Category: Coronavirus

  • Twitter, Facebook and YouTube Deletes Video Of A Section Of American Doctors Claiming To Have COVID-19 Cure

    Twitter, Facebook and YouTube Deletes Video Of A Section Of American Doctors Claiming To Have COVID-19 Cure

    (CNN Business) — A video featuring a group of doctors making false and dubious claims related to the coronavirus was removed by Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube after going viral online Monday.

    The video, published by the right-wing media outlet Breitbart News, featured a group of people wearing white lab coats calling themselves “America’s Frontline Doctors” staging a press conference in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC.

    President Trump shared multiple versions of the video with his 84 million Twitter followers Monday night despite the dubious claims running counter to his administration’s own public health experts. Spokespersons for the White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    During the press conference, a speaker who identifies herself as a doctor makes a number of dubious claims, including that “you don’t need masks” to prevent spread of the coronavirus, and that recent studies showing hydroxychloroquine is ineffective for the treatment of Covid-19 are “fake science” sponsored by “fake pharma companies.”

    “This virus has a cure, it’s called hydroxychloroquine, zinc, and Zithromax,” the woman claims. “You don’t need masks, there is a cure.”

    The claims run contrary to multiple studies on the anti-malarial drug and advice from public health officials to prevent spread of the virus.

    A study found that neither hydroxychloroquine alone nor hydroxychloroquine plus azithromycin appeared to affect the condition of patients at the 15-day mark. Additionally, unusual heart rhythms and elevated liver-enzyme levels were more frequent in patients receiving hydroxychloroquine alone or with azithromycin, according to the study.

    The video quickly went viral on Facebook, becoming one of the top performing posts on the platform with more than 14 million views before it was taken down Monday night for promoting misinformation. It was shared nearly 600,000 times, according to Crowdtangle, a data-analytics firm owned by Facebook.

    “We’ve removed this video for sharing false information about cures and treatments for COVID-19,” a Facebook spokesperson told CNN, adding that the platform is “showing messages in News Feed to people who have reacted to, commented on or shared harmful COVID-19-related misinformation that we have removed, connecting them to myths debunked by the WHO.”

    Twitter worked to scrub the video late Monday night after Trump shared versions of the video that amassed hundreds of thousands of views.

    “We’re taking action in line with our Covid misinfo policy,” a Twitter spokesperson told CNN.

    Twitter took action against the videos that Trump retweeted. By early Tuesday morning the videos were no longer able to be viewed on his account. Twitter also took action on a version of the video posted by Donald Trump Jr. and others shared by Breitbart News.

    The video was also removed by YouTube, where it had been viewed more than 40,000 times. Users attempting to access the video late Monday were greeted with a message that said it had been removed for “violating YouTube’s Community Guidelines.”

    A Breitbart spokesperson did not immediately respond to a CNN request for comment.

    According to the website for America’s Frontline Doctors, the group is led by Dr. Simone Gold, a Los Angeles-based emergency medicine specialist who has previously been featured on Fox News for her views that stay-at-home orders are harmful. Gold told the Associated Press in May she wanted to speak out against stay-home orders because there was “no scientific basis that the average American should be concerned” about Covid-19.

    America’s Frontline Doctors could not be reached for comment late Monday.

    As of Monday, the virus has caused nearly 150,000 US deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University, and is on track to become a leading cause of death in the country.

  • Madagascar  President Rajoelina Gives up on his Cure CVO as Covid19 cases in the Country surge. Calls for International Community support.

    Madagascar President Rajoelina Gives up on his Cure CVO as Covid19 cases in the Country surge. Calls for International Community support.

    In late April 2020, Rajoelina launched a traditional remedy ‘Covid Organics’ (CVO), a herbal concoction he claimed could prevent and cure the novel coronavirus.

    Rajoelina urged citizens to protect themselves from coronavirus by drinking the herbal beverage.“Drink this herbal tea to protect yourselves, to protect your families and your neighbours, there will be no more deaths’’ said the President of the Island nation while taking a sip of the concoction.

    Known under the scientific name of Artemesia Annua, a plant grown widely in Malagasy that helps in treating Malaria, Covid Organic was distributed free of charge.

