CORONA Main Coronavirus thread

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=viJxW2oUi5o
9:44 min
Backlash after Trump falsely claims 99% of COVID-19 cases are "totally harmless"
•Jul 6, 2020


CBS News

President Trump is facing criticism for saying 99% of COVID-19 cases are "totally harmless," which is not true. CBS News' Natalie Brand joins CBSN with more on the president's comments and how the White House is responding.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8BirmRQ_58
26:26 min
Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins deliver a COVID-19 update (LIVE) | USA TODAY
•Streamed live 85 minutes ago

USA TODAY

Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, hold a briefing as coronavirus cases continue to surge in many states.

Several states are now adding far more coronavirus cases daily than the entirety of the European Union. Deaths in Florida, Arizona and Texas have been edging upward since late June. The U.S. has seen almost 2.9 million confirmed cases and more than 130,000 deaths, according to John Hopkins University data.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNdZivjZHIQ
12:31 min
Air Conditioning suspected to play major role in coronavirus spread | Covid-19 Special
•Jul 6, 2020


DW News Germany

After cooling systems and air conditioning were linked to a coronavirus outbreak at a German meat-processing plant, mayn people wonder about how safe air conditioning is. Does air conditioning help spread the coronavirus?

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View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8x9ggjGPk2w
15:38 min
Infection spikes in South Africa and India | Coronavirus Update
•Jul 6, 2020


DW News Germany

South Africa has reported a sharp rise in the number of coronavirus infections. Nearly 11,000 new cases were reported on Saturday. That is the country's biggest increase in a single day since the start of the pandemic. The government is urging people to respect social distancing and other measures to halt the spread of the virus. But that is proving very difficult for some communities. India has announced that it has nearly 700,000 coronavirus cases, making it the third-hardest-hit nation in the global pandemic after the United States and Brazil .

The number of infections in India is also expected to rise for several more weeks and experts predict the one million figure will be passed this month. The country's major cities are bearing the brunt of the pandemic.

Some other coronavirus developments: - Hundreds of scientists are calling for the World Health Organization to revise its recommendations on combatting the virus to focus on airborne transmission.

- Saudi Arabia has banned gatherings between those attending this year's Hajj, the annual Islamic pilgrimage, to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

- Ireland will ease quarantine restrictions on incoming travellers starting July 20 based on a 'green' list of countries with low infection rates.
 

rev_mike

Contributing Member
Just posted on Twitter.


NEW: #COVID19 cases continue to spread at alarming rates in some CA counties.

CA is now asking Colusa, Madera, Marin, Merced, Monterey & San Diego to close indoor operations for:

-Restaurants
-Wineries
-Movie theaters
-Zoos, museums
-Cardrooms

Bars must close ALL operations.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UmVfSRC9a8
52:04 min
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo holds a briefing on the coronavirus outbreak — 7/6/2020
•Streamed live 5 hours ago


CNBC Television


New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is holding a news conference Monday on the Covid-19 outbreak, which has infected more than 397,131 people across the state, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Last week, Cuomo said that New York City restaurants will not be allowed to reopen their indoor dining sections as the coronavirus outbreaks continue to grow in other states.

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View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=izQ4AK_SuWU
2:03min
U.S. coronavirus case top 2.8M as scientists claim WHO is downplaying the virus' airborne risk
•Jul 6, 2020


CNBC Television


A group of 239 scientists from 32 different countries are reportedly preparing to publish an open letter to the World Health Organization in the coming days, urging the United Nations health agency to update its recommendations for the coronavirus, The New York Times reported on Saturday. This comes as Florida and Texas faced a surge of coronavirus cases over the weekend. The U.S. has recorded the highest number of Covid-19 infections and fatalities.

 
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marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oF8UKGFwTUA
.52 min
Covid19-Like Virus Was Sent to Wuhan in 2013, The Sunday Times Reports
•Jul 6, 2020


Bloomberg QuickTake News

Virus samples sent to the Wuhan Institute of Virology seven years ago closely resemble Covid-19, according to a report in the Sunday Times that highlights unanswered questions about the origins of the global pandemic.

Scientists in 2013 sent frozen samples to the Wuhan lab from a bat-infested former copper mine in southwest China after six men who had been clearing out bat feces there contracted a severe pneumonia, the newspaper said.

Three of them died and the most likely cause was a coronavirus transmitted from a bat, the Sunday Times reported, citing a medic whose supervisor worked in the emergency department that treated the men. The same mine in Yunnan province was subsequently studied by Shi Zhengli, an expert in SARS-like coronaviruses of bat origins at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Shi, nicknamed “bat woman” for her expeditions in bat caves, described Covid-19 in a February 2020 paper, saying it was 96.2% similar to a coronavirus sample named RaTG13 obtained in Yunnan in 2013. The Sunday Times said RaTG13 is “almost certainly” the virus that was found in the abandoned mine.

The differences between the samples may still represent decades’ worth of evolutionary distance, according to dissenting scientists cited in the article. The Sunday Times said the Wuhan lab did not respond to its questions.

In May, the director of the Wuhan Institute of Virology said there was no live copy of the RaTG13 virus in the lab, so it would have been impossible for it to leak. There is no evidence the lab was the source of the global outbreak that began in Wuhan. But U.S. President Donald Trump claimed in May he’d seen proof of the theory, contradicting intelligence services.

 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9BuM2xGfjU
4:42 min
Houston's Covid-19 recovery leader breaks down Texas virus spike
•Jul 6, 2020


CNBC Television


Covid-19 cases are still on the upswing in certain parts of the United States, including Texas. Marvin Odum, Covid-19 recovery leader for the City of Houston and former Shell oil company chairman, joins "Squawk Box" to discuss Houston's efforts battling the virus.

