Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Wednesday CoronaBuzz, December 22, 2021: 40 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Wednesday CoronaBuzz, December 22, 2021: 40 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

There are now 12,027 covid-19 articles, all tagged up, at https://rbfirehose.com/category/covid-19/ . Indexing begins mostly on March 14, 2020 (there were a few things indexed before in ResearchBuzz.) Category-specific search form in the right column, an overview of how to search/monitor tags, search terms, and categories at http://researchbuzz.me/2015/06/23/introducing-the-researchbuzz-firehose-how-to-use-it/ . Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

SOCIETAL IMPACT

NewScientist: Covid-19 was the third leading cause of death in the US in 2020. “More than three million deaths were recorded in the US in 2020 – an increase of 500,000 from 2019. The coronavirus was responsible for more than 350,000 deaths in 2020, according to the CDC.”

Associated Press: As COVID fueled the drug crisis, Native Americans hit worst. “As the pandemic ravaged the country, deaths from drug overdoses surged by nearly 30%, climbing to a record high. The drug crisis has also diversified from an overwhelmingly white affliction to killing people of color with staggering speed. The death rate last year was highest among Native Americans, for whom COVID-19 piled yet more despair on communities already confronting generations of trauma, poverty, unemployment and underfunded health systems.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

ABC News: With pediatric COVID cases surging, millions of children remain unvaccinated. “Since the emergence of the delta variant, children have been a significant driving factor behind the nation’s latest coronavirus surges, accounting for about a quarter of the nation’s reported weekly COVID-19 cases. Since July, more than 3.3 million have tested positive for the virus, representing 1 in every 4 cases, according to data from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association. In addition, the U.S. has not seen a week with fewer than 100,000 new pediatric cases since early August.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

NBC News: ‘I am terrified right now’: Hospitalizations are again on the rise as Covid cases surge. “Hospitalizations around the nation have risen 39 percent from Nov. 1 to Tuesday, according to an NBC News analysis of data from the Department of Health and Human Services. The number of people with Covid has risen by 30 percent in the last two weeks, according to NBC News’ tally.”

The Oakland Press: Michigan hospitals ‘teetering’ under current COVID-19 surge. “Hospitals in southeast Michigan today are in worse shape than they were during the first surge of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020. With the holidays approaching and the unknowns about the Omicron variant, hospital administrators are concerned.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

The Wrap: Fox Scraps Times Square New Year’s Eve Telecast Due to Omicron Surge. “Fox will not be ringing in 2022 from Times Square. The network said on Tuesday that it has canceled its planned broadcast from New York City on New Year’s Eve due to the surge of the Omicron variant of COVID-19.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

MarketWatch: Biden administration to stockpile 4 million COVID-19 therapies by end January: report. “The administration of President Joe Biden plans to have 4 million various therapies to treat COVID-19 in its pandemic arsenal by the end of January, according to a Bloomberg report on Wednesday that cited sources. ”

The Guardian: First Thing: Biden seeks to rally the troops in Covid battle. “Half a billion free at-home coronavirus tests will be sent to the American public in the fight against Omicron, Joe Biden announced yesterday while pushing back against resistance to vaccine mandates by saying they are intended ‘not to control your life but to save your life'”.

CNN: FDA authorizes first pill to treat Covid-19. “The US Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday authorized Pfizer’s antiviral pill, Paxlovid, to treat Covid-19 in high-risk individuals age 12 and older who weigh at least 88 pounds. This is the first antiviral Covid-19 pill authorized for ill people to take at home, before they get sick enough to be hospitalized.”

CNN: Biden extends pause on student loan repayment through May 1. “President Joe Biden announced Wednesday he is extending the pause on student loan payments until May 1. The payments, which were set to restart on February 1, have been paused since the beginning of the pandemic. Biden pointed to the ongoing Covid-19 crisis in the country as the reason for the extension.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Reuters: Poland reports highest number of COVID-related deaths in fourth wave. “Poland reported 775 COVID-related deaths on Friday, the highest daily number in the fourth wave of the coronavirus pandemic, the data from the health ministry showed.”

New York Times: Israel will roll out a fourth dose of the vaccine.. “Israeli officials said Tuesday that the country will administer a fourth dose of the Covid-19 vaccine, in a bid to curb the rapid spread of the Omicron variant. Israel is believed to be the first country to offer a fourth round of doses.”

Reuters: Philippines cuts COVID-19 booster shot interval to three months. “The Philippines’ health ministry on Tuesday halved the wait time for a COVID-19 vaccine booster to three months to help prevent the spread of the more infectious Omicron variant. A growing list of countries, including South Korea, the United Kingdom, Thailand and Germany, are shortening the interval for boosters to try to stave off a new surge in infections.”

Reuters: Despite consumption hit, China to stand fast on tough COVID-19 curbs. “China’s strict COVID policy is weighing on consumption and rattling foreign firms, but its effectiveness and the imperative to maintain stability heading into a sensitive year mean Beijing will stick to its approach, experts say.”

Reuters: German health experts urge more COVID curbs as lockdown not ruled out. “German health experts said on Wednesday that new coronavirus curbs probably did not go far enough to keep the Omicron variant in check, as the country’s health minister said he had not ruled out a full lockdown if cases spiked. The measures, decided on Tuesday, include limits on private gatherings, closing clubs and discos and banning spectators at football matches and are set to be introduced from Dec. 28.”

Washington Post: While omicron explodes around the world, covid cases in Japan keep plummeting and no one knows exactly why. “As the omicron variant surges around the world, Japan’s overall coronavirus cases and deaths have been plummeting. And no one seems to know exactly why. Call it the hunt for a potential ‘X factor,’ such as genetics, that may explain the trend and inform how Japan could deal with the next wave. While the new highly transmissible omicron variant has appeared in the country and experts suspect there is already some community spread, the overall transmission rate of the virus and coronavirus-related deaths in Japan have remained low.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Delaware: DPH Launches QR Tool Giving Delawareans Convenient Access to Their COVID-19 Vaccine Record. “The digital COVID-19 vaccination card now includes the QR code and is available through the DelVAX Public Portal, a site where those who were vaccinated in Delaware can access their immunization records. When the person accesses their COVID-19 record they will be able to download a PDF version of it, which resembles a vaccine card and includes the QR Code. The image can then be saved to a phone gallery, or printed on paper.”

Washington Post: D.C. to require coronavirus vaccination to enter restaurants, gyms and other businesses. “D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) on Wednesday announced that patrons age 12 and older at many indoor venues, including restaurants, will be required to show proof of coronavirus vaccination to enter under new rules she plans to unveil next month.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

City of Chicago: City of Chicago Announces Vaccine Requirements for Restaurants, Bars, Gyms, and Other Indoor Public Places. “Today, Mayor Lori E. Lightfoot, the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH), and the Chicago Department of Business Affairs & Consumer Protection (BACP) announced that any individual 5 years of age or older will be required to show proof that they are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 to dine indoors, visit gyms, or enjoy entertainment venues where food or drink are being served. This new requirement goes into effect on January 3, 2022 and is in response to an alarming rise in COVID-19 cases both locally and nationally, driven in part by the Omicron variant, and is similar to requirements already in place in other large cities, including New York City and Los Angeles.”

Fox 6 Milwaukee: COVID vaccination agreement Milwaukee, police union. “The City of Milwaukee and the Milwaukee Police Association (MPA) have signed an agreement that requires union members to receive a COVID-19 vaccination, officials announced on Wednesday, Dec. 22.”

6 South Florida: Miami-Dade Expanding COVID-19 Sites, Bringing Back Masks in Buildings Amid Surge. “Miami-Dade is expanding COVID-19 sites and hours and bringing back mandatory masks in county buildings as the county deals with a surge in cases and high demand for testing ahead of the holidays, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Wednesday. Levine Cava said the county is hoping to open between three and five new sites and expanding hours at existing sites in response to the accelerated demand for testing. The new sites and hours will be announced on the county’s website.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Daily Herald: ‘I have changed’: A nurse suffering long-haul COVID-19 effects looks toward Christmas. “This is long COVID. You cannot see it. What you would see is just another middle-aged woman, overweight, slow, lazy even. A complainer with nothing to complain about. Two years ago, I would have been described as fun, energetic. Youthful even. That woman has disappeared. In her place is a knockoff version, shoddy and not meant to last. And for this counterfeit self, lockdown has never ended. She does not do anything inspiring or go anywhere of note, but for work, part-time now, and essential shopping. She is but a shell of her pre-COVID self, as drab and unadorned as the tree standing in the corner.”

SPORTS

Sports Illustrated: Jets Coach Robert Saleh Tests Positive for COVID-19. “Jets coach Robert Saleh has tested positive for COVID-19, the team announced Wednesday. Saleh is symptomatic, per the Jets, and the team says he is vaccinated.”

