Thursday, February 24, 2022

February 24, 2022: Johns Hopkins COVID 19 Report

COVID-19 Situation Report

Editor: Alyson Browett, MPH

Contributors: Clint Haines, MS; Natasha Kaushal, MSPH; Amanda Kobokovich, MPH; Christina Potter, MSPH; Matthew Shearer, MPH; Marc Trotochaud, MSPH; and, Rachel A. Vahey, MHS.

FELLOWSHIP OPPORTUNITY Applications are now open for the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security’s Emerging Leaders in Biosecurity (ELBI) Fellowship Class of 2022. ELBI inspires and connects the next generation of biosecurity leaders and innovators. This highly competitive, part-time program is an opportunity for talented career professionals to deepen their expertise, expand their network, and build their leadership skills through a series of sponsored events. Applications can be submitted through 11:59PM (EST) March 31, 2022. Learn more about eligibility requirements and application materials.

EPI UPDATE The WHO COVID-19 Dashboard reports 426.6 million cumulative cases and 5.9 million deaths worldwide as of February 23. The global weekly incidence continues to decline, down 21.1% from the previous week. Notably, all WHO regions with the exception of the Western Pacific region (+28.8%) reported decreasing weekly incidence last week. Global weekly mortality fell 10.85% from the previous week. We expect the cumulative number of deaths to pass 6 million within the next 2 weeks.

Global Vaccination

The WHO reported 10.4 billion cumulative doses administered globally as of February 21. A total of 4.87 billion individuals have received at least 1 dose, and 4.29 billion are fully vaccinated. Analysis from Our World in Data indicates that the overall trend in global daily vaccinations continues to increase, closely following the trend in Asia. The trend is up from the most recent low of 18.34 million doses per day on February 7 to 24.8 million per day on February 22.* The global weekly average jumped to 33.4 million doses per day on February 23, corresponding to a large increase reported in Asia and may be a reporting error.** Our World in Data estimates that there are 4.93 billion vaccinated individuals worldwide (1+ dose; 62.6% of the global population) and 4.36 billion who are fully vaccinated (55.4% of the global population). A total of 1.27 billion booster doses have been administered globally.

*The average daily doses administered may exhibit a sharp decrease for the most recent data, particularly over the weekend, which indicates effects of reporting delays. In an effort to reflect the longer-term trends, the numbers reported here may not correspond to the most recent data.

**The OWID data show 17.65 million doses reported in Asia on February 22 and 26.75 million on February 23 (+9.1 million), but it is not immediately clear what country or countries accounted for that increase.

UNITED STATES

The US CDC is currently reporting 78.52 million cumulative cases of COVID-19 and 936,162 deaths. Daily incidence continues its sharp decline, down from a record high of 807,285 new cases per day on January 15 to 79,539 on February 22, a 90% decrease. Daily mortality appears to have peaked on February 2 at 2,597 deaths per day, down to 1,602 on February 22.*

*Changes in state-level reporting may affect the accuracy of recently reported data, particularly over weekends. In an effort to reflect the longer-term trends, the numbers reported here may not correspond to the most recent dates.

US Vaccination

The US has administered 687.7 million cumulative doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines. Daily vaccinations continue to decline, down from the most recent peak of 1.78 million doses per day on December 7 to 337,874 on February 18.* A total of 253.2 million individuals have received at least 1 vaccine dose, which corresponds to 76.3% of the entire US population. Among adults, 87.8% have received at least 1 dose, as well as 26.5 million children under the age of 18. A total of 215.1 million individuals are fully vaccinated**, which corresponds to 64.8% of the total population. Approximately 74.9% of adults are fully vaccinated, as well as 21.8 million children under the age of 18. Since August 2021, 93.4 million individuals have received an additional or booster dose. This corresponds to 43.4% of fully vaccinated individuals, including 66% of fully vaccinated adults aged 65 years or older.

*Due to delays in reporting, estimates for the average daily doses administered are less accurate for the most recent 5 days. The most current average provided here corresponds to 5 days ago.