    This saw Madagascar send the CVO to several African countries, including Tanzania, Guinea Bissau, Liberia, Niger and Senegal.

    The World Health Organisation, Africa CDC, and other medical research centres warned against the use of the traditional remedy without medical supervision.

    Since previous week, Madagascar appeared to be pulling in different directions in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic after a statement by the government criticised the Minister of Health for requesting international assistance to cope with a surge in COVID-19 cases.

    Even as the government has been promoting and distributing a herbal tonic, Covid-Organics, which President Andry Rajoelina claimed can prevent and cure the disease, the Health minister Ahmad Ahmad wrote a letter to international agencies appealing for help.

    The promotion and distribution of Covid-Organics has continued despite the World Health Organisation opposing it due to a lack of clinical trials to determine its efficacy in fighting the coronavirus.

    “Over the past weeks, the Covid-19 epidemic has evolved in a very critical way in Madagascar with notable flare-ups in certain regions, particularly in Antananarivo,” the letter said.

    In it, the ministry gave a list of what it termed as its “most urgent needs” which included oxygen bottles, ventilators, face masks, gloves and medical blouses.

    Public hospitals in the capital Antananarivo said on Monday that they have been overwhelmed by the number of patients due to a spike in cases.

    In what seems like a Presidential U-turn on the hyped herbal Covid-19 ‘cure’, Rajoelina, a former disc jockey unleashed a series of tweets saying the nation will win against the virus, Sunday morning.

    “We are inaugurating the CTC-Treatment centre in Mahamasina, which can accommodate 250 patients with severe forms,’’ tweeted Rajoelina on Sunday morning.

    He also launched CovData, a digital platform that will help in consolidating medical data including the numbers of beds, ventilators, and coronavirus patients being treated in health facilities.

    The head of state urged the nation to show unity and solidarity in the fight against the pandemic.

    The Indian Ocean island nation has so far recorded 8,866 cases, 5,579 recoveries and 78 corona-related deaths.The government has imposed stringent measures to combat the virus, including lockdowns in various regions, as cases spike.

  • MoH Kenya Orders Kemsa to procure 100,000 body bags as Covid19 fatalities rise.

    MoH Kenya Orders Kemsa to procure 100,000 body bags as Covid19 fatalities rise.

    BODY BAGS

    World Health Organization (WHO) director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus warned that there will be many more “body bags” if countries did not behave asking them to stop politicising the pandemic and focus on containing the pandemic.

    “Now is the time for unity, for the international community to work together in solidarity to stop this virus and its shattering consequences. We do not want to record more deaths,” the WHO chief said.

    According to a projection released by scientists, the country is likely to lose 620,500 people by next year February if no sufficient measures are taken and the virus hit its peak.

    In the worst scenario, the model projects that about two million Kenyans, which translates to 88 per cent of the population will be asymptomatic and about 356,000 people moderately affected by the virus. On the severe side, 114,470 individuals will need serious attention including the intensive care unit and ventilators during the same period, this is if the measures put in place by the government are relaxed. “The projections are not fixed and are based on the current measures and how Kenyans are willing to adhere. Behaviour change will determine the change in the modelling as well,” said Prof Omu Anzala, a microbiologist, who was also part of the disease modelling.

    PUBLIC GRAVEYARDS

    Already, some counties have started preparing public graveyards in readiness for an anticipated increase in Covid-19 related deaths as coronavirus infections soar.

    In Kisii, Siaya, and Kakamega, leaders have already identified large swathes of land for the same. Siaya which neither have ICU beds nor even a ventilator. A careless County Government!

    The Kakamega governor said his county had identified two parcels of land for mass graves.

    In Kisii County, officials from the National Multi-Agency Covid-19 Command Centre visited last week to discuss with the county leadership about their preparedness to deal with fatalities.

    The team was informed that the county has set aside a 13-acre piece of land at Nyatieko in Kitutu Chache South to be used as a cemetery.

    In Siaya, health executive Dorothy Owino said the county had bought sufficient body bags. Land executive Adrian Ouma said six acres have been set aside in Sega, four acres in Siaya town while Ugunja, Rarieda, Gem and Bondo sub-counties have one acre each.

