Tuesday, January 11, 2022

Cannabis Research, DeeBeeGee’s Virtual Black Doll Museum, Indiana Floodplains, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, January 11, 2022

Cannabis Research, DeeBeeGee’s Virtual Black Doll Museum, Indiana Floodplains, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, January 11, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Oregon Health & Science University: Cannabis resource for health care providers, researchers launches Jan. 10. “In light of the widespread availability of legal cannabis, Oregon Health & Science University today launched a new web-based tool designed to help clinicians and researchers evaluate the latest evidence around the health effects of cannabis.”

WTOP: Woman creates virtual Black doll museum. “The museum features antique dolls, dolls 80 years or older. [Debbie Behan-Garrett]’s oldest dolls date back to the 1880s. They are a pair of cloth dolls that are handmade by the grandchild of an abolitionist. She features vintage dolls from 1941 through 1960 and modern dolls from 1961 to the present. She also features one-of-a-kind dolls, dolls that can’t be found anywhere else.”

WBIW: New Indiana Floodplain Information Portal now available. “A new Indiana Floodplain Information Portal (INFIP) is available that will save users valuable time. INFIP is designed to show flood risk associated with Indiana water bodies and provide information specifically for local and state floodplain permitting. The information is based on the regulatory floodplain limits, as floods exceeding the regulatory floodplain can and do occur.”

Florida Polytechnic University: New online tool helps bolster STEM careers from Florida Poly. “MyFloridaFuture, which was announced today by the State University System of Florida and the Board of Governors, is an interactive tool designed to help students and their families make informed decisions about higher education options within the system…. Among the wealth of data found in the college and career planning tool is information to allow students to compare earnings over time, educational options beyond a bachelor’s degree, average loan amounts, and more. Information is available at both the institution and system level.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CDC: Worker Health Charts: A data visualization tool for worker health information. “Worker Health Charts is a valuable tool for analyzing and presenting worker health information and data. Recently, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) updated Worker Health Charts with new features to make it more user-friendly.”

CNET: Signal CEO Moxie Marlinspike steps down. “Signal, the encrypted-messaging app, is on the lookout for a new CEO after Moxie Marlinspike said Monday he’s stepping down. After leading the company for almost a decade, Marlinspike says now is a good time to find a replacement.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

CNN: In VR, there are no rules, so parents are making up their own. “[Allen] Roach is one of a growing number of parents navigating a new frontier in technology, and learning as they go. More kids have access to VR headsets than ever before — and with it, access to a still-niche but expanding virtual world of games, avatar-driven hangouts, and many more activities. And the number of kids who use it is only likely to increase after the most recent holiday season.”

New York Times: National Endowment for the Humanities Announces $24.7 Million in New Grants. “The awards will support projects including Cherokee language translation, a digital map of jazz and hip-hop in Queens, and a study of the secret language of French butchers.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Search Engine Journal: WordPress Core Vulnerabilities Hits Millions of Sites. “WordPress announced it has patched four vulnerabilities that are rated as high as 8 on a scale of 1 to 10. The vulnerabilities are in the WordPress core itself and are due to flaws introduced by the WordPress development team itself.”

New York Times: Google must turn over more documents in a labor case, a judge rules.. “Google wrongly claimed attorney-client privilege to protect documents subpoenaed in a National Labor Relations Board case filed by former employees who say the company fired them because of their unionization efforts, a labor judge has ruled.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

UVA Today: Americans Are Less Likely To Answer Emails Sent By African Americans, Study Finds. “African Americans are less likely to receive responses to the emails they send, according to new research from a team that included John Holbein, a professor of public policy, politics and education at the University of Virginia’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy.”

The Verge: Google launches Ripple, an open standard that could bring tiny radars to Ford cars and more. “Google has been publicly building tiny radar chips since 2015. They can tell you how well you sleep, control a smartwatch, count sheets of paper, and let you play the world’s tiniest violin. But the company’s Soli radar hasn’t necessarily had commercial success, most prominently featuring in an ill-fated Pixel phone. Now, Google has launched an open-source API standard called Ripple that could theoretically bring the tech to additional devices outside Google — perhaps even a car, as Ford is one of the participants in the new standard.” Good morning, Internet…

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January 11, 2022 at 06:59PM
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Monday, January 10, 2022

Politicians & Slavery, Education Technology, State Archives of North Carolina, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, January 10, 2022

Politicians & Slavery, Education Technology, State Archives of North Carolina, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, January 10, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Washington Post: More than 1,700 congressmen once enslaved Black people. This is who they were, and how they shaped the nation.. “The country is still grappling with the legacy of their embrace of slavery. The link between race and political power in early America echoes in complicated ways, from the racial inequities that persist to this day to the polarizing fights over voting rights and the way history is taught in schools. The Washington Post created a database that shows enslavers in Congress represented 37 states, including not just the South but every state in New England, much of the Midwest, and many Western states.”

EdScoop: Higher ed has a new tool for screening cloud service providers . “As colleges and universities mull what operations to move to the cloud, the higher education technology consortium Internet2 is testing how vendors and higher education institutions respond to the Cloud Scorecard, a vendor assessment tool in the works since 2019.” I’m pretty sure this is completely free but it seems to require institutional affiliation to use, so I can’t test it.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

State Archives of North Carolina: New Year, “New” Microfilm: An Update on County Records Added to Discover Online Catalog (DOC). “We are excited to announce that eleven counties of Search Room microfilm have been completely added to our online searchable database, Discover Online Catalog (DOC)! The completed counties are Albemarle (defunct), Ashe, Avery, Bute (defunct), Cherokee, Chowan, Clay, Dobbs (defunct), Gates, Graham, and Tryon (defunct).”

USEFUL STUFF

HongKiat: 5 Tools to Create Bar Chart Race Without Coding. “Data visualization is all these days – no matter what kind of information you want to present, either for school, work, or high-level corporate demos, it’s always important to present data in a very visual way…. Here are some solutions that you can use to create a bar chart race with or without pre-knowledge of coding.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

BBC: The AI software that could turn you in to a music star. “If you have ever dreamed of earning money from a stellar music career but were concerned you had little talent, don’t let that put you off – a man called Alex Mitchell might be able to help. Mr Mitchell is the founder and boss of a website and app called Boomy, which helps its users create their own songs using artificial intelligence (AI) software that does most of the heavy lifting.”

Times of Israel: Masonic archive amassed by Nazis still has secrets to reveal, curators say. “Curators combing through a vast historical archive of Freemasonry in Europe amassed by the Nazis in their wartime anti-Masonic purge say they believe there are still secrets to be unearthed. From insight into women’s Masonic lodges to the musical scores used in closed ceremonies, the trove — housed in an old university library in western Poland — has already shed light on a little-known history.”

Protocol: Eric Schmidt: Social media companies ‘maximize outrage’ for revenue. “Eric Schmidt, welcome to the techlash. In an interview with podcaster and actor Dax Shepard, posted Thursday, the former Google CEO and Alphabet chairman said that social media companies are designed to ‘maximize outrage’ in pursuit of revenue. It was a rare condemnation of the industry from a man who, as head honcho of YouTube’s parent company, directly oversaw one of the most powerful social media companies in the world.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Business Insider: Police are being trained to create fake social-media accounts using AI to generate images of people who don’t exist. “Police departments across the US are being trained to create fake social-media accounts using AI-generated profile images, violating rules enforced by platforms including Facebook and Instagram, according to a document obtained by Insider.”

