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Thursday, January 6, 2022

Most people are still wearing cloth masks. Here's why that's a problem with omicron



Your cloth face mask isn't protecting you against the coronavirus variant omicron, health officials say. 

As common as cloth face masks have become, health experts say, they do little to prevent tiny virus particles from getting into your nose or mouth and aren't effective against the new variant.

"Cloth masks are not going to cut it with omicron," says Linsey Marr, a researcher at Virginia Tech told NPR.

Health experts are urging the public to opt for three-ply surgical masks, KN95 masks or N95 masks, which offer more protection against the highly contagious variant. 

Omicron spreads more quickly and efficiently than other known coronavirus variants and is extremely transmissible – even through thick fabric face masks. Several countries, such as Germany and Austria, have surgical masks requirements in public.

What face mask is the most effective against COVID-19?

N95, KN95 and KF94 respirators are made out of material with an electrostatic charge, which "actually pulls these particles in as they're floating around and prevents you from inhaling those particles,"  Dr. Abraar Karan, an infectious disease physician at Stanford University, told NPR.  

Researchers at Duke University conducted a study last year to see which mask was the most effective. The N95 masks were the most effective in blocking respiratory droplets – 99% to be exact. Second-best? Surgical masks.

Leana Wen, an emergency physician and visiting professor of health policy and management at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health, said surgical masks are a great, more affordable option.

"We need to be wearing at least a three-ply surgical mask. You can wear a cloth mask on top of that, but do not just wear a cloth mask alone," Wen told CNN.

Why aren't cloth face masks effective as omicron spikes?

While cloth masks can filter large droplets, N95s can filter both large droplets and the smaller aerosols that may contain the airborne virus. N95s are also especially efficient, filtering out about 95% of airborne particles.  

Infectious disease expert Steven Gordon told Cleveland Clinic that all studies show omicron is the most easily transmissible coronavirus variant, and that's why health experts urge a change in masks. Gordon added that while cloth masks help prevent the exhale of particles, it doesn't do much to prevent inhaling particles, which is a problem with omicron.

Should N95 masks still be reserved for health care staff?

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urges the public to save N95 masks for health care workers. However, it was only in the first several months of the pandemic when hospitals saw a shortage in N95 masks. Now it has "been many months since the supply of N95s (has been) an issue," Wen said.

Should you be wearing an N95 mask? What to know and where to buy them online

Dr. Sabrina Assoumou, an infectious disease physician at Boston Medical Center, is among experts who recommend upgraded masks: "If you're in an indoor public setting, that's where we recommend that you wear a well-fitted, high-quality mask. With omicron and how transmissible it is, I feel that we should all be moving to wearing a higher-quality, better mask."

What are the best face masks for children? Are there N95 masks for kids? 

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital recommends children wear the white, duck-bill N95 masks because cloth masks "do not provide the same level of protection and should not be used."

The white duck-bill N-95 mask comes in two sizes, small and regular, and is shaped outwardly like a duck's mouth. The design was created to offer more breathability. 

How to spot fake N95 or KN95 masks

The first step is to turn to the CDC and analyze its charts of N95 and KN95 masks that the agency has tested, including the make, model number and filtration efficiency. Websites such as Fakespot help consumers weed out authentic products from counterfeits, including real and fake N95 masks. 

If you're purchasing a mask from Amazon, be wary of reviews in which people say they received the mask free, because that could persuade them to leave a positive review, The New York Times cautions. The Times also recommends purchasing masks through verified manufacturers such as DemeTech in Miami and Prestige Ameritech in Texas.

Certain manufactures will include a barcode consumers can scan to ensure they're buying the real product. Powecom KN95 masks have a barcode that's scannable using a phone, so whether you purchase through the website or a third party, you can verify the product.

CDC Expands Booster Shot Eligibility and Strengthens Recommendations for 12-17 Year Olds

Media Statement

For Immediate Release: Wednesday, January 5, 2022

Contact: Media Relations

(404) 639-3286

Today, CDC is endorsing the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices’ (ACIP) recommendation to expand eligibility of booster doses to those 12 to 15 years old. CDC now recommends that adolescents age 12 to 17 years old should receive a booster shot 5 months after their initial Pfizer-BioNTech vaccination series.

Data show that COVID-19 boosters help broaden and strengthen protection against Omicron and other SARS-CoV-2 variants. ACIP reviewed the available safety data following the administration of over 25 million vaccine doses in adolescents; COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective.

At this time, only the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine is authorized and recommended for adolescents aged 12-17.

