Manchester City star Sterling, 25, pictured at Bolt’s 34th birthday celebrations in Jamaica on Friday.
After the party, a Jamaican radio station claimed that Usain Bolt had tested the killer virus.
A person close to Sterling said, “Raheem feels good and has no symptoms of Covid-19.”
Meanwhile, the Eat Out to Help Out government program will end on August 31, diners will no longer get a 50% reduction in food on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.
This occurs when the death toll in the UK has risen to 41,433 today, with 4 deaths most reported.
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VACCINE WARNING
Anthony Stephen Fauci warned that he opposes deploying the vaccine before protection checks are carried out.
Distributing a COVID-19 vaccine according to special emergency use rules before it has been demonstrated and effective in giant trials is a bad concept that can have a deterrent effect on testing other vaccines, Dr. Fauci said.
The most important U.S. doctor said: “One of the possible risks of launching a vaccine is that it would be difficult, if not impossible, for other vaccines to recruit others in their trial.”
COVID PROPAGATION
Seven at one bird processing plant tested positive for coronavirus and five others are waiting for the results of the checks.
Production has not stopped at Banham Poultry, which processes about 650,000 chickens a week on its 12 acres in Attleborough, Norfolk.
The plant has the last food processing plant to report an outbreak, which raises considerations that COVID-19 can spread seamlessly to refrigerated plants.
The seven members who tested positive walked away for 14 days. The five staff members are also isolating the property pending the results of the controls.
More workers’ control of about six hundred more people is organized as a “precautionary measure.”
Louise Smith, Director of Public Fitness at Norfolk, said fitness officials were “monitoring the stage and taking action” to save her additional transmission at the plant and in the community at large.
She said: “We are working with colleagues from Public Health England, NHS and Breckland Council following a coronavirus outbreak at Banham Poultry in Attleborough.
“The Banham Poultry control team has moved temporarily to prevent the virus from spreading and is working hard with us to locate contacts from those who tested positive.”
Banham Poultry Managing Director Blaine van Rensburg said: “Protecting our staff, our consumers and the general public is vital to us and we are working with the public skills government to make sure we are doing everything we can and following everything right. kind procedures.
“The company remains open and operational and we are doing everything we can to prevent the spread of the virus.
“We have already invested in a variety of procedures and protective devices for the protection of our staff.”
THE DEVASTATED TOURISM INDUSTRY
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said tourism had been devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
He said there had been a loss of 244.35 billion pounds of exports in the first months of the year and more than 120 million jobs at risk.
Tourism is the third largest exporter of fuels and chemicals, and accounted for 7% of the industry last year.
It employs one in 10 more people on Earth and provides sustenment to many millions more, he said. This stimulates economies.
QUARANTINE RULES
France will impose a mandatory quarantine on Britons arriving in the country in the coming days.
People who arrived in the UK from France after 15 August will have to isolate themselves for 14 days due to the accumulation of coronavirus cases in France.
And the French Secretary of State for European Affairs, Clément Beaune, has warned that those traveling from the UK to France will soon face demands.
He told France 2: “There will be reciprocal measures so that the British do not close the border in one direction.
“For travellers returning from the UK, restrictive measures are likely to be implemented in the coming days through the Prime Minister and defence council.”
MEXICO PRICE COLLECTION
The Mexican government said it had introduced abusive pricing investigations to punish 420 companies, adding retail and funeral stores, for unfairly increasing the costs of the coronavirus pandemic.
The Consumer Protection Bureau said many outlets and grocery stores did not meet or replace published prices.
Or they were charging consumers too much for the items, adding basic food products as well as higher demand products due to the pandemic, adding isopropyl alcohol, hand sanitizer and masks, he added.
Mexico has recorded more than 560,000 cases of coronavirus and nearly 60,500 deaths of Covid-19, the third overall in the world.
THE BAN SINGS IN SCHOOLS
Schools banned a song and prevented parents from entering through the doors after they reopened in Northern Ireland on Monday, August 24.
One school has even brought mandatory masks for academics because of concerns about the spread of coronavirus in classrooms.
Forth River Primary School in Belfast’s Shankill district said social estrangement would be for its 212 pupils.
But director Judith Stevenson told the Guardian that the seven categories would serve as “social bubbles” without interaction with other groups.
Students will be allowed to eat in the school classroom or take physical education classes.
Singing lessons are a story for children.
Ms. Stevenson said: “Singing has been a component of our classes and was a way to help children become familiar with numbers and words.
“But we can’t sing with them because it produces more droplets in the air so you can’t be doing a song in class.”
The Ministry of Education said there is an “additional threat of infection” in environments where other people “sing, sing, play wind or metal instruments or scream.”
Read the full story here.