Sports Illustrated: ACC Adjusts COVID Policy Forfeiture Rule. “The league’s athletic directors unanimously voted Wednesday to adjust the forfeiture rule from the policy, effective immediately. Moving forward, if an ACC game among winter sport programs – including basketball – cannot be played due to COVID-19 issues with either team, it will be rescheduled, or declared a no contest if it cannot be rescheduled.”

K-12 EDUCATION

JournalStar: Teachers file class-action lawsuit against Peoria-area school districts over COVID rules. “Teachers in two Woodford County school districts are among plaintiffs in a lawsuit that seeks to end state COVID-19 mitigation efforts as an employment requirement. Attorney Thomas DeVore filed the lawsuit Monday in Sangamon County Circuit Court in Springfield. Defendants include Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, the Illinois Department of Public Health and the Illinois State Board of Education.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WTKR: UVA mandates COVID booster shot for spring semester. “The University of Virginia has announced students, faculty, and staff will be required to get a COVID-19 booster shot for the spring semester.”

New York Times: Another Surge in the Virus Has Colleges Fearing a Mental Health Crisis. “Colleges across the country are facing a mental health crisis, driven in part by the pandemic. After almost two years of remote schooling, restricted gatherings and constant testing, many students are anxious, socially isolated, depressed — and overwhelming mental health centers. At a few institutions, there has been a troubling spate of suicides. Now another swell of Covid cases, driven by the Omicron variant, threatens to make life on campus worse.”

HEALTH

Washington Post: Don’t feel ashamed for getting covid. “As two variants collide and states hit new records daily, breakthrough cases are becoming more normal and less of an exception; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns these cases are now ‘likely’ to occur. For many people who test positive during this latest surge, the virus is sparking yet another unpleasant feeling in an ordeal that’s churned out plenty: shame.”

Sky News: COVID infection reduces sperm quality for up to three months, study claims. Not peer-reviewed yet. “Men who become infected with coronavirus can suffer reduced sperm quality for up to three months, a new study has suggested. Research carried out on 120 men in Belgium by local academics showed that semen is ‘not infectious’ with COVID-19 and therefore cannot be transmitted through sexual contact.”

City AM: Mild or not: Omicron variant doubles risk of catching Covid aboard a plane. “Passengers are twice or even three times more likely to catch Covid-19 while flying since the emergence of Omicron according to a top medical adviser to airlines. Sitting in business class rather than the tightly packed economy section can reduce your chance of catching Covid-19 David Powell of the International Air Transport Association told Bloomberg.”

RESEARCH

Defense One: US Army Creates Single Vaccine Against All COVID & SARS Variants, Researchers Say. “Within weeks, scientists at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research expect to announce that they have developed a vaccine that is effective against COVID-19 and all its variants, even Omicron, as well as from previous SARS-origin viruses that have killed millions of people worldwide.”

Technology Networks: Researchers Pinpoint Indicators of Severe COVID. “In a study led by researchers at the Hull York Medical School and Department of Mathematics at the University of York, the scientists analysed blood samples from hospitalised Covid patients. They detected markers in the blood associated with patients becoming so ill they needed treatment in intensive care. The findings may lead to new ways for triaging and assessing the risk of Covid patients, relieving the pressure from hospitals during infection spikes.”

Bloomberg: Covid: Omicron has 80% lower risk of hospitalization, new study shows. “South Africans contracting Covid-19 in the current fourth wave of infections are 80% less likely to be hospitalized if they catch the omicron variant, compared with other strains, according to a study released by the National Institute for Communicable Diseases.”

OUTBREAKS

W42ST: Hell’s Kitchen Positive Tests Surge Over 550% — Latest City Data. “Hell’s Kitchen’s COVID-19 infection rate is trending up with an exponential curve as positive cases in the neighborhood increased by 578% since this time in November, according to city data released this afternoon.”

Local 10: Florida adds nearly 13,000 new COVID cases, largest jump since Sept. 11. “As the contagious omicron variant takes over as the dominant strain, Florida reported 12,915 new COVID-19 cases to the CDC from Monday, the state’s biggest single-day increase since Sept. 11. Over the past week, Florida is averaging 8,605 new cases per day, the CDC data shows, a significant spike after that number hovered below 2,000 from late October through early December.”

Akron Beacon Journal: Omicron variant helps fuel surge to record number of COVID-19 infections in Ohio since pandemic began. “The infections are skyrocketing as the omicron variant of the coronavirus spreads rapidly, particularly in Northeast Ohio. Omicron is now the second-most contagious known disease, behind only measles, according to a Cleveland doctor. Tuesday marked the highest number of new coronavirus infections in a single day in Ohio, with 12,502 additional cases reported.”

NBC New York: NJ COVID Cases Spike 42% in a Day as Cities Rush to Impose Masking, Close Schools. “New Jersey reported 9,711 new confirmed COVID-19 cases on Wednesday, the highest by far of the entire pandemic and a 42% increase from the day prior. The stunning surge puts in stark relief just how quickly the omicron variant is spreading in the state and the region. The old record, from mid-January, was nearly 3,000 cases lower than this new single-day mark.”

WRAL: Hundreds of COVID cases reported across NC nursing homes. “150 nursing homes and 66 residential care facilities are reporting a coronavirus outbreak. One of the worst in central North Carolina is at the Carolina Rehab Center of Cumberland County. 87 people have tested positive, most of them being residents. So far, two residents have died from the virus during the recent outbreak, according to data from the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

Department of Justice: College Football Player Arrested on Federal Charges of Orchestrating Fraudulent Scheme to Obtain COVID-Related Jobless Benefits. “A college football player was taken into custody this morning on federal charges alleging he orchestrated a scheme that fraudulently sought hundreds of thousands of dollars in COVID-related unemployment benefits. Abdul-Malik McClain, 22, who currently attends school in Jackson, Mississippi, surrendered to federal law enforcement this morning in Los Angeles before being arraigned this afternoon in United States District Court.”

OPINION

New York Times: Facts Alone Aren’t Going to Win Over the Unvaccinated. This Might.. “While small positive incentives such as free doughnuts or entries into statewide lottery programs may have motivated some people, those and similar methods don’t seem to motivate people to get vaccinated on a scale large enough to close the vaccination gap. The incentive that seems to work especially well is the employer vaccine mandate, a negative incentive.”

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December 23, 2021 at 01:18AM
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Indiana Housing, Colorado Inclusivity, James Webb Space Telescope, more: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, December 22, 2021

Indiana Housing, Colorado Inclusivity, James Webb Space Telescope, more: Wednesday ResearchBuzz, December 22, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority: Lt. Gov. Crouch, IHCDA unveil comprehensive dashboard to assist communities with housing inventory. “Lt. Gov. Suzanne Crouch, the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority (IHCDA) and partners from the Housing Working Group, which represents stakeholders from around the state, today released a housing dashboard that includes a statewide inventory of housing in Indiana…. Information can be compared county by county, including housing stock in Indiana by age, by price, by number of units in a structure, by number of bedrooms in a unit, and more.”

Colorado Sun: The Green Book helped Black travelers navigate the U.S. Now two women are creating a modern version in Colorado.. “Here’s how it works. Participants can rate businesses using a range of markers, including courtesy of staff, Americans With Disabilities Act compliance, sense of personal safety and gender-neutral bathrooms. These ratings are used to populate ‘inclusivity scores’ and to grade the store, restaurant or service provider on a scale of 1-5. Business owners who pay to participate receive a detailed report with suggestions and recommendations about how to make their establishments more inclusive.”

EVENTS

Space: How to watch NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope launch online in several languages on Christmas Eve. “The James Webb Space Telescope is the successor to NASA and Europe’s iconic Hubble Space Telescope. The next-generation capabilities of the upcoming observatory, paired with the laundry list of mission delays over the last several years, makes this a highly-anticipated event across the astronomical community.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Engadget: DuckDuckGo offers a first look at its desktop web browser. “DuckDuckGo has offered an early peek at its upcoming desktop app. In a blog post that recaps the company’s year, CEO Gabriel Weinberg looked toward the future as well. He said DuckDuckGo will bring the privacy protections the company is known for to the app. You can expect the speed and simplicity of its mobile app too.”

MakeUseOf: Mozilla Lists the Most Innovative Firefox Extensions of 2021. “Extensions are popular in the world of web browsers, and for a good reason. They are often a handy way to port over extra functionality into your browser. But not all extensions are the same, and Mozilla has revealed what it considers the most innovative ones of 2021.”

The Verge: Google Voice now lets you set custom rules for phone calls. “Google Voice now lets you create rules that dictate how the service responds to incoming calls from specific contacts. And yes, this includes having Google Voice automatically ignore certain contacts for you.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Reuters: China’s official Xinhua News Agency to issue digital photos as NFTs. “China’s state-owned news agency Xinhua said on Wednesday it will issue the country’s first collection of digital journalistic photos via blockchain-based non-fungible tokens (NFTs), ‘imprinting digital memories into the metaverse.'”

