At the break of day, market vendors are busy loading fresh fruits and vegetables. Office workers fill popular restaurants at dinner time. As night falls, old couples descend on the federal parks, using dance moves along the Yangtze River. Red lanterns were erected around the city in anticipation of the Lunar New Year celebrations.
A year has passed since the Chinese capital of 11 million people was put under the world’s first coronavirus lock on January 23rd. At least 3,869 Wuhan residents have died from the virus, which has claimed more than two million lives worldwide.
The world was shocked when flights, trains and buses leaving Wuhan were canceled, highways were blocked and people were ordered to stay in their homes, officials and volunteers for daily needs. At first, it was difficult for patients, families and even some healthcare workers to reach hospitals.
But the Chinese government has since identified these major measures as important to prevent the onset, and similar measures are now being implemented in countries around the world. -world – with some cities, and even whole countries, outside of China going through many locks.
WE WILL NOT. We ANSWER.
Q: Are medical masks better than cloth masks?
And while the tight weave of surgical masks offers a high level of external protection – which is why they are used by medical professionals around patients – cloth masks are more prone or missing. The effectiveness depends on the number of layers of clothing and the type of clothing used – most do not have a safety standard.
WHAT’S IMPORTANT
The megarich has already recovered from the pandemic. It could take ten years for the poor to do so
Nine months. That is how long it took the world’s top 1,000 billion people to regain their fortunes after the coronavirus pandemic.
“We stand to see the biggest rise in inequality since records began. The deep divide between rich and poor proves the lethality of the virus,” said Gabriela Bucher, Oxfam ‘s executive director. “Obese economies add wealth to a wealthy elite who are riding out the epidemic in luxury, while those on the front line of the pandemic – shoppers, shoppers healthcare workers, and market vendors – struggling to pay the bills and put food on the table. “
CDC revision of new data revealing a variety of coronavirus identified in the UK could be more lethal
CDC modeling shows that this new strain could be the biggest variant in the United States by March. Only 195 cases of the new variant have been seen in the U.S. so far, according to the CDC, but public health officials believe many more cases go unrecognized. Cases have been detected in 22 states, the CDC says, with California and Florida finding a very high number.
Responding to the new data in an interview with CBS on Sunday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases, said the coronavirus variant was first identified in the UK, B.1.1.7, as having the power to cause more damage, including deaths . But he also noted that both the Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 “vaccines still seem to protect against mutant restriction. It’s a very small reduction, but the cases you have of such efficiency that it is not going to have a negative impact. ”
What ‘vaccine licenses’ mean for your summer holidays
Some destinations – including the Seychelles, Cyprus and Romania – have already raised quarantine requirements for visitors who are able to confirm that they are receiving the vaccine. Others, such as Iceland and Hungary, have opened up to people who have passed on Covid-19.
This raises the expectation that confirmation of inoculation or immunity could be the golden ticket to return travel and seems to be good news for people who want to book a summer vacation. After months of lockdown, especially since vaccine distribution accumulates speed.
But the concept of a protected passport remains controversial, and anyone banking on them for the 2021 summer vacation could be disappointed. While there is a strong argument that globally known inoculation documents could help reconnect the planet, there are still fears about what protection they provide, how they might being abused and what that means for those still waiting for jabs.
AIR ON RADAR
- The world is getting closer to a new grim milestone: 100 million cases.
- President Biden will formally reset Covid’s travel restrictions for non-US travelers from Brazil, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and much of Europe on Monday, a White House official confirmed to CNN.
- More than three dozen Capitol police officers have tested positive for coronavirus since the Capitol outbreak on Jan. 6, the union representing Capitol Police told CNN on Sunday.
- Residents of a town in northeastern China have taken to social media to complain that severe coronavirus lockouts have left them short of food and medicine, sparking online chaos and apology from local officials.
- Israel will introduce a week-long ban on most incoming and outgoing trips from Monday night, in a bid to slow the spread of new coronavirus changes.
- Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has become the world’s newest leader to test positive for the coronavirus.
- Protests against Covid’s deportation in the Netherlands went into conflict and clashes with police in cities across the country on Sunday.
- The travel bubble between Australia and New Zealand was blocked for 72 hours after the South African variant of Covid-19 was found in a woman who had been quarantined for 14 days in New Zealand.
TOP TIP
With many people delaying essential medical care because of the pandemic, medical professionals are concerned that their patients will get sick or even die from other causes.
Some 25% of Americans said they or someone in their household had delayed medical care in the past month because of coronavirus, according to a study from the Kaiser Family Foundation in December. An earlier report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that 41% of Americans delayed medical care, including 12% who missed emergency or emergency care.
TODAY PODCAST
“I hope that if we can not just introduce two vaccines, but perhaps three to five vaccines, we will get a significant proportion of the population vaccinated in this calendar year. “- Dr. Dan barouch