**Full original course of the vaccine, not including additional or booster doses.

RUSSIAN INVASION OF UKRAINE Russia began a military invasion of neighboring Ukraine this morning, destroying more than 70 military targets through land, sea, and air assaults. The invasion represents the largest attack by one state against another in Europe since World War II. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has played no role in the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the incursion likely will impact virus transmission, testing, surveillance, and treatment for the foreseeable future. The current surge of COVID-19 cases due to the Omicron variant appears to have peaked in both Ukraine and Russia, but the numbers of new cases in both countries remain at record-high levels, and Ukrainian authorities have warned that, despite a 99% vaccination rate among its army, transmission is occurring on the Russian battlefront. The fighting is forcing people to travel west, crowding trains and roads in an effort to reach smaller towns and villages on the European Union border or cross the border into neighboring countries. Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania are preparing for an influx of refugees. Amid the pandemic, the Ukraine crisis indicates that balance-of-power politics have returned, confirms that pandemics can threaten military power, and reminds us that war has innumerable impacts on human health.

VACCINATION INTERVALS To increase the safety profile of mRNA vaccines, the US CDC is now recommending that certain groups wait longer between their first and second doses. The standard timeline between doses for the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines is 3 and 4 weeks, respectively. Some groups, including men between the ages of 12-39 years old, are now recommended to wait 8 weeks between doses in order to further decrease the risk of myocarditis. Men in this age group appeared to be at a higher relative risk of developing myocarditis following vaccination with an mRNA vaccine, which has prompted further research on ways to mitigate this outcome. Myocarditis associated with vaccination has a low relative risk, around 3.24, compared to the relative risk of COVID-associated myocarditis, around 18.28. Still, new evidence indicates that an 8-week interval between doses can further decrease the risk, which prompted CDC’s change in advice. People not in this group, such as the elderly and immunocompromised, are still recommended to receive their doses on the original 3- and 4-week schedules to prevent severe illness from COVID-19 should they be infected. However, more studies are continuing to evaluate whether a slightly longer period between doses, such as 6 weeks, might result in greater protection for all vaccine-eligible groups.

SANOFI-GSK VACCINE Sanofi and GSK are planning to request US FDA and European Medical Agency (EMA) authorization for their SARS-CoV-2 vaccine candidate—as a primary series and booster dose—following promising results in phase 3 clinical trials. The Sanofi-GSK candidate is an adjuvanted recombinant protein-based vaccine, which is a more traditional vaccine platform compared to the relatively new mRNA vaccines. These vaccines tend to have a good safety profile and have less complicated storage requirements, but mediocre results from a previous iteration kept Sanofi and GSK from applying for authorization last year. This modified candidate has now shown strong efficacy and safety in trials, with 100% efficacy against severe COVID-19 disease and hospitalization. While efficacy against symptomatic infection was around 58%, the vaccine creators assert that these numbers are in line with expected efficacy in the current variant-dominant environment and point to its strong performance against severe and moderate disease outcomes. Novavax, another manufacturer with a protein-based vaccine candidate, is awaiting US FDA review of its request for authorization. Canada and Singapore recently cleared the Novavax vaccine, known as Nuvaxovid, for use among adults.

TESTING & SURVEILLANCE A WHO official recently expressed concern that reduced SARS-CoV-2 testing and surveillance could be contributing to a decline in global COVID-19 cases, saying the falling number of cases and deaths “may not be real.” WHO COVID Technical Lead Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove urged countries to continue their surveillance systems, especially as the number of cases caused by the more transmissible Omicron variant of concern (VOC) BA.2 sublineage begins to climb worldwide. In addition to tracking cases among humans, some experts are encouraging more attention be paid to the hundreds of animal species that are potentially able to be infected with SARS-CoV-2. Cats, dogs, mice, tigers, red fox, deer, and other mammals can be infected by the virus, which could establish itself, mutate, and spread to other species, including back into the human population. Scientists worldwide are collecting genomic surveillance data on various animals, and the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) publishes monthly situation reports on SARS-CoV-2 animal investigations. A preprint study posted to medRxiv shows the detection of both the Alpha and Delta variants in Pennsylvania (US) white-tailed deer, the first time those variants have been found in deer. The data for the study, which is not yet peer-reviewed, was collected prior to the emergence of the Omicron variant. Additional long-term funding is needed for research to better understand how animal health is linked to human health, and vice versa.