New York Times: How the Copycats Came for Clubhouse. “Downloads of the buzzy chat app dipped in the spring as pandemic lockdowns were lifted and new competition emerged, according to the data and analytics firm Sensor Tower. Major tech companies started similar audio platforms: Twitter rolled out Spaces, Facebook made an audio chat feature and Spotify introduced one called Greenroom. And some communities, like those focused on gaming and nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, gravitated to more established chat platforms like Discord, which offers audio features.”

CNBC: Google CEO addresses employee concerns about loss of ‘candor, honesty, humility and frankness’ by execs. “Google employees are pressing executives to bring back a part of the company’s culture that, in the past, made it a desirable place to work: candor. At a year-end all-hands meeting, held virtually earlier this month, CEO Sundar Pichai read aloud one of the most popular questions from employees, based on the company’s internal system called Dory, which allows staffers to post questions and upvote the ones they want addressed.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

CNET: Scientists follow ancient clues to reveal oldest social network. “Way, way, waaay before the invention of Facebook, Twitter and TikTok, researchers say, a social network once existed in Africa — and the striking revelation comes to us through a bunch of ostrich eggshell beads. Among the oldest ornaments ever made, dating back as much as 50,000 years, these neutral-toned, Cheerio-shaped beads, made of ostrich eggshells, are unique imprints of ancient times.”

Mashable: Emoji helped me find my voice in our new remote reality. “Beyond their necessity in a time where we live a lot of our lives online, emoji just make me happy. I enjoy scheming up new ways to use different emoji and watching it catch on within my circle of friends. Lately, I’ve been using 🧘‍♀️ after I say something particularly aggressive or obnoxious, meaning ‘I’m going to attempt to be chill now.'”

Gizmodo: TikTok Got More Traffic Than Freakin’ Google in 2021. “TikTok is truly unstoppable: The video-sharing platform just pushed Google aside to become the most popular website in the world, according to web performance and security company Cloudflare’s 2021 Year in Review internet traffic rankings.” Good morning, Internet…

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December 22, 2021 at 06:27PM
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Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Tuesday CoronaBuzz, December 21, 2021: 41 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Tuesday CoronaBuzz, December 21, 2021: 41 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – MEDICAL/HEALTH

Medical Xpress: Web-based version of researcher’s CARD game helps improve kids’ vaccination experience. “Anna Taddio, a professor in the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy and a senior associate scientist at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto, and her team have developed a web-based version of the CARD game (short for Comfort, Ask, Relax and Distract) she originally created to help kids receiving vaccines in school-based programs. The system addresses fear of needles through pain management and coping strategies. The new web-based version of the game is intended for younger kids who are currently being encouraged to get vaccinated.”

NEW RESOURCES – EDUCATION/ENTERTAINMENT

TimeOut New York: Broadway launches website to track what shows are playing. “As New York’s live entertainment world reacts to increasing concerns about a return wave of COVID, the Broadway League is taking action to keep audiences informed. The trade association has launched a new website… to help potential spectators track Broadway schedules week by week, with the most current information available on performance times and cancelations.”

UPDATES

Associated Press: Omicron sweeps across nation, now 73% of US COVID-19 cases. “Omicron has raced ahead of other variants and is now the dominant version of the coronavirus in the U.S. Federal health officials said Monday that omicron accounted for an estimated 73% of new infections last week.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Mashable: The best, worst, and weirdest pandemic TV moments of 2021. “Over the past two years, how and why COVID-19 is portrayed on screen has grown more and more interesting. Some flagrantly fictional worlds have bent to accommodate the real crisis, while their more realistic counterparts sidestepped the matter altogether. So how was the pandemic addressed on TV this year? Listed in no particular order, here are 12 note-worthy Covid moments from 2021 television.”

Associated Press: US population growth at lowest rate in pandemic’s 1st year. “The United States grew by only 0.1%, with an additional 392,665 added to the U.S. population from July 2020 to July 2021, bringing the nation’s count to 331.8 million people, according to population estimates released by the U.S. Census Bureau. The U.S. has been experiencing slow population growth for years but the pandemic exacerbated that trend. This past year was the first time since 1937 that the nation’s population grew by less than 1 million people.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

Associated Press: Thousands in Brussels protest renewed COVID-19 restrictions. “Thousands of peaceful protesters have demonstrated in Brussels for a third time against reinforced COVID-19 restrictions imposed by the Belgian government to counter a spike in infections as the omicron variant sweeps across Europe.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

KHN: As Hospitals Fill Up, Paramedics Spend More Time Moving Patients, Less on Emergencies. “The night after Thanksgiving, a small ambulance service that covers a huge swath of southwestern Colorado got a call that a patient needed an emergency transfer from the hospital in Gunnison to a larger one with an intensive care unit 65 miles away in Montrose.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

NPR: With omicron now dominant, depleted U.S. hospitals struggle to prepare for the worst. “America’s hospitals are in bad shape right now — overwhelmed and understaffed — just as the omicron variant of the coronavirus takes hold across the country and Americans begin traveling and socializing for the holidays.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

BBC: Davos business leaders’ event postponed over Omicron. “The elite annual gathering of business and political leaders at the World Economic Forum in Davos has been postponed due to the spread of Omicron. The meeting was due to take place in Switzerland from 17-21 January, but is now planned for ‘early summer’.”

Washington Post: ‘SNL’ scraps show and sends cast home amid coronavirus fears; Tom Hanks and Tina Fey pitch in. “In a first for ‘Saturday Night Live,’ hours before an episode was set to air, producers scrapped the planned show and sent most of the cast home.”

INSTITUTIONS

New York Times: Metropolitan Museum of Art Limits Attendance Amid Virus Surge. “The Metropolitan Museum of Art said Tuesday that it would limit attendance to roughly 10,000 visitors per day because of the highly infectious Omicron variant. During a normal holiday season, the museum would expect nearly twice as many visitors.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNBC: Walgreens limits at-home Covid tests to four per customer due to demand surge amid omicron fears. “Walgreens on Tuesday limited purchases of at-home Covid tests in its stores to four per customer as demand for tests surges ahead of the holidays and as the omicron variant spreads throughout the U.S.” Note to history: tests started selling out over the weekend and this is completely pointless.

Slate: I Pointed Out That Our Hosts Were Unvaccinated. Airbnb Deleted My Review.. “A couple of months ago, my father and I stayed at an Airbnb in Moab, Utah. On my way home, I wrote a five-star review of the experience, in which I described the breakfasts (hearty and home-cooked), the rooms (clean and comfortable), the location (quiet yet proximate to downtown), and our hosts (friendly and full of good advice). After much deliberation, I closed out my review with the following line: ‘At the time of our stay in October 2021, the hosts told us that they were not vaccinated against COVID-19.’ Four hours later, I received a message from Airbnb: My review had been removed because it ‘didn’t have enough relevant information to help the Airbnb community make informed booking decisions.’ ”

New York Times: Fox tightens its vaccine rule, removing a test-out option for N.Y.C. office workers.. “Fox Corporation, the owner of Fox News, told employees on Friday that those working in New York City would have to show proof they’d had at least one dose of the Covid vaccine by Dec. 27, removing the option to get tested weekly instead.”

NPR: SpaceX reports LA County’s highest number of workplace COVID-19 cases. “At least 132 employees at the SpaceX rocket factory near Los Angeles have tested positive for COVID-19, making it the site of the largest recent countywide workplace outbreak tracked by local health officials. According to a report released by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health on Monday, the Elon Musk-led company currently accounts for nearly 30% of workplace COVID-19 cases in the county.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

ABC News: Biden to announce plan to mail 500 million free rapid tests to Americans next month. “President Joe Biden will announce a plan on Tuesday to distribute 500 million free at-home rapid tests to Americans beginning in January as part of an attempt to double down on the spread of a transmissible variant that has hit the U.S. distressingly close to the holidays.”

CNN: Daily Covid-19 case numbers with Omicron ‘could exceed previous peaks,’ CDC warns. “The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns that the Omicron coronavirus variant could drive Covid-19 cases higher than ever before, according to modeling posted on the agency’s website this week.”

CNN: Secret Service accelerates crackdown on Covid-19 scams. “In nearly two years of the coronavirus pandemic, the US Secret Service has seized more than $1.2 billion in relief funds obtained by fraudsters. Now, the agency is stepping up its efforts to claw back the billions more that Covid-19-related fraud has cost the economy by tapping a senior official to work with law enforcement agencies across the country on the issue.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: WHO urges cancelling some holiday events over Omicron fears. “The World Health Organization has urged people to cancel some of their holiday plans to protect public health as the Omicron variant spreads globally. ‘An event cancelled is better than a life cancelled’ said WHO head Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, adding that ‘difficult decisions’ must be made.”