ThreatPost: Attackers Exploit Flaw in Google Docs’ Comments Feature. “A wave of phishing attacks identified in December targeting mainly Outlook users are difficult for both email scanners and victims to flag, researchers said. Attackers are using the ‘Comments’ feature of Google Docs to send malicious links in a phishing campaign targeted primarily at Outlook users, researchers have discovered.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

I’m seeing the term “digital twin” a lot, so I went looking for a good explainer article. This particular article focuses more physics, but I’ve seen the digital twin concept used for optimizing a ski resort’s busy season and improve business and manufacturing processes. VentureBeat: What 1000-X faster simulation means for digital twins. “A digital twin is a virtual representation of an object or system that spans its lifecycle, is updated from real-time data, and uses simulation, machine learning, and reasoning to help decision-making. Connected sensors on the physical asset collect data that can be mapped onto the virtual model.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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January 11, 2022 at 02:00AM
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Monday CoronaBuzz, January 10, 2022: 47 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Monday CoronaBuzz, January 10, 2022: 47 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

I’ve decided to highlight a tag or two every day if you would ever like to explore CoronaBuzz.

Fact Checks: https://rbfirehose.com/tag/coronavirus+fact-checks/ (RSS https://rbfirehose.com/tag/coronavirus+fact-checks/feed/ ). Fact checks about covid misinformation. Currently about 50 articles indexed.

Fact Checking: https://rbfirehose.com/tag/coronavirus+fact-checking (RSS https://rbfirehose.com/tag/coronavirus+fact-checking/feed/ ). Both fact checks and the process / mechanisms of fact checking; I started this tag first before I added a separate fact checks tag. It currently has about 109 articles indexed.

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside away from home. Much love.

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

New York Times: Covid Test Misinformation Spikes Along With Spread of Omicron. “The burst of misinformation threatens to further stymie public efforts to keep the health crisis under control. Previous spikes in pandemic-related falsehoods focused on the vaccines, masks and the severity of the virus. The falsehoods help undermine best practices for controlling the spread of the coronavirus, health experts say, noting that misinformation remains a key factor in vaccine hesitancy.”

Daily Beast: Anti-Vax Leader Urges Followers to Drink Their Own Urine to Fight COVID. “Anti-COVID-19 ‘Vaccine Police’ leader Christopher Key has a new quarter-baked conspiracy theory for his anti-vax followers to use to cure themselves of COVID-19: Drink their own urine.”

UPI: FDA warns against using COVID-19 test swabs in the throat. “Swabs that come with at-home rapid antigen COVID-19 tests should be used in the nose and not the throat, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warns. It issued the warning on Twitter in response to reports that some people are using swabs intended for nasal samples to take samples from their throats and posting their results on social media with the hashtag #SwabYourThroat.”

Pappas Post: Anti-Vaccine Bishop and Unvaccinated Sister Die of COVID-19 Weeks Apart. “An unwavering anti-vaccine Greek Orthodox bishop has died of COVID-19 just weeks after his unvaccinated sister also died due to complications from the virus. The 76-year old Metropolitan Kosmas of Aetolia and Acarnania died after a month-long battle with the virus that saw him moved from a local hospital in Agrinio to an ICU room at Evangelismos hospital in Athens.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

BBC: Covid pass protesters attack French MP Stéphane Claireaux with seaweed. “A French MP has been attacked by a crowd of Covid-19 pass protesters outside his home in the overseas territory of St Pierre and Miquelon. Video showed Stéphane Claireaux being pelted with seaweed and other missiles on Sunday.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Alabama Political Reporter: Alabama hospitals, schools react as COVID surges. “As the more contagious omicron variant of COVID-19 surges schools and hospitals are taking varied measures to either protect from more spread, or what and see what happens. ”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

Reuters: Indian hospitals have plenty COVID hospital beds for children. ” Indian states have reserved more than double the COVID-19 hospital beds for children than recommended by federal experts out of fear of being under-prepared, government data shows, although doctors say not many youngsters have needed critical care yet.”

News-Medical: Rapid antigen tests exhibit high accuracy for COVID-19 screening in children. “A team of researchers from the United States (US) compared the accuracy of the Abbott BinaxNOW coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) rapid antigen test diagnostic kit against the gold standard reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) testing method among children.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

Missouri Independent: Missouri COVID hospitalizations set new record as omicron variant spread accelerates. “Missouri set pandemic peaks for COVID-19 hospitalizations and daily net new admissions this week. The Department of Health and Senior Services reported there were 2,933 inpatients, a number that grew an average of 91 per day over the previous seven days. The previous peaks were 2,862 inpatients on Dec. 22, 2020, before vaccines were widely available and 76 net new admissions per day on Nov. 8, 2020.”

New York Times: As an ER Doctor, I Fear Health Care Collapse More Than Omicron. “The harsh reality is this: Fewer providers means fewer available beds because there are only so many patients a team can treat at a time. This also means treatment is slower and people will spend more time in the E.R. And the longer these patients stay in the E.R., the longer others remain in the waiting room. The domino effect will affect all levels of the health care system, from short-staffed nursing homes to ambulances taking longer to respond to 911 calls.”

North Jersey: NJ COVID hospitalizations surpass 6,000 for first time since April 2020. “The number of people hospitalized with COVID in New Jersey reached more than 6,000 Sunday night in one of the largest one-day increases of the current wave of the pandemic. The 6,075 COVID patients in the hospital marked a single-day jump of 328, and is the most since April 29, 2020 during the initial wave of the pandemic.”

Click on Detroit: Michigan COVID hospitalizations rise above previous record following case surge. “Following a record-breaking week of new COVID-19 cases in Michigan, statewide hospitalizations are at a new record-high. According to MDHHS data, 4,901 inpatients were in hospitals statewide as of Jan. 10 with confirmed or suspected COVID-19, breaking the previous record of 4,721, set on Dec. 12, 2021.”

StarTribune: Minnesota hospitals brace for omicron even as COVID-19 declines in ICUs. “COVID-19 hospitalizations requiring intensive care declined from 374 on Dec. 16 to 255 on Friday in Minnesota, temporarily easing pressure on hospitals as they brace for the omicron wave of the pandemic. The fast-spreading omicron variant has produced an uptick in coronavirus infections in Minnesota, which on Monday reported another 10,810 infections and 44 COVID-19 deaths.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

BBC: Ikea cuts sick pay for unvaccinated staff forced to self-isolate. “Ikea has cut sick pay for unvaccinated staff who need to self-isolate because of Covid exposure, joining a growing list of firms changing their rules. The retail giant acknowledged it was an ’emotive topic’ but said its policy had to evolve with changing circumstances.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

CNN: US coronavirus surge could peak later this month, expert says, but the next few weeks are critical. “The current Covid-19 surge in the US, fueled by the Omicron variant, could peak later this month — but the next couple of weeks are critical, a health expert says. Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, warns long-term planning is needed to avoid continued stress on the health care system, as hospitals become full, schools struggle to keep students in class and testing remains difficult to access.”

Breaking Defense: How COVID-19 changed Navy ops, according to SWO boss. “As the country begins its third year battling the coronavirus, the US Navy’s top surface warfare officer says that if there’s a silver lining to the operational challenges presented by a global pandemic, it’s that it has pushed the service into being more self-sufficient.”

Associated Press: North Dakota officials forced to cut back on COVID case work. “The recent surge in COVID-19 cases is forcing North Dakota health officials to cut back on investigations and they are encouraging people who test positive to isolate on their own. The state Department of Health says it will continue to monitor virus cases for K-12 students, higher education students, people over age 55, and people in health care facilities, long-term care and congregate settings.”

NBC Miami: Florida Adds Over 49K New COVID-19 Cases After Setting Single Day Record. “The report came one day after Florida reported more than 77,000 cases on Sunday, the third time the state had reported more than 75,000 cases since December 31st.”