POST-VACCINATION MIS-C The risk of developing multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) is very low among young people who were vaccinated against COVID-19, according to a study published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health. Using surveillance data from the nationwide Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), researchers identified 21 young individuals who experienced MIS-C following vaccination between December 14, 2020, and August 31, 2021. All 21 individuals were hospitalized but all were discharged home. As of August 31, 2021, 21.3 million individuals aged 12 to 20 years had received 1 or more doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine, making the overall reporting rate of MIS-C following vaccination 1 case per million. Among those individuals who had no evidence of previous or current SARS-CoV-2 infection, the reporting rate was 0.3 cases per million vaccinated individuals.

The rare condition—which can cause dangerous inflammation in major organs as well as vomiting, diarrhea, and low blood pressure—can also follow SARS-CoV-2 infection, showing up sometimes weeks after acute infection. The US CDC updates its data on MIS-C cases monthly. As of January 31, there have been 6,851 cases with 59 associated deaths reported by state and local jurisdictional health departments. Those cases represent a very small portion of the more than 12.5 million COVID-19 cases that have been reported in children since the beginning of the pandemic. Some experts worried that the number of MIS-C cases would spike during the recent wave of cases caused by the Omicron variant, but fortunately that concern has not yet become reality. The CDC and others are working to learn more about why and how MIS-C occurs, and several studies investigating the long-term consequences of MIS-C, its presentation in children, and pathways for treatment and recovery are underway.

FRACTIONAL VACCINE DOSES Administering fractional, or reduced, SARS-CoV-2 vaccines doses could increase global supply, produce fewer side effects, and hasten vaccination uptake. While additional data must be collected, evidence suggests that half or quarter doses of some SARS-CoV-2 vaccines—used as part of a primary series or as booster shots—could be nearly as or even more efficacious than currently used doses of the same or similar vaccines. The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) and Australia’s Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI) announced the launch of a global clinical trial to investigate the efficacy and acceptability of fractional booster doses. Up to 3,300 healthy adults who have received a primary vaccination series with either Pfizer-BioNTech, Oxford-AstraZeneca, Sinovac, or Sinopharm vaccines will receive either a full or fractional booster dose of either the Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, or Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine. The trial, supported with up to US$8.7 million from CEPI, is part of the organization’s Call for Proposals to evaluate the impact of reduced SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in an effort to stretch global supplies and improve vaccine equity.

VACCINE SUPPLY & DEMAND Only about 12% of people in low-income countries are fully or partially vaccinated against COVID-19, but for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic, global vaccine supply is outpacing demand. The COVAX initiative is working to place more than 300 million vaccine doses in countries that need them, but those nations now face other challenges such as gaps in cold-chain storage, lack of funding for distribution networks and administration supplies such as syringes, and stalled vaccination uptake. Additionally, the Africa Centres for Disease Control (Africa CDC) plans to ask all vaccine donations be paused until later this year so countries can avoid wasting the shots if they expire and focus instead on bolstering vaccination logistics and last-mile strategies.

In countries with sufficient supplies, efforts are being made to get more people vaccinated. In South Africa, the government is shortening the required intervals between the first and second doses of a primary series and between the second dose and a booster shot, as well as offering heterologous booster dosing. In Uganda, which has a history of passing controversial public health-related laws, the parliament is considering adopting a vaccination mandate that would result in harsh penalties for people who refuse to comply, including steep fines of about US$1,137 or imprisonment for 6 months. Rights groups criticize the proposal and have called for officials to institute a more organized and inclusive vaccine rollout. Although governments hold much of the power to make vaccines accessible and acceptable, it will take coordinated efforts involving multiple stakeholders to improve vaccine uptake in many low- and middle-income countries.

US TRUCK CONVOYS After police in Ottawa, Canada, earlier this week cleared demonstrators who occupied the capital city for more than 3 weeks in protest against SARS-CoV-2 vaccine mandates and other pandemic restrictions, spin-offs of the so-called “Freedom Convoy” are taking shape across the US. Convoys of trucks are threatening to inundate the Washington, DC, metropolitan area as soon as this week, arriving from as near as Pennsylvania and as far as California, as well as hold a rally near the Washington Monument on March 1, the day US President Joe Biden is scheduled to deliver the annual State of the Union address. In anticipation of the protests, the US Department of Defense approved the deployment of 700 unarmed National Guard troops, at the request of the DC government and the US Capitol Police, to assist with traffic and mitigate possible disruptions. The California convoy—dubbed the “People’s Convoy”—departed Adelanto, California, on February 23 amid much fanfare and is expected to arrive in the DC area on March 5. The convoy is demanding an end to the national emergency first declared by former US President Donald Trump and recently extended by President Biden; a congressional investigation into the origin of SARS-CoV-2; and an end to government-issued public health measures including mask mandates and vaccination requirements. Unlike the Canadian truck convoy demonstrators, American truckers have no vaccination requirement to cross the US-Canada border, and most states have eased masking and vaccination requirements as the number of new COVID-19 cases fall.

