Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Coronavirus News (116)
Coronavirus News (115)
SpaceX spacesuits are designed for optimum functionality with Dragon pic.twitter.com/QW4DirDirx
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) May 27, 2020
Same is the case in Nepal, lockdown has not produced the result. Corona infection is increasing exponentially despite 60 days plus lockdown. What does Nepal government wants to do, people want to know.
Posted by Rudra Raj Pandey on Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Coronavirus News (114)
Shashi Tharoor introduced a bill in Parliament to amend the Indian Constitution and allow dual citizenship for Indians.
........ people of Indian origin have risen to high offices, including as presidents and prime ministers of various countries. At one point in 2014, America had over half a dozen Indian-origin politicians in office – two of them as Governors. ........ For years, Indian foreign policy discourse has suffered from introversion and fence-sitting on matters of international politics and security. A large part of the domestic debate on foreign policy is restricted to the immediate neighbourhood – and often just one country out of them all: Pakistan. ......... it will reinstate India’s legacy as a civilisation that is open rather than insular, global rather than protectionist, and confident rather than insecure. For India’s aspirations to be a global power, there are few attributes more pertinent than those.From the Secession of Pakistan to the Partitioning of India The creation of Pakistan was more a secession from India’s multicultural freedom movement than a partition of Indian territory into two states on the basis of religion. The ruling political ideology in India has now pledged allegiance to the ideals of the secession of Pakistan. ............ The Muslim League – the principal party of those who sought the secession of Pakistan – suffered heavy electoral losses year after year, even in the provinces whose secession it demanded: As late as in the elections of 1936-37, the Muslim League blanked out in Sind and the North West Frontier Province (NWFP). In Bengal, it failed to capture even a third of the seats reserved for Muslims. In all, the Muslim League garnered fewer than 5 percent of the Muslim vote across the country. ........ Secession was successfully achieved, not through the force of ballots, but through the force of violence. The dubious nature of the two-nation theory lies in the fact that Muslims were so well integrated across the entire geography of undivided India that, for several years after independence, India had more Muslims than Pakistan, despite forced mass migration of Hindus and Muslims across the border. ........ India did not become the Hindu Republic of India; instead, it stayed true to the multicultural values of the larger freedom movement, which established Indian nationalism on the basis of universal principles rather than cultural or religious identity. .......
“That was a partition of India’s soil; this has become a partition of India’s soul.”
India’s Art of the Impossible Trade Deal For decades, India has remained among the most protectionist of the larger developing economies, despite adopting liberalization policies nearly 30 years ago. ...... India had introduced the second-most number of trade restrictions among all G20 economies between 2016 and 2018 (the highest number belonged to the United States, where President Trump has been waging a trade war on multiple fronts). ....... To most international commentators and economists, this is baffling: India’s economic boom since 1991 has owed enormously to trade and globalization ........ For years, India has pushed countries around the world – both developing and developed – to open up their borders to high-skilled Indian professionals and more sophisticated industries such as IT and pharmaceuticals. These are areas where Indian exports (and labour) are highly competitive, producing output of fair quality at low prices. ........ But in the Indian economy, only a minority of the workforce is engaged in activities where India is competitive: In 2018, only 31 percent of Indians worked in the services sector (and an even smaller percentage worked in areas such as IT or pharmaceuticals); the remaining 69 percent were employed in manufacturing or agriculture – sectors which remain plagued by regulatory red tape, infrastructural woes and labour productivity issues. ........
Opening up to trade in sectors where India is less competitive means political pushback from the majority of the workforce. Yet, on the other hand, trade blocs would not open up to Indian professionals or exports in services without liberalization in industrial or agricultural goods.
........ “services such as IT tend to be neglected by traditional trade deals [such as RCEP]. Only ambitious, forward-looking agreements venture deeply into these areas, and those deals usually entail a degree of openness to foreign manufacturers that would terrify India’s industrialists.” What’s worse, in an era of heightened populism and right-wing nationalism, countries around the world are increasingly pulling up barriers to immigration and trade in services. ..... The Modi government has said that it would like to pursue trade talks with the EU and the United States instead – it might have better luck there, but only if India is willing to open up to dairy products and manufactured goods in return.How India Can Help Prepare the World for COVID-19 Vaccines the next 12-18 months will be critical for countries. They must prepare themselves for an extensive immunization program. ......... Modi called the International Solar Alliance (ISA) India’s “gift to the world” in the fight against climate change. The ISA is an inter-governmental organization, jointly launched by India and France in 2015 on the sidelines of the COP21 summit in Paris. The idea was to harness clean and low-cost solar power in solar-rich countries to make them energy secure and self-reliant. ..........
Unfortunately, most countries do not have a strong enough cold chain network to handle a mass immunization program for COVID-19.
...... Most of the ISA’s membership is African, with the continent contributing 34 ratified members. And India is attempting to establish itself as a responsible global leader by spreading its medicine diplomacy far and wide in Africa.India Needs a Basic Income Scheme Instead of Welfare Subsidies The coronavirus lockdown has reinforced the merits of a basic income scheme. But apart from alleviating distress, the replacement of wasteful subsidies by a basic income scheme would even be financially prudent. It would make economic reform more viable and the public sector more efficient. ..........
the biggest advantage of a basic income scheme is the simplicity of its implementation
. India’s traditional welfare system has depended upon a dense network of schemes, most of which do not involve direct cash transfers. In almost all of these schemes, there are significant leakages which prevent the beneficiaries from receiving their full entitlement. .......approximately one-fifth of households in the poorest 40 percent of the population do not receive any subsidies – a result of corruption and low state capacity.