 

Krayola

Veteran Member
Also, heard late last week locals saying that in fact Houston was getting filled up due to people from Mexico coming across the border for treatment.
At the beginning of this thread, me and a couple of other people predicted that illegals from south of the border would eventually stampede our hospitals.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
At the beginning of this thread, me and a couple of other people predicted that illegals from south of the border would eventually stampede our hospitals.
In Riverside Co. in CA, it was the American ex-pats living in Mexico, who caught the virus and returned to the US for treatment, that over-run the system.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYFKLVV7CBs
.16 min
Israel at the Height of a New Virus Offensive: Netanyahu
•Jul 5, 2020


Bloomberg Politics


Jul.05 -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the country is "at the height" of a new coronavirus offensive. There are currently 29,366 confirmed cases in Israel, including 330 fatalities, with as many as 1,100 new cases reported daily in the past week. He spoke at a press briefing Sunday in Jerusalem. (Translated excerpt)


 

Mixin

Veteran Member
Elkhart County residents will be required to wear masks beginning tomorrow. The officials seemed to express urgency in containing the spread of the virus but I'm not totally seeing why. Maybe it was the timing... cases started their decline just as the officials were making mask plans? The highest peak was on 6/17.

The whole pattern is a bit odd, imo. It looks like once it took off, it just went and didn't respond to closures or openings. Then cases just dropped off after June 17 and I don't see any reason for the decline.

Here are the opening stages:

Stage 1: March 23- May 3 (3/23 Thor and Winnebago suspended production), (4/28: 36 of 71 Greenleaf Health test positive)
Stage 2: May 4 - May 21 (5/4 or later Winnebago opened up Elkhart Co plants)
Stage 3: May 22 - June 11
Stage 4: June 12 - July 3 (6/21 Numbers spike, hospital capacity concerns), (6/30 Hospitals nearly overwhelmed)
Stage 4.5: July 4 - July 17
Stage 5: July 18 and beyond

Case numbers every 2 weeks:

20 cases Mar 31
105 Apr 15
281 cases April 29
609 May 15
1322 cases May 30 (cases stopped doubling here)
2158 June 15
3041 June 30 (mandatory mask announcement)

7.6 Elkhart Positive by Day.jpg
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Had a thought to see how Sweden is doing...


Data from:





Sweden's population is over 8.8 million.

For comparision, the Tampa Bay Metro Area, including Tampa, St. Petersburg and Clearwater, is about 3.1 million est.

Sweden has reported 73263 total cases, according to the above website.
They have reported 5465 deaths. Deaths as a percentage of reported cases, about 7.5%

Hillsborough County, including Tampa:
Total Cases: 14,677
Deaths: 158

Deaths as a percentage of reported cases in Tampa, just over 1%


Pinellas County, including St. Petersburg & Clearwater:
Total Cases: 8,759
Deaths: 199

Deaths as a percentage of reported cases in Pinellas County, about 2.2%


It appears we may be doing much better than Sweden, either in managing the care of the infected, or doing a much better job of testing and tallying cases.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
My daughter is a seventh grade teacher in CA. They were notified as parents that they had to choose to send their kids to a regular school day 5 days a week or distance learning.

As a teacher, the kids will stay in their cohort in a room at their same desk and the teachers will rotate among classrooms during the day. They may teach all the weeks classes in, say, English for a class for one day and rotate the next. (Not yet decided.) The teachers will also have to do the distance teaching for their assigned home students.

My daughter says that is too much. As a mother of 3, she can't do that. It takes too much prep time to do both types of classes and there is no additional pay. She is thinking of home schooling and taking on some remote tutoring jobs. It's really going to impact their income.

I think the kids who are distance learning should have separate teachers. Problem is they are hiring more janitorial staff and can't afford additional teachers.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
I believe the form of COVID-19 circling the globe since fall 2019 is a bio-weapon. But that's just my opinion. Here's another one. (I do agree with the last sentence, so I highlighted it). It's also possible the bio-weapon was created using this strain of virus, only tweaked to make it more insidious.



(fair use applies)

'Virus may have lain dormant across globe waiting for right conditions'
Sarah Knapton
July 06 2020 02:30 AM

Coronavirus may have lain dormant across the world and emerged when environmental conditions were right for it to thrive - rather than starting in China, an Oxford University expert believes.

Dr Tom Jefferson, senior associate tutor at the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at Oxford and visiting professor at Newcastle University, says there is growing evidence the virus was elsewhere before it emerged in Asia.

Last week, Spanish virologists announced they had found traces of Covid-19 in samples of waste water collected in March 2019, nine months before the disease was seen in China.

Italian scientists have also found evidence of the virus in sewage samples in Milan and Turin from mid-December, many weeks before the first case was detected, while experts have found traces in Brazil from November.

Dr Jefferson believes many viruses lie dormant throughout the globe and emerge when conditions are favourable. It also means they can vanish as quickly as they arrive.

"Where did SARS-1 go? It's just disappeared," he said. "So we have to think about these things. We need to start researching the ecology of the virus, understanding how it originates and mutates. We may be seeing a dormant virus that has been activated by environmental conditions. There was a case in the Falkland Islands in early February. Where did that come from?

"There was a cruise ship that went from South Georgia to Buenos Aires and the passengers were screened and then on day eight they got the first case. Was it in prepared food, defrosted and activated?

"Strange things like this happened with Spanish flu. In 1918, around 30pc of the population of Western Samoa died of Spanish flu and they hadn't had any communication with the outside world.

"The explanation could only be that these agents don't come or go anywhere. They are always here and something ignites them."

Dr Jefferson believes that the virus may be transmitted through the sewerage system or shared lavatory facilities, not just through droplets expelled by talking, coughing and sneezing.


