Idaho Expands Care Rationing; Outbreak at Kremlin: Virus Update

(Bloomberg) — Calling the situation “dire,” Idaho extended health care rationing statewide as Covid-19 hospitalizations surge, state officials said Thursday in a statement issued from Boise. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city is ready to begin administering booster shots as soon as the federal government authorizes them, as early as next week.

China has fully vaccinated more than 1 billion people — more than 70% of its eligible population — powering ahead of the U.S. and Europe despite having no immediate plans to ease some of the strictest pandemic measures in the world. The nation will start inoculating key population groups with booster shots this month, Henan Daily reported. 

A Covid outbreak inside the Kremlin has sickened dozens of people working close to Vladimir Putin, the Russian president said. Several European Union governments are pushing back against a proposal to extend controls on vaccine exports. 

Key Developments:

  • Global Virus Tracker: Cases pass 226.4 million; deaths exceed 4.6 million
  • Vaccine Tracker: More than 5.83 billion doses administered
  • Arizona AG admits suit over Biden vaccine rules is a ‘long shot’
  • U.S. racial vaccine gaps are biggerthan we thought
  • World’s worst HIV epidemic stymies South Africa’s Covid fight
  • Why the delta variant is giving more children Covid: QuickTake

NYC Prepares to Give Out Booster Shots (11:07 a.m. NY)

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said the city is ready to begin administering Covid-19 booster shots as soon as the federal government authorizes them, as early as next week.

During a briefing on Thursday, de Blasio said once the federal government gives the green light on boosters, “we need to be ready to move immediately.” The city will use all 1,900 vaccination sites across the city to help administer the booster shots.

“We have the health-care infrastructure” to meet the booster shot demand, Dave Chokshi, commissioner of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, said during the briefing.

JHU Scientist Sees Possible Over-65 Boosters (11:05 a.m. NY)

U.S. drug regulators would probably limit any approval of Covid-19 booster shots to people older than 65, Johns Hopkins University epidemiologist Jennifer Nuzzo said.

“If the FDA committee endorses anything it may be boosters over the age of 65,” she said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “That might be the next offering.”

A panel of outsider advisers to the Food and Drug Administration at a meeting on Friday plans discuss an application by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE for a third dose. Next week, Advisers to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will hold a two-day meeting on booster shots.

Brazil Halts Shots for Young Teens (10:53 a.m. NY)

Brazil’s health minister says people under 18 should only be vaccinated in case of other underlying conditions or disabilities, according to an order published on its website.

The ministry now says benefits of vaccinating healthy teenagers are not yet clear, with most of them recovering well when infected by the coronavirus. On Sept. 2, Brazil announced a plan to vaccinate all people aged 12-17.

Idaho Expands Health Care Rationing (10:39 a.m. NY)

Calling the situation “dire,” Idaho Thursday extended health care rationing statewide as Covid-19 hospitalizations surge, state officials said in a statement issued from Boise.

Crisis of care standards were initially imposed in hard-hit northern Idaho on Sept. 6. Thursday’s emergency order was put in place at the request of a major medical network in the state, St. Luke’s Health System, officials said.

“The situation is dire – we don’t have enough resources to adequately treat the patients in our hospitals, whether you are there for Covid-19 or a heart attack or because of a car accident,” said David Jeppesen, director of the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare.

Idaho has the lowest rate of vaccination in the U.S. after West Virginia, according to the Bloomberg Vaccine Tracker. 

EU Divided on Vaccine Exports (9:03 a.m. NY)

Several EU governments are pushing back against a proposal by the bloc’s executive arm to extend controls on vaccine exports, according to people familiar with the matter. The European Commission is intent on renewing the mechanism that allows it to track where vaccines are exported to and to block shipments under certain circumstances, the people said. At a meeting of EU ambassadors on Wednesday, several diplomats said they no longer saw the need for export controls now that the EU has sufficient capacity to meet its vaccine demand.

U.K. Set to Ease Travel Curbs (9 a.m. NY)

The British red list that hinders travel to 62 countries will be more than halved as the government relaxes curbs next month, the Times reported. 

The list, which has 62 countries at present, requires passengers to pay to quarantine in a hotel for almost two weeks. Countries on the list include Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, the Maldives, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Thailand.

EU Prepares for Future Emergencies (8:55 a.m. NY)

In the wake of the pandemic, the European Commission officially launched the Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority as part of plans to beef up the bloc’s health agencies and prepare for future emergencies.

