Featured Headlines
Surveillance
Official Reporting for April 1, 2020
WHO SITREP #71 | ECDCCountry Data | Johns Hopkins | |
Confirmed Cases | 750,890 | 85,3200 | 874,081 |
Deaths | 36,405 | 41,887 | 43,291 |
Total deaths: 2,860
Travel Related: 1,042
Close Contact: 2,919
Under Investigation: 159,578
Total Cases: 163,539
Surveillance Headlines
USA
Texas: 28 University of Texas spring breakers test positive for COVID-19 after group trip to Mexico – NBC News
North Carolina: 1,584 people have coronavirus in North Carolina, 9 deaths reported – Local News
Europe
France: Reported 7,578 new cases, with a total of 52,128. Health officials also reported 499 more deaths, which increased the country’s fatality count to 3,523, making it the fourth country to pass China’s death toll. – CIDRAP
Italy: Reported 4,053 more cases, with a total of 105,792 cases. An additional 837 were reported, bringing total to 12,428. – CIDRAP
UK: Reported 3,009 more cases, 381 more deaths. CIDRAP
Turkey: Reported 2,704 cases, up dramatically from the 1,610 it reported yesterday. Total deaths reported 168. CIDRAP
Serbia: Serbian state secretary dies from coronavirus – Reuters
Germany: Mass testing, empty ICUs: Germany scores early against virus – AP
Middle East
Iran: Reported 3,110 new cases, and 141 new deaths, with respective totals of 44,605 and 2,898. CIDRAP
Asia
Philippines: Reported 538 new cases, with a total of 2,084 cases, with 88 deaths. CIDRAP
India: Reported 146 new cases, for a total of 1,397. CIDRAP
Japan: Reported 87 new cases, total is 1,953. CIDRAP
South Korea: Reported 125 more cases, totaling 9,786. CIDRAP
Singapore: Reported 47 new cases, 16 of them imported, and Hong Kong reported 32 new cases, 24 of them with a travel history.
Science and Tech
Vaccines
The $1 billion bet: Johnson & Johnson (Janssen Division) and Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) team up in all-out coronavirus vaccine push – Science Janssen’s vaccine is built around an engineered version of adenovirus 26 (Ad26), which normally causes common colds but has been disabled so that it cannot replicate. Company scientists stich into this Ad26 “vector” a gene for the surface protein from the new coronavirus spreading around the world. Janssen is testing this same Ad26 platform in vaccines against Ebola, HIV, respiratory syncytial virus, and Zika. J&J had $42 billion in pharmaceutical sales last year, making it the sixth largest big pharma company. Sanofi is the only other in the top 10 that has a COVID-19 vaccine project.
Diagnostics
Newly approved testing at Tulane, UMC gives coronavirus results in hours – WWLTV
Published Research
SARS-CoV-2 Viral Load in Upper Respiratory Specimens of Infected Patients – NEJM
Transmission of 2019-nCoV Infection from an Asymptomatic Contact in Germany – NEJM
Early Transmission Dynamics in Wuhan, China, of Novel Coronavirus–Infected Pneumonia – NEJM
Antibodies in Infants Born to Mothers With COVID-19 Pneumonia – JAMA
Pre-Pub (not yet peer reviewed, should not be regarded as conclusive)
Susceptibility of ferrets, cats, dogs, and different domestic animals to SARS-coronavirus-2 – BioRX
Economic Impact
Screening for Previous Virus Infection Could Unlock Work Force – BloombergNew blood tests from Henry Schein Inc. and Becton Dickinson Co. look for antibodies produced in the middle to late stages of infection with Covid-19, the respiratory illness caused by the new coronavirus. Determining whether people have been infected could allow them to return to work without fear of passing along the disease or contracting it.
Opinions & Editorials
What it’s like being a New York ER doctor during this pandemic – Washington Post Craig Spencer is director of global health in emergency medicine at New York Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center. NEW YORK — Wake up at 6:30 a.m. Priority is making a big pot of coffee for the whole day, because the place by the hospital is closed. The Starbucks, too. It’s all closed. On the walk, it feels like Sunday. No one is out. Might be the freezing rain. Or it’s early. Regardless, that’s good. Walk in for your 8 a.m. shift: Struck by how the calm of the early morning city streets is immediately transformed. The bright fluorescent lights of the ER reflect off everyone’s protective goggles. There is a cacophony of coughing. You stop. Mask up. Walk in. You take sign-out from the previous team, but nearly every patient is the same, young and old: cough, shortness of breath, fever. The staff is really worried about one patient. Very short of breath, on the maximum amount of oxygen we can give, but still breathing fast. [If you hit a paywall at the link, try here]
Coping in Quarantine
‘Social Distance’: A Community-Style Poem To Help You Feel Less Isolated – NPR