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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Three quarters of people who live with a coronavirus sufferer may develop 'silent' immunity not detected by antibody tests, study finds
By Beezy Marsh
Published: 17:23 EDT, 6 July 2020 | Updated: 17:25 EDT, 6 July 2020

  • The number who have suffered Covid-19 may have been hugely underestimated
  • Tests are looking for antibodies in blood rather than the body’s ‘memory’ T cells
  • 6 out of 8 people living with Covid-19 sufferers tested negative for antibodies
  • They had suffered Covid-19 with mild symptoms, T cell immunity tests found

Up to three quarters of people in a household may develop ‘silent’ immunity to coronavirus when one is infected, a study has shown.

The number who have suffered Covid-19 may have been hugely underestimated because tests are looking for specific antibodies in blood rather than the body’s ‘memory’ T cells that fight infection, experts say.

Six out of eight of those living with someone who tested positive for Covid-19 showed negative results when tested for coronavirus antibodies in their blood, scientists found.

But when experts tested their blood samples for T cell immunity – part of the body’s deep defences to infection, from white blood cells in bone marrow – they found that they had in fact suffered Covid-19 with mild symptoms.


Some patients’ immune systems appear to be ‘split’ by their response to the virus so that those with no antibodies in their blood react at a deeper level with a T cell response, immunology experts said last night. This raises the prospect of new checks for coronavirus that work to detect T cells in a similar way to tests for tuberculosis – with the potential for one lab to process hundreds of patients and get effective results within two days.

It is currently estimated that up to 10 per cent of the population may have immunity to the virus, based on blood antibody tests, which detect antibodies generated by blood B cells.

T cells are the body’s big weapon – released from white blood cells in bone marrow to kill viruses when the immune system needs more help.

The latest study from Strasbourg University Hospital in France looked at seven families because their corona blood tests were unusual.

‘Our results suggest epidemiological data relying only on detection of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies may lead to a substantial underestimation of exposure to the virus,’ said researcher Professor Samira Fafi-Kremer.

The study involves a small sample and is yet to be peer reviewed but is being closely considered by immunologists. Professor Danny Altmann, of Imperial College and the British Society for Immunology, said there was growing evidence that Covid-19 immunity looked unusual, since some people were showing immunity from ‘memory’ T cells alone.

A normal response to a virus would be for antibodies in blood – from B cells – to also be present.

It means large numbers of those infected and who had mild symptoms may be reacting in a different way to the virus that leaves them ‘silently’ immune, because they cannot be diagnosed as having been exposed to Covid-19 by current tests.

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

States mandate masks, begin to shut down again as coronavirus cases soar and hospitalizations rise

Josh Partlow, Nick Miroff
July 6, 2020 at 6:07 p.m. EDT

The pandemic map of the United States burned bright red Monday, with the number of new coronavirus infections during the first six days of July nearing 300,000 as more states and cities moved to reimpose shutdown orders.

After an Independence Day weekend that attracted large crowds to fireworks displays and produced scenes of Americans drinking and partying without masks, health officials warned of hospitals running out of space and infection spreading rampantly. The United States is “still knee deep in the first wave” of the pandemic, Anthony S. Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Monday

Fauci noted that while Europe managed to drive infections down — and now is dealing with little blips as it reopens — U.S. communities “never came down to baseline and now are surging back up,” he said in an interview conducted on Twitter and Facebook with his boss, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins.

Despite President Trump’s claim that 99 percent of covid-19 cases are “harmless,” Arizona and Nevada have reported their highest numbers of coronavirus-related hospitalizations in recent days. The seven-day averages in 12 states hit new highs, with the biggest increases in West Virginia, Tennessee and Montana. The country’s rolling seven-day average of daily new cases hit a record high Monday — the 28th record-setting day in a row.

In Arizona, 89 percent of the state’s intensive care unit beds were full Monday morning, the state’s Department of Health announced, as the recently hard-hit state surpassed 100,000 cases.

In Miami-Dade County, authorities reversed course on a reopening plan, issuing an emergency order that shut down gyms, party venues and restaurants, with exceptions for takeout and delivery. That order will go into effect Wednesday. Florida has seen its caseload soar past 10,000 per day and 200,000 overall.

“We want to ensure that our hospitals continue to have the staffing necessary to save lives,” Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said in his announcement.

Gimenez said the spike has been driven by infections among 18- to 34-year-olds who have been gathering in congested places — indoors and out — without wearing masks and maintaining proper distancing.

“Contributing to the positives in that age group, the doctors have told me, were graduation parties, gatherings at restaurants that turned into packed parties in violation of the rules and street protests where people could not maintain social distancing and where not everyone was wearing facial coverings,” Gimenez said.

Despite the steep new rise in infections, the House and Senate have adjourned for a two-week recess, setting up a potential battle when they return over another pandemic relief package.

And more politicians continue to contract the virus. In Mississippi, where cases are rising, several lawmakers have tested positive, including the speaker of the State House of Representatives. Gov. Tate Reeves (R) wrote on Twitter he was “briefly in contact” with one of them, so he plans to isolate himself until he gets his own test results back. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (D) tweeted Monday evening that “COVID-19 has literally hit home. I have had NO symptoms and have tested positive.”

The United States has reported 2.9 million coronavirus cases to date, and at least 127,000 people have died of the virus nationwide. The United States has had more than twice as many reported deaths as any other country and accounts for nearly a quarter of all deaths attributed to the virus worldwide.

Some states imposed fresh restrictions on Monday in an attempt to tamp down rising case numbers and preserve hospital capacity.

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice (R) announced that face coverings will be mandatory inside buildings, and he asked residents to comply voluntarily. West Virginia hit an all-time peak of 130 new cases in one day on Sunday, putting its total at 3,442 cases on Monday.

“If you go to work in a building, I expect you to wear a mask as you enter work, and if you’re working in an area that is completely socially distanced, take your mask off,” Justice said during a briefing. “If you go to a drinking fountain, put your mask on. If you go into a retail business, then I expect you to wear a mask.”