The following is attributable to CDC Director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky

“It is critical that we protect our children and teens from COVID-19 infection and the complications of severe disease. Today, I endorsed ACIP’s vote to expand eligibility and strengthen our recommendations for booster doses. We now recommend that all adolescents aged 12-17 years should receive a booster shot 5 months after their primary series. This booster dose will provide optimized protection against COVID-19 and the Omicron variant. I encourage all parents to keep their children up to date with CDC’s COVID-19 vaccine recommendations.”

Scouce: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2022/s0105-Booster-Shot.html

Monday, January 3, 2022

What Does Endemic Mean and Will Covid-19 Become an Endemic Disease?

The disease that caused the global pandemic will likely circulate for the foreseeable future, public-health experts say

By Brianna Abbott and Gabriele Steinhauser

Updated Dec. 31, 2021 12:33 pm ET

Many public-health experts anticipate that the world will be dealing with Covid-19 for the foreseeable future. That doesn’t mean the pandemic won’t end.

Instead, the disease will likely become endemic, meaning Covid-19 would continue to circulate among the population more predictably. The disease could eventually become more similar to routine illnesses like the flu or colds, common ailments that are less destructive and deadly than Covid-19 is now, virologists and epidemiologists say. The virus’s long-term foothold in society depends on factors including vaccination coverage and how it continues to evolve.  The emergence of the B.1.1.529 variant, also known as the Omicron variant, has already shown the virus can evolve unpredictably. 

Here’s what public-health and infectious-disease experts say about our path beyond the Covid-19 pandemic.   

What does endemic mean?

A disease is endemic when it is a constant presence in a population, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Endemic diseases also follow predictable patterns and occur at an expected, baseline level, the agency said.

Malaria is endemic in many parts of the world, with an estimated 229 million cases in 2019, according to the World Health Organization. Seasonal influenza in the U.S. is another example of an endemic disease. New influenza strains can spur flu epidemics or pandemics. One of the most recent in the U.S. was the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic.

What’s the difference between endemic disease, an epidemic and a pandemic?

A disease is endemic when it exists at a baseline, predictable level, while an epidemic occurs when there is a sudden, unexpected increase in cases, according to the CDC. 

“One case of smallpox would be an epidemic,” Heidi Brown, an associate professor in the epidemiology and biostatistics department at the University of Arizona, said of the disease eradicated in 1980. 

An outbreak is similar to an epidemic but is usually associated with a more specific location or catalyst, such as a recent salmonella outbreak linked to onions or the Disneyland measles outbreak that started in 2014.

A pandemic is an epidemic that becomes widespread around the world. The World Health Organization said in March 2020 that the spread of the virus that causes Covid-19 had reached pandemic levels.


When Will Covid-19 Become Endemic?

P.M. Edition for Dec. 23. Despite a rise in Omicron cases, public-health experts say Covid-19 is on its way to becoming endemic in the U.S. But what does that mean? And what will it look like? WSJ health and medicine bureau chief Patrick McGroarty joins host Annmarie Fertoli to discuss.



Click on the link below to listen to the podcast.

https://www.wsj.com/podcasts/whats-news/omicron-what-we-know-so-far/EEDDA612-EB1E-4884-901C-0189F4452D48

How is an endemic disease related to herd immunity? Is it still possible to reach herd immunity against Covid-19?

Herd immunity isn’t a disease state, separating it from terms like endemic and pandemic disease. Instead, it is a form of protection that occurs when there is enough resistance built up in a population from vaccination and prior infection to stop the virus from spreading, protecting even those who aren’t immune.

Some public-health and infectious-disease experts once said the Covid-19 pandemic could end when the U.S. and other societies reached herd immunity, but the goal is looking increasingly elusive. More contagious variants including Delta and most recently Omicron, have pushed up the number of people that need protection to halt the virus’s spread. Waning immunity after infection or vaccination and the virus’s ability to sometimes spread among the vaccinated also make reaching that point and staying there on a national scale challenging.

The protection gained from increasing the immunity in a population is more like a dimmer than an on-and-off switch, said Joshua Schiffer, an associate professor in the vaccine and infectious-disease division at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The more people who have some level of immunity to the virus, Dr. Schiffer said, the harder it is for the virus to spread and the better off the population is as a whole, even without reaching a specific target for protection.

Can we still get rid of Covid-19?

Infectious-disease experts say that eradicating the Covid-19 virus—permanently reducing it to zero cases world-wide—is likely out of reach, at least for the foreseeable future. Smallpox is the only human disease to be wiped out globally, an achievement that required an exhaustive surveillance and vaccination campaign. 

Health authorities have been working to eradicate another scourge, polio, for decades. They haven’t yet succeeded, despite billions of dollars in investment and an effective vaccine. The Covid-19 pandemic further set back the effort when house-to-house polio-vaccination teams in Pakistan were forced to temporarily stop their work.

“Getting to eradication is massive. It’s really, really massive,” Dr. Brown said. 