...... for every rupee that the Indian government spends on welfare, society incurs a cost of three rupees. ...... A basic income scheme would serve as a safety net that insulates the poor from sudden drastic changes in income. The past six years have shown how low-income groups are the most adversely affected by economic crises, ranging from demonetisation to the current lockdown. This is supplemented by the nature of the informal economy (or even the formal gig economy) which breeds instability in employment. A basic income would alleviate the distress caused by the possible loss of employment income. .........direct cash transfers in Latin America, Africa and Asia actually led to a decrease in alcohol and tobacco consumption around 82 percent of the time. This effect was even greater when cash transfer programs were targeted at women
........ a similar study in Madhya Pradesh showed that such unconditional cash transfers led to increased food security, a decrease in alcohol consumption and increased school attendance. This shows that low-income groups are actually far more adept at understanding their basic needs than policymakers. ....... Depending on the nature of the scheme, the cost could be anything between Rs 2 lakh crores and Rs 10 lakh crores (the estimated cost of the Congress NYAY plan was Rs 3.66 lakh crores). Nonetheless, there are several ways by which this fiscal gap can be plugged. Firstly, a basic income scheme would make the PM-Kisan Scheme redundant, saving the exchequer Rs 54,000 crores. Similarly, other welfare schemes like the PDS or MNREGA could be significantly reduced as a basic income scheme would eliminate their primary purpose. ....... a basic income scheme would reduce and remove the political imperative for governments to maintain several irrelevant public sector jobs – many of which have been sustained only as a means of providing employment. ........ the government spends an exorbitant amount of around 1.04 percent of GDP on subsidies that do not directly benefit low-income households. A replacement of such wasteful subsidies by a basic income scheme would be extremely financially prudent.........the 190 million people who still do not have a bank account
...... The current migrant worker crisis emphasises the need to combine market and state more efficiently and equitably. It is time for a basic income scheme – one that merges the noble redistributive intent of socialism with the efficiency of the free market.Inter-Religious Harmony in India Amidst the Coronavirus In these times, even as pious religious slogans like Jai Shri Ram have come to be used politically, many Muslims are rising above religious barriers and reflecting remarkable stories of love over hate. Yusuf Sheikh, one of those who attended the funeral in Bandra, said, “We knew Premchandra Mahavir quite well. At such times, we should show humanity transcending religious barriers.” .......... In Loyaitola village of Malda district in West Bengal, a group of Muslims – chanting Bolo Hari, Bolo Hari and Ram naam satya hai – carried the body of 90-year-old Binay Saha to the cremation ground. “Our father died of old age,” said his son, Shyamal Saha. “We were anxious about how to cremate him during the lockdown. None of our relatives would be able to come.” Saddam Sheikh, a neighbour, said, “We (Muslims of the village) are neighbours and carried out our duty. No religion is greater than humanity.” ......... In Aurangabad, Maharashtra, a Hindu man died and, due to the fear of the coronavirus, none of his relatives came to perform his last rites. Farhat Ahmad, a functionary of the Tablighi Jamaat in Aurangabad, lifted the bier and cremated the body. ....... over 1,000 Christian-run hospitals in India, with 60,000 inpatient beds, are fighting the coronavirus. During these testing times, members of all religious communities are running kitchens for people in distress.........
one, pluralism is not diversity alone, but the energetic engagement with diversity; two, pluralism is not just tolerance, but the active seeking of understanding across lines of difference; three, pluralism is not relativism, but the encounter of commitments which doesn’t require us to leave our differences; four, pluralism is based on dialogue.
Wear a mask.
— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) May 27, 2020
Trump says he wasn't criticizing Biden for wearing a mask then immediately criticizes the masked reporter who asked the question. pic.twitter.com/P2RLlzp41c
— The Recount (@therecount) May 26, 2020
T 3544 -43 YEARS .. !!! .. 'Amar Akbar Anthony' is estimated to have made Rs 7.25 crore in those days. Inflation-adjusted, it crosses the collections of Bahubali 2—The Conclusion today!
— Amitabh Bachchan (@SrBachchan) May 27, 2020
#43YearsOfAmarAkbarAnthony pic.twitter.com/u5IMiOV2zt
This woman called the police on a Black birdwatcher after he asked her to leash her dog in NYC’s Central Park, claiming that ‘an African American man is threatening my life’ pic.twitter.com/m41NhFD7No
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) May 27, 2020
100,000 dead Americans. One wrong president. pic.twitter.com/NTH4cT0Xum
— The Lincoln Project (@ProjectLincoln) May 27, 2020
Coronavirus News (113)
Trump’s seeding of a culture war over masks just got a lot less subtle stop a senseless and counterproductive culture war over the wearing of masks during the coronavirus outbreak. ........ “So with the masks, it’s going to be, really, a voluntary thing,” he said. “You can do it. You don’t have to do it. I’m choosing not to do it, but some people may want to do it, and that’s okay. It may be good. Probably will. They’re making a recommendation. It’s only a recommendation. It’s voluntary.” ........ Asymptomatic people can be carriers. The idea that a mask isn’t necessary because the potential wearer has no reason to believe they’re sick also ignores the benefit that masks could provide when it comes to contracting the virus oneself.
In explaining his decision, Trump suggested he was holding out in public because he didn’t want to allow reporters who have continually pressed him on the issue to win.
.......... “I wore one in this back area, but I didn’t want to give the press the pleasure of seeing it,” Trump said. ......... When it comes to wearing a mask, public health isn’t the only consideration. So, too, are pride and Trump’s appetite for provocation. ...... Whatever can be gained by a president setting an example for the American people, there are other considerations........ In the days before Trump’s Monday retweet, anecdotal images showed Memorial Day weekend revelers in places such as the Lake of the Ozarks flouting not just mask-wearing guidelines but also social-distancing guidelines. .........90 percent of Democrats thought Trump should wear a mask in public, but just 38 percent of Republicans said the same........ 87 percent of Democrats reported wearing one while leaving home in the previous week, while just 53 percent of Republicans did.