BBC: Covid: No new measures in England but we rule nothing out, says PM. “The government needs to ‘reserve the possibility’ of bringing in new Covid rules in England as cases of the Omicron variant surge before Christmas, the prime minister has said.”

IDEX Online: Covid Travel Bans Destroying Economy, says Botswana President. “Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi has slammed Covid travel restrictions newly imposed by Western nations, saying they are destroying his country’s economy. The USA, France, Germany, and the UK are among the countries that have banned flights to Botswana and elsewhere in southern Africa.”

AFP: EU secures extra 20 million Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine doses for Q1 2022. “The European Commission said today it had reached an agreement with BioNTech and Pfizer for an extra 20 million doses of their Covid-19 vaccine to be delivered to EU member states in the first quarter of 2022. These doses come on top of an already scheduled 195 million doses from BioNTech-Pfizer, bringing the total number of deliveries in the first quarter to 215 million, a commission statement said.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Washington Post: Gov. Larry Hogan tests positive for covid-19. “Gov. Larry Hogan, who is fully vaccinated and received a booster, has tested positive for the coronavirus, he announced Monday. Hogan said he received a positive rapid test on Monday as part of his regular testing routine. He said he was ‘feeling fine at the moment.'”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Gothamist: Adams Cancels Inauguration Plans In Face of COVID Surge. “Mayor-elect Eric Adams said Tuesday he will cancel his inauguration in the face of a startling rise in coronavirus infections driven largely by the omicron variant. Adams had originally intended to hold his inauguration indoors at Brooklyn’s Kings Theatre, bucking the tradition of having the ceremony outside on the steps of City Hall.”

Reuters: U.S. Cities Try New Way to Help the Poor: Give Them Money. “At least 16 cities and counties are handing out no-strings-attached payments to some low-income residents, a Reuters tally found. At least 31 other local governments plan to do so in the months ahead. That’s a departure from most U.S. anti-poverty programs, which provide benefits for specific needs like groceries or rent and require recipients to hold a job or look for work.”

City of Chicago: CDPH, Discovery Partners Institute Announce Citywide System to Monitor COVID-19 in Wastewater. “The Discovery Partners Institute (DPI) and the Chicago Department of Public Health (CDPH) today announced the citywide system to monitor the virus that causes COVID-19 and its variants in wastewater will continue for two years, leveraging $2.14 million in federal funding. SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is detectable in human waste nearly from the onset of infection, while symptoms may not appear for three to five days – or for some, not at all.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

American Society For Biochemistry And Molecular Biology: Why we are developing a patent-free COVID antiviral therapy. “In March 2020, we started COVID Moonshot, which we believe is the first open-science effort to develop an antiviral drug. Now we are close to bringing an oral antiviral that’s effective against SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes Covid-19) to the clinic, with no patent protection. As soon as the drug is approved, any drug manufacturer around the world can manufacture and sell it without needing to license it, thus driving prices down.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

BBC: Rafael Nadal tests positive for Covid-19 on return to Spain. “Rafael Nadal has tested positive for Covid-19 after returning home from the Mubadala World Tennis Championship in Abu Dhabi. The 20-time Grand Slam champion was beaten by Britain’s Andy Murray in the semi-finals of the exhibition event on Friday.”

Tone Deaf: Evanescence postpone tour amid “multiple” coronavirus cases. “Evanescence has announced they will be postponing their remaining tour dates until January after ‘multiple’ members of their crew tested positive for COVID.”

CNN: Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and family test positive for Covid. “Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, his wife, and their teenage son have tested positive for Covid-19, his office announced Tuesday. The Democratic governor said that he and his wife Gwen tested positive Monday night following a PCR test after initially testing negative for the virus earlier that morning.”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Al Jazeera: Iran’s top diplomat in Yemen dies of COVID-19. “Iran’s top diplomat in Yemen, Hassan Irloo, has passed away due to COVID-19, days after being flown to Tehran for treatment, officials said. Irloo, 63, was named last year as Iran’s ambassador to the areas of the war-torn country controlled by the Houthi rebels, which for seven years have been fighting a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia in support of Yemen’s internationally recognised government.”

SPORTS

Gothamist: Personal Foul: NFL Officials Allowed To Skip COVID Testing Line In Manhattan. “Employees of the NFL were allowed to skip the line at a COVID testing site listed as a state-partnered facility on Monday, a facility employee and league spokesperson confirmed, sparking outrage among the 100 or so people huddled in the cold who said they’d spent hours queued up for pre-scheduled appointments.”

K-12 EDUCATION

Chalkbeat: Omicron and schools: What we know now. “What is clear is that some school systems are already adjusting course, but most have not yet made big changes to their plans for schooling in January or in-person learning this week. Here’s what we know so far.”

BBC: How Covid deepened America’s teacher shortages. “The autumn school term that has just ended in the United States was marked by a shortage of teachers and support staff. The pandemic has heightened the long-running problem – with a huge spike in retirements and resignations.”

New York Times: Are Schools Ready for the Next Big Surge?. “Districts say they don’t want to close classrooms again. But the latest wave in Covid-19 cases could challenge the rickety infrastructure that has kept schools running this year.”

Americas Quarterly: With Schools Reopening, Latin America Surveys the Damage. “As schools gradually reopen around the world, two questions are at the front of educators’ minds: How much ground did students lose during more than 20 months of pandemic-imposed closures, and how can policymakers close the learning gap? In Latin America and the Caribbean, both questions are just starting to be answered. Schools in the region were closed for an average of 231 days prior to October 2021, longer than any other part of the world.”

RESEARCH

Massachusetts Department of Public Health: Breakthrough case review finds 97% of COVID-19 cases in vaccinated individuals don’t result in severe illness. “Today the Massachusetts Department of Public Health released a review of breakthrough COVID-19 cases in vaccinated Massachusetts residents and found nearly 97% of all breakthrough cases in the Commonwealth have not resulted in hospitalization or death. Additionally, the review found unvaccinated residents are five times more likely to become infected than fully vaccinated residents (two doses of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine or one dose of Johnson & Johnson) and unvaccinated residents are 31 times more likely to become infected than fully vaccinated residents who have received a booster.”

BBC: Omicron: South African scientists probe link between variants and untreated HIV. “South African scientists – hailed for their discovery of Omicron – are investigating the ‘highly plausible hypothesis’ that the emergence of new Covid-19 variants could be linked, in some cases, to mutations taking place inside infected people whose immune systems have already been weakened by other factors, including, though not limited to, untreated HIV.”

OUTBREAKS

Central Maine: How Maine lost control of coronavirus and became a national hot spot. “Maine had the country’s fourth-highest number of new cases per capita over the past week – a daily average of 78 per 100,000 people – a rate more than double the national average. The state also had the second-fastest rate of change – an increase of 148 percent over 14 days – after Connecticut, according to a national tracking database of statistics from state and local health agencies maintained by The New York Times.”

Associated Press: After reprieve, NYC is rattled by a stunning virus spike. “An omicron-variant-fueled wave of cases is washing over the nation’s most populous city, which served as a nightmarish test case for the country early in the pandemic. While health officials say there are important reasons why it’s not spring 2020 all over again, some Broadway shows have abruptly canceled performances, an indoor face mask mandate is back and testing is hard to come by.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

Reuters: Three arrested in Sicily for anti-vax COVID-19 jab scam. “Anti-vaccination holdouts in Sicily paid a nurse to give them fake COVID-19 jabs in order to obtain a health certificate that is mandatory for some professions, police said on Tuesday.”

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December 22, 2021 at 02:40AM
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Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, TikTok, Opera Browser, more: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, December 21, 2021

Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, TikTok, Opera Browser, more: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, December 21, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

University of Virginia: Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection Launches Book And Virtual Exhibition. “A new book and website tell the story of a small group of Aboriginal artists from Australia who changed the face of global art history – and the resources were produced by the only museum dedicated to Aboriginal Australian art in the United States, the University of Virginia’s Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Order your favorite TikTok recipes from TikTok Kitchens, starting in March. “Who had TikTok delivery on their 2021 bingo card? If you did, congratulations and please let me in on your fortune-telling secrets. On Friday, Virtual Dining Concepts announced it was partnering with the social video app to launch hundreds of delivery-only locations in 2022, according to Bloomberg.”

PRNewswire: Opera and Google renew search agreement (PRESS RELEASE). “Opera (NASDAQ:OPRA) today announced the renewal on substantially similar terms of the multi-year commercial agreement to distribute Google Search in Opera browsers. Opera has had a search distribution agreement with Google (NASDAQ: GOOGL) since 2001.”

USEFUL STUFF

Washington Post: The ultimate guide to secure passwords. “The password fatigue is real, but don’t let it stop you from making some small changes to protect your accounts, your wallet and your identity. Here are six easy things to do today.”