Local ABC affiliate WCHS reported that Justice added that he had put off mandating masks but eventually decided “it is the very thing I want to do the most because I know in my heart if we don’t, we are going to have funeral after funeral.”

Universities, quickly approaching their fall semesters, also were grappling with how to provide an education without risking student health.

Harvard University announced Monday it will reopen with fewer than half of its undergraduates on campus, a sign of the extraordinary constraints colleges face across the country as they map out plans for the fall term. No more than 40 percent of Harvard’s undergrads will live at the Ivy League campus in Cambridge, Mass., when the school year begins, the university said. Most of them will be first-year students, who will get priority access to help them adjust to college life. All undergraduate courses will be taught remotely, the university said, no matter where the students are living. Tuition will remain the same.

Public health officials have been pleading with younger people to take the virus more seriously, as new cases among that demographic have driven spikes in several places. Fauci on Monday called on young people to realize that they are not “invulnerable to serious consequences” of the virus. Even though they may not get sick enough to end up in the hospital, they still could get “very sick” for weeks, he said. And by getting infected, he added, “they are propagating the outbreak” and might inadvertently infect someone vulnerable, with potentially fatal outcomes.

Though largely considered less vulnerable, young children have shown susceptibility as people try to return to their normal routines. The Texas Department of Health and Human Services reported Monday that at least 1,335 people have tested positive at child-care facilities, and about a third of the cases were children.

Trump and his campaign have increasingly argued that Americans need to continue to live their lives despite the pandemic. On Monday afternoon, Trump tweeted, in all caps, “SCHOOLS MUST OPEN IN THE FALL!!!”

Trump has played down the rise in cases, attributing it to expanded testing, and has recently emphasized that U.S. deaths have not spiked with new cases. He tweeted on Monday: “The Mortality Rate for the China Virus in the U.S. is just about the LOWEST IN THE WORLD!”

Other Republicans have struck a more serious tone. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) on Monday said: “This is not over.”

“We had hoped we’d be on the way to saying goodbye to this health-care pandemic. Clearly it is not over,” McConnell said at a news conference at a Louisville food bank. Public health officials in both parties have criticized the Trump administration for dismissing science and expertise in its handling of the pandemic. Dozens of former government scientists on Monday called for a science-based approach.

“Sidelining science has already cost lives, imperiled the safety of our loved ones, compromised our ability to safely reopen our businesses, schools, and places of worship, and endangered the health of our democracy itself,” wrote officials from the Trump, Obama and George W. Bush administrations.

Another group of more than 200 scientists from dozens of countries urged the World Health Organization to take more seriously the possibility of airborne-transmission of the virus, saying there is growing evidence that it can linger in the air indoors in small aerosol particles. More than 11.5 million cases have been reported worldwide.

Also on Monday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted an emergency use authorization for a rapid, point-of-care covid-19 diagnostic test that can yield results within 15 minutes, medical technology company Becton Dickinson announced.

The new antigen test that detects the presence of the virus will be used in conjunction with another diagnostic tool from the company that is in use in more than 25,000 hospitals, medical centers and retail pharmacies across the country.

Dave Hickey, president of Integrated Diagnostic Solutions for Becton Dickinson, said in a statement that the test will be a “game changer” for health-care workers and patients.

In May, the FDA issued an emergency approval for the first coronavirus antigen test that was made by Quidel Corp.

Fauci and Collins ended their 30 minute session on Monday with something of a pep talk.

“We will get through this,” Fauci said. “We have already suffered through a lot of pain, a lot of economic and personal pain and inconvenience.” He said “science will get us through this” by delivering drugs for early- and late-stage covid-19.

“Hang in there, it will end,” he said. “We promise you.”

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

US death toll surpasses 130,000; India's cases third-highest in world – as it happened

Helen Sullivan, Kevin Rawlinson, Lucy Campbell, Amy Walker and Damien Gayle
Mon 6 Jul 2020 19.06 EDT; updated

18:27

Brazilian president suffers symptoms – reports

Jair Bolsonaro, the far-right president of Brazil, is suffering Covid-19 symptoms and is awaiting the results of a test, according to CNN Brasil.

Bolsonaro, who has previously tested negative after people close to him were infected, has repeatedly dismissed the risks posed by the virus, even as his country’s suffering increased. Brazil is the second worst-hit nation in the world after the US, whose own rightwing president Donald Trump has also sought to play down the dangers posed by the pandemic.

18:05

Newly identified cases soared in California over the 4 July weekend, stressing some hospital systems and leading to the temporary closure of the state capitol building in Sacramento for deep cleaning, local officials have said.

The number of people hospitalised has increased by 50% over the past two weeks to about 5,800, according to the state governor Gavin Newsom.

The Reuters news agency reported that state and local records showed about a third of those hospitalised were in Los Angeles County, with about 630 confirmed and suspected virus patients requiring intensive care.

And 25% of the hospitalisations in the county in July were among patients aged between 18 and 40 years, health officials said, as new cases increasingly hit a younger population that may have been lax about safety precautions in recent weeks.

Further north, nearly 1,400 inmates at San Quentin state prison have contracted the virus, putting pressure on hospitals in Marin County, where the facility is located, Newsom said.

In all, 271,684 Californians have tested positive, including 11,529 in the past 24 hours, state records show. About 6,300 have died.

18:00

Egypt has reported 969 new cases the health ministry has said, the first drop below 1,000 registered daily since 27 May.

In total, 76,222 cases and 3,422 deaths have been reported, including 79 deaths on Monday, the ministry said.

Egypt reopened resorts to foreign tourists last week after tourism came to halt in March under measures to curb the epidemic. But Egypt was not on an initial “safe list” of 14 countries for resumption of non-essential travel to the EU, announced last week.

Tourism accounts for 5% of Egypt’s economic output, according to the government. But analysts put the figure as much as 15% if jobs indirectly related to the sector are included.