The Freedom Convoy protests also have inspired similar demonstrations against pandemic mitigation measures in other countries. Authorities in Austria, Belgium, and France earlier this month banned motor protests in their capital cities. In New Zealand, people protesting the nation’s vaccination mandate have occupied Parliament grounds for at least 17 days, with what began as a peaceful demonstration turning violent this week. Today, protestors chased Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s vehicle down a driveway as she visited a Christchurch primary school. Earlier this week, Prime Minister Ardern expressed concern for police safety after several officers were hospitalized after protestors threw an unidentified liquid in their faces. She has resisted calls to use emergency powers or defense forces to dispel protesters. The convoys and occupations represent a show of frustration at the years-long pandemic and associated efforts to control transmission of the virus and expose ideological rifts that can be exacerbated by misinformation, disinformation, and conspiracy theories.

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Boone County Board Member Under State Police Investigation –


Boone County Board Member Under State Police Investigation –

BY JOHN KRAFT & KIRK ALLEN

ON FEBRUARY 22, 2022

Boone County, IL. (ECWd) -

CLICK ON THE  FOLLOWING TO SEE THIS Edgar County Watchdog  ARTICLE:

Illinois Leaks | Boone County Board Member Under State Police Investigation – (edgarcountywatchdogs.com)

Trump says 'everybody wanted' COVID-19 vaccines when he was president?

INSIDER

Trump says 'everybody wanted' COVID-19 vaccines when he was president, despite the fact that millions of his supporters rejected them

Grace Panetta

Tue, February 22, 2022, 4:56 PM

In this article:


trump vaccine operation warp speed

Trump greets the crowd before he leaves at the Operation Warp Speed Vaccine Summit on December 08, 2020 in Washington, DC.Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

  • Former President Trump falsely said "everybody wanted the vaccine" when he was in office.

  • Trump supporters refusing to get vaccinated has driven partisan gaps in vaccination.

  • "And once I was out, all of a sudden people didn't want it," Trump said, blaming mandates for low uptake.

Former President Donald Trump said "everybody wanted" to get a COVID-19 vaccine when he was president and blamed vaccine mandates for low vaccine uptake among some segments of the population — even though millions of his supporters have refused to get vaccinated.

Trump, who falsely claimed vaccines cause autism in children as a presidential candidate, touted the development of COVID-19 vaccines while he was president.

"I think what we do get great credit for that they tried but it didn't work — even their side said you can't do that — is Operation Warp Speed," Trump said in an interview with the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. "And not only the fact that the vaccines were developed in nine months as opposed to five years to 12 years."

While Trump now claims vaccine hesitancy wasn't an issue while he was president, many of his most prominent supporters and advisers pushed COVID vaccine misinformation while he was president. The former president has continued to face pushback for his staunch pro-vaccine stance from influential conservatives and his rank-and-file supporters.

"Everybody wanted the vaccine when I was there, and we were doing a million shots a day, and, you know, we mobilized," Trump said.

But Trump didn't publicly disclose when he and former first lady Melania Trump were vaccinated at the White House before leaving office in January 2021 and didn't begin publicly promoting the vaccines until months later.

In that time, as vaccines became widely available to the American public, sharp partisan gaps in vaccine uptake between Democrats and Republicans emerged.

A Kaiser Family Foundation study conducted in November 2021, for example, found that Republicans and Republican-leaning independents made up 41% of the adult population but 60% of unvaccinated adults in the United States and that, when controlling for other factors, a Republican was 26 percentage points less likely to be vaccinated than a Democrat.

