Featured Headlines
COVID: how worried should we be about the new AY.4.2 lineage of the coronavirus? – The Conversation
No sooner than you thought all the talk of new COVID variants was over, there’s news of yet another one: AY.4.2. But what is it, where did it come from, and should we be concerned?
New Virus Cases Hitting Faster Than Ever Challenge China’s Covid-Zero Strategy – Bloomberg
China has driven Covid-19 cases back to zero three times over the past five months, but outbreaks are flaring more frequently than ever before, raising questions about how long the nation can persist with a strategy that’s leaving it increasingly isolated.
To see how COVID-19 vaccines are working in the real world, Israel has provided particularly compelling data. The fact that Israel is relatively small, keeps comprehensive medical records, and has a high vaccination rate with a single vaccine (Pfizer) has contributed to its robust data collection. Now, a new Israeli study offers some insight into those relatively uncommon breakthrough infections. It confirms that breakthrough cases, as might be expected, arise most often in individuals with lower levels of neutralizing antibodies.
How Public Health Took Part in Its Own Downfall – The Atlantic
here was a time, at the start of the 20th century, when the field of public health was stronger and more ambitious. A mixed group of physicians, scientists, industrialists, and social activists all saw themselves “as part of this giant social-reform effort that was going to transform the health of the nation,” David Rosner, a public-health historian at Columbia University, told me. They were united by a simple yet radical notion: that some people were more susceptible to disease because of social problems. And they worked to address those foundational ills—dilapidated neighborhoods, crowded housing, unsafe working conditions, poor sanitation—with a “moral certainty regarding the need to act,” Rosner and his colleagues wrote in a 2010 paper.
China Expects New Covid Outbreak to Worsen in Coming Days – Bloomberg
China’s new Covid-19 infections will increase in coming days and the areas affected by the epidemic may continue to expand, a health official said. The current outbreak in China is caused by the delta variant from overseas, Wu Liangyou, an official at the National Health Commission, said at a briefing in Beijing Sunday.
Delta ‘Plus’ Covid variant may be more transmissible – BBC
The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) has moved it up into the “variant under investigation” category, to reflect this possible risk. There is no evidence yet that it causes worse illness. And scientists are confident that existing vaccines should still work well to protect people.
Arizona has caught up to New York when it comes to reported deaths per capita — even though the latter was ravaged by the coronavirus early in the pandemic before treatments or vaccines were developed.
Cruises will no longer be required to follow CDC rules starting in January – Washington Post
The public health rules that dictate how cruise ships can operate in U.S. waters during the pandemic will become recommendations in mid-January, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday.
Cryptic transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and the first COVID-19 wave – Nature
Considerable uncertainty surrounds the timeline of introductions and onsets of local transmission of SARS-CoV-2 globally1–7. Although a limited number of SARS-CoV-2 introductions were reported in January and February 20208,9, the narrowness of the initial testing criteria, combined with a slow growth in testing capacity and porous travel screening10, left many countries vulnerable to unmitigated, cryptic transmission.
Endemic Covid-19 Has Arrived in Portugal. This Is What It Looks Like. – WSJ
In this soccer-crazed capital of a soccer-obsessed nation, the stadiums are full again. Portugal, a country ravaged earlier in the year by the Delta variant of the coronavirus, now has the highest Covid-19 vaccination rate in Europe and offers a glimpse of a country trying to come to grips with what is increasingly looking like an endemic virus.
Vaccine Headlines
Moderna says new data supports its COVID vaccine for kids 6 to 11 – NPR
Moderna says a study in kids 6 to 11 found two doses of the company’s COVID-19 vaccine given 28 days apart produced a strong antibody response. The study, conducted in collaboration with the National Institutes of Health, used shots containing a 50 microgram dose of the vaccine, half the dose of the Moderna shots authorized for adults. More than 4,700 children ages 5 to 11 took part in the study.
China Giving Covid Shots to Three-Year-Olds as Outbreak Persists – Bloomberg
China started giving Covid-19 vaccines to children as young as three, as the country grapples with the return of the delta variant and more frequent virus outbreaks.
Vaccine study links virus to rare neurological illness – BBC
Doctors say the landmark UK study provides further reassurance that being vaccinated offers the best protection for overall health.
