Thursday, 7 May 2020
Young women among worst hit by coronavirus job cuts
Read here (UUTISET, May 7, 2020)
How swamped preprint servers are blocking bad coronavirus research
‘To address the need for rapid review, a group of publishers and scholarly-communication organizations announced an initiative last month to accelerate the publication of COVID-19 papers using measures such as asking people with relevant expertise to join a list of rapid reviewers. The initiative’s members include Outbreak Science Rapid PREreview, a platform where researchers can request or provide swift reviews of outbreak-related preprints.’
Read here (Nature, May 7, 2020)
Access to lifesaving medical resources for African countries: COVID-19 testing and response, ethics, and politics
Read here (The Lancet, May 7, 2020)
US FDA grants an EUA for the first CRISPR-based diagnostic test
Download here (US FDA, May 6, 2020)
Guides to the other side: The problem-solvers working to get us through the pandemic
‘They don’t offer easy answers or miracle cures; they know there is no resurrecting the lives they once had. Still, they’re giving what they can to a moment that demands it. When it is most difficult to imagine the world getting better, they’ve summoned the creativity — and the courage — to invent the world anew.’
Read here (Washington Post, May 7, 2020)
US mayor says he had coronavirus last year, worried people dismissed it as bad flu
‘The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced on January 21 the first case was a man who had returned to the Seattle area after visiting Wuhan.
‘Within five minutes of the blood test, the doctor shared the positive antibody results with the mayor, prompting Melham to think back to the New Jersey League of Municipalities Conference in Atlantic City in November, when he recalled driving back up the Garden State Parkway on Thursday, November 21 not feeling well, suspecting the reason was a mix of exhaustion and dehydration from the three-day event.’
Read here (Global Times, May 7, 2020)
Patterns of pain: What Covid-19 can teach us about how to be human
‘I conclude with Freud: “The aim of psychoanalysis is to turn hysteria into ordinary human unhappiness.” That is an accomplishment for an individual and for a society. We cannot escape unhappiness. It is constitutive of being human, just as are creativity, courage, ambition, attachment and love. Let’s embrace the complexity of what it means to be human in this time of sorrow as we think and feel our way to come out of this, wiser, humbler and more connected.’
Read here (The Guardian, May 7, 2020)
COVID-19 death rate sinking? Data reveals a complex reality
Read here (DW, May 7, 2020)
Wednesday, 6 May 2020
Lianhua Qingwen (TCM product) approved for sale in Singapore
‘Lianhua Qingwen, a recommended medicine for treating patients with mild COVID-19 symptoms, has been approved as a Chinese proprietary medicine by the Health Sciences Authority in Singapore. The designation means the product can be sold in the country as a medicine, the drug’s manufacturer said.’
Read here (GMP News, May 7, 2020)
Five ways the pandemic is changing the world for the better: An interview with UCI philosopher Aaron James
(1) Telecommuting and flexible work schedules are being normalised. (2) Universal basic income is gaining bipartisan support. (3) Contributing to society is about more than making money. (4) Climate change progress is being driven by renewable energy capitalism. (5) Turns out the pandemic may be a vaccine against assholes.
Read here (University of California, Irvine, May 7, 2020)
China could cut US debt holdings in response to White House Covid-19 compensation threats, analysts say
Read here (South China Morning Post, May 6, 2020)
Genetic mutation study finds new coronavirus spread swiftly around the world in late 2019
Read here (Straits Times, May 6, 2020)
Virus outbreak in India market could cause cases to snowball
‘The market, which had remained open during India's six-week virus lockdown, is central to the region’s food supply chain. The challenge for public health officials is to track the many traders, workers and shoppers who visited the market. Experts said the virus cluster has exposed India’s poor surveillance during the pandemic. They said the country’s long denial of how prevalent the virus was resulted in people not taking precautions, and warned that the market cluster could result in cases in India snowballing.’
Read here (ABC News, May 6, 2020)
World faces rare ‘inflationary depression,’ says Keynes scholar
Read here (Bloomberg, May 6, 2020)
For the record: Are Gates and Rockefeller using their influence to set agenda in poor states?
Read here (The Guardian, Jan 15, 2016)
Download report here (Global Policy Forum, November 2015)
The problem with stories about dangerous coronavirus mutations
‘As if the pandemic weren’t bad enough, on April 30, a team led by scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory released a paper that purportedly described “the emergence of a more transmissible form” of the new coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2. This new form, the team wrote, “began spreading in Europe in early February.” Whenever it appeared in a new place, including the U.S., it rapidly rose to dominance. Its success, the team suggested, is likely due to a single mutation, which is now “of urgent concern.”