"And the military really did well, much better than their leaders led them, I will tell you, in the removal from Afghanistan. That I can tell you. And they were doing really well. They were delivering 'em," Trump said. "And everybody wanted the vaccine. And once I was out, all of a sudden people didn't want it. And that's how you started with this whole mandate thing, which is terrible, okay, 'cause you're forcing people."

In recent months, Trump has stepped up his advocacy for COVID-19 vaccinations and boosters in recent months after dismissing booster shots in August 2021 as a "money-making operation" for pharmaceutical companies and saying he likely wouldn't receive a third COVID shot in September (though he eventually did get one).

Trump was booed by some of his fans when he announced he'd received a booster shot at an event with former Fox News host Bill O'Reilly in December 2021.

Trump has also called out "gutless" unnamed politicians for refusing to reveal their booster status, which some interpreted to be a thinly-veiled jab at Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis after DeSantis declined to say whether or not he had been boosted in a December 2021 interview.

"Many politicians — I watched a couple of politicians be interviewed, and one of the questions was, 'Did you get the booster?' because they had the vaccine. And they're all answering it like — in other words, the answer is yes, but they don't want to say it because they're gutless," Trump told One America News' Dan Ball.

"You gotta say it. Whether you had it or not, say it," Trump added.

DeSantis, a possible 2024 presidential candidate who has taken a hardline stance against vaccine mandates and passports in Florida, has denied rumors of tension with Trump.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fake news alert! Donald Trump’s new social media app is a triumph

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The Guardian

The Guardian

Fake news alert! Donald Trump’s new social media app is a triumph

Opinion by Arwa Mahdawi - Yesterday 9:18 AM


Truth hurts, everyone knows that. Nevertheless, I wasn’t expecting my experience with Truth Social, Donald Trump’s new social media venture, to be quite so painful. After months of fanfare, the former president’s new app, which is essentially a Twitter clone, was opened to the US public on Sunday night. Obviously, I signed up straight away – or at least I tried to.

Photograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP

© Provided by The GuardianPhotograph: Carolyn Kaster/AP


www.phoenix.edu/Competency/MBA


Related: Donald Trump’s social media app launches on Apple store

I spent 20 frustrating minutes attempting to create a new account and getting error message after error message. Eventually, I managed to sign up with the username @stormyd, only to be told that I had been put on a waiting list “due to massive demand”. I was number 194,276 in line, apparently. Which, I’m sure, is a very precise number and not something they just pulled out of the air.

It is unclear how many people were actually successful at getting on Truth Social – although the Guardian has reported that at least one Catholic priest managed to join. The fact that you, apparently, needed God on your side to secure an account wasn’t the only issue with the launch: the app has also run into potential legal trouble. Turns out, Truth Social may not have just taken inspiration from Twitter, the app’s logo looks suspiciously like that of a British solar power startup called TRAILAR. “Great to see Donald Trump supporting a growing sustainability business!” TRAILAR tweeted on Monday. “Maybe ask next time?”


Above is from:   https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/feb/22/donald-trump-new-social-media-app-truth-social

Growing Counties in Illinois

31 / 50

Teemu008 from Palatine, Illinois // Wikimedia Commons

#19. Boone County

- 2010 to 2020 population change: -119
--- #1,706 among all counties nationwide
- 2010 to 2020 percent population change: -0.2%
--- #19 among counties in Illinois, #1,603 among all counties nationwide
- 2020 population: 53,448

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

February 22, 2022: Johns Hopkins COVID 19 Report

COVID-19 Situation Report

Editor: Alyson Browett, MPH

Contributors: Clint Haines, MS; Natasha Kaushal, MSPH; Amanda Kobokovich, MPH; Christina Potter, MSPH; Matthew Shearer, MPH; Marc Trotochaud, MSPH; and, Rachel A. Vahey, MHS.

BA.2 OMICRON SUBVARIANT The BA.2 subvariant of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant of concern (VOC) is increasing in prevalence, but questions remain regarding whether it results in more severe disease. The Omicron VOC spans multiple subvariants, including the main B.1.1.529 lineage and the BA.1 and BA.2 sublineages. When Omicron emerged in the US, the rapid increase in prevalence was predominantly due to the B.1.1.529 and BA.1.1 lineages, which combined to account for nearly 99% of US cases the week of January 29. Since that time, the BA.2 lineage prevalence has increased from an estimated 0.8% to 3.8% of US cases, approximately doubling each of the past 2 weeks. The increase in prevalence indicates that BA.2 is more transmissible than the other Omicron lineages, possibly 30% more. Notably, genomic surveillance for the BA.2 lineage is difficult, because it does not result in the S-gene target failure (SGTF) in PCR-based assays, which has been used to track other VOCs—including Omicron—without requiring genomic sequencing. The BA.2 lineage has not yet taken off in the US, but the next several weeks will provide important information regarding the potential for a second Omicron surge.

