Biden Receives Third Dose; Harvard MBAs Online: Virus Update

(Bloomberg) — U.S. President Joe Biden received a booster shot Monday and said he’d press for more vaccination mandates to improve the U.S. inoculation rate. Harvard Business School moved first-year and some second-year MBA students to remote classes amid a steady rise in breakthrough infections. Pfizer said it is starting trials of an oral antiviral drug.

American men lost 2.2 years of life expectancy last year because of Covid-19, the biggest decline among 29 nations in a study of the pandemic’s impact on longevity. Only Denmark and Norway avoided drops in life expectancy across both sexes, according to researchers at the University of Oxford.

Health-care workers should get priority access to fuel as the U.K.’s shortage continues, according to a union for doctors. There’s a “real risk” that National Health Service staff will be unable to do their jobs, the British Medical Association said.

Key Developments:

  • Global Virus Tracker: Cases pass 231.9 million; deaths exceed 4.75 million
  • Vaccine Tracker: More than 6.13 billion shots given
  • Profiling coronavirus mutations help scientists find weak spots
  • Pandemic dashboards win followers in search of latest Covid data
  • Understanding the debate over booster shots: QuickTake

Biden Gets Booster, Presses for Mandates (1:57 p.m. NY)

U.S. President Joe Biden received a booster shot of the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE Covid-19 vaccine in front of cameras at the White House and said he would press for more vaccination mandates to improve the U.S. inoculation rate.

“If you’re fully vaccinated, you’re highly protected now from severe illness even if you get Covid-19,” he said before getting his shot. “The most important thing we can do is to get more Americans vaccinated.”

Chile to Use Sinovac Shot for Children 6-11 (12:46 p.m. NY)

Chile began vaccinating children ages 6 to 11 with a vaccine made by Sinovac Biotech Ltd. that won emergency use approval from the government this month. Previously, Pfizer Inc.’s vaccine, approved for people 12 to 17 years old, had been Chile’s only shot available to young people. The country has vaccinated 82.4% of its residents, behind only Uruguay in Latin America, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Crowdsourced Pill Research Gets $11 Million (12:32 p.m. NY)

A crowdsourced effort to design a Covid-19 pill won 8 million pounds ($11 million) in funding from the Wellcome Trust. About 250 people submitted to the Covid Moonshot effort more than 4,500 potential molecular designs intended to block a key protein that helps the virus replicate. 

“It is a way of working that none of us realized was possible,” said University of Oxford Professor Frank von Delft, a leader of the project. It has been “an express train on tracks we have had to lay down as we go.” 

The Wellcome funding will help pay for the expensive last step of research needed to bring the project into human clinical trials but is unlikely to beat big pharmaceutical companies. Pfizer Inc. is in late-stage trials on an oral antiviral.

Biden to Get Booster in Media Event (11:54 a.m. NY)

U.S. President Joe Biden will receive a booster shot Monday at a White House media event. The 78-year-old meets federal guidelines issued last week that people over age 65 get a third vaccination and is well past the six-month threshold since his last shot. 

Biden, who will get the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE vaccine, is expected to speak about the broader U.S. effort to fight Covid-19 as the U.S. begins to lag behind other countries in vaccinations.

NYC Mayor Vows to Fight for School Mandate (11:45 a.m. NY)

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio vowed to fight for a vaccine requirement for school workers and said 90% of teachers and 97% of principals have received their first shot. The city’s school system was temporarily blocked by a judge from enforcing a mandate forcing teachers and other staff to get vaccinated by Monday. A federal appeals court is expected to hold a hearing Wednesday.

Groups representing teachers and administrators argued that a mandate would result in employee shortages that would endanger student safety and said the district had no plan to redeploy substitutes and central office employees to cover absent teachers and other workers.

Pfizer Starts Advanced Trial of Oral Drug (11:01 a.m. NY)

Pfizer Inc. advanced testing of an experimental oral antiviral drug. The medicine, PF-07321332, is intended to be given at the first sign of exposure or infection, without requiring patients to be hospitalized first.