‘The paper has not yet been formally published or reviewed by other scientists. But on May 5, the Los Angeles Times wrote about it, claiming that “a now-dominant strain of the coronavirus could be more contagious than [the] original.” That story quickly went … well … viral.
‘But “the conclusions are overblown,” says Lisa Gralinski of the University of North Carolina, who is one of the few scientists in the world who specializes in coronaviruses. “To say that you’ve revealed the emergence of a more transmissible form of SARS-CoV-2 without ever actually testing it isn’t the type of thing that makes me feel comfortable as a scientist.” She and other virologists I’ve spoken with who were not involved in the Los Alamos research agree that the paper’s claims are plausible, but not justified by the evidence it presents. More important, they’re not convinced different strains of the coronavirus exist at all.’
Read here (The Atlantic, May 6, 2020)
These are the ‘10 plain truths’ about the coronavirus pandemic, according to former CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden
2. It’s “just the beginning”
3. Data is a “very powerful weapon against this virus”
4. We need to “box the virus in”
5. We must find the balance
6. Protect the “frontline heroes”
7. Protect our most vulnerable people, too
8. Governments and private companies need to work together
9. We must not neglect non-Covid health issues
10. Preparedness is paramount
Read here (CNN, May 6, 2020)
Singaporeans to be given improved reusable masks in third nationwide mask distribution exercise
Read here (Straits Times, May 6, 2020)
The coming post-Covid anarchy: Kevin Rudd
Read here (Foreign Affairs, May 6, 2020)
From Hong Kong to Britain, governments ranked poorly for their response to Covid-19
Read here (South China Morning Post, May 6, 2020)
When did Covid-19 first appear in the US?
View here (CGTN, Youtube, May 6, 2020)
Six flaws in the arguments for reopening
Read here (Washington Post, May 6, 2020)
We can beat the virus only by protecting human rights
Read here (Washington Post, May 6, 2020)
Experts differ over states’ CMCO non-compliance
‘While lawyer Derek Fernandez said the states have a constitutional obligation to follow what has been gazetted as law by the Federal Government (if the states have yet to have their own laws on Covid-19), former judge Datuk Seri Gopal Sri Ram said it is not so simple.’
Read here (The Star, May 6, 2020)
Tuesday, 5 May 2020
National action plan for expanding and adapting the healthcare system for the duration of the Covid pandemic
- How can we improve infection prevention in hospitals and maintain a robust supply chain for personal protective equipment (PPE)?
- What approach should we take to restarting deferred healthcare services?
- What financial support is needed for hospitals and healthcare providers?
- How should the healthcare workforce be sustained and augmented?
- How can we provide mental health support for healthcare workers in this crisis?
- How can we provide medical care and sick leave for all people in the United States?
- How can we make telemedicine a new normal?
- How can we reduce the number of undiagnosed infectious diseases in our hospitals?
- How can we better protect emergency medical services (EMS) personnel from infectious diseases?
- How can we better coordinate the healthcare response to COVID and the next pandemic?
Read and download here (Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, May 5, 2020)
S’pore’s youngest Covid-19 casualty was declared virus-free a week before she died
‘Ms Salha, 58, had been declared virus-free nine days earlier, but the infection had already taken a toll on her body, her daughter told The Straits Times. Her vital organs, including her kidneys and liver, were failing and she was in a bad shape.’
Read here (Straits Times, May 5, 2020)
Sympathy for the epidemiologists: Paul Krugman
‘So let me give a shout-out to the hard-working, much-criticized epidemiologists trying to get this pandemic right. You may take a lot of abuse when you get it wrong, which you unavoidably will on occasion. But you’re doing what must be done. Also, welcome to my world.’
Read here (New York Times, May 5, 2020)
Yuval Noah Harari talks about governance, surveillance, misinformation and the significance of Covid-19
View here (BBC, Youtube, May 5, 2020)
What Covid-19 antibody tests can and cannot tell us
‘Antibody tests could help scientists understand the extent of COVID-19’s spread in populations. Because of limitations in testing accuracy and a plethora of unknowns about immunity itself, however, they are less informative about an individual’s past exposure or protection against future infection.’
Read here (Scientific American, May 5, 2020)
Shocking draft FEMA report sees 200,000 Covid-19 cases, 3,000 deaths daily by June 1
Read here (Huffington Post, May 5, 2020). Download here
Argentina responds boldly to coronavirus crisis
‘Meanwhile, the armed forces are building triage centres in case of a surge in infections while social, religious and business groups work together to deliver food to more than two million in the greater Buenos Aires area alone.’
Read here (IPS News, May 5, 2020)
Paul Garner: For 7 weeks I have been through a roller coaster of ill health, extreme emotions, and utter exhaustion
‘The aim of this piece is to get this message out: for some people the illness goes on for a few weeks. Symptoms come and go, are strange and frightening. The exhaustion is severe, real, and part of the illness. And we all need support and love from the community around us.’