Research is ongoing to better characterize protection against the BA.2 subvariant from vaccination, booster doses, and prior infection. Like the original Omicron variant, BA.2 is less susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 vaccines than previous VOCs, but booster doses can increase the vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic COVID-19 disease to 74%. The BA.2 lineage also appears to evade antibodies generated in response to prior infections with earlier strains, including the Alpha and Delta VOCs. There is some evidence that BA.2 is able to reinfect individuals who were previously infected with the BA.1 lineage, although the combination of prior infection and vaccination appears to provide moderate protection. Researchers in Denmark recently conducted a study to evaluate reinfection with the BA.2 lineage. Out of a sample of 187 reinfection cases (within 20-60 days), 47 were the result of BA.2 infection following infection with the BA.1 lineage. Conversely, a recent study by the UK government found “no detected sequence-confirmed BA.2 reinfection following a BA.1 infection at any interval.”

The data on disease severity for the BA.2 lineage are mixed. Some countries where BA.2 has become more prominent are exhibiting declining trends in daily COVID-19 mortality, such as the UK, whereas Denmark is exhibiting an increasing trend. Through the use of animal models, researchers have identified more extensive damage to lung tissue in hamsters infected with the BA.2 lineage compared to BA.1, but this may not necessarily hold true for humans. A study in South Africa found similar disease severity among patients infected with the BA.1 and BA.1 subvariants, and US CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky indicated that “there is no evidence that the BA.2 lineage is more severe than the BA.1 lineage.” Evidence also indicates that the BA.2 subvariant exhibits strong resistance to many monoclonal antibody treatments, including sotrovimab, which is currently being used to treat patients infected with the Omicron variant. The lack of an effective treatment option could impact disease severity and mortality.

MENTAL HEALTH Results from the largest cohort study to date on the impact of acute COVID-19 on mental health were published February 16 in The BMJ. The cohort consisted of 153,848 individuals who survived 30 days after initial SARS-CoV-2 infection, and 2 control groups: 5.6 million individuals who did not have recorded SARS-CoV-2 infection and 5.8 million historical control individuals pulled from pre-pandemic data. All of the data came from a US Department of Veterans Affairs database. Overall, the study found that people who had COVID-19 were 60% more likely to experience subsequent mental health problems than people who never had the disease. Individuals who had COVID-19, even mild cases, had a 41% increased risk of developing sleep disorders, 39% increased risk of developing depression, 38% increased risk of heightened stress levels, 35% increased risk of developing anxiety, 34% increased risk of developing an opioid use disorder, and 80% higher risk of developing other cognitive symptoms, such as “brain fog.” Limitations of the study include that it was performed before vaccines were widely available and that the population primarily included older white men, although controlling for race, gender, and age found no difference in risk.

Growing evidence indicates that SARS-CoV-2 infection has the potential to impact nearly every organ system, including the nervous system. The exact mechanism behind the observed increase in mental health risks after SARS-CoV-2 infection is currently unclear, but one hypothesis suggests that the virus can enter the brain and damage areas responsible for mood and emotional regulation. An association between acute COVID-19 and long term increases in mental health disorders raises the likelihood that a wave of mental health symptoms could occur in the near future, given that nearly 425 million people worldwide have had COVID-19. The National Health Service (NHS) in England recently warned that millions of patients face dangerously long wait times for mental health services. Concerns are rising that a lack of investment in mental health care infrastructure could lead to an increase in suicide, self-harm, and eating disorders. Mental health services historically have been neglected worldwide, but they will need an increase in funding and attention if we want to be prepared for the coming increase in patient needs.