...... While 18 percent of Democratic-leaning voters said they never wore a mask, 46 percent of Republican-leaning voters said the same. ......... What’s most inexplicable, though, is thatwearing a mask is one of the simplest things to do — and something that could actually help when it comes to lifting those restrictions
. Masks help people reemerge in society without infecting one another"We now see a trend in an uptick in hospitalizations. It's a small uptick, but it is an uptick and it is unmistakable, and it is probably a result of reopening," says @ScottGottliebMD. "We are going to have to watch it--we expected this." pic.twitter.com/1BuRaksMaT— Squawk Box (@SquawkCNBC) May 26, 2020
WHO Media Briefing
The covid-19 lockdown has served its purpose. It’s time to end it. The objective of the lockdown was never to stop every American from getting covid-19, which is impossible; it was to buy time to learn about the virus and prevent our health-care system from being overwhelmed. ......... The Army Corps of Engineers spent $660 million to build emergency field hospitals across the country ......... “most of these facilities haven’t treated a single patient.” ....... in at least a dozen states there are now more coronavirus tests than there are people to take them, and Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo (D-N.Y.) recently said, “we have more sites and more testing capacity than we’re using.” ....... Those achievements have come at an enormous price.
In the past two months, almost 40 million Americans have lost their jobs — about a quarter of our working population.
One recent study suggested that 42 percent of those layoffs may be permanent. ........... The costs are not just in lost jobs, but in lost lives. Americans have been forced to put off care for non-covid-19 illnesses such as cancer and cardiac disease — forgoing screenings, surgeries, chemotherapy and emergency room visits. ..........we could see an additional 40,000 deaths due to suicides and drug overdoses among the jobless, as well as an additional 2 million people addicted to drugs.
........ the vast majority of covid victims are older Americans, like my mother, with underlying health conditions. We must continue to shelter and protect them. But for everyone else, especially young people, the risks of resuming activity are much lower.......... Parents uncomfortable sending their kids to school should be given the option of distance learning. But the vast majority of students should be allowed back in the classroom with appropriate social distancing precautions. .......... children will suffer a 9- to-12-month learning loss because of the lockdown. That will only worsen if it continues in the fall. ......... Michael Chertoff, chairman of ReOpen DC Advisory Group, has recommended that Washington, D.C., schools not fully reopen for in-person learning until there is a vaccine. That’s completely senseless......... Michael Chertoff, chairman of ReOpen DC Advisory Group, has recommended that Washington, D.C., schools not fully reopen for in-person learning until there is a vaccine. That’s completely senseless.Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Coronavirus News (112)
also countries where “overwork is the norm.”
........ workplace productivity and satisfaction go up under a shorter, more compressed schedule. ....... 64 percent of leaders of businesses with four-day workweeks saw an increase in staff productivity, while 77 percent of workers linked it to a better quality of life ....... before the pandemic, Karen Jansen, a researcher on organizational behavior in the U.K., estimated a major shift toward the shorter workweek wouldn’t happen before 2030. Now, she said,the coronavirus is “accelerating” that timeline
. ........ Much like remote work, four-day weeks, even if they gained widespread traction, would not likely be available to all workers evenly. There are different models for the shortened week, some of which envision the same output condensed into fewer hours while other simply imagine longer hours spread over fewer days. ......... The crisis has also amplified inherent inequalities between workers in formal jobs, with set contracts and hours, and those in the gig and informal economy. ........ the three-day weekend would become a “bubble” like remote work, encompassing a growing number of people and professions while excluding others....... women worldwide bear the brunt of child care and other domestic responsibilities under lockdowns and work-from-home orders, which exacerbate preexisting dynamics. In contrast, he argued, a four-day workweek could normalize a pattern in which people of all genders split their time more evenly between home and the workplace, removing an entrenched barrier to female professional advancement. ......... “You’re never going to get women at the top unless you get the guys out of the office,” Barnes said. “It makes it okay [for men] to spend time at home, to look after kids, to have care responsibilities.” ....... a mix of office and remote work moving forwardEARTH’S MAGNETIC FIELD IS MYSTERIOUSLY WEAKENING, CAUSING SATELLITES AND SPACECRAFT TO MALFUNCTION A localised region of weakness is 'developing vigorously', scientists warn ......... Scientists studying the phenomenon observed that an area known as the South Atlantic Anomaly has grown considerably in recent years, though the reason for it is not entirely clear. ....... the area of the anomaly dropped in strength by more than 8 per cent between 1970 and 2020. ....... The challenge now is to understand the processes in Earth's core driving theses changes ...... One possibility, according to the ESA, is that the weakening field is a sign that the Earth's magnetic field is about to reverse, whereby the North Pole and South Pole switch places. ....... The last time a "geomagnetic reversal" took place was 780,000 years ago, with some scientists claiming that the next one is long overdue. Typically, such events take place every 250,000 years. ......... the process is not an instantaneous one and could take tens of thousands of years to take place....... magnetic field observations from Swarm are providing exciting new insights into the scarcely understood processes of Earth's interior.
Coronavirus: Migrant Crisis is Due to Poor Planning, Not Poor State Capacity Some believe that the migrant crisis unleashed by India’s lockdown was inevitable. But the government’s own track record proves otherwise. It already has the infrastructure and capacity to respond, including several assets that are not currently being used. .........
Social media is awash with posts documenting the inhumane suffering of homebound migrant workers, many of whom are travelling hundreds of miles home on foot.
........ a failure of policy and have questioned the haste with which the government implemented the lockdown. .......... the government should have predicted the exodus ........ the disaster mitigation policy adopted by the government in the wake of Cyclone Fani in 2019. The government shifted more than a million people from low lying areas to cyclone shelters and ensured that there was minimal loss of human life. ..........The government feeds more than 100 million children through its midday meal program.
The infrastructure for this distribution of food is still in place but not currently in use, since most children are now at home. The government could have used the midday meal infrastructure and augmented it with other initiatives to ensure that all migrant workers were provided for in the cities. .......... Over the last few years, through the Sarv Shiksha Abhiyan, thousands of schools have been constructed. These schools – presently also closed – could have been used to increase the housing capacity of the existing shelter homes. ......... public transport systems (such as railways and buses) are not presently being utilised fully and could have been used to transport the migrants home after screening them. .......there is no coherent national plan
......... The reason for this lack of planning lies in political apathy and not in a lack of state capacity. ......... a large section of the Indian middle class, many of whom incorrectly believe that the government does not have the resources or tools to deal with the scale of the migrant crisis. ........India’s challenge is not one of poor state capacity but of low levels of empathy among many middle-class voters.