Pfizer’s new trial is enrolling as many as 2,660 adults who live in the same household as someone with a confirmed infection. Participants will get either a placebo or a combination of the experimental drug plus ritonavir twice daily for five or 10 days, the company said.

Monoclonal antibodies from Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Eli Lilly & Co. are authorized in the U.S. for preventing Covid-19 in high-risk individuals who have been exposed, but no oral drugs have been approved yet.

Slow J&J Deliveries Hobble South Africa (10:35 a.m. NY)

Slow delivery of Johnson & Johnson vaccinations is hampering South Africa’s inoculation drive, Business Day reported, citing Nicholas Crisp, acting director-general of the country’s health department. While South Africa has ample supply of Pfizer Inc. vaccines, it needs J&J’s for people in remote areas, since those shots can be stored with normal refrigeration and only one dose is needed.

“We don’t have plenty of J&J vaccines, and that is a problem for us because there are communities that are very hard to get back to a second time,” Crisp said. No doses were delivered in May and June and only 1.5 million were in July, Crisp said. South Africa has agreed to buy 31 million. 

Harvard Moves Some MBA Students Online (10:06 a.m. NY)

Harvard Business School moved its first-year MBA students to remote learning this week amid a “steady rise” in infections in students, despite high vaccination rates and frequent testing. Remote learning will be in place for this week and the school asked all students to eliminate unmasked indoor activities.

U.K. Doctors Seek Priority Access to Fuel (9:35 a.m. NY)

Health-care workers should get priority access to fuel as the U.K.’s shortage continues, according to a trade union representing doctors. The British Medical Association stressed the importance of fuel for both emergency and essential workers, stating that it not only affects traveling to work, but work itself. It said there’s a “real risk” that National Health Service staff would be unable to do their jobs and provide vital services.

Indonesia Takes Steps to Avoid New Variants (6:22 a.m. NY)

Indonesia said it’s taking steps to reduce the possibility of any new variants entering the country, including restricting arrivals from places with high infections, such as Turkey and the U.S. Flight arrivals will be better managed to avoid crowding at airports.

The government is preparing to reopen Bali’s Nusa Dua, Sanur and Gianyar beaches during a trial phase in a decision to be made this week, Tourism Minister Sandiaga Uno said earlier. Fully vaccinated foreign tourists who test negative for coronavirus will first be quarantined at facilities to be set up in Sanur, Ubud and Nusa Dua. The government said a new Covid variant is inevitable and it’s anticipating the next wave of outbreak in November and December.

 

Japan to Lift Covid State of Emergency (6:20 p.m. HK)

The Japanese government will end the coronavirus state of emergency covering Tokyo and 18 other prefectures on Sept. 30, Nikkei reported. 

Daily coronavirus cases have been steadily coming down in Japan since its peak in mid-August when it saw more than 25,000 cases, according to data compiled by public broadcaster NHK. The cases dropped to 2,134 Sunday.

Pakistan Makes Arrests Over Fake Certificates (5:52 p.m. HK)

Authorities in Pakistan arrested more than 40 people for issuing fake vaccination certificates. The arrests took place over the past month and a half, said Sanaullah Abbasi, director general at Pakistan’s Federal Investigation Agency.

Ho Chi Minh City Plans to Ease Lockdown (4:30 p.m. HK)

The People’s Committee of Ho Chi Minh City issued a draft plan to ease restrictions from Oct. 1, news website Zing reported. The city may allow factories in some industrial parks to reopen with the requirement of testing workers every seven days. The draft also allows people with at least one shot or who have recovered from the virus to travel in the city.

AstraZeneca-Sputnik Protection Study (4:15 p.m. HK)

A combination of the AstraZeneca Plc and Sputnik Light vaccines provides “strong” protection against Covid-19, the Russian Direct Investment Fund, AstraZeneca and R-Pharm said in a joint statement, citing a study conducted in Azerbaijan.