Read here (BMJ Opinion, May 5, 2020)
The invisible pandemic: Our most important task is not to stop spread but to concentrate on giving the unfortunate victims optimal care
Read here (The Lancet, May 5, 2020)
Why has eastern Europe suffered less from coronavirus than the west?
Read here (The Guardian, May 5, 2020)
Cook County searching for overlooked COVID-19 deaths as far back as November just ‘to cover our bases’
Read here (Chicago Sun Times, May 5, 2020)
Preparing for post-COVID-19 from the lens of sustainable development goals (SDGs): Insight from Malaysia
- Disaster preparedness: Build on the strengths of the Malaysian public healthcare system which has shown tremendous robustness and resilience in this crisis. Raise the level of disaster preparedness (SDG 3.d) through the use of Big Data for predictions and alerts, and maintain a ready stockpile of emergency supplies. Ensure that the provision of public goods like healthcare remains the responsibility of the government (SDG 3.8)
- Culture of civic responsibility: Keep up campaigns to promote personal hygiene, public cleanliness, and health and safety awareness as mutual responsibilities (SDG 4). Ensure an efficient system of participation and involvement by non-government organisations to alleviate the negative impacts on all people and ensure a better quality of life (SDG 16& SDG 17).
- Sustainable risk-resilient game plan: Business and the broader economy need increased resiliency. In the short term, the Malaysian government needs to develop a comprehensive and sustainable social protection system to help the M/SMEs to cope with unprecedented economic situations (SDG10.4). Going forward, the country needs a people-centred economic policy; for instance, better policies on flexible work for both women and men...
- High-speed cost-effective connectivity: Many daily activities have moved online – business functions, school, and university classes, and purchasing food and other essentials – but gaps do exist. We need to identify the gaps in our preparedness and connectivity so that all organisations are fully prepared for this eventuality (SDG 9.1). Connectivity needs to be cost-effective and available even in remote areas (SDG 9.c).
- Research & innovation: Research and innovation are crucial for Malaysia to progress in this highly competitive world. Funding for high-quality research and innovation is a key part of that and the COVID-19 crisis makes such research and development more imperative and urgent. While financial resources are not easy to come by with the looming global economic recession, Malaysia should at least maintain its present level of R&D expenditure (1.44% of GDP) and increase it later when the situation allows ( SDG 4.7 and SDG 9.5).
Read here (United Nations University, May 5, 2020)
State v Federal impasse over lockdown relaxation order
Read here (The Edge, May 5, 2020)
As some countries ease up, others are reimposing lockdowns amid a resurgence of coronavirus infections
Such a resurgence of cases had been widely predicted by experts, but these increasing numbers come as a sobering reminder of the challenges ahead as countries chafing under the social and economic burdens of keeping their citizens indoors weigh the pros and cons of allowing people to move around again.
Read here (Washington Post, May 5, 2020)
Preparing a safe return to work
Read here (The Edge, May 5, 2020)
Chow: No feedback was collected from the states on CMCO
Read here (The Star, May 5, 2020)
Monday, 4 May 2020
Defiance of the 9 States – The whirling wheels of Malaysian federalism
‘In a stunning development, as many as 9 states have said they will not be following or complying fully with the Federal Government’s ease of movement and resumption of businesses at 100% capacity under the CMCO.
‘Is it unconstitutional for these States to not follow or fully comply with the Federal Government’s CMCO?’
Read here (Malaysian Public Law, May 2, 2020)
MITI urges state governments to follow Putrajaya's decision to relax the MCO
‘Failure to do so may result in the state governments facing the possibility of legal action from various parties, particularly industry players, Minister of International Trade and Industry Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali cautioned in a statement today.
‘As it is, Mohamed Azmin said various industry associations, including the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers and the Malay Chamber of Commerce of Malaysia, have issued statements calling for state governments not to stop companies from resuming their operations from today, the first day of the CMCO.’
Read here (The Edge, May 4, 2020)
See how a cough travels without a mask and with
View here (CNN, May 4, 2020)
UN humanitarian chief: After COVID-19, it’s in everyone’s interest to help the world's poorest countries
‘Some may be sceptical that additional resources of that magnitude can be generated in the current circumstances. That is not my experience. After the financial crisis of 2008 fundraising for UN-coordinated humanitarian appeals had increased by more than 40 per cent by 2010. That was a result of human generosity and empathy – but also a calculation of national interest in the donor countries.’
Read here (OCHA, May 4, 2020)
Govt needs a U-turn on conditional MCO
‘This is where infection is most likely – the most number of people are there and the ones most likely to ignore SOPs. They include all sorts of businesses – food and beverage, services, shops, workplaces – virtually all can reopen except for those that involve close contact and mass gatherings.’
