Just as Europe seemed to be addressing the coronavirus pandemic, Covid-19 turns out to be spreading again.
The German Center for Disease Control, the Robert Koch Institute, said this week that a recent increase in cases is “very worrying.” In France, new daily instances have returned to the same point where the blockade was lifted in early May. Spain and Italy also recorded increases.
The spread of infections has been linked to an increase in summer holiday movements, which has forced many European countries to oppose their decisions to remove restrictions, writes Emma Reynolds.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that there were symptoms of a momentary wave in Europe. Over the weekend, Johnson imposed 40 other people returning from Spain, just weeks after the lifting of travel restrictions in the country, which brought thousands of other people’ travel plans into chaos.
“What we had to do was take swift and decisive action where we thought the threat is beginning to emerge again,” Johnson said of the decision.
European governments desperately need a repeat of the initial crisis in March, when the epidemic moved from a few remote cases in Italy to a widespread crisis that hit most of the continent in just a few weeks. From Europe, the virus then spread to the United States.
Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, admitted for the first time that Trump’s management is slow to recognize Europe’s risk. “The advent of Europe happened before we knew what was going on,” Redfield told ABC News. “By the time we learned (the) European risk and interrupted the trip to Europe, there were probably already two or three weeks since another 60,000 people came back every day from Europe.”
Q: Are cancer patients at increased risk of severe Covid-19 headaches?
A: yes. And the highest applies to cancer patients of all ages.
“Having cancer lately increases the threat of a serious illness caused by Covid-19,” says the CDC. “Right now, we don’t know if having a history of cancer increases its threat.” Researchers found that patients whose cancer worsened or spread were more than five times more likely to die within a month if Covid-19 was stuck.
But there are steps cancer patients can take to be as healthy as possible:
Submit your questions here. Are you a fitness fighting covid-19? Send us a message on WhatsApp about the demanding situations you face: 1347-322-0415.
They have a Covid-19 effect on the heart: new studies recommend “thickening of the plot”
Almost every week, more and more evidence of the damage Covid-19 can cause beyond the lungs.
The disease caused by the virus can damage other organs of the framework, adding the center, and now two separate studies provide more data on how Covid-19 can have a prolonged effect on the physical condition of the center in those who have recovered and would possibly have caused problems at the center. Infection in those who have died.
One study found that of a hundred adults who recently recovered from Covid-19, 78% had some form of cardiac engagement MRI and 60% had continued inflammation of the heart. Jacqueline Howard reports.
The Hajj begins – with 1000 pilgrims, of the same 2 million
Islam’s greatest annual pilgrimage to the holy sites of the cities of Mecca and Medina began last night with only a small fraction of its normal number of faithful.
For the first time in decades, foreign travelers have been excluded from the Hajj. So, instead of the same old crowds of about 2 million, only about 1000 pilgrims will attend the Hajj this year due to new crowd restrictions imposed across Saudi Arabia. The country has registered more than 270,800 instances of Covid-19.
It’s just the Hajj. The pandemic has reshaped centuries-old devout traditions in other denominations and continents. From driving services, remote iftar and Purim virtual celebrations, the world’s devoted communities have been forced to adapt to the new normal.
Russia says it will approve vaccine in 2 weeks
The vaccine race is intensifying. Russian officials told CNN that they intend to be the first globally to pass a coronavirus vaccine in less than two weeks, despite considerations about its safety, effectiveness and whether the country has taken key steps in development. Frontline fitness staff will be the first to get vaccinated.
Officials have promoted the early approval date despite the fact that the vaccine has not yet completed its second phase test. The developers plan to complete this phase until Monday and then conduct the third phase of testing in parallel with the vaccination of medical workers, reports Matthew Chance.
Russia has not published any clinical knowledge about its vaccine tests and CNN has not been there to determine its protection or efficacy. Critics say the country’s strain for a vaccine comes amid the Kremlin’s political tension, which it must provide to Russia as a global clinical force.
Meanwhile, in the United States, Pfizer and BioNTech began a large-scale test of their vaccine in the United States on Monday. On the same day, Moderna began a phase 3 trial of its experimental vaccine. Despite the immediate speed of development, experts have warned that more paintings are desired.
Trump promotes lies about coronavirus
A video from an organization of doctors making false and questionable statements similar to coronavirus was removed via Facebook, Twitter and YouTube after it went viral and was shared through US President Donald Trump.
The video, published through the right-wing Breitbart News, featured an organization of other people dressed in white robes who called themselves “America’s frontline physicians,” who held an open-air press convention at the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. The organization’s dubious claims run against Trump’s own public fitness experts.
This was not the only false statement that was repeated through Trump. At his coronavirus briefing last night, the president withdrew from the script and embarked on a series of false and misleading claims about the status of the pandemic. At one point, Trump claimed that America’s “much” is “without a crown” (that’s not true). He also claimed that protests in Seattle and Portland led to a build-up of (also fake) cases. It has introduced an amazing new version of hydroxychloroquine, the antimalarial drug that has not been shown in rigorous clinical trials as an effective remedy for Covid-19. He also complained that the government’s most sensible infectious disease specialist, Dr. Anthony Fauci, had higher approval rates than he did.
And when CNN’s Kaitlan Collins was pressured on his words from a doctor who downplayed the mask and warned that extraterrestrial DNA was used in medical treatments, the president interrupted the briefing and became enraged.
Iceland is an outpost of normalcy amid the Covid pandemic
Iceland praised its handling of the crisis after a first uptick in cases in February. The government has begun testing and tracking, closed borders, and imposed restrictions. The island, which has a population of about 360,000, has recorded fewer than 2,000 cases and only 10 deaths.
Then, when Inga Thordar, armed with a negative covid-19 test, returned to his home country after spending months living in a lockout in London, it was a bit shocking.
“It was an informal hug from an old friend and yet so traumatic,” he writes. “Two friends greeted me and one kissed me warmly, however, my herbal reaction to get away from them and I struggled to maintain such a close verbal exchange. Her herbal ease, which six months ago would have been so normal, now felt uncomfortable. and stressful I felt the tongue, and my manners and brasy seemed to have abandoned me.
Try these 5 minutes to reduce exhaustion
Given the misery and uncertainty caused by the pandemic, the exercise might seem like the last thing that can be done. However, studies have shown that cardiovascular exercise increases well-being and decreases mental misery and emotional exhaustion. Resistance education has also been particularly effective in expanding well-being, non-public achievement and reducing perceived stress.
The good news is that you don’t want to have interaction in an intense education program or long-term training elegance to take advantage of those benefits. It only takes about five minutes of aerobic exercise to begin stimulating anxiolytic effects. So here are some quick exercise ideas.
“When we have something new, and therefore this coronavirus is very new, we will have to be waiting for the science that accompanies it at first not to reveal the true image of what is happening. careful to come to great conclusions based on a small number of studies involving only a few people. – Erin Bromage, comparative immunologist and professor of biology at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth
Throughout the pandemic, there was a big question: Will the cure of the virus or an effective vaccine provide lasting immunity? CNN contributor Erin Bromage explains why new studies in recent weeks give her more hope than ever that the answer can be yes. Listen now.
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