MakeUseOf: 7 Helpful Online Communities for Developers. “If you don’t interact much with fellow developers, programming can quickly become to feel like a solitary and boring activity. But joining developer communities can help you feel connected, keep up with the industry, and get support from other developers.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

The Verge: WSJ’s deep dive into eating disorder rabbit holes on TikTok explains a sudden policy change. “A troubling report from the Wall Street Journal digs into the personal experiences of young girls who were sent down rabbit holes of extreme weight loss challenges, purging techniques, and deadly diets through TikTok, contributing to the development of eating disorders, or making existing ones worse. The WSJ did its own experiment to see how TikTok’s algorithm can potentially promote this kind of harmful content — its findings may explain TikTok’s sudden decision to alter the way its video recommendation system operates.”

TechRadar: Eagle-eyed Redditor spots a flying Stealth Bomber on Google Maps. “Google Maps is home to a lot of unusual sights, from strange pentagrams in Kazakhstan to a parked UFO in Romania. But a Reddit user has just spotted one of the rarest ones yet: a flying stealth bomber.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Associated Press: Pentagon targets social media posts in new rules aimed at stopping rise of extremism among military ranks. “Warning that extremism in the ranks is increasing, Pentagon officials issued detailed new rules Monday prohibiting service members from actively engaging in extremist activities. The new guidelines come nearly a year after some current and former service members participated in the riot at the U.S. Capitol, triggering a broad department review.”

Bleeping Computer: Conti ransomware uses Log4j bug to hack VMware vCenter servers. “Conti ransomware operation is using the critical Log4Shell exploit to gain rapid access to internal VMware vCenter Server instances and encrypt virtual machines. The gang did not waste much time adopting the new attack vector and is the first ‘top-tier’ operation known to weaponize the Log4j vulnerability.”

Europol: Europol coordinates referral action targeting migrant smuggling from Belarus. “On 16 December, a total of 455 social media accounts facilitating the illegal immigration from Belarus to Europe have been targeted as a result of a large-scale referral action. Europol’s European Migrant Smuggling Centre (EMSC), together with the European Union Internet Referral Unit (EU IRU) within Europol’s European Counter Terrorism Centre (ECTC) coordinated the referral activity which involved law enforcement authorities from Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Poland and Germany.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

New York Times: Navigational Apps for the Blind Could Have a Broader Appeal. “Nearly every blind person has at least one story of getting lost or disoriented…. That may change, though, with the release of new apps specifically designed with pedestrians and accessibility in mind. Thanks to improvements in mapping technology and smartphone cameras, a number have emerged with features like indoor navigation, detailed descriptions of the surrounding environment and more warnings about obstacles.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Mashable: YouTuber breaks down how to timestamp a call using just the background hum. “If you were ever in any doubt as to just how mind-bogglingly impressive science can be, just watch this video of a linguistic expert time-stamping phone calls using the background hum on a line.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 21, 2021 at 11:24PM
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Monday, December 20, 2021

Bacterial Genes, Feedly, Google, more: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 20, 2021

Bacterial Genes, Feedly, Google, more: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, December 20, 2021
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

EMBL: Connecting the dots between bacterial genes around the world. “This database, created using publicly available data, contains more than 2 billion genes, 303 million of them dubbed unigenes. A unigene is a DNA sequence that scientists use during data analysis to represent a group of multiple almost-identical gene sequences that come from the same microbial species. These unigenes have been identified from 14 different environments, including human and animal bodies, as well as soil and water from different geographical locations. The resource aims to help the scientific community study various aspects of microbial planetary biology, such as similarities and differences between microbiomes found in distant locations or facing different environmental conditions.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

KnowTechie: How to follow sites without RSS feeds on Feedly. “If you’re already a Feedly user, you know the power of being able to create a personalized feed for your interests. Most blogs and other news sources already use RSS to integrate to Feedly, but what if you find one that doesn’t Well, now Feedly has a custom RSS Builder tool, so you can create your own feeds for websites that don’t have RSS.”

Search Engine Land: Google Search launches enhanced autocomplete with second column. “Google has officially launched a new enhanced autocomplete search suggestions that may include a second column of predictions, and provide easier access to content related to a search, a Google spokesperson confirmed with Search Engine Land.”

USEFUL STUFF

Motherboard: Which of These Notification Sounds Gives You the Most Anxiety?. “Busy Simulator is a web app that mimics the notification sounds for nine different platforms—Google Calendar, Slack, Microsoft Teams, Discord, Apple Mail, Outlook, iMessage, Google Chat, and Skype, plus a vibrating phone noise—to use when you need an excuse out of a meeting that is making you want to claw your eyes out.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

New York Times: Buying Influence: How China Manipulates Facebook and Twitter . “China’s government has unleashed a global online campaign to burnish its image and undercut accusations of human rights abuses. Much of the effort takes place in the shadows, behind the guise of bot networks that generate automatic posts and hard-to-trace online personas. Now, a new set of documents reviewed by The New York Times reveals in stark detail how Chinese officials tap private businesses to generate content on demand, draw followers, track critics and provide other services for information campaigns. That operation increasingly plays out on international platforms like Facebook and Twitter, which the Chinese government blocks at home.”

The Verge: Google still ran ads on climate denial, despite promising to stop. “Google has struggled to uphold its recent pledge to stop running ads on content that promotes climate change denial, according to a new report from the nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH).”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Wired: Google Warns That NSO Hacking Is On Par With Elite Nation-State Spies. “The company’s products have been so abused by its customers around the world that NSO Group now faces sanctions, high-profile lawsuits, and an uncertain future. But a new analysis of the spyware maker’s ForcedEntry iOS exploit—deployed in a number of targeted attacks against activists, dissidents, and journalists this year—comes with an even more fundamental warning: Private businesses can produce hacking tools that have the technical ingenuity and sophistication of the most elite government-backed development groups.”

FTC: FTC Launches Rulemaking to Combat Sharp Spike in Impersonation Fraud. “The Federal Trade Commission launched a rulemaking today aimed at combatting government and business impersonation fraud, a pernicious and prevalent problem that has grown worse during the pandemic. Impersonators use all methods of communication to trick their targets into trusting that they are the government or an established business and then trade on this trust to steal their identity or money.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Phys .org: Hate speech on social media is fueled by users’ shared moral concerns. “People whose moral beliefs and values align closely with other members of their online communities—including those on social networks Gab and Reddit—are more prone to radicalization, according to new USC research.”

ZDNet: Quantum computing: Now Rigetti explores qutrits as well as qubits. “US quantum computer outfit Rigetti Computing has announced the Aspen-M, an 80-qubit processor quantum computer that consists of two connected 40-qubit chips.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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December 21, 2021 at 01:51AM
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Monday CoronaBuzz, December 20, 2021: 74 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, December 20, 2021: 74 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Going back to five days a week until we get through this. Will index the 12,000th covid-related article for CoronaBuzz in the next day or so. Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside with a bunch of people. Much love.

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

The Daily Beast: Fox News Host Advises Viewers Against Boosters as COVID Rages. “As the Omicron variant rips through the country and New York City experiences a record surge in COVID-19 cases headed into the holidays, public health officials have one big message for all Americans over 16 years old: Get your booster right now. But Fox News viewers got a very different message when they tuned in to The Five on Friday afternoon. According to the channel’s self-described comedy host, you’re better off with ‘nature’s vaccination.'”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Washington Post: In Japan, back-to-back tragedies renew calls for boosting neglected mental health resources and education. “A pair of high-profile tragedies in Japan over the weekend — a deadly arson attack and the suicide of a pop star — have highlighted growing concerns about the country’s mental health crisis, which experts say has been exacerbated by isolation and anxiety during the pandemic. The back-to-back news stories renewed calls for more resources and education on mental health needs in Japan, which has seen a rise in suicides among youths and women amid the covid crisis.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

Deutsche Welle: Germany: Thousands protest against COVID measures across country. “Opponents of vaccinations and the German government’s coronavirus policies demonstrated in several German cities on Saturday. Several thousand people took to the streets in the northern port city of Hamburg, then marched in several blocks through the city center, police said. About 8,000 attendees were registered.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

New York Times: Doctors and Nurses Are ‘Living in a Constant Crisis’ as Covid Fills Hospitals. “The highly contagious Omicron variant arrives in the United States at a moment when there is little capacity left in hospitals, especially in the Midwest and Northeast, where case rates are the highest, and where many health care workers are still contending with the Delta variant. Some researchers are hopeful that Omicron may cause less severe disease than Delta, but health officials still worry that the new variant could send a medical system already under pressure to the breaking point.”

Kennebec Journal: Some hospital workers raise alarms over lack of dedicated COVID-19 paid sick time. “If workers get sick with COVID-19 and are unable to come into work, most state and many municipal and private-sector workers get paid COVID-19 sick time so they don’t have to use their regular sick time or vacation time for their time out of work. But some hospital workers in Maine are raising alarms that they are not getting such benefits even as they’re on the frontlines of the pandemic.”