Read here (FocusMalaysia, May 4, 2020)
‘Advance market commitment for Covid-19 vaccine’ by Gavi, the vaccine alliance
‘The positive news is that the global response in terms of vaccine development has been historic. Today, over 80 preclinical candidates are in development and seven have already progressed to human trials. This could well give us a better chance of getting more than one COVID-19 vaccine introduced in record-breaking time. However it also shines a light on another critical challenge: how to ensure that once a vaccine is available, it is accessible to everyone that needs it. We can only stop the pandemic if it is under control everywhere.’
Read here (Gavi, May 4, 2020)
Read more about Gavi here
Inventive routes back to normal life
‘All these novel schemes, and many more, may help a return to some form of normality. But Ngaire Woods, professor of global economic governance at Oxford University, says easing lockdown requires us all to rethink our lives. "We have got to get testing tracing and isolating up and running fantastically well," she told Radio 4's Briefing Room. "We have to start thinking about preventative measures in public spaces and schools. We have got to manage the import of cases - so think about travel restrictions. That's a clear checklist in order to safely start lifting the lockdown."
‘Prof Woods says thinking will have to go far beyond just re-opening closed-down businesses. We may need to split workforces by age group - an example could be that older teachers must take their classes by video link. "Those are the questions we have to ask - they are not insurmountable problems. The alternative is to stay in a total lockdown."
Read here (BBC, May 4, 2020)
The next Apple Watch could be a powerful COVID-19 early warning system
‘Toward the end of his life, one of Steve Jobs’s hopes for Apple was that it could play a role in helping people stay healthy. After he died, that ambition was most clearly expressed in the Apple Watch. The company has always pushed to make its wearable something more than a fitness tracker—a more powerful, clinically relevant device.’
Read here (Fast Company, March 4, 2020)
Historic financial decline hits doctors, dentists and hospitals — despite covid-19 — threatening overall economy
Read here (Washington Post, May 4, 2020)
French doctors say they found a Covid-19 patient from December
Read here (CNN, May 4, 2020)
FDA steps up scrutiny of coronavirus antibody tests to ensure accuracy
‘The result, they complained, was a flood of products of dubious quality that confused hospitals, doctors and consumers — “a wild, wild West” environment, said Scott Becker, chief executive officer of the Association of Public Health Laboratories, which represents state and local public laboratories.’
Read here (Washington Post, May 4, 2020)
The coronavirus pandemic is pushing America into a mental health crisis
Read here (Washington Post, May 4, 2020)
Malaysia is beating all these brutal COVID-19 expectations
Read here (Channel News Asia, May 4, 2020)
UrbanFutures: Building a trust economy
‘Developing the trust economy involves three key aspects: (1) An enhanced role for government (2) Hyperlocalism and digital infrastructure (3) Protecting the welfare of the people.’
Read here (The Edge, May 4, 2020)
Nurses are playing a crucial role in this pandemic — as always
Read here (Scientific American, May 4, 2020)
In The NYTimes, only white leaders stand out
‘According to the NYTimes, Iran Completely and Utterly Botched Its Response to the Coronavirus, but countries with higher mortality rates like Germany, Italy, Sweden, and Denmark are listed as true leaders. It makes no sense. It’s just racism, so structural that the Editorial Board can’t even see it. It’s built into the edifice of the paper itself.’
Read here (Medium, May 4, 2020)
The curse of ‘The Lucky Country’: In search of economic antidotes to Covid-19
Read here (McKinsey & Co, May 4, 2020)
Sunday, 3 May 2020
Roche's serology test with ‘specificity greater than 99.8% and sensitivity of 100%’ gets FDA approval
Read here (Roche press release, May 3, 2020)
Threatened, maligned, jailed: Journalism in the coronavirus pandemic
‘We will not be able to say with certainty just how many journalists have disappeared or been jailed since the coronavirus pandemic began until the end of the year. However, we can report that as of today at least 231 professional journalists and 115 so-called citizen journalists and bloggers — that is, people disseminating information on authoritarian governments via YouTube or Facebook — are currently behind bars. Another 14 media professionals (photographers, camera operators, editors, etc.) are in jail as well.’
Read here (DW, May 3, 2020)
Why are some people testing positive more than once?
Speaking on The Andrew Marr Show, she said doctors were finding instances where "dead cells" that emerged during the healing process of the lungs were testing positive for Covid-19, but the individuals themselves were not reinfected.
View here (BBC, May 3, 2020)
Vienna Airport to offer coronavirus tests to avoid quarantine
Read here (Reuters, May 3, 2020)
Coronavirus poses a tough question: Did NYC essential workers die in the line of duty?