FOURTH VACCINE DOSE Questions about the necessity of a second SARS-CoV-2 vaccine booster, or fourth dose, arose shortly after announcements regarding the importance of an initial booster. Several new studies attempting to shine a light on the durability of vaccine-mediated immunity provide evidence that a 3-dose regimen of mRNA-based vaccines—possibly only 2 doses—may be able to protect most people against severe COVID-19 disease for months or even years. Evidence for possibly lengthy protection from vaccination includes an increase in neutralizing antibody diversity, T cells that can recognize the Omicron variant, and germinal center activation for up to 15 weeks post-vaccination. Leading immunologists have stated that fourth or fifth doses of the vaccine might lead to diminishing returns for the majority of the population when compared to 3 doses. However, a fourth vaccine dose may still be necessary for certain populations, including older and immunocompromised individuals.

Several nations have begun offering fourth vaccine doses to specific populations or openly discussing that possibility. Many health officials in the US have agreed that it is too early to officially recommend a fourth vaccine dose, but the US FDA is continually examining emerging data to determine if and when another booster may be necessary. If a fourth dose does appear to be warranted, for all age groups or only older adults, experts say it likely would be recommended in the fall to coincide with annual flu shots and the rise of respiratory virus transmission. Additional considerations include whether the vaccine should be reformulated for novel variants. Other nations are moving forward with plans to provide fourth doses to certain populations, including the UK, Italy, South Korea, Sweden, and Israel. While fourth doses of SARS-CoV-2 vaccine may be necessary for certain populations, it is critical to ensure that populations in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are not left behind. Vaccine equity must be addressed now so the world can be prepared for future pathogens with pandemic potential.

VACCINES IN AFRICA Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, and Tunisia will be the first 6 countries in Africa to receive the technology needed to produce SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccines, WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus announced February 18 at an event held at the European Union-African Union summit in Brussels. The technical information and training will come from the global mRNA technology transfer hub established by the WHO last year in Cape Town, South Africa, in order to expand mRNA vaccine manufacturing—for COVID-19 and other diseases in the future—to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). As a hub partner, South Africa's Afrigen Biologics announced earlier this month that it has developed a version of the Moderna vaccine using publicly available information. While the EU is supporting the effort, the bloc received criticism at the summit for continuing to block a proposal at the World Trade Organization (WTO) for a temporary waiver of the TRIPS Agreement. South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa, who has accused Europe of hoarding the vaccines, called on the EU to drop its opposition to a waiver, saying it is a matter of saving millions of lives rather than padding the pockets of a few pharmaceutical companies. At the summit’s closing press conference, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen committed to reaching a solution on the matter by spring.

Moderna has said it will not enforce existing patents on its SARS-CoV-2 vaccine during the pandemic. But the company recently applied for patents related to its vaccine in South Africa, raising concerns the company will move to prevent the technology transfer hub from making its own version of the shot once the pandemic phase is declared over. Moderna Chief Executive Officer Stéphane Bancel said the company has not yet decided whether it will enforce patents in LMICs when the pandemic ends. In an interview with STAT, WHO Chief Scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan said the global health agency would like Moderna to not enforce its patents on its SARS-CoV-2 vaccine during and beyond the pandemic. Without Moderna’s assistance, the Afrigen-developed mRNA vaccine must go through human clinical trials and could take another 2 years to come to market. But the effort is seen as building a foundation for the production of future mRNA vaccines on the continent. Additionally, BioNTech last week announced it is deploying modular vaccine production facilities—housed in shipping containers and dubbed BioNTainers—to several African nations to help increase production of the company's current and future mRNA vaccines for COVID-19, malaria, tuberculosis, and cancer. The increased manufacturing capacity could be a sign of improving global vaccine equity, but much more needs to be accomplished to reach that goal, including billions more dollars of investment and efforts to increase vaccine uptake.

Meanwhile, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) last week released case studies from Côte d'Ivoire, Uganda, and Zambia detailing successful efforts to increase vaccination uptake, including actions by its Global Vaccine Access, or Global VAX, initiative. US officials announced the government will intensify assistance to 11 African countries under the initiative, efforts worth more than US$250 million. The countries—Angola, Côte d'Ivoire, Eswatini, Ghana, Lesotho, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia—were selected based on their COVID-19 incidence, healthcare system capacity, readiness to administer the vaccines, and ability to deploy additional US investments. On February 18, the administration of US President Joe Biden requested an additional US$5 billion for overseas COVID-19 response efforts, far less than the approximately US$19 billion USAID originally recommended would be needed. Of that funding, US$2.55 billion would be used for vaccinations, US$1.7 billion for therapeutics and supplies, and $750 million for humanitarian aid.