Washington Post: Omicron and holidays unleash scramble for coronavirus tests across the U.S.. “Coronavirus testing was a breeze when J.D. Schroeder traveled to Abu Dhabi and Mexico this fall. Not so much at home in Pennsylvania when he felt sick Wednesday and found out he had been exposed. The mechanical engineer started looking for an over-the-counter rapid test because the earliest antigen test appointment he could find in his Pittsburgh-area community was almost a week away. Rite Aid would only let him order online. The closest CVS pharmacies were all out of stock. He nabbed the last box at a Walgreen’s, which came back positive.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: ‘Everywhere is full’: New COVID-19 surge is clogging Pennsylvania hospitals. “On Wednesday, Allegheny Health Network issued guidance to patients seeking medical attention to prevent long waits and backups at hospitals. The 14-hospital system advised patients to only seek care in an emergency room in cases of chest pain, stroke symptoms, difficulty breathing or other conditions that could be life threatening.”

KOMO News: Hospitals call for help amid spike in COVID cases. “On Friday, Ohio activated its National Guard to send more than 1,000 members to help overwhelmed hospitals. Right now, one in every five hospitalizations in the state is due to COVID-19. Maine is doing the same. The National Guard is now working with 10 hospitals that are understaffed. Pennsylvania is asking for FEMA’s help after hospitalizations jumped 66% in just one month. Medical response teams will be sent to the hardest-hit areas. Similar teams are already on the ground New Hampshire.”

Washington Post: Hits ‘keep coming’: Hospitals struggle as COVID beds fill. “Ohio became the latest state to summon the National Guard to help overwhelmed medical facilities. Experts in Nebraska warned that its hospitals soon may need to ration care. Medical officials in Kansas and Missouri are delaying surgeries, turning away transfers and desperately trying to hire traveling nurses, as cases double and triple in an eerie reminder of last year’s holiday season. ‘There is no medical school class that can prepare you for this level of death.’ said Dr. Jacqueline Pflaum-Carlson, an emergency medicine specialist at Henry Ford Health System in Detroit. ‘The hits just keep coming.'”

Click on Detroit: Sunday Read: Henry Ford Health officials say Michigan’s current COVID ‘crisis’ worse than a year ago . “‘Unfortunately, today, we are in as bad of a situation — in fact, worse — than we were a year ago, with respect to our numbers within the hospitals and across the hospitals in this state and in other states,’ said Dr. Adnan Munkarah, executive vice president and CCO of Henry Ford Health System….About 75-80% of Henry Ford’s hospitalizations due to COVID are in unvaccinated residents, and more than 85% of patients in the ICU or on ventilators for COVID are unvaccinated, according to Munkarah.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

Rolling Stone: Brett Eldredge, Billy Strings Cancel Shows as Omicron Variant Surges. “As the spread of the Omicron variant reignites fears about another wave of Covid outbreaks in the U.S., the ongoing pandemic continues to throw a wrench into the normal operations of touring artists in the country and Americana sphere. Billy Strings and Brett Eldredge both canceled shows this week — in Nashville and Chicago, respectively — due to positive Covid cases within their circles.”

ITV: Silent night: Some Christmas nativities cancelled due to coronavirus while others get creative. “Christmas nativities are a tradition many parents and grandparents have for the second year in a row missed out on. While the Government said school and nurseries could host festive shows this year, the rise in Covid cases means many have been cancelled or are being attended virtually.”

INSTITUTIONS

CNN: Zoom Santas are back and eager as ever. “Santa Bombing piggybacks on the runaway success of virtual Santa visits last year. Like the explosion in popularity for curbside dining options and Zoom itself, the sudden rise of Zoom Santas met a pandemic need. It offered families a safer alternative to the annual tradition of visiting Santa Claus at a mall amid a surge in Covid cases, and offered actors a chance to still earn a paycheck for Santa work over the holidays — in some cases far more money than with IRL Santa work.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

New York Times: Boeing joins other federal contractors in dropping its vaccine mandate.. “Boeing said on Friday that it had suspended a vaccination requirement for employees after a court blocked enforcement of an executive order by President Biden that instructed federal contractors to impose such mandates.”

Variety: Omicron Is Here and Hollywood Is Finally Taking Notice. “Social life in Hollywood had all but fully resumed in recent months, with cocktail parties for awards voters, splashy film premieres and power lunches five days a week. But things are changing rapidly as one agency and studio after another discovers breakthrough cases of COVID within its ranks.”

Washington Post: Pfizer to test a third dose of coronavirus vaccine in young children after two-dose regimen falls short. “The companies reported that two doses of the pediatric vaccine failed in 2-, 3- and 4-year-olds to trigger an immune response comparable to what was generated in teens and older adults. The vaccine did generate an adequate immune response in children 6 months to 2 years old. If three doses are successful at triggering a protective immune response, the companies expect to submit the data to regulators in the first half of next year.”

New York Times: Moderna says its booster significantly raises the level of antibodies to thwart Omicron.. “A booster shot of the Moderna coronavirus vaccine significantly raises the level of antibodies that can thwart the Omicron variant, the company announced on Monday. The news arrives as Omicron rapidly advances across the world, and most coronavirus vaccines seem unable to stave off infection from the highly contagious variant.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

BBC: US court reinstates Covid vaccine mandate for large US businesses. “A federal appeals court has reinstated a vaccine-or-testing mandate for large US businesses. The mandate will require workers at private companies with more than 100 employees to get fully vaccinated against Covid-19, or be tested weekly.”

CNN: Biden admin eyes a potentially stark shift in messaging around ending the pandemic. “Already, cases and hospitalizations are surging in some parts of the country, leading to a 31% increase in cases and a 20% increase in hospitalizations from two weeks ago. Yet Biden and his team have all but ruled out new lockdowns, and behind the scenes, administration officials have been debating how to shift public attention from the total number of cases — which appear likely to surge, even if many are mild — toward the number of severe infections that are overloading health systems and causing interruptions to normal life.”

CBS News: Two positive COVID tests on trip with Secretary of State Antony Blinken were not disclosed. “Three cases of COVID-19 upended Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s multi-nation trip this week — including two previously undisclosed cases among members of the Air Force flight crew. On Friday, the Pentagon confirmed the additional two positive cases among its personnel in response to inquiries from CBS News.”

Axios: Report: CDC overcounts millions of vaccinations. “The U.S. government has overcounted the number of Americans who are at least partly vaccinated against the coronavirus, Bloomberg reports. Why it matters: Millions more people than initially thought are unprotected as coronavirus infections, hospitalizations and deaths are rising across the country.”

NBC News: Biden to deliver Tuesday speech on omicron variant as Covid cases rise. “President Joe Biden will deliver a speech on Tuesday addressing the omicron variant and unveil new steps the administration is help communities in need of assistance, a White House official told NBC News on Saturday. Biden is expected to go beyond his already unveiled ‘Winter Plan’ with additional measures while ‘issuing a stark warning of what the winter will look like for Americans that choose to remain unvaccinated,’ the official said.”

The Guardian: Fauci: Omicron ‘raging through the world’ and travel increases Covid risks . “The Omicron variant of Covid-19 has ‘extraordinary spreading capabilities’, the US government’s top infectious diseases expert said on Sunday, warning that it is already ‘raging through the world’.”

Politico: ‘It is embarrassing’: CDC struggles to track Covid cases as Omicron looms. “Continuing gaps in the CDC’s data collection program, which almost two years into the pandemic still relies on state health departments who use a mix of often incompatible and outdated state systems to identify cases, impedes the nation’s understanding of where and how fast the virus is spreading, according to more than a dozen state and federal officials involved in tracking cases.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: Covid: Action needed to limit hospital admissions – Sage scientists. “More stringent restrictions need to be brought in very soon in England if ministers want to stop hospital admissions reaching 3,000 a day, the government’s scientific advisers say. The BBC has seen leaked minutes of a meeting of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies held on Thursday.”

BBC: Covid-19: Omicron spreading at lightning speed – French PM. “The Omicron variant is ‘spreading at lightning speed’ in Europe and will likely become dominant in France by the start of next year, French Prime Minister Jean Castex has warned. He spoke on Friday, hours before France imposed strict travel restrictions on those entering from the United Kingdom.”

BBC: Coronavirus: Hospitality venues in Ireland to close early. “The Irish cabinet has agreed that hospitality venues, cinemas and theatres should have a closing time of 20:00 to curb the spread of Covid-19. The measures will take effect from Monday, 20 December. The National Public Health Emergency Team (NPHET) had originally recommended a 17:00 cut off from Monday.”