Read here (Politico, May 3, 2020)
SARS-COV-2 was already spreading in France in late December 2019
- Covid-19 was already spreading in France in late December 2019, a month before the official first cases in the country.
- Early community spreading changes our knowledge of covid-19 epidemic.
- This new case changes our understanding of the epidemic and modeling studies should adjust to this new data.
Read here (Science Direct, May 3, 2020)
The Covid-19 riddle: Why does the virus wallop some places and spare others?
‘Time may still prove the greatest equalizer: The Spanish flu that broke out in the United States in 1918 seemed to die down during the summer only to come roaring back with a deadlier strain in the fall, and a third wave the following year. It eventually reached far-flung places like islands in Alaska and the South Pacific and infected a third of the world’s population.
“We are really early in this disease,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, the director of the Harvard Global Health Research Institute. “If this were a baseball game, it would be the second inning and there’s no reason to think that by the ninth inning the rest of the world that looks now like it hasn’t been affected won’t become like other places.”
Read here (New York Times, May 3, 2020)
Covid-19’s race and class warfare
Read here (New York Times, May 3, 2020)
MCO and the failure to follow the rule of law
‘All this in the face of existing PCID-MILA Regulations and the provisions of the PCIDA which expressly confers power only upon the Minister of Health to formulate and enforce regulations relating to activities and movement in infected areas. And so, the confusion and uncertainties continue whilst little is known of what the Ministry of Health has to say about all this.’
Read here (FocusMalaysia, May 3, 2020)
Saturday, 2 May 2020
Covid-19 and the harsh reality of empathy distribution
Read here (Scientific American, May 2, 2020)
Expert report predicts up to two more years of pandemic misery
Read here (CNN, May 2, 2020)
It’s unfair to blame China for coronavirus pandemic, Lancet editor tells state media
‘His comments came after the US top spy agency said that the intelligence community did not believe the virus had been man-made or genetically modified, but said it will continue to examine whether the outbreak “began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan”.’
Read here (South China Morning Post, May 2, 2020)
The pieces of the puzzle of covid-19’s origin are coming to light
‘The question of whether they really are [unrecognised zoonoses], and how those threats may stack up, needs attention. That attention needs laboratories. It also needs a degree of open co-operation that America is now degrading with accusations and reductions in funding, and that China has taken steps to suppress at source. That suppression has done nothing to help the country; indeed, by supporting speculation, it may yet harm it.’
Read here (The Economist, May 2, 2020)
The British charlatan style has been sent packing by too much reality
‘What’s over is the glib, deceitful spirit of 2016 with its false promise that bills need never be paid. The Brexit right has attempted a final rally. It dismissed warnings about public health as “over the top” just as it dismissed warnings about Brexit as “Project Fear” and assured us that “German carmakers” or some other knight on a shining unicorn would make everything all right.’
Read here (The Guardian, May 2, 2020)
Friday, 1 May 2020
Singapore: New safe distancing guidelines, standards for workplaces after Covid-19 circuit breaker
‘These guidelines... will also be complemented by a testing regimen as well as some form of technology that can ensure better tracking and monitoring should a confirmed case emerge in the workplace.’
Read here (Straits Times, May 1, 2020)
US officials crafting retaliatory actions against China over coronavirus as President Trump fumes
Read here (Washington Post, May 1, 2020)
Coronavirus concerns are not a carte blanche to snoop: Europe Human Rights Commissioner
- ‘First of all, digital devices must be designed and used in compliance with privacy and non-discrimination norms. They must be anonymous, encrypted, decentralized, function on open source and be available to the largest number of people possible, thus bridging the digital divide. Their use must be voluntary, based on informed consent, restricted to the purposes of health protection, contain a clear time limit and be fully transparent. Users should be able to opt-out at any moment, deleting all their data, and be able to challenge intrusions into their private sphere through effective measures.
- ‘Secondly, laws must comply strictly with the right to privacy as protected by the laws of national constitutions and of the European Court of Human Rights.
- ‘Thirdly, government operations must be subject to judicial review, as well as monitoring by parliament and national human rights institutions to ensure accountability. Independent data protection authorities must test and approve technological devices before they are used.’
Read here (DW, May 1, 2020)
MMA: Public now the ‘frontliners’ in Covid-19 fight
“As most businesses will resume operations on Monday (May 4), the public will now play the most important role in fighting the Covid-19 pandemic... The general public must now take on the role as frontliners, in battling the pandemic in public places by being disciplined in observing social distancing, personal hygiene and comply with the standard operating procedures (SOP) at all times or we can easily slip back into the ‘old norm’.’’
Read here (The Star, May 1, 2020)
Conditional MCO might cause third wave of infections, say health experts
Azrul Mohd Khalib, the executive director of the Galen Centre for Health and Social Policy, said people might be confused over the standard operating procedures (SOP) given the short time frame for preparation, warning also of non-compliance by others.