KVOE: CORONAVIRUS: IRS starting tax season early. “The IRS has announced this year’s tax filing season will begin Jan. 24, 17 days earlier than it started last year. The main reason, like it is for many adjustments the past two years, is coronavirus. The IRS is anticipating a resurgence of COVID cases — underway now across the country — as well as less funding authorization from Congress than requested by President Biden.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

BBC: India Covid: Booster shots start for priority groups as cases surge. “India has begun giving booster doses of the Covid-19 vaccine to priority groups amid a surge in infections. Health and frontline workers and people above 60 years old with comorbidities are currently eligible to take the jab.”

Reuters: Sweden takes more COVID measures as Omicron squeezes healthcare. “Sweden will introduce more measures to stem the rising number of COVID cases and an increased pressure on the healthcare system, Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson said on Monday.”

Associated Press: Slovakia eases COVID measures as omicron surge yet to hit. “Slovakia is easing coronavirus restrictions after a decline in new infections while the fast-spreading omicron variant is yet to fully hit the country. The changes include the cancellation Monday of the overnight curfew between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. The move allows bars and restaurants, stores and others to stay open without restrictions. Only fully vaccinated people and those who have recovered from COVID-19 are eligible to enter bars, restaurants, hotels, ski resorts, religious services and stores selling nonessential goods.”

Reuters: France averages new record of nearly 270,000 new Covid cases per day. “France reported close to 94,000 new COVID-19 cases , pushing the seven-day moving average of new infections to a new high of 269,614, official data showed on Monday, the 14th consecutive day seeing the value climbing up.”

ITV: Email proves Downing Street staff held drinks party at height of lockdown. “Downing Street staff were invited to a drinks party in the Number 10 garden during the height of nationwide lockdown to “make the most of the lovely weather”. An email shared exclusively with ITV News provides the first evidence of a party on May 20, 2020, when the rest of the country was banned from meeting more than one other person outdoors.”

STATES / STATE GOVERNMENT

Salt Lake Tribune: Utah prison, jail facilities report COVID-19 outbreaks. “As Utah continues to report record-high coronavirus case counts, cases also are spiking in the state’s prisons and jails. The Davis County Jail is experiencing a new outbreak after the facility had been COVID-free for nine months. As of last week, 24 individuals had tested positive, and a dozen other inmates were being monitored for exposure. On Monday, the number of confirmed cases had jumped to 35, according to a spokesperson.”

WTOP: Md. assembly’s COVID-19 protocols restore public access to legislative complex, limit streaming. “In spite of soaring COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations, the Maryland General Assembly’s pandemic safety protocols are shaping up to be much different — and more publicly accessible in some ways — than what occurred during the 2021 session.”

ABC 30: Calif. health care workers who are asymptomatic with COVID won’t have to test or isolate to work. ” California health care workers won’t have to isolate or test negative to go back to work if they are asymptomatic until February 1. As omicron cases continue to surge and hospital staffing shortages increase across the state, California’s department of public health is changing its COVID isolation guidelines.”

WTVD: More than 1,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations added in the last week in North Carolina. “Hospitalizations jumped 376 since Friday. More than 1,000 patients have been added in the last week. That brings the COVID-19 hospitalization number back in line to where it was this time last year. The good news: the weekly share of patients on a ventilator and in the ICU with COVID-19 is continuing to trend down. But pediatric COVID-19 hospitalization are trending up–with 2.3% of the hospitalized COVID-19 patients listed as children. That’s one of the highest pediatric percentages the state has ever reported.”

Associated Press: Michigan lieutenant governor tests positive for COVID-19. “Michigan Lt. Gov. Garlin Gilchrist II says he’s tested positive for COVID-19 but is showing no symptoms while he quarantines with his family. Gilchrist said on Twitter that he tested positive Sunday morning after his 2-year-old daughter, Ruby, began experiencing a runny nose and a mild fever — symptoms that are consistent with the coronavirus.”

NBC New York: New NY Breakthrough Data Show Omicron’s Stunning December Impact as Viral Growth Rates Appear to Slow. “Newly released data on New York breakthrough infections highlights in stark reality the viral force that crippled workforces for virtually every key industry last month, while COVID rates in the one-time epicenter show potential signs of improvement. Fueled by the more vaccine-resistant omicron variant, the daily rate of new COVID infections per 100,000 fully vaccinated New Yorkers grew by more than seven-fold over the course of December, from 29.8 new cases per 100,000 inoculated residents the first week of the month to 223.3 the final week, state data shows.”

The State: SC breaks COVID record again with 16,600 cases, as omicron variant surges in state. “The state Department of Health and Environmental Control released three days of COVID-19 data on Monday showing that 16,630 cases were reported for Saturday. The following day, Sunday, the Palmetto State recorded its second-highest all-time case count, with 15,234 cases and 30 deaths. DHEC also reported 12,827 cases and 12 deaths for Monday.”

KMIZ: Share of breakthrough coronavirus infections increasing as omicron spreads in Missouri. “Missouri is seeing a larger share of fully vaccinated or previously infected people getting the coronavirus amid a surge powered by the more transmissible omicron variant. The share of breakthrough infections in Missouri has hit pandemic highs over the last two weeks. Those cases made up nearly 22% of new infections last week and 46% of new cases the week before, according to the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. Nearly 8% of cases so far in January are in people previously infected with the virus.”

NBC Boston: Mass. Launches Digital COVID Vaccination Card System, My Vax Records. “Massachusetts has launched a digital vaccination card system, the Baker administration announced Monday. My Vax Records, as the tool is called, lets people see their vaccination history and pull up a card that’s similar to the paper CDC cards that have been given out when people are vaccinated.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Fox6: Milwaukee’s free N95 mask distribution begins. ” Milwaukee’s distribution of free N95 masks began at the Northwest and Southside Health Centers on Saturday, Jan. 8. Dozens of cars lined the streets Saturday morning – the first day of the city’s latest effort to encourage citizens to mask up.”

Deseret News: Salt Lake County orders mask mandate. Will it stand?. “Salt Lake County has imposed a mask mandate after Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall urged county leaders Friday to put the ‘lifesaving’ requirement in place to combat the dramatic spread of the COVID-19 omicron variant that’s resulted in record case counts in Utah.”

Chicago Sun-Times: Feds urged to investigate city’s use of COVID-19 relief funds. “Community organizers and Ald. Rossana Rodriguez (33rd) have called on the feds to investigate the city’s use of COVID-19 relief funds claiming the mayor’s office wrongly allocated money to pay down debt instead of helping the residents it was intended for.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

Washington Post: Meet the Kovids. These people share the same name as the covid-19 pandemic.. “The pandemic has fundamentally changed the lives of the people who share the Sanskrit name of Kovid. And many of the Kovids are tired of the jokes. Several have even bonded over social media, forming a loose network to discuss and complain about their shared experiences of being mocked for a name that means ‘scholar or learned person’ — and is referenced in Vedic literature, including within a Hindu prayer dedicated to Lord Hanuman — yet takes on a whole new meaning in the covid pandemic.”

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Daily Beast: Killer Tycoon Robert Durst Dies Months After Life Sentence. “In October, Durst was admitted to LAC+USC Medical Center and placed on a ventilator. He had tested positive for COVID-19, according to his lawyer, despite being fully vaccinated against the virus.”

SPORTS

Los Angeles Daily News: LAUSD suspends athletic competition for a week due to COVID-19 surge. “The Los Angeles Unified School District sent an email to high school administrators and parents late Sunday informing them all athletic competition this week (Jan. 10-14) will be postponed and rescheduled due the COVID-19, specifically referring to the omicron variant.”

K-12 EDUCATION

BBC: Uganda schools reopen after almost two years of Covid closure. “Children in Uganda have expressed their joy at finally returning to school nearly two years after they were closed because of Covid…. But after one of the world’s longest school closures, authorities warned at least 30% of students may never return.”