17:41

Brazil has suffered 620 more deaths and registered 20,229 additional cases over the last 24 hours, the country’s health ministry has said. The nation has now registered a total of 1,623,284 cases and 65,487 deaths attributable to the virus, Reuters has reported.

16:14

The US saw a 27% increase in new cases in the week to 5 July, compared to the previous seven days, with 24 states reporting positivity test rates above the level that the World Health Organization has flagged as concerning.

Nationally, 7.5% of diagnostic tests came back positive last week, up from 7% the prior week and 5% two weeks ago, according to a Reuters analysis of data from The Covid Tracking Project, a volunteer-run effort to track the outbreak.

The WHO considers a positivity rate above 5% to be a cause for concern because it suggests there are more cases in the community that have not yet been uncovered, Reuters has reported.


Deaths, which health experts say are a lagging indicator, continued to fall nationally to 3,447 people in the week ended 5 July. A handful of states, however, have reported increases in deaths for at least two straight weeks, including Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, Texas and Tennessee.

16:00

The state of the epidemic in the US is “really not good” and a “serious situation that we have to address immediately”, the top White House health official Dr Anthony Fauci has said.

The nation is still “knee-deep” in the first wave, having never got the case number as low as planned, Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a member of the White House coronavirus task force, said during a live internet interview with National Institutes of Health director Francis Collins.

It’s a serious situation that we have to address immediately.


Fauci said that he expects an eventual vaccine, now in development by several companies, to work well and provide protection at least for some period of time, but that it will not be infinite protection such as the vaccine for measles.


14:02

Summary

  • The US coronavirus death toll passed 130,000 following a massive surge of new cases that has put Donald Trump’s handling of the crisis under the microscope and derailed efforts to restart the economy. Cases reached almost three million, the highest tally in the world and double the infections reported in the second most-affected country, Brazil. New York’s governor Andrew Cuomo said the president was “enabling” the virus if he failed to acknowledge the severity of the situation
  • Israel reimposed certain restrictions after a surge in cases, to avoid a wider lockdown that could devastate the economy. Bars, nightclubs, gyms and event halls have been closed in Israel as restrictions are reimposed to combat a rise in infections. Restaurants, buses and synagogues will limit the number of entrants also.
  • Covid-19 cases in Qatar exceeded 100,000, as it recorded another 546 cases in the last 24 hours. With a population of about 2.8 million people, the Gulf state has one of the world’s highest per capita number of confirmed cases.
  • Flights between Greece and the UK will resume from 15 July. Greek government sources said the UK’s “greatly improved epidemiological data” had finally convinced the committee of scientists advising the prime minister to lift the ban, after it was initially extended for two weeks on 1 July.

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

The White House is reportedly hoping Americans 'will grow numb' to the COVID-19 death toll

11:05 a.m.

As new COVID-19 cases and deaths continue to rise in the United States, White House officials are reportedly crossing their fingers that Americans will simply get used to it.

President Trump's advisers are looking to "reframe" his coronavirus pandemic response, and they want to "convince Americans that they can live with the virus," with White House officials hoping "Americans will grow numb to the escalating death toll and learn to accept tens of thousands of new cases a day," The Washington Post reports. One senior administration official said Americans will have to "live with the virus being a threat," while a former official told the Post, "They're of the belief that people will get over it or if we stop highlighting it, the base will move on and the public will learn to accept 50,000 to 100,000 new cases a day."

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, recently said the U.S. could soon reach this shockingly high number of 100,000 new cases a day while also warning that the final death toll will be "very disturbing." The U.S. has reported almost 130,000 deaths from COVID-19 and has been setting records for the number of new cases per day.

NBC News similarly reports the White House is preparing a new message on COVID-19 that the country must "learn to live with it." Trump has faced a declining approval rating during the pandemic, with Bloomberg reporting on Monday that support for Trump "is slipping fastest in the 500 counties where the number of cases have been more than 28 coronavirus deaths per 100,000 people." Meanwhile, the Post reports that presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden's campaign plans to keep attacking Trump for his COVID-19 response, arguing that, as one adviser put it to the Post, "the country would be in a much different place today ... if Joe Biden had been the president in January."

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms contracts COVID-19
2 hours ago

ATLANTA (AP) — Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced Monday that she had tested positive for COVID-19.

The 50-year-old Democrat is among the women named as a potential vice-presidential running mate for presumptive presidential nominee Joe Biden.

“COVID-19 has literally hit home. I have had NO symptoms and have tested positive,” Bottoms tweeted.

She told MSNBC that she decided her family members should get tested again because her husband “literally has been sleeping since Thursday.” She said the only other symptoms she and her husband have been experienced are those similar to allergies they have.

“It leaves me for a loss for words because I think it really speaks to how contagious this virus is,” Bottoms told MSNBC. “We’ve taken all of the precautions that you can possibly take. We wear masks, we’re very thoughtful about washing our hands, I have no idea when and where we were exposed.”

Bottoms’ national profile has risen in recent months both as a mayor handling the coronavirus pandemic and amid the national reckoning on race that has followed a white Minneapolis police officer’s killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, on May 25.

A first-term mayor, Bottoms issued a firm plea for peaceful protest as demonstrators gathered on downtown streets after Floyd’s killing — and urged the protesters to get tested for COVID-19. She invoked Atlanta’s civil rights history and her personal experience as the mother of Black sons. She won plaudits from progressives after firing Atlanta officers for using excessive force during the protests.

She has also been noted for earlier criticizing Republican Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp on his slowness to order Georgians to shelter in place and his quickness to lift that order.

Bottoms was an early and vocal supporter of Biden, who has been considering Bottoms as his possible vice presidential running mate in his own presidential bid.