    The Laikipia County government has bought enough body bags to take care of a rise in deaths, Health executive Lenai Kamario told Kenya insights on Monday, adding that the burial grounds were adequate.

    The gravity of the pandemic has jolted counties in the wake of the spiralling infections, with attention shifting to the worst scenario in which many lives maybe lost.

    The government has ordered for the procurement of 100,000 Covid-19 body bags, in what is described as preparations for a “worst-case” scenario.

    In a memo seen by the Kenya insights from the Ministry of Health to Kenya Medical Supplies Agency, the bags have to be doubled bagged and be made with heavy-duty vinyl Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastic bag.

    The bag, which is for the adult size, 40 by 90 inches of 0.4 millimeter thickness, must have an envelope zipper and should be preferably white in colour.

  • Nairobi Hospital overwhelmed with Covid19 positive cases.

    Nairobi Hospital overwhelmed with Covid19 positive cases.

    At a point in time when President Uhuru Kenyatta lapsed cessation of movement in and out of earlier restricted epicentre and high risk areas Nairobi Metropolitan, Mombasa County and Kwale — allowing free transport of human vectors for the Covid19 to travel and mingle with most vulnarable groups upcountry – Nairobi hospital is getting overwhelmed as number of positive cases being admitted to the private facility surge.

    “Over this past weekend, the management faced a big challenge to stretch the hospital’s capacity to accommodate a sudden rise in cases presenting at the accident and Emergency department with suspected Covid-19,”

    In a statement on Tuesday, hospital CEO Christopher Abeid said as at July 4, the hospital had admitted 164 patients with 22 requiring intensive care admissions.

    He noted that the country is experiencing a surge in the number of positive symptomatic patients. Virus cases rose to 8,250 on Tuesday with 164 confirmed fatalities.

    With the eased restrictions, the countries cases are expected to rise exponentially. Abeid hopes that the hospital partnership with the UN will pull through which will enable establishment of a facility in 5-8 weeks aid in solving the low capacity problem.

    This comes even as the hospital improved admissions from a low 35 per cent bed occupancy in mid-April to a high 63 per cent in July. “With this rising challenge, we are hopeful that the hospital board will support the next phase of the TNH-UN Covid-19 care partnership.

    This will give us a 150-bed state of the art Coronavirus hospital at the old nursing school,” he said.

    According to him, the facility will have a 25 ICU bed capacity with ECMO capacity and its own operating theater. “It is a fantastic opportunity to migrate Covid-19 care completely from the Main Hospital Campus in the next eight weeks,” he said.

  • China Approves The First COVID-19 Vaccine For Military Use

    China Approves The First COVID-19 Vaccine For Military Use

    (Reuters) – China’s military has received the greenlight to use a COVID-19 vaccine candidate developed by its research unit and CanSino Biologics (6185.HK) after clinical trials proved it was safe and showed some efficacy, the company said on Monday.

    The Ad5-nCoV is one of China’s eight vaccine candidates approved for human trials at home and abroad for the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus. The shot also won approval for human testing in Canada.

    China’s Central Military Commission approved the use of the vaccine by the military on June 25 for a period of one year, CanSino said in a filing. The vaccine candidate was developed jointly by CanSino and a research institute at the Academy of Military Science (AMS).

    “The Ad5-nCoV is currently limited to military use only and its use cannot be expanded to a broader vaccination range without the approval of the Logistics Support Department,” CanSino said, referring to the Central Military Commission department which approved the military use of the vaccine.

    CanSino declined to disclose whether the innoculation of the vaccine candidate is mandatory or optional, citing commercial secrets, in an email to Reuters.

    The military approval follows China’s decision earlier this month to offer two other vaccine candidates to employees at state-owned firms travelling overseas.

    The Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials of the CanSino’s vaccine candidate showed it has the potential to prevent diseases caused by the coronavirus, which has killed half a million people globally, but its commercial success cannot be guaranteed, the company said.

    Separately, AMS received an approval earlier this month to test its second experimental coronavirus vaccine in humans.