NBC Boston: NH District Schools Close Due to COVID-19 Staff Absences. “The Nashua, New Hampshire school district said schools will be closed for the early part of the week because of staff absences. Nashua Superintendent Garth McKinney said in a Friday letter to staff and parents that many of the absences are due to COVID-19. There were nearly 200 absences on Thursday, he said.”

Columbia Daily Herald: ‘Relearn school’: Discipline amid pandemic dominates concerns at Maury County schools. “This school year, at least 40 citations have been issued to students at Columbia Central High School, including seven students arrested and placed in juvenile detention, according to Maury County Sheriff Bucky Rowland, who shared the information with members of the county commission, during Wednesday’s health and environment committee meeting. The situation reflects a national trend as interruptions caused by the pandemic have sparked a rise in students and young people struggling to retain their mental health.”

KNWA: ACHI reports 97% of school districts have high COVID-19 infection rates. “The Arkansas Center for Health Improvement urges sheltering in place for at-risk families, masking in all school districts, virtual for some, as 97% of districts reportedly have high COVID-19 infection rates. A record 226 public districts of the state’s 234 contiguous districts have COVID-19 infection rates of 50 or more new known infections per 10,000 district residents over a 14-day period, the ACHI said Monday, Jan. 10.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

WRAL: Dozens of Duke students incorrectly told they had COVID-19. “Dozens of Duke University students were incorrectly told they had COVID-19 Sunday night. Duke spokesperson Michael Schoenfeld said a data processing error incorrectly notified 67 students they had tested positive for COVID-19. The students were notified of the mistake immediately, he said, adding it was the first error in the nearly 1 million free tests administered by the school.”

HEALTH

Washington Post: COVID-19 led to smell problems for many. Seniors are especially vulnerable.. “The reports from coronavirus patients are disconcerting. Only a few hours before, they were enjoying a cup of pungent coffee or the fragrance of flowers in a garden. Then, as if a switch had been flipped, those smells disappeared. Young and old alike are affected – more than 80% to 90% of those diagnosed with the virus, according to some estimates. While most people recover in a few months, 16% take half a year or longer to do so, research has found. According to new estimates, up to 1.6 million Americans have chronic smell problems because of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.”

BBC: Covid-19: Common cold may give some protection, study suggests. “Natural defences against a common cold could offer some protection against Covid-19, too, research suggests. The small-scale study, published in Nature Communications, involved 52 individuals who lived with someone who had just caught Covid-19.”

RESEARCH

WWLP: Vaccinated women pass COVID-19 antibodies to breastfeeding babies. “Women vaccinated against COVID-19 transfer SARS-CoV-2 antibodies to their breastfed infants, potentially giving their babies passive immunity against the coronavirus, according to University of Massachusetts Amherst research.”

CoronaBuzz is brought to you by ResearchBuzz. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



January 11, 2022 at 01:40AM
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YIVO Institute Archives, The Night Watch, Mapping PFAS, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, January 10, 2022

YIVO Institute Archives, The Night Watch, Mapping PFAS, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, January 10, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

New York Times: YIVO Institute Makes Archives of Yiddish Life Available Online. “Almost 100 years ago, a group of Jewish linguists and historians decided to create a ‘scientific institute’ that would collect literary manuscripts, letters, theater posters, business records and ephemera so they could document the flourishing Yiddish culture of Eastern Europe and promote the language. Among its honorary board members: Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud. Within 15 years, the institute, established in what is now the Lithuanian city of Vilnius (Vilna in Yiddish), had blossomed into the world’s leading archive of Eastern European Jews and their scattered emigrant satellites.”

My Modern Met: Explore Rembrandt’s Famous Painting “The Night Watch” in New 717-Gigapixel Photo. “Rembrandt van Rijn is perhaps the most well-known of the Dutch Masters. During the Golden Age of the Netherlands, his expressive brushwork conjured realistic scenes and expressive portraits. The Night Watch is chief among his masterpieces. The iconic painting is a 12-by-14-foot canvas illustrating 34 figures of an early modern militia. Now, this monumental work can be explored in microscopic detail through a 717-gigapixel photograph of the work.”

News@Northeastern: This Map IDs Cancer-causing Chemical Sites In Your Neighborhood. “Just how toxic is your community? No, this isn’t about contentious school committee meetings or surly neighbors. Neighborhoods across the country are contaminated with long-lasting, cancer-causing toxins called per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances or PFAS, and researchers at Northeastern recently unveiled an interactive, online map that identifies areas with high levels of the chemicals.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CogDogBlog: Could Not Stop Making Bookmarklet Tools. “I was a bit excited to push out my recent bookmarklet tool experiment. The reception was kind. I was hasty in the naming of it in github tying to google images because as alluded to, I realized I could make a new one for searching Openverse (the updated version of Creative Commons CC Search).”

Ubergizmo: Ubergizmo’s Best of CES 2022 . “CES 2022 is ending, and it’s time to nominate what we deem to be the best, most innovative, and enthusiastic products of CES that we’ve looked at up close or experienced hands-on.”

Google Operating System: Bring Back YouTube Dislikes. “YouTube has recently hidden the number of dislikes for YouTube videos. In a blog post from November, YouTube announced that this was done to ‘help better protect our creators from harassment, and reduce dislike attacks’. The dislike button hasn’t disappeared, but the dislike counts were made private, so that only video creators could see them. If you install this Chrome extension, you can bring back the number of dislikes next to the ‘dislike’ button.” You’ll see some caveats in the article, but as they note it’s better than nothing.

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

CNBC: Disney is hiring TikTok creators — you need to love theme parks, food and social media. “On Monday, the company announced it’s hiring two social media content coordinators to ‘expand DPEP (Disney Parks, Experiences and Products) social media presence’ – especially on TikTok. The chosen applicants would work at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida, and Disneyland in Anaheim, California, respectively.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

CTV News: Man seeking RCMP files goes to court after national archives takes 80-year extension. “An Ottawa researcher is asking a judge to order Canada’s national archives to speed up work on his request for old RCMP records after he was told to wait at least 80 years for a response. In a notice of application to the Federal Court, Michael Dagg says Library and Archives Canada “has failed to establish any valid basis for the extraordinary extension of time” to process his application under the Access to Information Act.”

Vice: FBI’s Backdoored Anom Phones Secretly Harvested GPS Data Around the World. “Anom, an encrypted phone company marketed to criminals which the FBI secretly took over, surreptitiously recorded every message sent by the phones’ users. But the truly global undercover operation had another secret: The phones also collected users’ precise GPS location and transferred that information to authorities, according to multiple documents reviewed by Motherboard.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Week: The NFT craze has stopped being funny. “As an NFT skeptic, some guy getting scammed out of his collection of objectively hideous procedurally-generated ape cartoons was amusing. But it’s all getting steadily less funny. Real non-rich people are putting a lot of money into these things, and there are good reasons to think sooner or later most of them are going to lose their shirts.”

KelloggInsight: When a Bunch of Economists Look at the Same Data, Do They All See It the Same Way?. “Data can be messy, notoriously so. And so scientists and researchers have developed reams of strategies for cleaning and analyzing and ultimately harnessing data to draw conclusions. But this unusual study—an analysis of 164 separate analyses—suggests that the decisions that go into choosing how to clean the datasets, analyze them, and come to a conclusion can in fact add just as much noise as the data themselves.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Pinkbike: Bike Index Uncovers International Bike Theft & Sale Operation. “In early 2021, users of the bike registry Bike Index alerted the website that a seller based in Juarez, Mexico, appeared to be selling large numbers of bikes that matched many of those stolen in Colorado. The tips catalyzed a special data compilation project that took place throughout 2021, has indexed more than 1000 suspicious bikes, and has matched several victims of bike theft with their bikes.” Good morning, Internet…

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January 10, 2022 at 06:32PM
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Sunday, January 9, 2022

Sunday CoronaBuzz, January 9, 2022: 31 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Sunday CoronaBuzz, January 9, 2022: 31 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside away from home. Much love.