Violence in the city has grown worse since protesters burned down a fast food restaurant where a white officer fatally shot Rayshard Brooks after he seized a stun gun and ran. Armed people have been manning roadblocks at the site and an 8-year-old girl was shot dead near the site on Saturday. At the same time, some police officers have been refusing to answer calls, angry that the district attorney has charged officers in the Brooks shooting.

Atlanta police again broke up the roadblocks at the site Monday, but that wasn’t enough for Kemp, who said he was mobilizing up to 1,000 National Guard troops after a spike in shootings in Atlanta.

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Herman Cain progressing in COVID-19 recovery; prayers 'making a difference'
By Anugrah Kumar, Christian Post Contributor
Monday, July 06, 2020

Former Republican presidential candidate and businessman Herman Cain is still hospitalized with COVID-19 but “making progress” as prayers are “making a difference,” his team stated in an update Sunday.

“Herman wants to thank everyone for praying for him. It’s making a difference,” a post on Cain’s official Twitter account reads. “He’s still in the hospital but he’s making progress and we expect to hear more encouraging news as the week progresses.”

Cain’s staff urged supporters to keep the prayers “coming.”

“God is listening,” the tweet explains.

Update: Herman wants to thank everyone for praying for him. It's making a difference. He's still in the hospital but he's making progress and we expect to hear more encouraging news as the week progresses. So thank you, everyone, and keep them coming! God is listening.
— Herman Cain (@THEHermanCain) July 5, 2020

Cain is a business executive and Tea Party activist who ran for president of the United States in 2000 and 2012. He also ran for U.S. Senate in Georgia in 2004. He did not win in the primaries of any of those elections.

Last Thursday, it was announced that the 74-year-old Cain tested positive for coronavirus over a week after attending a rally for President Donald Trump. He is receiving treatment in an Atlanta-area hospital.

According to Cain’s Twitter account, it is unclear where he contracted the virus. Cain was notified last Monday that he tested positive for the virus. Within two days, he had to be admitted to the hospital.

“There is no way of knowing for sure how or where Mr. Cain contracted the coronavirus, but we do know he is a fighter who has beaten Stage 4 cancer,” a statement shared on Cain’s Twitter account stated. “With God’s help, we are confident he will make a quick and complete recovery.”

Dan Calabrese, the editor of HermanCain.com, said the team is thankful because Cain’s condition did not require him to use a respirator.

“That was probably the one detail we were praying about the most, and God was gracious,” Calabrese wrote in a blog post published on the website.

While Calabrese remained confident that Cain will recover, he noted how serious the virus is and called for prayers for his recovery.

“Let’s not sugarcoat it: COVID-19 is a horrible thing to experience, and while we are sure Herman will beat it just like he beats everything, he really needs prayer right now,” Calabrese urged. “Herman will be fine. We’re also confident of that. But please lift him up in your prayers, as well as his wife Gloria and their family for strength and encouragement in getting through this.”

Cain recently attended President Trump's campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where his team tweeted a photo of him with a group of supporters inside the arena. No one in the photo was wearing a mask.

Just hours before the event, six staff members at the site had tested positive for the virus. Two more staffers tested positive after returning to Washington, The Washington Post reported. Additionally, dozens of Secret Service agents on the trip were ordered to self-quarantine at home because two of the staff members who tested positive in Tulsa were Secret Service employees.

Calabrese noted that even though Cain also attended the rally in Tulsa, he could have gotten the virus from other places.

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Bolsonaro Undergoing Covid-19 Test After Showing Symptoms
Simone Iglesias and Murilo Fagundes (Bloomberg)
25 mins ago

Brazil’s President Jair Bolsonaro has undergone another test for Covid-19 after showing symptoms of the virus.

Bolsonaro said an exam showed his lungs are “clean” and that he would test for the coronavirus again. “But everything is fine,” he told supporters as he arrived at the residential palace, according to a video broadcast on a YouTube channel.

The presidential office confirmed Bolsonaro was tested Monday night at a Brasilia hospital and said results would be available on Tuesday. The president is currently in good health condition, according to a statement.

Bolsonaro had a light fever and is taking hydroxychloroquine, a medication he has been touting to combat the coronavirus but that so far has unproven efficacy against it, according to CNN Brasil.

Bolsonaro could be seen coughing during a Thursday broadcast on his social networks, when he sat next to six other people, none of whom wore a mask. Those included Regional Development Minister Rogerio Marinho and the chief executive officer of state-owned bank Caixa Economica Federal, Pedro Guimaraes. Since then, he has mingled with members of his administration and the general public, and had lunch with the U.S. ambassador to Brazil on Saturday.

It is not the first time Bolsonaro has been tested for Covid-19. In March, after multiple members of his delegation to a U.S. visit contracted the virus, he said he tested negative. Since the beginning of the pandemic, he has disobeyed several recommendations from the World Health Organization and experts to avoid contamination by the coronavirus, such as avoiding crowds, wearing face masks and maintaining social distance.

On June 25, he said during a Facebook live event that he thought he had already contracted the virus.

As of Monday, Brazil had 65,487 confirmed deaths from the virus and more than 1.62 million total cases.

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
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Hospitals approaching capacity as Miami closes restaurants
By ADRIANA GOMEZ LICON and LISA MARIE PANE
yesterday

Hospitals rapidly approached capacity across the Sunbelt, and the Miami area closed restaurants and gyms again because of the surging coronavirus Monday, as the U.S. emerged from a Fourth of July weekend of picnics, pool parties and beach outings that health officials fear could fuel the rapidly worsening outbreak.

The seesaw effect — restrictions lifted, then reimposed — has been seen around the country in recent weeks and is expected again after a holiday that saw crowds of people celebrating, many without masks.

“We were concerned before the weekend and remain concerned post-holiday, as anecdotal stories and observed behavior indicate that many continue to disregard important protective guidance,” said Heather Woolwine, a spokeswoman for the Medical University of South Carolina.