Read here (Free Malaysia Today, May 1, 2020)
List of banned activities during conditional MCO
This story contains (1) the list and (2) a number of related news stories pertaining to the conditional MCO announced by the Prime Minister on May 1, 2020.
Read here (Malaysiakini, May 1, 2020)
Ethiopia’s Prime Minister calls on developed countries to help Africa through Covid-19
Read here (Project Syndicate, May 1, 2020)
Beijing-based company finds Covid-19 shot protects monkeys
‘Researchers from Sinovac Biotech, a privately held Beijing-based company, gave two different doses of their COVID-19 vaccine to a total of eight rhesus macaques. Three weeks later, the group introduced SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, into the monkeys' lungs. None developed a full-blown infection, and the monkeys given the highest dose of vaccine had the best response: Seven days after the animals received the virus, researchers could not detect it in their pharynx or lungs. Some of the lower dosed animals had a “viral blip” but also appeared to have controlled the infection, the Sinovac team reports in a paper published on 19 April on the preprint server bioRxiv.’
Read here (Science, May 1, 2020)
Can gut microbes predict Covid-19 severity?
Read here (Psychology Today, May 1, 2020) and here (Medrxiv, April 25, 2020)
Famed HIV researcher on the race to find a Covid-19 treatment
‘The Jack Ma Foundation recently gave Ho and other researchers at Columbia University a $2.1 million grant to support their efforts to identify antiviral drugs and antibodies that can be used to fight the coronavirus.
‘Ho: My group is not so much working on a vaccine. We're trying to discover small-molecule drugs or develop antibodies that can be used either as prophylactics or therapeutics. We think the timeline for antibodies in particular can be much faster. We know we have the technology to fish out and construct very powerful antibodies that can be used to treat the infection, as well as prevent the infection.’
Read here (NBC News, May 1, 2020)
The rise of ‘health entertainment’ to convey lifesaving messages in the Covid-19 pandemic
Read here (Scientific American, May 1, 2020)
The post-pandemic future of work
Read here (The New Republic, May 1, 2020)
Government researchers changed metric to measure coronavirus drug remdesivir during clinical trial
‘Instead of counting how many people taking the drug were kept alive on ventilators or died, among other measures, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said it would judge the drug primarily on a different outcome: how long it took surviving patients to recover.’
Read here (The Washington Post, May 1, 2020)
Major challenges remain in Covid-19 testing
Read here (Mckinsey & Co, May 2020)
Coronavirus vaccine: Where profit and public health collide
Read here (DW, May 1, 2020)
From surviving to thriving: Reimagining the post-COVID-19 return
Read here (McKinsey & Co, May 1, 2020)
How life in our cities will look after the coronavirus pandemic
‘Cities thrive on the opportunities for work and play, and on the endless variety of available goods and services. If fear of disease becomes the new normal, cities could be in for a bland and antiseptic future, perhaps even a dystopian one. But if the world’s cities find ways to adjust, as they always have in the past, their greatest era may yet lie before them.
‘To help us make sense of urban life after the pandemic, Foreign Policy asked 11 leading thinkers from around the world to weigh in with their predictions. One of the contributors is Maimunah Mohd Sharif from Penang, Malaysia.’
Read here (Foreign Policy, May 1, 2020)
Resolve to Save Lives releases a colour-coded
Download here (Resolve to Save Lives, May 2020)
Three potential futures for Covid-19: recurring small outbreaks, a monster wave, or a persistent crisis
“This pandemic is not going to settle down until there is sufficient population immunity,” slightly above 50%, epidemiologist Gabriel Leung of the University of Hong Kong told a New York Academy of Sciences briefing.
‘Since the world “is far from that level of immunity,” said Osterholm (he estimates that no more than 5% of the world population is immune to the new coronavirus as a result of surviving their infection), “this virus is going to keep finding people. It’s going to keep spreading through the population.” And that, he said, “means we’re in for a long haul”.’
Read here (STAT News, May 1, 2020)
Thursday, 30 April 2020
US launches SPHERES consortium to monitor, conduct genomic research and share information on the Coronavirus
- Monitor important changes in the virus as it continues to circulate.
- Gain important insights to support contact tracing.
- Provide crucial information to aid in identifying diagnostic and therapeutic targets.
- Advance public health research in the areas of transmission dynamics, host response, and evolution of the virus.
Read here (US CDC, April 30, 2020)
Under pressure, airlines begin mandating passenger face masks
‘Flight attendant unions and Democratic lawmakers have been pressing the federal government to mandate masks on planes. Regulators have so far resisted the pressure, but the airline industry is beginning to turn toward implementing mask requirements piecemeal anyway.’