NEW RESOURCES – AREA-SPECIFIC

Global News: Thousands of rapid test results already reported to made-in-Sask. online database. “A University of Saskatchewan student is hoping his new online tool can help close the COVID-19 data gap arising from increasingly limited access to official PCR testing.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

NBC Think: Covid vaccine and treatment misinformation is medical malpractice. It should be punished.. “From making false claims about vaccines to offering to sign medically unnecessary mask exemptions in exchange for payment, these ‘disinformation doctors’ are amplifying lies and often profiting from a cottage industry of social media posts, websites, live and virtual conferences and podcasts. In the process, they are weaponizing their white coats and putting patients, the public and their profession at risk.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

Reuters/dpa: Coronavirus: Anti-vaccination protesters tell France’s Emmanuel Macron: ‘We’ll p*** you off’. “Anti-vaccine protesters rallied in cities across France on Saturday, denouncing President Emmanuel Macron’s intent to ‘p*** off’ people refusing Covid-19 vaccines by tightening curbs on their civil liberties. Macron said this week he wanted to irritate unvaccinated people by making their lives so complicated they would end up getting jabbed. Unvaccinated people were irresponsible and unworthy of being considered citizens, he added.”

BBC: Covid: Thousands protest in France against proposed new vaccine pass. “French authorities say more than 105,000 people have taken part in protests across the country against the introduction of a new coronavirus pass. A new draft law would in effect ban unvaccinated people from public life.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

WBAY: HSHS treating record number of COVID-19 patients at hospitals–majority unvaccinated. “A record number of patients are hospitalized and being treated for COVID-19 at the Hospital Sisters Health System. HSHS called it an ‘unfortunate milestone.’ They’re treating 303 patients, up from the previous high of 293 patients in November 2020, before the vaccination was available.”

CBC: Record high number of Ontarians in hospital with COVID-19 as Omicron wave continues. “Ontario reported a pandemic high of 2,472 people with COVID-19 in hospital on Friday, as the number of admissions to intensive care increased again. The previous high of 2,360 hospitalizations came on April 20, 2021, during the height of the third wave.”

CTV News: Laurentians hospitals in critical situation, transferring COVID-19 negative patients to long-term care homes. “Citing a critical situation in Laurentians area hospitals, certain patients, who have tested negative for COVID-19, are being transferred to long-term care homes (CHSLDs) in the region. Laurentians health and social services centre spokesperson Hugo Morissette said staff are being forced to pivot on a daily basis as the epidemiological situation remains distressing.”

Philadelphia Inquirer: COVID-19 surge has overwhelmed some Pa. hospitals — and now their workers are getting sick, too. “In the last week, the unprecedented number of infections has sidelined teachers, bus drivers, trash collectors, and others in significant numbers, in some cases disrupting services and schools. The omicron variant is more transmissible and can evade vaccine protection; as health-care workers also catch the fast-spreading virus, it has added a new challenge for hospitals already strained by the worsening surge.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

KLFY: Texas couple charged $3,973 for COVID-19 testing: ‘Makes me sick to my stomach’. “Before flying to Peru to hike the Inca trail, Suli Luque and her husband went to get tested for COVID-19. They needed to show proof of negative test results to be let into the country…. Austin Emergency Center claimed the visit for their COVID-19 tests cost $3,973 altogether, and their insurance company said it was the couple’s responsibility to pay it.”

Reuters: FedEx warns of shipment delays as Omicron leads to staffing shortage. “FedEx Corp warned on Friday that rising cases of Omicron variant has caused staff shortage and delay in shipments transported on aircraft.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

Associated Press: US, Japan agree to keep troops on base to curb COVID spread. “The U.S. and Japan on Sunday agreed to keep American troops within their bases as worries grew about a sharp rise in coronavirus cases in the country. The restrictions starting Monday will last 14 days, confining U.S. military personnel to base facilities except for ‘essential activities,’ a statement from the U.S. Forces in Japan said. The Japanese Foreign Ministry released the same statement.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Loop Jamaica: Jamaica surpasses 100,000 COVID cases; record 1,593 new ones, 6 deaths. “The total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Jamaica has surpassed 100,000, with 1,593 new cases recorded over 24 hours up to Friday afternoon. This is the third time this week that Jamaica’s coronavirus infections hit a new record for a one-day period since the pandemic began locally.”

Loop Jamaica: Jamaica still unable to test for COVID-19 variants. “In October of last year, the island acquired a genome sequencer and training of personnel to use the machine was scheduled to begin in order to test for variants of the novel coronavirus by last December. However, the training was pushed back until January 10, and that timeline is also not going to be met in terms of the stated goal.”

Reuters: Restrictions imposed in several states in India as Covid-19 cases rise. ” India reported 159,632 new COVID-19 cases on Sunday, as the Omicron variant of the coronavirus continues to spread rapidly in the country, nudging several state governments to impose fresh restrictions.”

New York Daily News: Vaccine appointments multiply after Quebec requires shots for weed, alcohol stores. “They’re going shots for shots. First-dose vaccine appointments quadrupled in Quebec after the Canadian province required vaccine passports to buy alcohol and marijuana. Quebec announced the new rules Thursday, when there were an average of 1,500 first dose appointments, the Montreal Gazette reported.”

Associated Press: Navajo Nation reports 220 new COVID-19 cases, but no deaths. “The Navajo Nation has reported 220 new confirmed COVID-19 cases, but no additional deaths related to the virus. Tribal officials said the number of confirmed cases on the vast reservation since the pandemic began now total 42,887 as of Saturday including 45 delayed reported cases.”

STATES / STATE GOVERNMENT

Chattanooga Times Free Press: Tennessee launches program to help COVID-related mortgage delinquencies. “Tennessee homeowners who have fallen behind on their mortgages, property taxes or home insurance due to the COVID-19 pandemic are getting a new economic lifeline this week. The Tennessee Housing Development Agency is launching a new federally-funded program Monday that will pay up to $40,000 for each household that has suffered from the ongoing pandemic and is delinquent in housing-related bills.”

WABI: Maine CDC director says to focus on COVID hospitalization numbers. “Every day the Maine CDC releases loads of data and numbers to the public that help them track the severity of COVID-19 in our state. It is no surprise that some of these numbers are more important than others. This week Dr. Nirav Shah of the Maine CDC offered a little guidance to the public about what numbers they should put more focus on.”

Associated Press: Vermont to provide COVID rapid tests to child care centers. “The state of Vermont is going to be providing free rapid COVID-19 tests to the state’s regulated child-care centers. The ‘Tests for Tots’ program, which was announced Friday, is designed to allow the centers to test children and staff when a positive COVID-19 case is detected at their program.”

WBUR (Massachusetts): State issues COVID-19 booster mandate for nursing home workers. “More nursing home workers will now be forced to roll up their sleeves and get a COVID-19 booster — or risk losing their jobs. That’s thanks to a statewide booster mandate for all eligible nursing home staff handed down by the state’s Department of Public Health.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

Associated Press: School bus service in 2 NC cities suspended due to driver COVID-19 cases. “The News & Record of Greensboro reports that Guilford County Schools said Friday that 76 of the district’s drivers are out of work with the virus. Superintendent Sharon Contreras said those absences come on top of the district’s pre-existing driver shortage.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

KTVI: Missouri cancer surgery delayed over COVID strain at hospitals. “Scott Mueller said his wife April was diagnosed with appendix and colon cancer in December of 2021. She was supposed to have a colonoscopy and colon surgery in a couple of weeks at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Peters, part of the BJC Healthcare system. Mueller got the news Wednesday that both procedures would likely be postponed.”