Covid-19’s high infectiousness and ability to move among humans and other species make eradication especially challenging if not impossible, infectious-disease experts say. 

Top U.S. infectious disease official Anthony Fauci said on Nov. 17 that because eradication is unlikely, the aim right now should be to gain control of the virus. 

Predicting the precise moment when Covid-19 will be endemic isn’t possible yet, Dr. Fauci said. Rather, he encouraged people to work to raise vaccination rates to protect the population overall.

Some places have aimed to eliminate Covid-19, which means to stop transmission and wipe it out in a particular country or region. Diseases that are eliminated can still make a comeback if they aren’t stomped out globally. 

Measles has been considered eliminated in the U.S. since 2000 because it isn’t circulating in the country, but it is common in some other parts of the world. The U.S. was close to losing its status as a country that has eliminated the measles in 2019 after outbreaks mostly in New York.

Will Covid-19 become endemic everywhere in the world?

Most epidemiologists believe so, although it is likely to happen at different times in different places. Public-health experts say the virus is already on a path toward becoming endemic in the U.S. Some countries in Europe with high vaccination rates, such as Denmark and Portugal, are already experiencing what some epidemiologists say is likely close to endemic Covid-19. Other epidemiologists say it is too early to anticipate what Covid-19 baseline presence in a population might look like.

“Until the epidemiologists can tell you what’s going to happen in the future without massive uncertainty caveats, then we’re still in an epidemic-type situation,” Dr. Brown said. 

Poorer nations with very low vaccination rates, especially in Africa, might be stuck in crisis for some time. Unless they get more vaccines soon, it could take years for enough people to develop immunity and stop hospitals from getting overwhelmed and many patients from dying. 

The world’s most populous country, China, is still trying to eliminate Covid-19 within its borders. Until recently a handful of other countries in Asia were also trying to eliminate Covid-19, through curbs on travel, strict quarantines for new arrivals and quick lockdowns to quell local outbreaks. But the much more contagious variants including Delta and Omicron, the realization that vaccines don’t entirely stop transmission and the punishing economic and social cost of control measures have pushed most of these countries to drop so-called zero-Covid strategies.

Where do we go from here?

Many public-health and infectious-disease experts say the best-case scenario for now involves vaccinating as many people as possible to help reduce the risk of severe disease and death from Covid-19 and impede its spread. 

“I think the best we can hope for is we’d continue to have waves of cases in the ensuing years but because of vaccination and repeated exposure to the virus, the proportion of cases that are severe continues to decrease,” Dr. Schiffer said. 

The level at which the virus might circulate in the population in part depends on the amount of disease that governments and people are willing to tolerate. Measures such as masking in indoor spaces, testing and staying home when sick could also help suppress the virus’s spread when cases flare up. 

Better treatments, such as antiviral pills from Pfizer Inc. and Merck & Co. and partner Ridgeback Biotherapeutics LP, could become critical to making Covid-19 less of a burden on people and society.

“We can confidently say that the virus will be endemic for the foreseeable future,” Dr. Schiffer said. “Projecting how severe it will be will be very challenging.” 

Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/will-covid-19-become-endemic-11636222687

Sunday, January 2, 2022

Disease Expert's Ominous Warning: Omicron Could Shutter Schools, 'Everyday Life'

Sat, January 1, 2022, 10:48 AM·2 min read

Amid a surge of new COVID cases across the country and evolving CDC guidance surrounding both shortened isolation periods for Americans who test positive and eliminating the need to test negative before returning to work, Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, appeared on MSNBC Thursday morning with a dire prediction of how the latest variant could escalate so quickly in the days to come that it could disrupt daily life through January:


“Right now we have a very imperfect situation that is going to require some very imperfect responses,” Osterholm said on Dec. 30, the day after America recorded more than 465,000 new COVID cases. “Over the next three to four weeks, we are going to see the number of cases in this country rise so dramatically that we are going to have a hard time keeping everyday life operating.”

Asked specifically if this unprecedented Omicron surge could threaten the reopening of schools during the first week of the new year, Osterholm said the situation may have less to do with student safety than a profound disruption to the supply of teachers: “It’s not even a function of ‘Should they delay [reopening schools] because of kids getting sick?’ I worry very much that even with vaccinated teachers, we still could have breakthrough infections; we’re going to have a hard time staffing our schools in the next three to four weeks.

“All of society is going to be pressured by this – it’s health care, big box stores that are actually considering closing or have closed because they can’tt find enough workers to actually be at work. From the school standpoint, we know schools are a place where this virus can spread, it will spread, kids will get it there, kids will bring it home, kids will take it to school, teachers will get sick … I think the next month is unparalleled in the kinds of decisions we [will] have to make and schools will be one of them.”

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