Reuters: Dutch flock to shops before expected Christmas lockdown. ” The Dutch hit the shops on Saturday as they prepared for a Christmas lockdown that is expected to close all but essential stores from Sunday, as the health minister said authorities were ‘extremely worried’ about the Omicron variant of COVID-19.”

Washington Post: Highly vaccinated countries thought they were over the worst. Denmark says the pandemic’s toughest month is just beginning.. “As omicron drives a new phase of the pandemic, many are looking to Denmark — and particularly the government institute devoted to testing, surveillance and modeling — for warnings about what to expect. The emerging answer — even in this highly vaccinated, wealthy northern European country — is dire. For all the defenses built over the last year, the virus is about to sprint out of control, and scientists here expect a similar pattern in much of the world.”

KGMI: Canada reintroduces COVID PCR test entry requirement . “Canada’s government has announced they are reintroducing the requirement of pre-arrival COVID PCR tests for all travelers coming back into the country. The travel restriction will go into effect starting on Tuesday, December 21st, and will apply to everyone regardless of how long they’ve been out of the country.”

Associated Press: Iran says ambassador in Yemen has coronavirus, recalls him. ” Iran said Saturday it is recalling its ambassador in Yemen for medical treatment as he has been infected by the coronavirus. The Foreign Ministry said on its website that Ambassador Hassan Irloo was in need of urgent medical care after being infected for several days, and was en route to Iran.”

Ada Derana (Sri Lanka): Coronavirus: 18 more deaths, 430 new cases confirmed . “The Director General of Health Services has confirmed another 18 coronavirus related deaths for December 18, increasing the death toll in the country due to the virus pandemic to 14,752.”

Associated Press: Navajo Nation reports 40 new COVID-19 cases, 3 more deaths. “The Navajo Nation has reported 40 new confirmed COVID-19 cases and three additional deaths. The latest numbers released Saturday pushed the tribe’s total to 40,765 cases since the pandemic began with 1,576 known deaths.”

Associated Press: Israel to ban travel to US, Canada over omicron variant. ” Israeli ministers on Monday agreed to ban travel to the United States, Canada and eight other countries amid the rapid, global spread of the omicron variant. Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s office announced the decision following a Cabinet vote.”

STATE GOVERNMENT

Washington Post: Reinstating indoor mask mandate ‘on the table’ as coronavirus cases surge, Bowser says. “D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) on Friday said that reinstating the District’s indoor mask mandate is ‘on the table,’ among other measures, as the city sees its highest-ever daily numbers of coronavirus cases since the pandemic began. On Friday morning, Bowser implored eligible residents to get vaccinated, schedule their booster shots and reconsider going to social events in the coming weeks. While the vaccine has helped stymie deaths and hospitalizations, Bowser said, the highly transmissible omicron variant — which has now been detected throughout the region — is of particular concern.”

WJHG: DeSantis highlights new preventative monoclonal antibody treatment. “Governor Ron DeSantis announced a new monoclonal antibody therapy will be available to immunocompromised individuals at numerous health care provider locations in Florida. The treatment was developed by AstraZeneca and is authorized for moderately to severely immunocompromised individuals, such as cancer patients and transplant recipients.”

Gothamist: Ethics Board Orders Cuomo To Pay Back $5.1m In Book Profits. “Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has been ordered to pay $5.1 million to the state attorney general’s office after he made use of state resources to author a book on the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Route Fifty: Booster Mandates Are a Tough Call for States, Businesses. “More than a dozen universities, most of them in left-leaning states, have begun requiring booster shots for employees and students. But few if any states appear poised to add a booster requirement. And it’s unclear whether the federal vaccine rule mandating employers with more than 100 workers to require either vaccination or regular testing will expand beyond initial doses—if it’s upheld in court.”

Associated Press: Company backed by Conn. first lady to exit COVID testing. “A health care company whose investors include a venture capital firm run by Connecticut’s first lady will exit the COVID-19 testing business after questions were raised about contracts it received to run state testing sites. The CT Mirror reported Friday that Sema4, the company backed by Annie Lamont’s venture capital firm, has told public health officials and investors that it will leave COVID testing in mid-January and return to its core business, genomic testing.”

Governor of Louisiana: Two Governor’s Office Staffers Test Positive for COVID. “These staff members are at home in isolation, per guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Louisiana Department of Health. These vaccinated staff members are currently all doing well and the Governor’s office is following CDC guidance on contact tracing and testing. These people were close contacts of the Governor and he tested negative on Friday.”

Associated Press: California’s Employee Workplace Restrictions Revised For Covid-19. “The move Thursday was criticized by business groups and hailed by labor advocates. The revised rules require that vaccinated but asymptomatic workers who come in close contact with someone infected with the virus must wear masks and stay 6 feet (1.8 meters) from others for 14 days if they return to work.”

Associated Press: Federal probe sought on Alabama’s plan to use $400M in COVID funds to build prisons. “Nearly two dozen organizations have sent a letter asking the U.S. House Financial Services Committee to investigate Alabama’s plan to use $400 million in coronavirus pandemic relief funds to build two super-size prisons.”

Washington Post: States rushed to loosen alcohol laws in the pandemic. Heavy drinking went up, some studies say.. “The new rules include cocktails-to-go laws, which allow consumers to pick up mixed cocktails, beer or wine at their local pub or restaurant, and direct-to-consumer laws that allow grocery stores or liquor stores — and sometimes distillers, brewers or winemakers — to deliver alcoholic beverages directly to people’s homes…. But critics say expansion has come at the same time alcohol sales soared and drinking spiked. Studies have found higher rates of binge drinking and alcoholism, and some state coroners have reported a sharp increase in alcohol-related deaths during the pandemic.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

RTE: London declares ‘major incident’ to help Covid-hit hospitals. “London Mayor Sadiq Khan has declared a “major incident” to help the city’s hospitals cope with a surge in Covid-19 cases caused by the fast-spreading Omicron coronavirus variant. Mr Khan took the step, which allows for closer coordination between different public agencies, after Britain reported the largest 24-hour increase in the number of new cases yesterday since the pandemic began.”

Gothamist: As COVID Surges, An Adams Indoor Inauguration Takes On Public Health And Political Risks. “New York City has long had a history of quirky and unpredictable mayoral inaugurations — from Fiorello La Guardia, who decided to skip the festivities entirely and go straight to work, to John Lindsay, who was forced to cancel a celebratory five-borough tour due to a transit strike. But no previous mayor has had to contend with the unwelcome presence of COVID-19 on inauguration day, and as Eric Adams plans for an indoor ceremony on January 1, the surge in cases brought by the omicron and delta variants may throw the new mayor’s plans into a tailspin.”

NBC New York: NYC Still Offering Free Hotel Isolation for COVID-Positive New Yorkers. “After the pandemic struck last spring, New York City created the COVID-19 Hotel Room Isolation Program to provide free hotel rooms throughout New York City for up to 14 days for individuals who qualified. The city’s isolation program extends to New Yorkers who test positive or exhibit symptoms and live with someone who is vulnerable, share a bathroom, or can’t stay more than six feet from someone else.”

Houston Chronicle: Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner says he has COVID-19, plans to isolate. “Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner announced Friday he has COVID 19, putting him among a rising number of infections as the omicron strain of the virus begins to sweep the country.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

NBC News: Covid in Wuhan. Now she may not survive jail.. “In the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, when the Chinese government was trying to contain the initial outbreak, reporting by citizen journalists like Zhang [Zhan] questioned the scale of the crisis and the government’s response. But they worried their aggressive reporting wouldn’t be tolerated for long in a country where the news media is strictly controlled.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

Billboard: Queen’s Brian May Tests Positive for COVID-19: ‘The Shocking Day Finally Came’. “Queen guitarist Brian May has tested positive for COVID-19. The 74-year-old rock icon took to social media on Saturday (Dec. 18) to share the news with his fans.”

SPORTS

CBS Sports: NFL postponements: Raiders-Browns, Washington-Eagles, Seahawks-Rams games pushed back due to COVID-19 issues. “The NFL has postponed Saturday’s scheduled game between the Cleveland Browns and Las Vegas Raiders. The game will instead be played on Monday. Kickoff is slated for 5 p.m. ET and will air on NFL Network. Sunday’s Washington-Eagles and Seahawks-Rams games have been postponed as well and both will kick off on Tuesday at 7 p.m. ET. Those games will air on Fox and will also be available via NFL Sunday Ticket.”

ESPN: NBA discussing plan to require teams short-handed by COVID to sign additional replacement players, sources say. “In the wake of dozens of players being sidelined in the league’s health and safety protocols, and with looming concerns leaguewide about more games being halted, the NBA and National Basketball Players Association are discussing a plan that would require teams decimated by COVID to sign additional replacement players, league sources tell ESPN.”

Reuters: NHL announces enhanced COVID-19 measures amid rise in cases. “The National Hockey League has announced enhanced COVID-19 measures which include daily testing and restrictions amid the emergence of the Omicron variant and a recent increase in positive cases among teams, it said on Saturday.”