In the event of a health emergency, HERA’s role will be to ensure the development, production and distribution of medicines, vaccines. 

China to Offer Booster Shots from September (6:15 a.m. NY)

China will start inoculating key population groups with booster shots between September and November, Henan Daily reported, citing a meeting held by the local government of central China’s Henan province. The program is aimed at people who were fully vaccinated before May 1.

U.K. Mask Wearing Falls (6:12 a.m NY) 

More than four million British people stopped wearing face coverings in public, the Guardian reported. 

In May, 98% of people said they had worn a face covering in the past week when leaving the house. That fell to 89% this month, the newspaper said, citing Office for National Statistics figures.  

China Has Fully Vaccinated More Than 1 Billion (3:14 p.m. HK)

China has fully vaccinated more than 1 billion people against Covid-19 — over 70% of its eligible population — powering ahead of the U.S. and Europe despite having no immediate plans to ease some of the strictest pandemic measures in the world. 

A total of 2.16 billion doses have been given in China as of Sept. 15, Mi Feng, a spokesperson at the National Health Commission, told reporters in Beijing on Thursday.

The success of China’s vaccination strategy hasn’t averted flareups of the pathogen in recent months, and questions remain about how effective the shots are, especially against the newest variants. The nation is currently battling a cluster in the southeastern province of Fujian after squelching an earlier delta outbreak, the broadest it’s experienced since Covid first appeared in Wuhan.

Putin Says ‘Tens’ of Cases in His Entourage (2:50 p.m. HK)

A Covid outbreak inside the Kremlin has sickened dozens of people working close to Vladimir Putin, the Russian president said, highlighting the scale of the outbreak in one of the country’s most carefully guarded areas.

“It’s not one or two people but tens of people,” Putin told a televised video link with other leaders in the Collective Security Treaty Organization. “I will have to observe self-isolation for several days.” 

Putin received the Russian Sputnik V vaccine earlier this year.

Health Minister Calls Minaj Claim Waste of Time (1:44 p.m. HK)

Trinidad and Tobago’s health minister said there has been no evidence of testicular-swelling due to Covid vaccines, disputing a claim by rapper Nicki Minaj that drew international attention. 

Minaj, who has about 23 million Twitter followers, tweeted earlier this week that her friend’s cousin in Trinidad became impotent and his testicles became swollen after taking the vaccine. 

“Unfortunately, we wasted so much time yesterday running down this false claim,” Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh said in a press conference on Wednesday.

Minaj, who skipped the prestigious Met Gala because she did not meet the vaccination requirement, said she was still researching vaccines. The White House said Wednesday it had offered her a call with a doctor to answer questions about the shot.

Singapore Begins Vaccine Boosters (1:07 p.m. HK)

Singapore this week began its program to give booster shots for those above 60 years and people who are immuno-compromised. Health Minister Ong Ye Kung said in a Facebook post that 3,200 seniors stepped forward to receive boosters on Wednesday, and more than 12,000 have made appointments for shots.

Singapore is launching the program as cases surge in the island nation, with daily infections topping 800, though critical cases remain under control. The government has said it’ll seek to stick to the course of living with Covid-19 for now, though officials warned daily cases may rise to 2,000 in a few weeks.

Melbourne Lockdown to Ease Slightly (11:24 a.m. HK)

Lockdown restrictions in Australia’s second most populous city Melbourne will be slightly eased this weekend after more than 70% of Victoria state’s adult population had their first vaccination, Premier Daniel Andrews told reporters. Among the changes, residents will be allowed to travel up to 10 kilometers from their home for up to four hours of exercise a day and be allowed to meet a friend in a park for a picnic, he said.

Health authorities in Victoria continue to struggle to bring the delta varient under control. The state recorded 514 more daily infections, and its outbreak has doubled in seven days, according to Bloomberg calculations of Victorian health department data.

Booster Dose Slashes Infections (5 a.m. HK)

A third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech SE vaccine can dramatically reduce rates of Covid-related illness in people 60 and older, according to data from a short-term study in Israel. 

Starting 12 days after the extra dose, confirmed infection rates were 11 times lower in the booster group compared with a group that got the standard two doses, the analysis released Wednesday by the New England Journal of Medicine found. Rates of severe illness were almost 20 times lower in the booster group.

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