Confirmed cases are on the rise in 41 out of 50 states plus the District of Columbia, and the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus is increasing in 39 states.

Florida, which recorded an all-time high of 11,400 new cases Saturday and has seen its positive test rate lately reach more than 18%, has been hit especially hard, along with other Sunbelt states such as Arizona, California and Texas.

A virus outbreak in the California Legislature indefinitely delayed the state Assembly’s return to work from a scheduled summer recess. Five people including Assemblywoman Autumn Burke tested positive. Coronavirus hospitalizations in California have increased 56% in the past two weeks while the number of confirmed cases has jumped 53%.

In Miami-Dade County, population 2.7 million, Mayor Carlos Gimenez ordered the closing of restaurants and certain other indoor places, including vacation rentals, seven weeks after they were allowed to reopen. Beaches will reopen on Tuesday after being closed over the weekend.

“But if we see crowding and people not following the public health rules, I will be forced to close the beaches again,” the mayor warned.

Hospitalizations across the state have been ticking upward, with nearly 1,700 patients admitted in the past seven days compared with 1,200 the previous week. Five hospitals in the St. Petersburg area were out of intensive care unit beds, officials said. Miami’s Baptist Hospital had only four of its 88 ICU beds available.

“If we continue to increase at the pace we have been, we won’t have enough ventilators, enough rooms,” said Dr. David De La Zerda, ICU medical director and pulmonologist at Miami’s Jackson Memorial Hospital.

Officials in Texas also reported hospitals are in danger of being overwhelmed. Hospitalizations statewide surged past 8,000 for the first time over the weekend, a more than fourfold increase in the past month. Houston officials said intensive care units there have exceeded capacity.

Along the border with Mexico, two severely ill patients were flown hundreds of miles north to Dallas and San Antonio because hospitals in the Rio Grande Valley were full.

In Arizona, the number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 topped 3,200, a new high, and hospitals statewide were at 89% capacity. Confirmed cases surpassed 100,000, and more than half of those infected, or over 62,000, are under 44 years old, state health officials said.

As cases surge across the state, Katie Cameron said it appears some of her neighbors in Phoenix are in denial. The mother of two said she’s seen people tearing down caution tape meant to keep them off playground equipment in parks, large groups gathering to socialize and — most concerning — very few masks.

“I feel like people don’t care or don’t think its real,” Cameron said. “It’s kind of like ‘out of sight, out of mind’ or they are just lying to themselves because they don’t want to believe it.”

Health officials in South Carolina reported over 1,500 new cases Monday. If the numbers keep rising at their current rates, hospitals will probably have to adopt an emergency plan to add 3,000 more beds in places such as hotels and gyms, authorities said.

Alabama has been averaging about 1,000 new cases a day, two or three times what it was seeing in late April, when its stay-at-home order was lifted.

“We set a record for highs over the holiday weekend, and, of course, given the number of people who were out and about over the weekend celebrating, we are certainly concerned about what the next couple of weeks are going to look like as well,” said Scott Harris, Alabama’s health officer.

In West Virginia, Republican Gov. Jim Justice reversed course and ordered the wearing of face masks indoors, joining other state leaders around the country.

“I’m telling you, West Virginia, if we don’t do that and do this now, we’re going to be in a world of hurt,” he said, adding: “It’s not much of an inconvenience.”

The coronavirus is blamed for over a half-million deaths worldwide, including more than 130,000 in the U.S., according to the tally kept by Johns Hopkins University. The number of confirmed infections nationwide stood at 2.9 million, though the real number is believed to be 10 times higher.

New cases per day nationwide have hit record levels of well over 50,000.

Average deaths per day have fallen over the past two weeks from around 600 to about 510, in what experts say reflects advances in treatment and prevention as well as the large share of cases among young adults, who are more likely than older ones to survive COVID-19.

But deaths are considered a lagging indicator — that is, it takes time for people to get sick and die. And experts are worried the downward trend in deaths could reverse itself.

Meanwhile, three of the top U.S. medical organizations issued an open letter urging Americans to wear masks, social distance and wash hands often to help stop “the worst public health crisis in generations.”

The American Medical Association, American Nurses Association and American Hospital Association issued the plea in the absence of a mask-wearing order from Washington and said steps taken early on that helped slow the spread of COVID-19 “were too quickly abandoned.”

The White House again rejected calls for a nationwide order to wear face coverings, with White House chief of staff Mark Meadows saying on Fox News that it is a matter for governors and mayors to decide.

In New York, once the most lethal hot spot in the country, Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he was concerned about reports of large gatherings over the holiday weekend in New York City, on Fire Island and other places.

“I understand people are fatigued,” he said. “We’ve been doing this for 128 days. I get it. But it doesn’t change the facts, and we have to stay smart.”

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
In Florida, schools start in August, not September, so this is next month.



(fair use applies)


Florida Department of Education orders all its schools to reopen campuses in August after coronavirus closures
The emergency order is temporary and only applies to the fall semester

Bradford Betz
Published 2 hours ago

The Florida Department of Education issued an emergency order on Monday mandating that all of its schools must reopen for the fall semester, following months of closure due to the coronavirus.

The order, signed by Commissioner of Education Richard Corcoran, addresses all school boards and charter school governing boards. It says that all “brick and mortar schools” must reopen beginning in August at least five days per week and that they must follow the guidelines as set by the Florida Department of Health.

“Education is critical to the success of the state and to an individual, and extended school closures can impede the educational success of students, impact families’ well-being and limit many parents and guardians from returning to work,” wrote Corcoran in the order.

The department’s order further requires all schools that accept state scholarship money to submit a reopening plan that satisfies the state’s requirements.

The order from the Florida Department of Education follows President Trump’s tweet earlier in that day that, “SCHOOLS MUST OPEN IN THE FALL!!!”