CORNWALL FULL OF ‘HARD TOURISTS’
Cornish besieged by rude tourists who stay, make staff cry and refuse to stick to the rules of social estrangement.
Beth Richards of Truro Cornwall told how she broke down in the room after talking to “unpleasant” guests.
She spoke after friends running in shops, restaurants and other holiday parks were also abused.
Beth wrote: “Without you and your customs, I could very well be unemployed right now, BUT you have to do it without us, you’d be without a vacation, it’s a two-way street.”
The unfortunate employee added that tourists told her that they had to go to Cornwall “because we are immune to that [coronavirus].”
She added: ‘I’m not the author of the rules, so please don’t belittle me and call me stupid, silly or ab’ just because you have to book a position for the pool or wear a mask for just five minutes in the store.
“You need me to respond to you the same way.”
MISCHIEVOUS STEP DOWN
Children can simply be detained due to Covid’s safety rules.
But parents threaten to get more than a slap when fined if they refuse to send their children back to school.
Ministers are their crusade to return all scholars to complete elegance next week.
But many schools would possibly not have detention or isolation rooms for students who misunderstand, as this would combine annual groups.
One instructor said: “The message of the superiors is that for some children, coming back will be difficult.
“This can have a domino effect on behavior. Therefore, when possible, teachers will have to show indulgence.
“Social estrangement regulations also mean that the concept of putting a child and an instructor for an hour in detention after school is not a solution.
“It’s a replacement that academics will appreciate, but I’d possibly let teachers pull their hairs out.”
For the full story, see HERE.
RAHEEM STERLING’S SUCCESS WITH COVID SCARE
Raheem Sterling is at the center of a coronavirus scare after partying with Usain Bolt, before the sprinter tested positive.
Manchester City star Sterling, 2 and a half, who will be named to the England team to face Iceland on September 5, pictured at Bolt’s 34th birthday celebrations in Jamaica on Friday.
Videos of the party showed visitors dancing together without a mask and ignoring social distance.
A Jamaican radio station claimed that Olympic legend Bolt had tested positive for Covid-19.
Hours later, he posted a video on social media saying he was isolating himself after taking a test, he did not verify the positive result.
A close to Sterling said: “Raheem feels good and has no symptoms of Covid-19.
“But he is in close contact with the medical experts of Manchester City and England.”
TAXI DRIVER WHO THINKS THE VIRUS WAS A CHEAT LOSES HIS WIFE IN COVID-19
A woman died of coronavirus after she and her husband thought the Internet was a hoax.
Taxi driver Brian Lee Hitchens and his wife, pastor Erin, refused to stick to a fitness recommendation similar to the killer virus in Florida, USA.
Erin, 46, was suffering and had sleep problems, the BBC reported.
Brian stated that they adhered to the rules of physical fitness and social estrangement at the beginning of the pandemic due to false claims detected online.
He worked and collected his wife’s medicine without dressing up as a mask or distancing herself socially.
The couple were diagnosed with coronavirus in May after reading false accusations that “manufactured, 5G-related or flu-like.”
Erin died this month in a coronavirus-like center.
Brian told the BBC that he “wanted me to pay attention from the beginning” and that he hoped his overdue wife would forgive him.
He added: “It’s a genuine virus that affects other people differently. I can’t replace the past. I can only live and make as many options as possible for the future.”
For the full story, see HERE.
HIGH RISK OF BLOOD CANCER PATIENTS GETTING SICK WITH COVID-19
Patients with blood cancer have a much greater threat of developing a serious illness if they develop a coronavirus than others with other cancer bureaucracy, according to one study.
The document through researchers from the universities of Oxford and Birmingham concluded that blood cancer patients admitted to the hospital had a 57% higher risk of serious illness and that cancer patients over the age of 80 had the chance of death.
Blood Cancer UK said the test would be “very worrying” to others with protected blood cancer.
He asked the government to do more for those who feel “forced” to return to the paintings despite the great threat they face.
The charity evaluated the test and said the effects show that of the other 224 people with blood cancer who suffered from coronavirus and ended up in hospital, 36% died.
Once age and sex were taken into account, other people with leukemia were more than twice as likely to die (125%) if they were diagnosed with coronavirus than the average user with cancer.
People with lymphoma were 72 percent more likely to die, the charity said, and other people with myeloma were 65% more likely to die, he added.
People with other types of blood cancer were 20 percent less likely to die than the average cancer user, the charity said.
AUSTRALIA CORONAVIRUS DEATH RATE RISES
Three out of five coronavirus deaths in Australia have been linked to nursing home, ABC News reports.
The death toll of Covid-19 in the country has reached 517, after 15 deaths in the last 24 hours, all in Victoria.
The percentage of coronavirus deaths in this state reached 430.