Washington State Department of Health: New COVID-19 safety guidance released after multi-county outbreak linked to high school wrestling tournaments. “The Washington State Department of Health (DOH), is updating the health and safety requirements for high contact indoor sports in the wake of a multi-school, multi-county outbreak. The outbreaks are linked to a series of wrestling tournaments held in early December and are linked to an estimated 200 COVID-19 cases. Genomic sequencing recently confirmed at least three cases are omicron.”

Texas Sports Nation: Rice postpones college basketball games due to COVID-19 issues. “Rice has postponed its men’s and women’s basketball games this weekend because of COVID-19 issues in the programs. The men were scheduled to host St. Thomas on Sunday, and the women were to play at No. 23 Texas A&M.”

CBS Sports: College basketball hit hard by COVID-19 cancellations: Memphis, UCLA among schools on pause due to outbreaks. “The latest significant news came Saturday morning when, less than 80 minutes before tip time, Memphis announced its game in Nashville vs. No. 18 Tennessee was off due to COVID protocols in Memphis’ program. The news followed the high-profile cancellations of Kentucky vs. Ohio State and North Carolina vs. UCLA in Saturday’s CBS Sports Classic.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

Michigan Daily: UMich to require booster shots on all campuses after first student omicron case identified in Ann Arbor. “In an email to the campus community Friday, University of Michigan President Mark Schlissel announced all Ann Arbor faculty, staff and students, including Michigan Medicine employees covered by the U-M vaccination policy, must receive a booster shot for COVID-19 by Feb. 4 or as soon as they are eligible to receive an additional dose. According to the University Record, all students, faculty and staff on the Flint and Dearborn campuses will also be required to receive a booster shot.”

WCVB: Harvard University shifting to remote learning for first 3 weeks of January due to COVID concerns. “Most students and staff at Harvard University will be learning and working remotely for the first three weeks of January due to COVID-19 concerns. In a message to the Harvard community, university leaders stated that the move was prompted by the rapid rise in COVID-19 cases locally and across the country, as well as the growing presence of the omicron coronavirus variant.”

HEALTH

New York Times: As Covid Surges, Experts Say U.S. Booster Effort Is Far Behind. “As the pandemic has surged toward its third year, shape-shifting into the contagious new Omicron variant and spiking dangerously in the Northeast, around the Great Lakes and in other parts of the country, health officials and epidemiologists are vehemently urging Americans to get vaccinated and boosted. But the going has been slow. Of American adults who are fully vaccinated and eligible for a booster shot, only about 30 percent have received one, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”

Georgia Public Broadcasting: How to get your teens or college-age kids to take omicron seriously. “‘Covid is becoming endemic,’ my son told me. ‘We’re all vaccinated and we’ve just got to live with it.’ And he’s not alone. Data from the COVID States Project shows many people have relaxed their behaviors and are taking fewer precautions compared to last spring. But, if apathy greets omicron at the door, the surge will put lots of people at risk — including older friends and relatives who are vaccinated. So, how best to communicate this to your kids?”

Washington Post: The pandemic could drive another national health crisis, GAO warns: covid-19 anxiety. “As if more than 800,000 deaths and 50 million covid-19 cases in the United States are not bad enough, the virus appears to be spawning a different health calamity. ‘The pandemic is potentially driving another national crisis related to its effects on behavioral health, with people experiencing new or exacerbated behavioral health symptoms or conditions.’ That’s the stark warning in the first paragraph of a letter to Congress in a new Government Accountability Office (GAO) report.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

Medical Xpress: Parents underestimate teens’ social media use during pandemic. “Parents’ and adolescents’ estimates of adolescent screen use during the first year of the pandemic differed significantly, according to a new study published in Academic Pediatrics. While parents estimated their children spent more total time using screens recreationally than their kids estimated, parents underestimated the amount of time spent specifically on social media and multi-player video games (versus texting, video chats, and other uses).”

RESEARCH

CTV News: Countries with national mask mandates had lower COVID-19 death rates, global study finds. “A study examining the association between face mask policies and a reduction in COVID-19 deaths found that countries that enacted national mask mandates at the beginning of the pandemic had significantly lower death rates per million people than countries that did not enforce any mask rules, which researchers say supports the use of face masks to prevent excess coronavirus deaths and should ‘be advised during airborne disease epidemics.'”

CNET: When can pets get the COVID vaccine?. “They’re man’s best friend (or good acquaintance, if you’re talking about a cat), and they might stick like glue to your side while you recover from the worst of illnesses, including COVID-19. But research throughout the pandemic has shown that pets and other animals can catch the coronavirus – according to the US Department of Agriculture more than 15 species of animals, including domestic pets and wild animals, have contracted COVID-19. So will your dog or cat be able to get a COVID vaccine?”

BBC: Trial begins of needle-free Covid vaccine targeting new variants. “A trial has begun of a new needle-free Covid-19 vaccine to protect against future variants of the virus. The vaccine, administered through a jet of air, has been developed by Prof Jonathan Heeney of Cambridge University and chief executive of DIOSynVax.”

The Ohio State University: How new COVID-19 variants are found. “When you become sick with COVID-19, you can’t easily tell which variant or strain of the SARS-CoV-2 virus is responsible for your symptoms. But, using what’s called genomic sequencing, scientists like me in genomic laboratories can determine the virus’ specific makeup.”

Foreign Policy: Why People Reject Vaccination—and How to Change Their Minds. “Anti-vaccination beliefs are highly dependent on cultural and social context. Here’s what worked in two United States-based studies.”

OUTBREAKS

ABC 7 NY: COVID News: New York sets new pandemic case record as testing demand soars. “With Christmas Eve just one week away, there is growing alarm over increasing COVID cases across the Tri-State region. Governor Kathy Hochul said that 21,027 positive test results were reported in New York state Thursday, setting a new single-day reporting record.”

NBC Chicago: COVID by the Numbers: Illinois Sets Single-Day High for New Coronavirus Cases in 2021. “The state of Illinois reported nearly 12,000 new cases of coronavirus in the last 24 hours, the largest single-day increase in new cases in more than a year. According to the latest figures from the Illinois Department of Public Health, the state recorded 11,858 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 in the last day.”

Bloomberg: COVID-19 ‘raging’ in New Jersey as leaders weigh next steps. “New Jersey reported back-to-back days of over 6,000 new confirmed cases on Thursday and Friday, as infections have dramatically spiked in recent weeks, state data shows. This time last month, the state was reporting under 2,000 daily new cases. The number of people hospitalized for COVID-19 has also been on the rise in the past month, from fewer than 700 in early November to over 1,700 currently, according to state data. COVID-19 patients in intensive care units and on ventilators are also up.”

Reuters: UK scientists suggest many more have Omicron coronavirus variant than reported. “Scientific advisors to Britain’s government said it was “almost certain” that hundreds of thousands of people were being infected with the Omicron coronavirus variant every day and hospital admissions were likely to surge.”

NBC News: Taylor Swift album party becomes superspreader event after nearly 100 test positive for Covid. “A Taylor Swift album party in Sydney, Australia, appears to have been a superspreader event, with authorities issuing an urgent warning after the party was connected to nearly 100 Covid cases. In a public health alert issued on Thursday, the New South Wales Ministry of Health said it had been notified of a ‘venue of concern’ in Sydney connected to at least 97 confirmed cases of Covid-19.”

OPINION

Esquire: It’s a Miracle Anyone Survived Trump’s Meat-Headed Covid Response. “One of the least important problems with El Caudillo del Mar-A-Lago is that he is a complete political maladroit who surrounded himself with other complete political maladroits. Not to be crass, but the pandemic was a golden opportunity for him to demonstrate smart, tough political leadership and, not incidentally, guarantee his election to a second term. Not only did this not occur to him, apparently, it didn’t occur to anyone around him, either.”

New York Times: What Our Omicron Future Should Look Like . “Public acceptance of Covid disruptions, like business and school closings, has waned. Combine that with a highly infectious variant, and policymakers are left with a limited number of options. But they are not helpless. President Biden’s Covid-19 address planned for Tuesday must lay out how the federal government will support states in reducing severe illness and death, while maintaining the public’s resolve to follow basic Covid-19 control measures.”

POLITICS

Politico Congress Minutes: Long testing lines, fresh fears but no new masks amid rising cases: Omicron has landed on Capitol Hill. . “Cases are at all-time highs in the Washington, D.C. area, but Senate Democrats aren’t calling for the chamber to require masking. Even as they express frustration with maskless GOP colleagues, they’re framing masking as a personal responsibility to protect themselves and others from the Omicron variant of Covid-19. They aren’t calling for major new rules — nor would Republicans likely accept them willingly.”

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December 20, 2021 at 11:09PM
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