Read here (Politico, April 30, 2020)
Trump’s ‘Operation Warp Speed’ aims to rush coronavirus vaccine
‘Called “Operation Warp Speed,” the program will pull together private pharmaceutical companies, government agencies and the military to try to cut the development time for a vaccine by as much as eight months, according to two people familiar with the matter.’
Read here (Bloomberg, April 30, 2020)
Six political philosophies in search of a virus: Critical perspectives on the coronavirus pandemic
‘The Coronavirus (Covid-19) poses interesting questions for social and political thought. These include the nature and limits of the ethical responsibility of the state, personal liberty and collective interests, human dignity, and state surveillance. As many countries throughout the world declared states of emergency, some of the major questions in political philosophy become suddenly highly relevant. Foucault’s writings on biopolitical securitization and Agamben’s notion of the state of exception take on a new reality, as do the classical arguments of utilitarianism and libertarianism. In this paper, I discuss six main philosophical responses to the pandemic, including provocative interventions made by Agamben, Badieu, and Zizek, Latour on the governance of life and death as well as the Kantian perspective of Habermas on human dignity...
‘If there is a single conclusion to be drawn from these philosophies, it is that the Coronavirus is more than a pathogen that threatens the lives of many people, but democracy is also in danger from the recent experiments with emergency government. These may not result in a permanent state of exception or the suspension of democracy – letting aside the Anthropocene scenario of extreme climate change requiring long-term states of exception – and the solution is not a simple restoration of individual liberty. Perhaps then more significant in the long-term will be new technologies of emergency governance that are now taking shape in large-scale societal experimentation with the technocratic management of populations in rapidly changing circumstances. Governments have acquired considerable technocratic power over their populations, which have been disciplined in the late Foucauldian sense of the term to desire safety over liberty.’
Download here (LSE European Institute, May 2020)
Three major concerns over Covid-19 and the MCO
- One, there are excessive detentions following the movement control order or MCO which has raised legitimate concerns over police highhandedness, extreme sentencing, and the possibility of actually exacerbating Covid-19 instead of controlling it.
- Two, the limited 1-day sitting of Parliament, in name only, on May 18 does not allow Parliamentary sanction, legitimacy and debate of the moves taken by the new backdoor government.
- And three, this shortened parliamentary session raises issues over the lack of legitimacy of moves taken and the inability to raise more funds to deal with the economic effects of the pandemic.’
Read here (FocusMalaysia, April 30, 2020)
Covid-19 in rural America – Is there cause for concern?
Read here (KFF, April 30, 2020)
We need smart solutions to mitigate the coronavirus’s impact. Here are 30
Read here (The Washington Post, April 30, 2020)
Wednesday, 29 April 2020
Tests in recovered patients found false positives, not reinfections, experts say
‘Oh Myoung-don, who leads the central clinical committee for emerging disease control, said the committee members found little reason to believe that those cases could be COVID-19 reinfections or reactivations, which would have made global efforts to contain the virus much more daunting. “The tests detected the ribonucleic acid of the dead virus,” said Oh, a Seoul National University hospital doctor, at a press conference Thursday held at the National Medical Center.’
Read here (The Korea Herald, April 29, 2020)
Long-term care industry calls for expanded testing and funding for nursing homes and assisted-living communities
‘Despite recent data and reports showing the outsized impact of the novel coronavirus on long term care residents, particularly those with underlying health conditions, industry leaders say nursing homes and assisted living communities have not been a priority for supplies, testing or resources.’
Read here (AHCA, April 29, 2020)
FEMA prepares to send protective gear to nursing homes
‘The move comes weeks into the coronavirus response and targets facilities hardest hit by the pandemic. Nursing homes have been particularly vulnerable to coronavirus in part because of the slice of the population they serve: elderly residents who, data suggests, may be at higher risk of the illness.’
Read here (CNN, April 29, 2020)
Did China cover-up the Covid-19 outbreak?
View here (BBC, Youtube, April 29, 2020)
Dr Anthony Fauci says Gilead’s remdesivir will set a new ‘standard of care’ for coronavirus treatment
- White House health advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said Wednesday that data from a coronavirus drug trial testing Gilead Sciences’ antiviral drug remdesivir showed “quite good news” and sets a new standard of care for Covid-19 patients.
- Fauci said the median time of recovery for patients taking the drug was 11 days, compared with 15 days in the placebo group.
- The results suggested a survival benefit, with a mortality rate of 8% for the group receiving remdesivir versus 11.6% for the placebo group, according to a statement from the National Institutes of Health released later Wednesday.