How COVID-19 Will Impact the Indian and Global Economies apart from its tragic human consequences, COVID-19 is likely to cost around $1 trillion to the global economy ........ COVID-19 will likely contract the global economy in 2020 by 2.5 per cent – the recessionary threshold for the world economy. ........ with the spread of COVID-19 having been fuelled by international migration and travel, globalisation may itself take a hit in the post-pandemic world. ...... Each day, countries get more restrictive, requiring more people to be quarantined upon arrival. ......... Unskilled and semi-skilled migrant labours are among the worst hit by the ongoing lockdown. It has tightened a job-scarce economy into a no-work economy – leading to the mass exodus of millions of daily wage workers from the big cities to the towns and villages...... Health of a population boosts the national economy through higher productivity and greater access to education and employment, which may otherwise be blocked by poor health. A growing health sector also provides gainful employment to many. By promoting mental health, we reduce conflict in society.........
Expenditure on healthcare includes expenditure on public health, family welfare, water supply and sanitation. India needs to spend more in these areas to create a resilient healthcare infrastructure and counter any potential future pandemics.
........... Cash transfer measures are set to benefit farmers, rural workers, poor pensioners, construction workers, low-income widowers and other marginalised people in the country. ....... The central bank has also permitted all lending institutions to allow a 3-month moratorium on the payment of instalments on term loans.Inter-Religious Harmony in India Amidst the Coronavirus there is an outbreak of anti-Muslim hate during the nationwide lockdown. ........ In Indore, in the second week of April, when Draupadi Bai Verma died, her relatives refused to touch her body out of fear of contracting coronavirus. In response, a group of ten Muslim neighbours arranged for her last rites and carried her body to the cremation ground. Abdul Rehman Sheikh, a Muslim who carried her bier, said, “This is the purpose of humanity, to serve each other.” In Bulandshahar, Uttar Pradesh, when Ravishankar died, his relatives similarly feared contracting coronavirus and didn’t turn up for his last rites. Ultimately, a group of Muslims carried his bier to the cremation ground, chanting Ram naam satya hai.
My daughter lives in Nashville & wore her mask to buy groceries. Guy yells at her: ‘Liberal pussy!’ Back story: she nearly died of H1N1. She was in the ICU for a week, on a ventilator for 3 days. She CANNOT get covid. The ignorance & hatred is so painful. She’s trying to survive.— rosanne cash (@rosannecash) May 26, 2020
Trump has shown more outrage in the last few days about Americans voting by mail during a pandemic than he has ever shown about Russian efforts to interfere with our elections.— Joyce Alene (@JoyceWhiteVance) May 26, 2020
The global pandemic is pushing over half a billion people into poverty. Meanwhile the 25 richest people on Earth have increased their wealth by $255 billion. We need international solidarity. We must address the grotesque level of wealth inequality that's getting worse every day.— Bernie Sanders (@BernieSanders) May 26, 2020
Cummings’ contempt for lockdown rules makes the public feel like fools | Fintan O’Toole https://t.co/uhrEmiWTWJ— Fintan O'Toole (@fotoole) May 26, 2020
Cummings’ contempt for lockdown rules makes the public feel like fools The ordinary treachery of saying one thing and doing another – there will be £350m extra every week for the NHS; there will never be a border in the Irish Sea – is mother’s milk to them. Perhaps because it is so habitual or because they are so used to getting away with it, their sense of how it works has become dulled. They missed the crucial fact that this time it’s different. This time it’s personal. ............ the rules for collective survival in a pandemic are not ironic. They are intimate. They are embodied. They are the detailed texture of the lives we live every day. ..........
To use the Blitz analogy that England apparently cannot escape, it’s fine to leave your lights on during the blackout if you’re an important person with documents to read.
..... an unpardonable snigger of elite condescension.Justice Gopala Gowda, former Supreme Court judge, writes in the @Freedom_Gazette: "Not only has the Court abdicated its judicial responsibility, but it has also demonstrated an unprecedented apathy & heartlessness to the plight of vulnerable citizens." https://t.co/pT4JcL0gC6
— Freedom Gazette (@Freedom_Gazette) May 26, 2020
Sunday, May 24, 2020
Coronavirus News (111)
“When it happens, it’s like you’re living in a nightmare and you can’t get out.”
......... Most people sickened by COVID-19 survive, but in serious cases, the experience is harrowing, the effects linger and the long-term health risks aren’t clear. .......... “Please, please, please take it seriously,” said Steve Soeffker, a 69-year-old McLeod County resident who spent 43 days in the hospital before returning home this month. .........Doctors don’t know whether COVID-19 survivors will maintain immunity against the virus down the road
......... there are questions about long-term issues with the lungs, kidneys and liver in serious cases ...........In the most serious cases, getting over COVID-19 is just the start of the struggle.
......... During her first night at Methodist Hospital, she couldn’t stop gasping for breath. ........“I had this moment of total dread that came over me,” she said, “as I realized I could possibly die.”
.......... Life moved slowly in April, with Bort surprised by her fatigue walking up stairs. Now, she takes daily walks around Lake of the Isles but doesn’t feel completely recovered. ........ “Two months later, I’m still out of breath — much more out of breath than I normally would be. So, I’m a little worried. … Usually by this time of the year, I’d be riding my bike 10 or 15 miles a day.” ....... After landing in the hospital, Goldblatt spent about three weeks in the ICU and his memories are the stuff ofpiercing nightmares and dark visions
. The distress is not unique to COVID-19 patients, doctors say, but a function of intensive care that can leave patients disoriented as they try to cope with disrupted sleep, heavy medications and a devastating illness. ........... “I thinkI was one of those people who was in complete denial — that that was never going to happen to me,” Goldblatt said of COVID-19. “And I have to tell you — it could, and it did.”