In terms of infections, there were 116 new cases in Victoria on Monday, the lowest statistic since July 5, when 77 cases were recorded, the station added.
BRAZIL’S OVERTENEAL CONTINUES
Brazil has recorded 17,078 more cases of Covid-19 in the last 24 hours and 565 deaths, the country’s ministry of fitness announced on Monday.
The country has now recorded 115309 coronavirus deaths and 3622861 showed cases.
BRITISH MASTER FEELS ‘SAFER’ IN WUHAN
A British instructor who was evacuated from the ‘zero point’ of the coronavirus in Wuhan returned to China, claiming he felt safer there than in the UK.
Physical education instructor Kharn Lambert, 31, is now in strict quarantine for the time being in six months.
Once out, he hopes to resume his in Wuhan, where the fatal virus originated.
Talking to Sun Online from a hotel in Guangzhou, southern China, Kharn, from Lancaster, said: “I came back here because I think the chances of Covid getting here are much lower than if I stayed in Britain.
“Yes, the virus was born here.
“But the Chinese government without delay won the lead and implemented strict blocking measures almost without delay for the spread of the virus and even closed its borders.”
“There has been too much nonsense on the part of the British and it has taken many more lives than it needed. That’s why I’m back.”
Lambert said the UK has closed borders before and put in stricter blockades.
VOLUNTEER BLOCKADE
Parts of Spain, Madrid and Gran Canaria are back in voluntary blockade as coronavirus outbreaks continue across the country.
Tielmes in Madrid, La Barquilla en Ceceres and Valleseco in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria have asked citizens to leave their homes if possible.
The tourist hotel of Valleseco in Gran Canaria has noticed only 3 positive cases of coronavirus, however, the local mayor has warned that it does not need to be in danger given the greatest number of positives on the island.
He called on 4,000 citizens to limit themselves to a voluntary foundation and not leave their homes if possible to prevent further outbreaks of the virus.
Gran Canaria recorded the maximum waves of all the Canary Islands, basically similar to nightlife, tripling the instances in 23 days and raising the total number of instances to 2043.
RETURN OF CORRIE’S SENIOR STARS
The older stars of Coronation Street, however, will return to the cobblestones after the coronavirus block prevented them from playing.
Corrie’s manufacturers have shown that older actors will resume filming in the fall, while other cast members have repainted since June.
Stars such as Bill Roache (Ken Barlow), 88, Malcolm Hebden (Norris Cole), 80, Sue Nicholls (Audrey Roberts), 76, and Barbara Knox (Rita Tanner), 86, will return to their roles in ITV Soap.
But any other cast or team of Corrie with pre-existing situations or considered “vulnerable” will have to get a little further away for their own safety.
The return of the previous cast comes after The Sun Online revealed that Maureen Lipman (Evelyn Plummer), 74, and David Neilson (Roy Cropper), 71, had already returned to work.
BLOOD PRESSURE MEDICATIONS ‘REDUCES DEATH RISK’
A drug for high blood pressure administered to millions of other people across the UK can simply decrease the threat of coronavirus dying through a third, experts have discovered.
Researchers from the University of East Anglia studied 28,000 patients taking medications used to treat upper blood pressure, upper blood pressure.
They found that these patients were less likely to expand severe Covid-19.
The death threat was also reduced for those taking angiotensin conversion enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or angiotensin receptor inhibitors (ARA).
Lead researcher Dr Vassilios Vassiliou of the EU Norwich School of Medicine said: “We found that there was a particularly minor death threat and critical results, so they could play a protective role, especially in patients with hypertension.”
“Patients with the upper blood strain Covid-19 who were taking ACEi/ARA medications were 0.67 times less likely to have critical or fatal end results than those who did not.”
For the full story, see HERE.
WHEN DOES “EAT TO HELP” END?
The government’s Eat Out to Help Out program will end on Monday, August 31.
The programme has allowed the British to gain advantages from a 50% reduction in food and non-alcoholic beverages, to a maximum of 10 euros in line with income, each and every one on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays in August.
It was established through Chancellor Rishi Sunak to inspire others to faint and eat after the reopening of restaurants for the first time in 3 months after the coronavirus was blocked.
Unfortunately, there seem to be plans to expand the Eat Out to Help Out program after August.
The Chancellor demonstrated this in a verbal exchange with Channel Five News, after being pressured to see if the assignment would continue.
Mr Sunak said: “The explanation for why these things are successful is because they have a time limit.
“That’s the whole point and that’s why concentrating it in August when we leave the lockout has the maximum effect on this sector.”
PEDRO ANDRÉ’S PRAISE TO THE DOCTOR’S WIFE
Peter Andre says it’s “bittersweet” to see his wife running in the “line of fire” as an NHS doctor.
The 47-year-old singer congratulated Emily, 30, on her paintings on the coronavirus pandemic in a new interview.