Recipients of Johnson & Johnson shot rush to get boosters – Washington Post
Jennifer Lopez, 58, had jumped at the chance to get the Johnson & Johnson vaccine last March but soon began feeling regret when data showed it might be less effective than other coronavirus vaccines.
Doctors say the landmark UK study provides further reassurance that being vaccinated offers the best protection for overall health.
Up to 99 million Americans are now eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine booster shot, after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week signed off on sweeping new booster recommendations for recipients of Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson’s vaccines.
Clinical Considerations
The neurocognitive impact of long COVID – Medical News Today
For many people, long COVID has associations with serious neurological and neurocognitive impairments, a phenomenon sometimes known as neuro-COVID. Why does this happen, and who is most at risk? In this Special Feature and podcast, we speak to two researchers and a person with lived experience of neuro-COVID to find out more.
Sudden Psychosis, Abnormal CSF in Three Teens With COVID – MedPageToday
Sudden, rapidly progressing neuropsychiatric symptoms ranging from severe anxiety to delusional psychosis caused three teenage patients with recent COVID-19 to be hospitalized, researchers reported.
The cytokine Transforming Growth Factor β (TGFβ) has potent immune-modulatory effects, playing a role in downregulating the body’s immune response once a pathogen has been successfully controlled. For this reason, its production is normally timed to coincide with the end of an infection. Now, a new study finds a different situation with a SARS-CoV-2 infection. A Berlin-based team of researchers has revealed that patients with severe disease show an increase in the production of TGFβ as early as the first week of infection.
Official Reporting for October 26, 2021
World Health Organization
Weekly Epi Update October 25th (latest release)
New Cases: 35,707
Confirmed Cases: 243,572,402
Deaths: 4,948,434
Johns Hopkins
Confirmed Cases: 244,239,277
Deaths: 4,959,558
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Total cases: 45,363,116 (+19,200 New Cases)
Total deaths: 734,752 (+167 New Deaths)
Science and Tech
The Real Scandal About Ivermectin – The Atlantic
Claims about the drug are based on shoddy science—but that science is entirely unremarkable in its shoddiness.
How the Dead Are Helping the Living (Bloomberg Podcast)
In a secure, air-locked chamber in the world’s largest research hospital, Dan Chertow and a half-dozen other scientists in astronaut-inspired protective gear carry out a microscopic search. They are studying the remains of people killed by Covid-19 in an effort to unlock one of the pandemic’s biggest and most disturbing mysteries. On this episode, Bloomberg Senior Editor Jason Gale joins the critical-care physician on his exhaustive hunt for the coronavirus in the bodies and brains of its victims. By looking for clues among the deceased, Chertow aims to understand how to treat and prevent the disease in the living, including the lingering symptoms afflicting millions of Covid “long haulers.”
Psychological and Sociological Impact
Returning Workers Confront Creepy Time Capsules of Pre-Pandemic Life – WSJ
Petrified snacks. Year-old calendars. Plants run amok. After 18 months away, people say their offices look like Pompeii’s ruins. Returning to the office last month for the first time since March 2020, Ryan Weaver caught sight of something on his old desk that made him do a double take.
Homicide-Suicide Risk Something to Be Aware of During the Pandemic – MedPageToday
As the pandemic continues, clinicians should be on the lookout for patients at risk of committing homicide-suicide, Elias Ghossoub, MD, director of the psychiatry residency training program at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon, said Saturday at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law.
Published Research
Anti–SARS-CoV-2 and Autoantibody Profiles in the Cerebrospinal Fluid of 3 Teenaged Patients With COVID-19 and Subacute Neuropsychiatric Symptoms – JAMA Neurology
Covid-19 Breakthrough Infections in Vaccinated Health Care Workers – NEJM
Untimely TGFβ responses in COVID-19 limit antiviral functions of NK cells – Nature
Misinformation, Disinformation, and Conspiracy Theories
Opinion: Why is Anthony Fauci trying to kill my puppy? – Washington Post
Spoiler Alert: the only thing being tortured here is the truth.
Coping with COVID
Heading into pandemic winter 2021… let’s not forget what it looked like in 2020