SupChina: Xi’an woman in quarantine begs for period products in viral video, gets bashed by men for being ‘dramatic’. “Are period products necessities or luxuries? Should women be blamed if they are trapped in a quarantine facility without sanitary pads because they should be keeping track of their menstruation cycles? A COVID-19 lockdown and viral video have launched a debate on Chinese social media.” To anyone who thinks that menstrual cycles are some kind of events of inexorable timing and can be planned for, I offer this study from October 2021 on how pandemic stress disrupted menstrual cycles: https://www.verywellmind.com/pandemic-stress-caused-irregular-menstrual-cycles-study-finds-5204326 .

INDIVIDUALS – DEATHS

Iran Human Rights Monitor: Jailed Iranian poet Baktash Abtin dies due to lack of timely medical care for Covid-19. “Baktash Abtin, a member of Iran’s Writer’s Association died today in a Tehran hospital after catching COVID-19 in Evin Prison. Baktash Abtin, 48, was put into an induced coma in a Tehran hospital after being rushed there from Evin Prison on December 14 with severe symptoms of COVID-19.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

Hindustan Times: College students in Pune face challenges amidst rising Covid cases, restrictions. “Amid rising Covid-19 cases in the city, college-going students are facing multiple challenges. While offline classes have stopped, hostel, food and commuting all is getting tougher for many.”

HEALTH

CNET: The pandemic changed health care, and there’s no going back. “Video-calls-as-doctor’s-visit wasn’t a tool created because of COVID-19, but the pandemic has transformed it from an obscure practice to the new way to do health care. Importantly, policy changes made during the pandemic helped knock down some barriers for telemedicine access, and helped providers get paid for it.”

CNN: People desperate for Covid tests are turning to resellers online. “The emrgence of Covid test resales comes as frustrated Americans struggle to get tested and face long lines amid an increased demand following holiday travel and gatherings. Amazon, CVS Health and Walgreens are limiting the number of at-home Covid kits customers can purchase. Walmart recently hiked the prices for some of its rapid Covid tests from $14 to $20 for two. Experts say reselling kits in small numbers and without a large markup price is not illegal — nor is purchasing these products — but there are risks, for both buyers and sellers.”

RESEARCH

Cyprus Mail: Coronavirus: Cyprus’ Deltacron could just be contamination, Imperial College virologist says. “A researcher at Imperial College in London, which has driven much of the UK’s response to the Covid pandemic, says the ‘Deltacron’ variant Cyprus may have discovered ‘looks to be quite clearly contamination’.”

PsyPost: CEO narcissism linked to heightened workplace uncertainty amid the COVID-19 pandemic. “New research provides evidence that narcissistic business leaders can have a detrimental impact on the workplace by triggering a sense of uncertainty among middle management. The findings have been published in the Journal of Applied Psychology.”

CRIME / SECURITY / LEGAL

NDTV: 3 Arrested For Celebrating Pet Dog’s Birthday Amid Covid Norms In Gujarat. “Chirag Patel and his brother Urvish Patel, both residents of Krishnagar in Ahmedabad city, had thrown a big party on the birthday of their pet dog, Abby, an Indian Spitz, along with their friend, Divyesh Mehariya, a police official said.”

7 San Diego: Pop-Up COVID Testing Sites May Be Rife for Identity Theft, Experts Say. “Pop-up testing sites have cropped up on street corners, in parking lots and on shopping properties across the country, but health and legal experts say many of these are unregulated and could be rife for nefarious activities like identity theft. In the last few weeks, legislators and attorneys general in several states including Illinois, Maryland, California, Texas and Pennsylvania have said they will be investigating and introducing regulatory legislation overseeing these operations.”

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January 10, 2022 at 12:22AM
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UP Michigan, Making Media, Formatting Google Sheets, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, January 9, 2022

UP Michigan, Making Media, Formatting Google Sheets, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, January 9, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Upper Michigan Source: NMU archives launches UP Link. “In October, the Central UP and Northern Michigan University archives sought donated photos and documents to upload on their digital archive, UP Link. While it will take some time until those donated documents are available, UP Link is officially live.”

EVENTS

EFF: How to Make Every Media With Free & Open-Source Software. “‘How to Make Every Media With Free & Open-Source Software’ is an ever-evolving reference guide for creating in any digital medium with free and open-source tools. We’ll start at development & podcasting and work our way through making films, games, and VR experiences, covering each medium briefly and then zooming in wherever the audience is most interested. We’ll then open up for the crowd-sourcing of more open-source tools (as we’ve surely missed some), and questions from the audience on how they can get started, moving, or published in their current focus media.” This is not an EFF event, but an Electronic Frontier Alliance-affiliated event.

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: The 9 Best Google Sheets Formatting Tips for Creating Professional-Looking Spreadsheets. “There are so many ways to make Google Sheets look beautiful to impress with your data visuals. The majority of spreadsheet apps focus on the computation part, leaving the data visualization and formatting to the user. Therefore, if you don’t format your spreadsheet carefully, the audience may find it boring, since plain and simple data is not interesting. The same goes for Google Sheets.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Atlas Obscura: Welcome to the Spanish Village Saved by Art—And Nearly Destroyed by Fire. “There was the table-sized mosaic lizard scurrying across the wall near the village church; the three white skeletons lazing on a rooftop; the lamp post, whimsically canted because its base rests on an orange; and the giant pencil drawing a line down the side of a village house. Genalguacil, once a dying rural village, had been reborn in the 21st century as an enchanting open-air gallery of fantastical and surreal public art. Now, as the destructive and deadly fire loomed, so did the question: How to safeguard the art of a town’s museum when the town is the museum?”

SECURITY & LEGAL

The Verge: Sonos wins major patent infringement victory against Google. “The US International Trade Commission has ruled that Google is in violation of five Sonos patents relating to smart speakers (via The New York Times). The decision affirms a judge’s ruling in August, and it’s the kind of decision that could theoretically force Google to stop importing products using the infringing technology. However, it’s not yet clear whether any specific Google products will necessarily disappear from shelves, and for now it seems unlikely that will happen at all.”

CNET: Privacy myths busted: Protecting your mobile privacy is even harder than you think. “With increasingly invasive digital surveillance from advertisers and law enforcement over the past few years, securing your mobile phone from privacy threats in 2022 should be a key resolution. But don’t stop short. Changing a few settings in your phone and apps isn’t enough. To get the most privacy, the key ingredient to add is a suite of encrypted apps.”

Techdirt: Court Orders Twitter Reveal Anonymous Tweeter Over Sketchy Copyright Claim, Because That Tweeter Won’t Show Up In Court. “Back in November we wrote about a very bizarre attempt to abuse copyright law to uncover who was behind a Twitter account, @CallMeMoneyBags. That account tweeted out various things mocking and shaming various extremely wealthy people, including billionaire Brian Sheth, a private equity bro. Some of the tweets in the fall of 2020 lightly mocked Sheth, including suggesting potential infidelity. The images themselves appeared to be social media-type photos of young women (or possibly just one young woman).”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Sydney Morning Herald: Removalists were more focused on shifting my Google review than shifting my stuff. “This is why the reality doesn’t match the website, but the reviews are still universally glowing: they just buy off the bad ones. Having scaled their operations up, this – this putting out Google review fires – is where they have chosen to put their most focused company energy. Instead of ensuring that every subcontractor they put out on the road is up to the job, they are doggedly retro-fitting customer feedback. They are attacking the problem after it’s happened.”