He said, “She’s been amazing, she needs me to say it or not, and she’s been out there saving lives on the line like all the other caregivers and doctors.
“It was bittersweet to me, because I was so proud of her for what she was doing, but I was very afraid for her physical condition and for her children.
The young NHS doctor secretly fought the killer virus in March and took the resolution of isolating hemselves after feeling “very bad.”
Emily has been at the helm of the NHS since the onset of the pandemic.
HONG KONG MAN INFECTED TWICE
Scientists say a Hong Kong man suffered a coronavirus at a time in five months.
Genetic testing showed that the 33-year-old boy returning from Spain in mid-August had another strain from which he had inflamed in March.
Dr. Kelvin Kai-Wang To, the microbiologist who led the work, said the patient had symptoms the first time and none at the time.
His latest infection detected by examinations and tests at Hong Kong airport.
“This shows that some other people are not immune for life,” opposed to the virus if they have already had it, To said.
He added: “We don’t know how many other people can rejoin. There are other people out there.
SLOGAN DROPS KFC
KFC suspends the use of its slogan ‘Finger Lickin’ Good ‘in all its new advertisements after years due to the coronavirus crisis.
Instead, the chain of fried birds blurs and pixelss the well-known phrase.
KFC says the motion will only be transient because the slogan “does not fit” after the Covid-19 pandemic.
This comes after KFC released a series of television commercials with the line in March 2020, fearing it would announce the spread of the coronavirus.
The 163 court cases brought up before the Standards and Advertising Authority (ASA).
However, your slogan is only removed from all new ads: it will remain on KFC packaging in restaurants.
NICK GRIMSHAW OFF THE AIR
Nick Grimshaw has been on vacation for 3 weeks, but don’t expect to hear it soon on Radio 1; now faces a fortnight caught at home.
The popular drivetime DJ planned to return to the studio on Monday after taking an annual leave.
However, she has now been quarantined for 14 days after her boyfriend Meshach Henry, with whom she lives, contacted a coronavirus.
He was replaced through Dev Griffin on the air this week, bosses are struggling to find a way for him to return to the air next week from home.
Speaking of his forties, Grimmy said: “So gutted that even regulations are regulations and CBA (can’t be a highlight) in the Live Lounge.
“Both feel perfectly well now and have no symptoms. Let’s cross our fingers, love each other for another 14 days.”
USAIN AUTOAISLANTE BOLT
The feeling of the Jamaican track Usain Bolt said on social media that he was waiting for the effects of a coronavirus control and quinding as a precautionary measure.
The retired 34-year-old sprinter, who won gold in the hundred meters and two hundred meters in the last 3 Olympic Games, posted a video on social media explaining his concern for health.
He said Monday: “I wake up. Like the rest, I checked social media and saw social media say they showed me for Covid-19.
“I did a check on Saturday, because I’m working. I’m leaving to be responsible, so I’m staying and staying here for my friends.
Bolt, who in the video gave the impression of being a liar in bed, said he had no symptoms.
“Just to be sure, I’ll go into quarantine and move on slowly,” the star added.
He wrote in the messages, “Stay, my people” with hands clasped in prayer.
Comments on its post ranged from smart wishes, adding ‘please, my legend’, to tips like ‘drink your ginger tea all the time’.
GREAT THREAT OF RETURN IN PROGRESS
Principals can fine parents for preventing their children from going to school from September, but it’s a last resort, the school minister said today.
Nick Gibb under pressure for all young people to return to their study rooms starting next week to give them the most productive possibility in life and to fix the pain caused by months of confinement to their education.
The prime minister is launching a massive bombardment to assure parents that they must return before the English schools that will return next week.
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said fines would only be used as a “last resort” if parents refused to return their children.
He said: “In terms of fines, we would ask all schools to paint with those parents and inspire them to bring those young people back.”
Parents face fines for preventing their children from going to school starting next week, but it’s a ‘last resort’, the minister says.
HEALTH WORKERS MUST RECEIVE A FIRST VACCINE: RESEARCH
Many selfless Britons would be waiting for fitness staff in other countries to get vaccines if this helped end the coronavirus pandemic sooner, according to a new survey.
The effects revealed that of more than 2,000 other people surveyed, 82% said that a country that will present a Covid-19 vaccine percentage of this knowledge.
Directed through the savanta ComRes survey company for the poverty-fighting organization The ONE Campaign, it also showed that nearly 80% of coronavirus injections deserve to be available in all countries at the same time.
More than 80% said that once the vaccine becomes available, it will be distributed as effectively as possible to defeat the global pandemic.
And 71% think that if that means the pandemic can end faster, fitness staff in Britain and other countries will be vaccinated first, even if other people in physical condition at home have to wait a little longer.
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