US STATES’ PANDEMIC ESCAPE PLANS Two days after the White House COVID-19 Response Team signaled that the administration of US President Joe Biden is planning for the pandemic to cease being a crisis, President Biden on February 18 announced he is continuing the designation of COVID-19 as a national emergency. Meanwhile, most US states have announced the end of or plans to end statewide indoor mask mandates—leaving Hawaii as the lone holdout. Many states and cities also have lifted their proof-of-vaccination requirements and called state and municipal employees back into the office after 2 years of work-from-home rules. Governors and mayors cite plummeting numbers of new COVID-19 cases, with the 7-day national average down 87% since January 15. California Governor Gavin Newsom last week announced California will move into the “next phase” of managing the pandemic, with a focus on early detection of variants, keeping schools open, wastewater surveillance, and stockpiling masks and tests. Newsom’s SMARTER plan—which stands for Shots, Masks, Awareness, Readiness, Testing, Education, and Rx—is billed as a response plan for COVID-19 as well as future health emergencies. Some state legislatures are taking additional steps to roll back public health measures, introducing legislation to restrict mask mandates, ban vaccine requirements, and revise visitation policies for long-term care facilities and hospitals.

A model from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) estimates that about three quarters of the US population currently is immune to Omicron due to natural immunity, vaccine-mediated immunity, or a combination. However, many experts warn that the currently circulating Omicron BA.2 sublineage or future variants could escape current immunity, and most are confident that existing immunity will wane. While the number of deaths is beginning to decline nationwide, around 2,000 people continue to die of COVID-19 each day, with unvaccinated individuals making up the majority of those deaths. Even California Governor Newsom acknowledged that there is no end date to the crisis, “not a moment where we declare victory.” But he said California’s plan will allow residents to shift from a “crisis mentality” to one relying on prevention and adaptability, with health officials stepping up measures to quell outbreaks when they occur. Still, experts who encourage control measures such as vaccination and masking continue to experience backlash and warn that trust in public health is at an all-time low. Notably, some evidence suggests trust, between people or in government or scientists, is the most critical factor in addressing crises such as COVID-19.

US CDC DATA According to reporting by The New York Times, the US CDC is sharing only a small portion of the data it collects on COVID-19, 2 full years into the pandemic. The data could help state and local officials better understand how and when to use specific mitigation measures, what populations are most at risk, who needs booster doses, and where outbreaks might occur or new variants emerge. CDC representatives gave various reasons why the agency has been slow to release some information, including outdated systems incapable of handling large amounts of data, fear that the information might be misinterpreted, and concerns over some data representing only a sampling of the US population. A string of necessary bureaucratic approvals also adds to the delays. Several epidemiologists and scientists said gaps in data have the potential to erode trust in public health and science and countered that the release of detailed data analyses and effective communication of that information can help bolster public trust and provide a better understanding of the pandemic.

OTTAWA PROTESTS Police in Ottawa, Canada, regained control of most of the capital city over the weekend after a push to disperse the so-called “Freedom Convoy.” The demonstration, which began in late January with protestors and far-right organizations denouncing COVID-19 vaccination requirements and other pandemic restrictions, turned into a 3-week-long occupation. Police arrested nearly 200 people, having to use pepper spray, stun grenades, and other anti-riot tactics, and vowed a months-long investigation leading to financial sanctions and criminal charges. The Ottawa police chief resigned last week after receiving criticism about why it took so long to break up the convoy.

The demonstration led Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to invoke the Emergencies Act for the first time ever, in order to help quell the protests by permitting authorities to freeze bank accounts associated with the convoy and seize protestors’ vehicles. Last night, the House of Commons approved the Emergencies Act, extending its use for an additional 30 days. Prime Minister Trudeau said there “continues to be real concerns” and that the government will evaluate daily whether to continue the state of emergency. Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said they have frozen more than 200 bank and corporate accounts worth several million Canadian dollars in relation to the protests. Now that the convoy has ended, many Canadians—including Ottawa residents, politicians, policy experts, and the demonstrators themselves—are wondering how the organized and financially backed protests might affect the country’s future political landscape.