Georgia Public Radio: Scientists vacuum zoo animals’ DNA out of the air. “A key part of protecting endangered species is figuring out where they’re living. Now researchers say they have found a powerful new tool that could help: vacuuming DNA out of the air. ‘This is a bit of a crazy idea,’ admits Elizabeth Clare, a molecular ecologist at York University in Toronto, Canada. ‘We are literally sucking DNA out of the sky.’ But it works. Clare’s group was one of two to publish papers in the journal Current Biology Thursday showing that dozens of animal species could be detected by simply sampling the air.”

The Conversation: How social media can crush your self-esteem. “As a PhD student in psychology, I am studying incels — men who perceive the rejection of women as the cause of their involuntary celibacy. I believe that social comparison, which plays as much a role in these marginal groups as it does in the general population, affects our general well-being in the age of social media.”

University of Texas at Austin: Citizen Science, Supercomputers and AI. “Citizen scientists have helped researchers discover new types of galaxies, design drugs to fight COVID-19, and map the bird world. The term describes a range of ways that the public can meaningfully contribute to scientific and engineering research, as well as environmental monitoring.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

The Gazette: A Colorado ‘fusioneer’ invented a painting robot and an inspiring way of life. “Don’t bother trying to understand it all. Just take it in. The stacks of notebooks with pages of scribbles and detailed takeaways from years of art classes and museum visits. The piles of outlines that, to the untrained eye, look like complicated blueprints drawn by an architect. The many, many books, ranging from a Michelangelo biography to one titled ‘Self-Organization of Biological Systems.’ The flow charts on whiteboards. The endless lines of code on a computer. The machine shop in the back and the paintings neatly hanging on the wall. And the robot holding a paintbrush.” Good morning, Internet…

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January 9, 2022 at 09:53PM
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Saturday, January 8, 2022

Saturday CoronaBuzz, January 8, 2022: 37 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Saturday CoronaBuzz, January 8, 2022: 37 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

Please get a booster shot. Please wear a mask when you’re inside away from home. Much love.

UPDATES

CNN: Partying passengers stuck in Mexico after airlines decline to fly them home. “Some members of a rowdy group shown dancing, drinking and vaping maskless aboard a flight to Cancun find themselves stranded in Mexico after their return flight to Canada was scrubbed and other airlines have declined to fly them home.”

CORONAVIRUS MISINFORMATION / FACT-CHECKING

Daily Beast: QAnon Star Who Said Only ‘Idiots’ Get Vax Dies of COVID. “Cirsten Weldon had amassed tens of thousands of followers across right-wing social media networks by promoting the pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy under the screenname ‘CirstenW.’ She was prominent enough to become a sort of QAnon interpreter for comedian conspiracy theorist Roseanne Barr, and started recording videos about QAnon with her.”

Associated Press: FACT FOCUS: Unfounded theory used to dismiss COVID measures. “An unfounded theory taking root online suggests millions of people have been ‘hypnotized’ into believing mainstream ideas about COVID-19, including steps to combat it such as testing and vaccination.”

SOCIETAL IMPACT

Associated Press: Omicron explosion spurs nationwide breakdown of services. “Ambulances in Kansas speed toward hospitals then suddenly change direction because hospitals are full. Employee shortages in New York City cause delays in trash and subway services and diminish the ranks of firefighters and emergency workers. Airport officials shut down security checkpoints at the biggest terminal in Phoenix and schools across the nation struggle to find teachers for their classrooms. The current explosion of omicron-fueled coronavirus infections in the U.S. is causing a breakdown in basic functions and services — the latest illustration of how COVID-19 keeps upending life more than two years into the pandemic.”

ACTIVISM / PROTESTS

New Zealand Herald: Covid 19 Omicron outbreak: National Party MP Harete Hipango attends second anti-lockdown and mandate protest. “Whanganui list MP Harete Hipango has posted pictures of herself on Facebook, at a rally in her electorate. But the post has been deleted after being contacted by her party’s leader Christopher Luxon. She wrote about freedom and choice in her post and criticised the label anti-vaxers.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

Des Moines Register: Photos: Respiratory Therapists on the COVID-19 front lines. There’s not really an excerpt so I can’t give you one. It’s a collection of 47 photos, mostly following two specific health care professionals as they work.

NPR: Short-staffed and COVID-battered, U.S. hospitals are hiring more foreign nurses. “Billings Clinic is just one of scores of hospitals across the U.S. looking abroad to ease a shortage of nurses worsened by the coronavirus pandemic. The national demand is so great that it has created a backlog of health care professionals awaiting clearance to work in the U.S. More than 5,000 international nurses are awaiting final visa approval, the American Association of International Healthcare Recruitment reported in September.”

Austin American-Statesman: The number of Texans in hospitals for COVID-19 has increased by more than 50% in the past week. “Health officials on Friday recorded 9,216 people in the hospital for COVID-19 statewide, more than a 50% increase in the past week. The summer surge peaked at 13,932 patients on Aug. 26, 2021. The pandemic high was in January, when 14,218 Texans were hospitalized.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

BuzzFeed News: The CDC Is Warning That Child Hospitalization Rates Are Breaking Pandemic Records. “CDC Director Rochelle Walensky warned on Friday that pediatric hospitals are seeing record numbers of children with COVID-19, as the Omicron variant surges nationwide.”

New York Times: Covid may raise the risk of diabetes in children, C.D.C. researchers reported.. “Children who have recovered from Covid-19 appear to be at significantly increased risk of developing Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes, researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Friday.”

HEALTH CARE – CAPACITY

The Atlantic: Hospitals Are in Serious Trouble. “Here, then, is the most important difference about this surge: It comes on the back of all the prior ones. COVID’s burden is additive. It isn’t reflected just in the number of occupied hospital beds, but also in the faltering resolve and thinning ranks of the people who attend those beds.”

WTKR: Sentara postpones non-emergent surgeries, procedures as COVID-19 hospitalizations reach record highs. “Sentara Healthcare announce Friday that starting Monday, Jan. 10, it is postponing all hospital-based non-emergent surgeries, procedures and diagnostic testing due to the surge in COVID-19 cases across the U.S., saying its team members are ‘stretched to their capacity.'”

WHAM: Rochester-area hospitals make unusual moves in wake of latest COVID surge. “The hospital says health care workers willing to pick up extra shifts and overtime are making up the difference. And next week, the hospital will attempt something it’s never done. Two dozen office workers will temporarily replace nurses doing clerical work so they can be used to provide much-needed patient care.”

New York Times: More Patients, Fewer Workers: Omicron Pushes New York Hospitals to Brink. “At Interfaith Medical Center in Brooklyn, the intensive care unit is full, mainly with Covid patients. In a scene reminiscent of spring 2020, patient beds have been set up in the hallway. But on Wednesday, when Interfaith asked city officials to divert ambulances to other hospitals, the request was granted for only two hours, the hospital’s top executive said. Emergency rooms at neighboring hospitals were also overflowing, or precariously understaffed.”

Associated Press: Western Michigan hospital turns to heated tent to ease COVID-19 crush. “A hospital in Western Michigan is using a heated tent as extra emergency space due to a surge in COVID-19 cases. The tent at Mercy Health Muskegon was set up a few weeks ago but put into service Thursday, WOOD-TV reported.”

EVENTS / CANCELLATIONS

Associated Press: CES gadget show turnout falls more than 75% thanks to COVID. “The Consumer Technology Association said on the show’s closing day that more than 40,000 people attended the multi-day event on the Las Vegas Strip. That’s less than a quarter of the more than 170,000 the CTA said were there for its 2020 convention.”

INSTITUTIONS

Stuff New Zealand: Documenting the pandemic – how Archives NZ and the National Library are keeping tabs. “For millennia humans have documented their time in unusual and humorous ways that people before or after didn’t understand. During the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic, people shared cartoons and jokes making light of a terrible situation, many of which don’t make any sense today. Things are no different in the 21st century, but now technology is revolutionising the way we communicate.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNET: Amazon reduces COVID-19 isolation period for US workers. “Amazon is cutting down the amount of time that US workers have to isolate if they test positive for COVID-19, the company said in a Friday memo sent to employees. The Wall Street Journal earlier reported the news, which an Amazon representative confirmed to CNET.”