Schools in nearly every state closed in March amid the worsening coronavirus pandemic. Most school districts provided online teaching for the remainder of the school year.

The emergency order from the Florida Department of Education is temporary, however, and will only last through the fall semester.

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
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Average age of new Florida COVID-19 cases only 21 as state’s infection rate continues to climb, governor says
By: Christopher Boyce, Sarah Wilson, and Cierra Putman
Updated: July 6, 2020 - 7:03 PM

THE VILLAGES, Fla. — The average age for those testing positive for COVID-19 in Florida is now only 21, Gov. Ron DeSantis said Monday in an update in The Villages.

He said the younger age of those testing positive is contributing to lower mortality rates from the virus across the state. The fatality rate in Florida is currently less than 2%.

DeSantis said the positivity rate for testing is going up, which is a sign that the virus is becoming more prevalent making things like social distancing and wearing a mask still important. The positivity rate is now near 15%, when it was previously as low as 2% in May.

DeSantis has stated that he doesn’t plan to issue a statewide mandate.

“There’s no need to really be fearful about it,” he said.

DeSantis said people age 65 and older should continue to avoid crowds and minimize contact with people outside of their home. He said the same applies to people with preexisting conditions such as diabetes, cystic fibrosis, asthma, kidney disease, obesity, heart conditions and sickle cell disease.

On Monday, Florida reported more than 6,300 new cases of the virus, which was down from over the weekend when the state hit a single-day record reporting more than 11,000 cases in 24 hours.

Reporters questioned the governor on when and if he may considering closing theme parks, as many have reopened and Walt Disney World’s reopening looms.

He said he is confident that Disney will provide a safe environment for guests.

“I think that where you start to see the spread is in social situations where people let their guard down,” DeSantis said. “Usually at like a private party or something like that.”

Today we’re in The Villages for a noon #coronavirus update from @GovRonDeSantis Earlier we learned the state reported 6,336 new #covid19 cases state wide. @WFTV pic.twitter.com/EHQJe2BWnU
— Cierra Putman WFTV (@CPutman_WFTV) July 6, 2020
.@GovRonDeSantis says people shouldn’t fear #coronavirus . But should take steps to stay healthy like social distancing, wear a mask ?? in public and wash ?? your hands frequently @WFTV #COVID19 #Florida pic.twitter.com/0l452FDgMu
— Cierra Putman WFTV (@CPutman_WFTV) July 6, 2020
Average age of new cases of #covid19 is 21! @GovRonDeSantis says that’s likely why the case fatality rate is low right now. It’s less than 2%. However, young people could spread #coronavirus to older more vulnerable populations @CPutman_WFTV pic.twitter.com/uPW7hg5jLh
— Cierra Putman WFTV (@CPutman_WFTV) July 6, 2020

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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
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Dr. Anthony Fauci says the average age of U.S. coronavirus patients has dropped by 15 years as Sun Belt states gets hit
Noah Higgins-Dunn, Will Feuer
Published Mon, Jul 6 20203:36 PM EDT | Updated 5 Hours Ago

Key Points

  • The average age of new coronavirus patients has dropped by roughly 15 years compared with only a few months ago, White House health advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said.
  • While young people are less likely to develop serious illnesses from Covid-19, Fauci warned that the virus could still “put them out of action for weeks at a time.”
  • Fauci said that the resurgence of cases in the U.S. is an extension of the outbreak first reported earlier this year, not a second wave.

The average age of new coronavirus patients has dropped by roughly 15 years compared with only a few months ago as the virus reignites in America’s Sun Belt, White House health advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Monday.

Fauci, director of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said during a Q&A discussion with Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, that the resurgence of cases in the U.S. is an extension of the outbreak first reported earlier this year, not a second wave.

“It’s a serious situation that we have to address immediately,” he said.

The U.S. has continued to push further beyond what some previously thought was its peak earlier this year, reporting thousands of new cases each day. States like Florida and Texas have recently reported daily infections in the thousands and growing hospitalizations.

Cases surged after some states rushed to reopen their economies in May. Many have since walked back their reopenings, reclosing bars and indoor dining at restaurants as many young people disregarded social distancing and face mask recommendations, officials say.

“The average age of people getting infected now is a decade and a half younger than it was a few months ago particularly when New York and New Orleans and Chicago were getting hit very badly,” Fauci said.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the median age of new Covid-19 patients in his state, which reported a record number of new cases over the holiday weekend, has reached a low of 33. By comparison, the median age of a newly diagnosed coronavirus patient in their 50s and 60s in March and April, he said at a news conference Monday.

“Now why is that important? Well, because this is a virus that does not affect all age groups equally. It’s much more lethal for people who are in their 80s and 90s than it is in your 20s and 30s,” DeSantis said.

The fatality rate is significantly lower among Gen Y and millennials, he said adding that many of those cases are asymptomatic. “Just because you’re 21 and you may not have significant symptoms that does not mean you can’t affect other people and I think that’s something that we’re concerned about,” he said.

While young people are less likely to develop serious illnesses from Covid-19, Fauci warned that the virus could still “put them out of action for weeks at a time.”

They should also remember that when they’re infected, there’s the likelihood that they could spread the disease to people who are at high risk of serious illness, he said.

“They could infect someone who infects someone, and then all of a sudden someone’s grandmother, grandfather or aunt who’s getting chemotherapy for breast cancer gets infected,” Fauci said. “You’re part of the propagation of the pandemic, so it’s your responsibility to yourself as well as to society to avoid infection.”

Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator, has previously warned that the virus poses a greater risk to those with underlying health conditions, such as diabetes and significant obesity, which are seen in every age group.

“We do know that we have people in the younger age groups with significant Type 1 diabetes and may also have individuals with significant obesity,” Birx said at a White House task force news conference on June 26. “We know that those are risk factors, so risk factors go with your comorbidity, not necessarily with your age.”

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