.......... ....Soeffker didn’t have a cough or fever when he went to bed one night in early April. Around 4 a.m.,his wife found him collapsed on the floor and gasping for air
. ......... “This COVID is real. A lot of people are thinking it’s not,” he said. “Yes, I’m sympathetic for the small businesses, sympathetic for the people who are laid off and are losing wages. But they’re in a position where they’re still alive, still functioning.” ....... “One of the most shocking parts of this illness is how quickly people can decline — go from just feeling a little short of breath to not able to breathe at all,” said Dr. Craig Marshall of Methodist Hospital. “It can happen very quickly, for some patients within six to eight hours.” ......... “I think everybody who has COVID —there’s this narrative that it’s just the flu. It’s not
,” he said. “One of my hopes is that we tell people: Hey, this is really serious. And here’s a reasonably well-educated doctor … who just didn’t understand how serious it was.”'The price you pay': Sweden's 'herd immunity' experiment backfires Unlike its Nordic neighbors, Sweden decided early on in the pandemic to forgo lockdown in the hope of achieving broad immunity to the coronavirus. While social distancing was promoted, the government allowed bars, restaurants, salons, gyms and schools to stay open. .........
Sweden's mortality rate is the highest in Europe.
........ "I think the mortality in Norway is something like ten-fold lower. That’s the real comparator." (Norway's daily death rate is less than .01 per 1 million people.) ........ Scientists estimate herd immunity for the coronavirus is reached when 70-90% of the population becomes immune to a virus, either by becoming infected or getting a protective vaccine. ....... only 7.3% had developed the antibodies needed to stave off the disease. ........ In Spain, for example, 5% of the population had developed antibodies as of May 14 .......... 2.5% of the U.S. population has been infected with the coronavirus. To possibly reach herd immunity, "you're going to have to get close to 100% of the population being antibody-positive" ....... we can keep doing non-pharmaceutical interventions like contact tracing, mask wearing and isolation quarantines, but also develop drugs that work better treating people who already have the infection so they don't require critical care in a hospital. ........Sweden’s government insists that it does not have a herd immunity strategy, but Swedish virolgist Lena Einhorn said that “they have denied it, but under their breaths they have acknowledged” the strategy
The pandemic is sending India's poor into the abyss Already rife with inequality, the pandemic has distributed suffering unequally among India's underclass ........ Risk of hunger, uncertainty of future employment, and poverty-related suicide are imminent threats for many Indians. It seems that
post-pandemic India has brought massive pain and suffering among people living in extreme poverty
, particularly disadvantaged caste and religious groups, transgender people, women, and rural residents......... 46.7% of those employed earn below $3.20 a day ........ Among 5 million people employed in sanitation and cleaning work, 90% come from lower castes (including a significant number of Dalit women). Higher caste women in urban areas also likely to hire Dalit women for household work. The loss of daily wage jobs puts lower castes in economically precarious situation. Their employment in essential service jobs such as sanitation leaves them vulnerable to coronavirus exposure. ......... They face an increased likelihood of contracting the coronavirus due to their disproportionate employment in essential services — a situation that may lead to further marginalization....... neoliberal reforms, which call for deregulatory fiscal policies and privatization, have remade Indian society to favor a small portion of the wealthy class. This small proportion of affluent Indians, who have chosen to live in gated communities, are in constant need of service work from the lower class-caste poor, who generally live in shanty slums. .......Usually, these burgeoning shanty slums are found in the rising upscale suburbs, albeit next to affluent gated high-rise buildings, in the large metropolis of Kolkata, Mumbai, Bangalore, New Delhi, and Chennai.
......... An example of high-rise buildings meeting the poverty-ridden dilapidated slums is clearly seen in Mumbai – the high-rises standing next to slums of Dharavi ........since the COVID-19 lockdown, tens and millions of migrant workers have been left unemployed.
........ The lockdown has also commenced a nonessential travel ban that includes trains, buses and modes of public transportation. Meanwhile, the slums are ideal conditions to spread diseases like COVID-19: defined by small quarters, close contact, shared bathrooms and narrow alleys, constructed slums are not a safe place to be in a pandemic. Often these slums lack basic amenities, such as running water, toilets, and food, which makes living there impossible for social distancing and isolating for amid COVID-19. ..........Amid agony, fear, and hunger, these repatriates — protesters and non-protesters — set out to walk tens or hundreds of miles back to these home villages.
........ Much of India's migrant population consists of women and children who live in shanty towns, generally built next to high rise buildings. ....... the COVID-19 situation has further aggravated the condition of victims of domestic violence, most of whom are women. Many women, like a 45-year old from the Indian city of Chennai who has lost her cooking job and has to contend with an unemployed husband, have seen their abusive relationships exacerbate. .......The economic insecurity and uncertainty due to job loss, coupled with an existing patriarchal mindset, is fueling the rise in domestic violence against women.
.......... the pandemic has further intensified anti-Muslim sentiment in India ......... "It isn't just Hindu nationalist politicians or mobs" blaming Muslims for COVID-19, he writes. "The country's respectable press have joined in too."Coronavirus News (111) https://t.co/ve5VYPKlN5 #coronavirus #COVID19Ontario #COVIDー19 #lockdown2020 #lockdownextension #pandemic #pandemia
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 24, 2020
Right Now America Is Looking At A Million Dead In Winter
A million dead just in winter. At least a million. That is not a million up to winter. That is not counting the 100,000 that have already died, and the next 100,000 that will surely die in the best of circumstances.
The million deaths through winter are avoidable. Nobody lacks any warning anymore. We already know what to do. These deaths can be avoided with or without a vaccine.
Those like Trump and Bolsanaro (twins?) offering a choice between an economy and deaths are demagogues offering a false choice. Saving lives is the best way to save the economy. Those that will kill people will also kill the economy.
Right Now America Is Looking At A Million Dead In Winter https://t.co/3xaYsrsyQE #coronavirusuk #coronavirusvaccine #coronavirusFacts #CoronaWarriors #Corona #CoronavirusLockdown #COVID19 #COVID #COVIDー19 #COVID19toronto #lockdownextension #lockdownhustle #pandemic #pandemia2020
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 24, 2020
Coronavirus News (110)
Why we might not get a coronavirus vaccine Politicians have become more cautious about immunisation prospects. They are right to be .......... while trials have been launched and manufacturing deals already signed – Oxford University is now recruiting 10,000 volunteers for the next phase of its research – ministers and their advisers have become noticeably more cautious in recent days. ............
