Florida is experiencing the worst of the pandemic as the Delta variant spreads, and the state has reported more cases this past week than any other. Florida also broke another record this week as 12,000 more people were hospitalized with the virus. Compared to the original Covid-19 strain, the Delta variant is more harmful to children, and Florida has reported more young people admitted to the hospital in the last week with the virus — 4,615 — than any other state.
Insane numbers in Florida:
Governor of State Leading Nation in Kids Hospitalized with Covid Fights to Ban School Mask Mandates
The state's Department of Health issued a rule on Friday allowing parents to opt their children out of masking mandates.www.rollingstone.com
With an insane governor leading the way.
Republicans claim to be the party of small government and freedom but sure jump at the chance to crush that freedom when they disagree with something!
Florida Gov. DeSantis threatens to hold school leaders’ pay if they require masks: ‘Financial consequences’
As students in many Florida counties headed back to school Monday, Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis threatened to stop paying superintendents and school board members who defy his executive order banning classroom mask mandates.
New cases today: 515. 22,896 tests completed
In Ontario, 20,047,911 vaccine doses have been administered. 81.2% Ontarians 12+ have one dose and 72.5% have two doses. 116 people are hospitalized (excl. ICU) with #COVID19. 10 are fully vaccinated and 106 are not fully vaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status.
New cases today: 515. 22,896 tests completed
In Ontario, 20,047,911 vaccine doses have been administered. 81.2% Ontarians 12+ have one dose and 72.5% have two doses. 116 people are hospitalized (excl. ICU) with #COVID19. 10 are fully vaccinated and 106 are not fully vaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status.
Indeed. And we have more people in hospital and ICU than we did in August 2020. Isn't the vaccine supposed to mitigate this?Crap.
That is just over 100 more cases than yesterday. At this rate we will be at 800 new cases by the end of the week.
Indeed. And we have more people in hospital and ICU than we did in August 2020. Isn't the vaccine supposed to mitigate this?
Indeed. And we have more people in hospital and ICU than we did in August 2020. Isn't the vaccine supposed to mitigate this?
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the chief medical adviser to President Biden, says an additional COVID-19 vaccine dose is needed for people who have compromised immune systems.
Speaking to NPR's Morning Edition on Thursday, Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said that for those with compromised immune systems, the need is "so imminent to make sure that we get them boosted so that they would be in a protected zone."
The decision to allow a third dose would come from the Food and Drug Administration, which is expected as early as this week to extend its emergency use authorization on vaccines to allow an additional dose.
Roughly 3% of Americans have an immune system that has been made weaker due to disease, certain medical treatments or organ transplants. For most people, a booster would mean a third dose of vaccine.
The FDA has been evaluating studies showing that people with a compromised immune system can have a weak response to the standard vaccine regimen. Research indicates that a third dose may boost immunity to the coronavirus in these people and protect them from serious COVID-19 complications.
A committee advising the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will meet Friday to discuss the data about vaccines in immune-compromised people. If the FDA OKs booster shots, the committee is likely to take a vote on whether to recommend the additional dose and outline who should get it.
Scientists also continue to evaluate whether people with normal immune systems might need an additional dose.
Earlier this month, the World Health Organization called on developed countries, such as the United States, to forgo booster shots until less wealthy countries still struggling to vaccinate their populations are able to catch up.
Asked about that concern, Fauci said, "I believe we can do both."
"I feel very strongly, and I've been very vocal about that, that we have a responsibility as a rich nation — and other rich nations — to make sure that there's equity in the ability to distribute and the accessibility of vaccines," he told NPR. "However, the United States is really doing both. If you look at what we are doing, we are essentially doing more than the rest of the world combined."