Neutralizing antibodies to the spike protein of the coronavirus increased by at least fourfold in 85% of the volunteers on the 57th day of the study, according to the statement. It cited an interim analysis based on data collected from the first 20 participants in the study.

Singapore Extends Aviation Workforce Support (4:06 p.m. HK)

The Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore said wage support will be extended for six months. It will cost the government about S$130 million ($96 million) and benefit more than 100 companies.

The authority said passenger traffic movement at Singapore’s Changi Airport was at 3.6% of pre-Covid levels as of September 2021.

Thailand to Reopen Regions Including Bangkok (2:29 p.m. HK) 

Thailand’s government is reopening 10 more provinces, including Bangkok, for vaccinated foreign tourists from Nov. 1. The mandatory quarantine period for vaccinated travelers will be cut to seven days from 14, the government said in a statement.

More places and businesses, including theaters and nail salons, will be allowed to reopen from Oct. 1, the government said. A nighttime curfew will be shortened by one hour, it said.

Taiwan Eases Restrictions (2:22 p.m. HK)

Taiwan will allow some recreational facilities, including karaoke and video game venues, to resume operation conditionally from Oct. 5, according to statement from Taiwan Centers for Disease Control. The easing comes as Taiwan reported zero new daily infections.

Partition or separated seating at the venues is required, and no dining will be allowed. Bars and nightclubs will remain shut.

New Zealand’s Pilot Program for Travelers (11:31 a.m. HK)

New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said a small pilot program will begin soon to trial self-isolation for returning international travelers.

Those arriving in New Zealand are allowed to isolate at home for 14 days as an alternative for managed isolation. The program will be capped at 150 people and focus on those required to travel for work. Participants must be New Zealand citizens and residents and fully vaccinated.

China Infections Are Tailing Off (9:43 a.m. HK)

China reported 16 infections on Monday, as the spread of delta variant appears to be tailing off. The cluster in southeastern province Fujian dwindled to two cases, all in Xiamen, a city of 5.2 million and a manufacturing hub for electric components that was placed under lockdown following detection of cases in early September.

The Northeastern city of Harbin reported 13 infections, including two asymptomatic cases, while a smaller city in the north called Suihua reported one infection, raising concern that the virus is spreading within the broader Heilongjiang Province.

Mandates Control Covid at Connecticut Colleges (6:35 a.m. HK)

Connecticut colleges and universities have reported few infections since imposing vaccine mandates for the start of this school year, the Hartford Courant reported. 

The University of Connecticut has reported only 18 cases at its main campus this year, compared with hundreds last year that led to quarantines of entire dormitories, according to the newspaper. Western Connecticut State has reported only one case. 

Connecticut has one of the U.S.’s highest vaccination rates, with almost 76% of people receiving at least one dose, compared with the national average of 64.2%, according to the Bloomberg Vaccine Tracker. 

WHO Starts New Team to Probe Covid Origin (5:42 p.m. NY)

The World Health Organization is reviving its investigation into the origins of the Covid-19 virus by building a new team of about 20 scientists, the Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. The previous team, which had been disbanded after a visit to Wuhan, had said data provided by Chinese scientists was insufficient to reach a conclusion.

Members of the new team will be chosen by the end of this week, and the team’s “priority needs to be data and access in the country where the first reports were identified,” WHO officials told the Journal.

The Chinese government declined to say if the new team will be allowed to enter the country.

CDC Head Warns of Health Care Strain (12:55 p.m. NY)

Parts of the U.S. health system are in “dire straits,” as the spread of the Covid-19 delta variant forces some states to prepare for rationed medical care, said Rochelle Walensky, head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

“That means that we are talking about who is going to get a ventilator, who is going to get an ICU bed,” Walensky said on CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “Those are not easy discussions to have, and that is not a place we want our health care system to ever be.”

Idaho, among the U.S.’s least-vaccinated states, and Alaska have said that hospitals can begin to ration medical care if needed. A major hospital in Montana also implemented so-called “crisis of care standards” to prioritize who is treated. Health officials warned the measure could be widened across the state. 

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