“We can’t be sure we will get a vaccine.”
........ Vaccines are simple in principle but complex in practice. The ideal vaccine protects against infection, prevents its spread, and does so safely. But none of this is easily achieved, as vaccine timelines show. ........ More than 30 years after scientists isolated HIV, the virus that causes Aids, we have no vaccine. The dengue fever virus was identified in 1943, but the first vaccine was approved only last year, and even then amid concerns it made the infection worse in some people. The fastest vaccine ever developed was for mumps. It took four years. ..........coronaviruses do not tend to trigger long-lasting immunity
. About a quarter of common colds are caused by human coronaviruses, but the immune response fades so rapidly that people can become reinfected the next year. ........... Researchers at Oxford University recently analysed blood from recovered Covid-19 patients and found that levels of IgG antibodies – those responsible for longer-lasting immunity – rose steeply in the first month of infection but then began to fall again. ...........most people who recovered from Covid-19 without going into hospital did not make many killer antibodies against the virus.
......... If a vaccine only protects for a year, the virus will be with us for some time. ........ Some viruses, such as influenza, mutate so rapidly that vaccine developers have to release new formulations each year. The rapid evolution of HIV is a major reason we have no vaccine for the disease. ........ Unlike experimental drugs for the severely ill, the vaccine will be given to potentially billions of generally healthy people. .......... During the search for a Sars vaccine in 2004, scientists found that one candidate caused hepatitis in ferrets. Another serious concern is “antibody-induced enhancement” where the antibodies produced by a vaccine actually make future infections worse. The effect caused serious lung damage in animals given experimental vaccines for both Sars and Mers. .............. The US biotech firm Moderna reported antibody levels similar to those found in recovered patients in 25 people who received its vaccine. ....... Another vaccine from Oxford University did not stop monkeys contracting the virus, but did appear to prevent pneumonia, a major cause of death in coronavirus patients......... Coronavirus patients pass the virus on to three others, on average, but if two or more are immune, the outbreak will fizzle out. That is the best-case scenario. .........a vaccine that doesn’t stop the virus replicating can encourage resistant strains to evolve, making the vaccine redundant.
........ “If and when we have a vaccine, what you get is not rainbows and unicorns” ...... “If we are forced to choose a vaccine that gives only one year of protection, then we are doomed to have Covid become endemic, an infection that is always with us.” ......... “It will be harder to get rid of Covid than smallpox,” says Brilliant. With smallpox it was at least clear who was infected, whereas people with coronavirus can spread it without knowing. A thornier problem is thatas long as the infection rages in one country, all other nations are at risk
. ............ “Unless we have a vaccine available in unbelievable quantities that could be administered extraordinarily quickly in all communities in the world we will have gaps in our defences that the virus can continue to circulate in.” ........... the virus will “ping-pong back and forth in time and geography”. ....... some kind of global agreement must be hammered out now. “We should be demanding, now, a global conference on what we’re going to do when we get a vaccine, or if we don’t” ............ “If the process of getting a vaccine, testing it, proving it, manufacturing it, planning for its delivery, and building a vaccine programme all over the world, if that’s going to take as long as we think, then let’s fucking start planning it now.” ............. we will have to get used to extensive monitoring for infections backed up by swift outbreak containment. People must play their part too, by maintaining handwashing, physical distancing and avoiding gatherings, particularly in enclosed spaces. ......... Immediate treatment when symptoms come on could at least reduce the death rate. ........ all social distancing can be relaxed – but only if people wear masks in enclosed spaces such as on trains and at work, and that no food or drink are consumed at concerts and cinemas. ..........the diligent and correct use of reusable masks is the most important measure
Inflamed brains, toe rashes, strokes: Why COVID-19's weirdest symptoms are only emerging now These symptoms sound scary, but they should be expected. Here's what scientists know about the "new" effects of the coronavirus. ....... An infection can inflict serious damage inside your body in many different ways, and COVID-19 seems to use just about all of them. The coronavirus primarily attacks the lungs, which can cause pneumonia or even respiratory failure, and
in one of every five patients, it also leads to multiple organ failure
. ........... Every human body is unique, so a disease that strikes millions of people will yield some oddities. .........COVID-19 starts as a respiratory disease
. The virus invades cells in the nose, throat, and lungs and starts to replicate, causing flu-like symptoms that can progress to pneumonia and even punch holes in your lungs, leaving permanent scars. For many patients, that’s the worst of it. .........A cytokine storm can damage the liver or kidneys and result in multi-organ failure.
....... one in five COVID-19 patients experiencing some cardiac injury ........... If a virus attacks the lungs, they become less efficient at supplying oxygen to the bloodstream. An infection can also inflame the arteries, causing them to narrow and supply less blood to the organs, including the heart.The heart then responds by working harder to compensate, which can lead to cardiovascular distress
. ........... One unusual and as-yet unexplained symptom—even among young and otherwise healthy people—is myocarditis, a relatively rare condition in which inflammation weakens the heart muscle. ........the coronavirus may embed itself directly in the heart
. Viruses enter cells by looking for their favorite doorways—proteins called receptors. In the case of the coronavirus, scientists have noted that the heart possesses the same protein gateway of choice, called ACE-2, that SARS-CoV-2 uses to attack the lungs. ............ viruses such as chickenpox and HIV have been known to directly infect heart muscle, and research suggests that the coronavirus can invade the blood vessel lining. .......... has raised the question of whether COVID-19 should also be classified as a cardiovascular disease. ....... More than 160 years ago, a German physician named Rudolf Virchow detailed three reasons abnormal blood clots can occur. First, if the inner lining of blood vessels becomes injured, perhaps due to an infection, it can release proteins that promote clotting. Second, clots can form if the blood flow becomes stagnant, which sometimes happens when people in hospital beds are immobile for too long. Finally, vessels can develop a tendency to become cluttered with platelets or other circulating proteins that repair wounds—which typically happens with inherited diseases but can also be triggered by systemic inflammation. ............ all three of those are playing a role in COVID .........pre-existing cardiovascular disease correlates with severe COVID-19.