WORLD/COUNTRY GOVERNMENT

Xinhua: Mauritania tightens restrictions amid rising COVID-19 cases. “The Ministerial Committee in charge of monitoring the development of COVID-19 in Mauritania on Friday tightened restrictions amid rising COVID-19 cases. The committee banned ‘all public gatherings’ and ordered the ‘closure of theatres.'”

Buenos Aires Times: Argentina surpasses 100,000 Covid-19 infections in a day. “Argentina on Thursday surpassed 100,000 confirmed cases of Covid-19 in a single day for the first time, breaking its record high since the start of the pandemic for the third day running. The country, which since the end of 2021 has been facing a dizzying rise in coronavirus infections, is now one of the countries in Latin America where the disease is progressing most rapidly.”

Reuters: China warns hospitals against rejecting patients over COVID curbs as cases decline. “China reported fewer COVID cases on Friday as several cities have curbed movements, while a top official warned hospitals not to turn away patients after a woman’s miscarriage during a lockdown in the city of Xian sparked outrage. China reported 116 domestically transmitted infections with confirmed clinical symptoms for Thursday, mostly in Xian and the province of Henan, down from 132 a day earlier, official data showed on Friday.”

ANI: COVID-19: Non-essential shops to be opened on odd-even basis in Delhi. “Amid the surge in COVID-19 cases in the national capital, the Delhi government on Friday said that shops dealing in non-essential goods will only be allowed to open on an odd-even basis between 10 am to 8 pm.”

AFP: World tops 2mn new daily COVID-19 cases. ” The world recorded more than two million daily coronavirus cases on average between January 1 and 7 with figures doubling in 10 days, an AFP tally showed on Saturday. An average of 2,106,118 new daily infections were reported over the seven-day period, shortly after the one million case threshold was passed in the week of December 23-29, 2021.”

STATES / STATE GOVERNMENT

California Governor: Governor Newsom Activates National Guard to Bolster State’s COVID-19 Testing Capacity. “Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that he has activated the California National Guard to support local communities with additional testing facilities and capacity amid the national surge in COVID-19 cases driven by the Omicron variant.”

LOCAL GOVERNMENT

NBC News: Covid plagues mass transit, leading to staff shortages, service disruptions. “The start of a new year has done little to slow the crippling effects of the pandemic weighing on U.S. public transit systems battling reduced services, Covid-related staffing shortages and slumping ridership. Cities such as Portland, Oregon, Atlanta and Washington, D.C., are reducing mass transit services as their employees contract the coronavirus and are unable to work.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

ABC 7: Texas teacher accused of locking son in car’s trunk to avoid exposure to COVID-19. “A Houston-area teacher allegedly locked her 13-year-old son in the trunk of her moving car as she drove him to a COVID-19 testing site because he had already tested positive and she didn’t want to be exposed, authorities say. Police issued an arrest warrant for the teacher, 41-year-old Sarah Beam, for felony endangering a child after investigating the incident.”

Associated Press: Georgia woman gets prison time for COVID relief fraud. “Federal prosecutors say 49-year-old Hunter VanPelt of Roswell submitted six false loan applications to the Paycheck Protection Program from April to June 2020. She requested a total of more than $7.9 million and received more than $6 million, prosecutors said in a news release.”

The Wire India: Bihar: FIR Against Octagenarian Who Took 12 Doses of COVID Vaccine. “Embarrassed by an 84-year-old man’s revelation that he took 12 COVID-19 vaccines in 11 months, Madhepura district’s health officials have filed a police complaint against Brahmadev Mandal for cheating and disobedience of a public servant’s order.”

INDIVIDUALS – HEROES

Shelton Herald: Shelton senior center director becomes COVID test ‘lifeline’. “Doreen Laucella remains a lifeline for those homebound senior citizens seeking a COVID-19 test…. for those unable to leave their home, Laucella wants them to know she is a resource in attempting to get test kits to those who may be experiencing symptoms or who could have been a close contact to someone who has tested positive.”

K-12 EDUCATION

NBC Washington: Montgomery County Public Schools Drops COVID-19 Policy Days After Introducing It . “Montgomery County Public Schools will no longer consider virtual learning for every school that has 5% or more COVID-19 cases, but will instead make the decision for virtual learning on a case-by-case basis, the superintendent announced Friday. The news comes a day after the school system said online that more than 10,000 students and staff reported testing positive for COVID-19 on Wednesday. MCPS went from having 11 schools in its ‘red’ category to 126.”

Chalkbeat New York: ‘Spread very thin’: NYC schools remain open during COVID surge, but learning is disrupted. “Far more school staff and students have reported testing positive for COVID since Dec. 24 than the rest of the school year combined. On Thursday alone, nearly 11,000 students and more than 2,200 staff reported testing positive, keeping them out of classrooms. On Friday, Chancellor David Banks acknowledged that staff attendance ‘has been lower than we wanted to see,’ but education department officials have refused to provide specific numbers.”

WWMT: Battle Creek Public Schools returns to virtual learning amid rising COVID-19 cases. “Battle Creek Public Schools students will not be in the classroom Monday morning. In a letter posted on the district website Thursday, Superintendent Kim Carter said the district was returning to remote learning Monday, Jan. 10. due to rising COVID-19 cases in the community.”

Reuters: French schools “overwhelmed” by COVID-19 and contact tracing. “Less than a week has gone by since French schools reopened after Christmas, but at the Jean Renoir high school in Boulogne-Billancourt, just outside of Paris, one in four teachers and nearly 50 pupils are already sick with COVID-19.”

Washington Post: ‘I’m barely clinging onto work’: Exhausted parents face another wave of school shutdowns. “Latoya Hamilton had just taken a job as a medical assistant when she got notice last week that her daughter’s school was going online temporarily. The single mother asked for time off. When it was denied, she did the only thing she could: quit. A lack of child care had prompted Hamilton to resign once before early in the pandemic, when she left her $26-an-hour job at NYU Langone Health to care for her three school-aged children. But this time is different. She feels more alone, she said, and unsure of how to make do, both logistically and financially. Federal assistance has expired, and she has depleted her savings and maxed out her credit cards.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

The Michigan Daily: ‘I feel disrespected overall by the administration’: UMich students face long waits, difficulties with quarantine and isolation policies. “When LSA freshman Ruide Xu — who lives in South Quadrangle residence hall — tested positive for COVID-19 on Wednesday, his first thought was to contact the quarantine housing hotline — only to be met with no response after multiple calls and emails….Eventually, Xu said he was able to contact a representative from the U-M Division of Public Safety and Security but was informed that he was not on the quarantine housing list despite being enrolled as a student living on campus who tested positive for COVID-19.”

HEALTH

Boston 25 News: Could Friday’s snowstorm slow the spread of COVID-19?. “In the midst of an Omicron-fueled coronavirus surge that is pushing hospital capacities to the brink, could Friday’s big snowstorm be just what the doctor ordered? Dr. Jeremy Faust, an emergency medicine specialist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, thinks the snow came at the perfect time.”

RESEARCH

USA Today: COVID-19 boosters offer ‘potent’ protection against omicron, study says, recommending Pfizer and Moderna. “New evidence underscores the importance of boosters against omicron, with an mRNA vaccine booster offering the best protection against the fast-spreading variant. People who got either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna two-dose COVID-19 vaccine series and then a booster achieved ‘potent’ neutralization against omicron, a paper published Thursday in the journal Cell found.”

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January 9, 2022 at 12:29AM
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