Read here (CNBC, April 29, 2020)
Third of UK Covid-19 patients taken to hospital die, study finds. ‘On par with Ebola’
Read here (The Guardian, April 29, 2020)
ILO: As job losses escalate, nearly half of global workforce at risk of losing livelihoods
Read here (ILO, April 29, 2020)
US and Chinese researchers team up for hunt into Covid origins
Read here (Financial Times, April 29, 2020)
The ‘terrible moral choice’ of reopening
Read here (The Atlantic, April 29, 2020)
Pandemic shakes France’s faith in a cornerstone: Strong central government
‘Like many leaders, Mr. Macron initially derived a boost from the crisis, but that has begun to fade. Nearly 60 percent of respondents described him as a “bad president” in one recent poll, while another poll showed confidence in the government’s management of the crisis declining steadily to 39 percent from 55 percent in the past month.’
Read here (New York Times, April 29, 2020, updated May 5)
Coronavirus spreads anti-Chinese feeling in Southeast Asia, but the prejudice goes back centuries
Read here (South China Morning Post, April 29, 2020)
There is no exit from coronavirus, only containment: A perspective from India
‘Having said that, the horrifying twin-reality still remains to be that an end to lockdown will by no means represent a return to normality, and, equally, a second, far more destructive wave is virtually an unavoidable possibility, notwithstanding the infection-reducing social distancing as a “new normal” in our daily life.’
Read here (Indian Punchline, April 29, 2020)
Managing expectations on Covid exit is the new challenge
Read here (Irish Times, April 29, 2020)
Dogs are being trained to sniff out coronavirus cases
‘The dogs are the first trainees in a University of Pennsylvania research project to determine whether canines can detect an odor associated with the virus that causes the disease covid-19. If so, they might eventually be used in a sort of “canine surveillance” corps, the university said — offering a noninvasive, four-legged method to screen people in airports, businesses or hospitals.’
Read here (Washington Post, April 29, 2020)
Dare to imagine the best possible new normal
‘The added difference between 1945 and 2020 is that the pandemic should make us realise more deeply the fact that we are merely a species among other species and how species relate to each other cannot continue to be haphazard, and that the environment that supports us and that we all share is fragile. The environment has to be respected and cared for. And our existence is a shared one — within the species and among species.’
Read here (The Edge, April 29, 2020)
Tuesday, 28 April 2020
Learning how to dance - Part 3: How to do testing and contact tracing. Tomas Pueyo
- With testing, we find out who is infected
- With isolations, we prevent them from infecting others
- With contact tracing, we figure out the people with whom they’ve been in contact
- With quarantines, we prevent these contacts from infecting others
Read here (Medium, April 28, 2020)
Strengthening preparedness for Covid-19 in cities and urban settings
Beyond traditional recommendations—such as multisectoral collaboration, protecting vulnerable populations, and evidence-based policy decisions—the guidance also addresses 4 focus areas in the context of COVID-19 preparedness:
- Coordinated local plans to address unique issues, characteristics, and capacities of individual cities;
- Risk communication and education to promote compliance with recommended actions, using media that can effectively reach target audiences;
- Contextually and culturally appropriate approaches to public health, including social distancing, enhanced hygiene, and respiratory etiquette; and
- Adequate access to care for COVID-19 and other essential health services, including prevent services like vaccination. The document also includes an annex with more specific details, considerations, and recommendations under each focus area.
Read and download here (WHO, April 28, 2020)
Germany's Covid-19 infection rate rises after lockdown lifted
Read here (Euronews, April 28, 2020)
India cancels order for ‘faulty’ China rapid test kits
Read here (BBC, April 28, 2020)
In race for a Coronavirus vaccine, an Oxford group leaps ahead
Read here (New York Times, April 28, 2020)
Trump unveils testing blueprint
Download here (Whitehouse, April 2020)
Covid-19 — A reminder to reason
‘We are living through an unprecedented biopsychosocial crisis; physicians must be the voice of reason and lead by example. We must reason critically and reflect on the biases that may influence our thinking processes, critically appraise evidence in deciding how to treat patients, and use anecdotal observations only to generate hypotheses for trials that can be conducted with clinical equipoise. We must act swiftly but carefully, with caution and reason.’
Read here (New England Journal of Medicine, April 28, 2020)
Unified in coronavirus lockdown, India splinters over reopening
Read here (New York Times, April 28, 2020)
New antibody test ‘with 99 per cent accuracy’ approved for use across Europe
‘The company’s diagnostic test has been given a CE mark showing it complies with EU safety rules and can now be used in labs across the UK to test for antibodies created when a person has been infected with Covid-19.’
Read here (The Independent, April 28, 2020?)
‘Calamitous’: Domestic violence set to soar by 20% during global lockdown
Read here (The Guardian, April 28, 2020)
Worst ever Covid variant? Omicron
John Campbell shares his findings on Omicron. View here (Youtube, Nov 27, 2021)
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