.......... It’s not clear why COVID-19’s clots are so tiny and are filling organs by the hundreds ........ Most of the strokes reported with COVID-19 have been “ischemic,” meaning a clot plugs one of the vessels supplying blood to the brain. Ischemic strokes are already common in general—with 690,000 cases in the U.S. per year—due to their tight correlation with cardiovascular conditions like atherosclerosis. If an ischemic stroke blocks the supply of oxygenated blood for too long, it can impair the area of the brain that lies downstream. That’s why the manifestations caused by the coronavirus can seem random—such as trouble speaking or seeing or walking. Some COVID-19 cases have also involved hemorrhagic stroke, which occurs when a weakened blood vessel ruptures and bleeds into the brain, compressing the surrounding brain tissue. ............ Reports have also linked COVID-19 to patients suffering from encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain, as well as a much rarer syndrome called Guillain–Barré, in which the body’s immune system attacks the nerves. In milder cases, encephalitis can cause flu-like symptoms; in more severe cases, it might bringseizures, paralysis, and confusion
............. When one of these viruses invades the nervous system, it can injure and inflame the brain either by directly killing cells or by inviting the immune system to do the job, akin to a cytokine storm. .......... One of the most recently discovered—and most inexplicable—signs of COVID-19 is a broad range of inflammatory symptoms that it seems to be provoking in the skin, including rashes, the painful red lesions that have come to be known as COVID toe, and the collection of symptoms in children that’s been labeled a “Kawasaki-like” syndrome. ............ with COVID-19, rashes take on so many different patterns that it’s hard to tell if any of them are unique to SARS-CoV-2 in the same way that itchy red bumps and blisters are a telltale sign of chickenpox. The situation is somystifying
that some experts wonder if the rashes seen in COVID-19 patients are just a coincidence. ......... In the meantime, researchers say, we should stay focused on maintaining the now standard practices to protect ourselves from COVID-19, includingwearing masks outside, meticulous handwashing, and careful social distancing
. “That’s going to be the answer,” Agus says, “whether this turns into one syndrome or four syndromes.”Coronavirus News (110) https://t.co/4tWIBiiksh #CoronavirusUSA #coronavirusvaccine #coronavirusFacts #CoronaWarriors #CoronavirusOutbreak #COVID19toronto #COVID #COVID19Ontario #lockDownSouthAfrica #LockdownExtended #lockdownhustle #pandemic #pandemia2020
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 24, 2020
Friday, May 22, 2020
Coronavirus News (109)
a picture is starting to emerge of a ferocious, unpredictable illness that can attack organ systems across the body
. ......... 14.3 percent of patients required dialysis, the process of removing excess water and toxins from the blood when the kidney can no longer take care of the process. ....... There was also a strong association between COVID-19 patients ending up on a ventilator and developing acute kidney failure. Among more than 1,000 patients on ventilators, 90 percent developed the serious condition.Why contact tracing may be a mess in America High caseloads, low testing, and American attitudes toward government authority could pose serious challenges for successful efforts to track and contain coronavirus cases. ....... Stubbornly high new infection levels in some areas, the continued shortage of tests, and American attitudes toward privacy could all hamstring the effectiveness of such programs. ........
The chief challenge with this coronavirus is its potential to spread exponentially
: absent containment measures, every infected person on average will infect two or three others, according to most estimates (although some studies find it could be higher). ........ If they successfully detected 90% of symptomatic cases and reached 90% of their contacts—and tested all of them regardless of whether they had symptoms—it could reduce transmissions by more than 45% .........as regions relax social distancing measures, the average number of contacts for infected patients could rise to closer to 20.
...... US tracing efforts will require 30 professionals for every 100,000 people (or more than 98,000 people nationwide). ........ They called on Congress to set up a 180,000-person contact tracing workforce that would cost the federal government some $12 billion. .......Move fast and test things
........ people are most infectious before and within five days of the onset of symptoms ......people with minimal or no warning signs like fevers and coughs are a major vector of the disease
............ Successful contact tracing efforts also require people to accept calls and heed advice from complete strangers...... Unfortunately, years of robocalls and telemarketing have conditioned many Americans to ignore calls from numbers they don’t recognize. ........ San Francisco’s contact tracers are finding that about 40% of potentially exposed contacts are Spanish-only speakers, many of them in crowded living situations. .......... Americans have already defied the orders of health officials in several prominent incidents, including assaults on store workers who asked people to wear masks, armed demonstrators protesting stay-at-home restrictions, and businesses that have reopened before their local government gave the go-ahead.5 summer books and other things to do at home
The Post-COVID-19 World Will Be Less Global and Less Urban The COVID-19 pandemic will reverse the trends of globalization and urbanization, increasing the distance between countries and among people. These changes will make for a safer and more resilient world, but one that is also less prosperous, stable and fulfilling ......... In retrospect, we will come to view the years right before the 2008 financial crisis as “peak globalization.” ......... What was a growing “anti-globalization” consensus is poised to crystalize into a “de-globalization” reality. .......... After coronavirus, people will be more fearful of crowded trains and buses, cafes and restaurants, theaters and stadiums, supermarkets and offices. Crowded spaces are the lifeblood of cities. But now crowds are seen as major health risks. ....... De-urbanization would harm economic growth because cities generate enormous scale economies and have proved to be remarkably effective incubators of creativity and innovation. ........
In addition to being more productive, cities also tend to be more environmentally sustainable.
.... Globalization and urbanization generate challenges we must confront, all the more so in a post-coronavirus world. The solution is to manage them, not to reverse them.The Pandemic Is Turbo-charging Government Innovation: Will It Stick? The trick for making these solutions stick, they say, is transitioning from a focus on modernization to
a culture of continuous innovation
. .......... persistent challenges like cybersecurity, healthcare, and the one we are all most concerned about right now: the COVID-19 pandemic and its many troubling repercussions ......... Challenges like these really bring into focus the many critical roles that government agencies play in our lives. The current environment underscores how important it is that our government operate with the latest innovations and capabilities in hand. Government leaders need data-derived insights at their disposal and advanced technology tools that allow them to move rapidly and collaboratively as their mission-focused workloads require. .......... The massive $2 trillion coronavirus aid package passed by Congress in March includes$340 billion in new government appropriations, much of which will go toward government telework, telehealth, cybersecurity, and network bandwidth initiatives
. .......... The National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence, a congressionally chartered, independent commission, is urging Congress to double federal research and development spending on artificial intelligence in fiscal 2021 and then double it again the following year. .........Innovations that are ubiquitous today, including the Internet, GPS, touchscreen display, smart phones, and voice-activated personal assistants, all stem from government investments.
........ the outdated technology and archaic business processes that are still embedded across the government. ......... Until recently, government agencies have been relatively slow in adopting emerging technologies and commercial best practices — cloud computing, artificial intelligence, robotic process automation (RPA), human-centered design, and customer experience, to name a few — that have been powering positive disruptions in the commercial sector for years. ......... They have tried to adapt commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) software to rigid, complex, decades-old internal business processes that are often rooted in law and shaped by highly prescriptive compliance regulations. ...... ......Emerging capabilities such as software-defined everything, virtualization, containerization, open source software, API connectivity, advanced encryption, advanced data visualization, robotic process automation (RPA), and machine learning have evolved in recent years to the point where commercial technologies today are exceedingly more adaptable to government needs and use cases. ........federal agencies throughout that period have been busy overhauling their outdated bureaucratic approaches
....... federal agencies correctly view cloud adoption as pivotal in their ability to leap-frog from being technology laggards to technology leaders. ........ today’s emerging and complex challenges, such as multi-domain operations in defense, public health, cybersecurity, and the transitioning economy. ....... Health and Human Services plans to employ AI, intelligent automation, blockchain, micro-services, machine learning, natural language processing, and RPA to support services like medication adherence, decentralized clinical trials, evidence management, outcomes-based pricing, and pharmaceutical supply chain visibility. ....... Technologies will constantly advance, so agencies need a different mindset that views innovation as a non-stop journey of continuous evolution and adaptationCoronavirus News (109) https://t.co/sc2McZCmGb #coronavirus #CoronaVirusVaccine #CoronaInPakistan #COVIDー19 #Lockdownextention #pandemia #pandemic
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 23, 2020
Amidst all the talk around lockdown relaxation and efforts to build a NEW “Feel Good” narrative, India’s #COVID situation is in fact WORSENING.
— Prashant Kishor (@PrashantKishor) May 22, 2020
Average daily cases, Positive case ratio and Fatality are at their HIGHEST levels and spread is growing FASTER than most countries👇🏼 pic.twitter.com/TRn85aQci5
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Coronavirus News (108)
What Xi knew: pressure builds on China’s leader his government now faces the most daunting set of economic and financial challenges since Deng Xiaoping began to steer the country out of the wreckage of the cultural revolution in 1979............. what he knew, what he did and what he didn’t do during a critical 13-day period preceding China’s acknowledgment on January 20 that coronavirus was highly contagious. ......... it is not yet clear whether “the Chinese economy can recover after this shock, especially after the expected restructuring of global supply chains and another escalation in US-China tensions”. ........ After largely disappearing from view in late January and early February, he finally showed up on the front lines of the battle against coronavirus on February 10 and has since led
the most effective long-term containment plan among the world’s most populous nations.
......... Mr Xi’s cause has been helped by the chaotic response to coronavirus in the US and parts of Europe. ......... “Then the virus spread across the world and death tolls were much higher elsewhere. People changed their minds partly because of what Xi did right, but more because of other countries’ failures.” ......... national health officials warned on January 14 in an internal meeting that China faced a “severe and complex public health event”, adding that “the risk of transmission and spread is high”. But Beijing did not make a public announcement until January 20......... Mr Xi’s disappearing act in late January and early February could indicate that even China’s most powerful leader since Mao Zedong was finding it difficult to get to the bottom of what was happening in Wuhan ...........“The small infection numbers outside Hubei are related to low testing rates,” says one Chinese doctor who asked not to be named. “We did not have many test sites outside Hubei. If we want to figure out the real infection rate, we need to conduct large-scale antibody testing to see how many people used to be infected.”
........ By contrast, the US response continues to vary depending on the approaches adopted by state governors, leading to multiple Wuhan-sized infection clusters and stubbornly high daily infection and fatality counts.Covid-19 will blight the prospects of a generation What a lousy time to graduate.
Coronavirus: AstraZeneca ready to supply potential vaccine in September Drugs giant AstraZeneca has announced it is ready to provide a potential new coronavirus vaccine from September. .......The firm said it had concluded deals to deliver at least 400 million doses of the vaccine, which it is developing with Oxford University........AstraZeneca said it was capable of producing one billion doses of the AZD1222 vaccine this year and next. ......... Initial trials are under way and AstraZeneca said it recognised that the vaccine might not work. ....... Scientists have warned that a coronavirus vaccine, if developed, might not confer full immunity, while Prime Minister Boris Johnson has warned that
a vaccine might never be found
....... Despite these reservations, intensive research continues, with about 80 groups around the world working on possible vaccines. ........ Specifically, it said it had received support of more than $1bn from the US Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) for the development, production and delivery of the vaccineCoronavirus: US health official warns of dangerous second wave a fresh outbreak would likely coincide with the flu season .......... It would put "unimaginable strain" on the US health care system ........
A post-mortem examination has revealed that a person who died at home on 6 February in Santa Clara county is now the first known fatality in the US.
..... the assault of the virus on our nation next winter will actually be even more difficult than the one we just went through".Coronavirus News (108) https://t.co/YYQdtIXugU #coronavirus #coronavirusghana #coronavirusInkenya #CoronavirusUSA #CoronaInPakistan #CoronavirusOutbreak #coronavirusuk #COVID2019 #Covid_19 #COVID #Lockdownextention #pandemia
— Paramendra Kumar Bhagat (@paramendra) May 22, 2020