    No vaccine has yet been approved for commercial use against the illness caused by the new coronavirus, but over a dozen vaccines from more than 100 candidates globally are being tested in humans.

  • China approves its first Covid19 vaccine. To be used by the Millitary.

    China approves its first Covid19 vaccine. To be used by the Millitary.

    (Reuters) – China’s military has received the greenlight to use a COVID-19 vaccine candidate developed by its research unit and CanSino Biologics (6185.HK) after clinical trials proved it was safe and showed some efficacy, the company said on Monday.

    The Ad5-nCoV is one of China’s eight vaccine candidates approved for human trials at home and abroad for the respiratory disease caused by the new coronavirus. The shot also won approval for human testing in Canada.

    China’s Central Military Commission approved the use of the vaccine by the military on June 25 for a period of one year, CanSino said in a filing. The vaccine candidate was developed jointly by CanSino and a research institute at the Academy of Military Science (AMS).

    The Ad5-nCoV is currently limited to military use only and its use cannot be expanded to a broader vaccination range without the approval of the Logistics Support Department,” CanSino said, referring to the Central Military Commission department which approved the military use of the vaccine.

    CanSino declined to disclose whether the innoculation of the vaccine candidate is mandatory or optional, citing commercial secrets, in an email to Reuters.

    The military approval follows China’s decision earlier this month to offer two other vaccine candidates to employees at state-owned firms travelling overseas.

    The Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials of the CanSino’s vaccine candidate showed it has the potential to prevent diseases caused by the coronavirus, which has killed half a million people globally, but its commercial success cannot be guaranteed, the company said.

    Separately, AMS received an approval earlier this month to test its second experimental coronavirus vaccine in humans.

    No vaccine has yet been approved for commercial use against the illness caused by the new coronavirus, but over a dozen vaccines from more than 100 candidates globally are being tested in humans.

  • The Government Has Spent Sh6.4B On COVID-19 In The Past Three Months

    The Government Has Spent Sh6.4B On COVID-19 In The Past Three Months

    The government has spent Sh6.4 billion in the past three months to respond to effects of coronavirus even as the number of confirmed positive cases continue to rise, hitting 5,384 on Thursday.

    Sh5.85 billion has been shared among the 47 counties to mitigate the spread of Covid-19 while the rest was distributed to national referral hospitals for acquiring test kits and reagents.

    Data contained in the third mini-budget tabled in Parliament on Wednesday shows Sh6.35 billion has been spent.

    The Treasury had allocated Sh3 billion in the Second Supplementary budget that was approved in April but has now factored in a further Sh3.35 billion in the Third Supplementary Budget that has been placed before Parliament for approval as the financial year closes in less than five days.

    “Supplementary estimate of the amount required in the year ending June 30, 2020 for salaries and expenses of the Ministry of Health including general administration, planning, health policy and standards management, oversight over sanitation services, health training, health research, referral facilities, medical supplies and aids control (Sh6,350,000,000).”

    The Treasury transferred Sh5.85 billion to the counties to develop at least 300-bed isolation centres in readiness for the surging Covid-19 cases.

    President Uhuru Kenyatta on June 10 in his monthly address to the nation on Covid-19 ordered counties to prepare well for handling the pandemic.

    The Sh5.35 billion was given to the 47 counties as conditional grant to be used on increasing their healthcare capacity by building infrastructure.

    The latest budget estimates show that the Treasury has released Sh1.5 billion to the Ministry of Health for procurement of test kits and reagents used to test Covid-19 since the first case was detected in Kenya on March 24.

    Donors like Chinese billionaire and Alibaba founder Jack Ma donated equipment, some of which was stolen on arrival at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA).

    The disappearance of the donations comes at a time Kenya is struggling to acquire testing kits, reagents and personal protective gear for health workers.

    The Supplementary Budget III indicates that the Treasury transferred Sh700 million to the Health docket for administration of quarantine facilities while Sh300 million was spent on supply of face masks to vulnerable groups.

    Mbagathi Hospital and Coast General Hospital, which have been handling the bulk of Covid-19 patients received Sh350 million each while Mandera and Kitui hospitals got Sh250 million each.

    Kenyatta University Teaching, Referral and Research Hospital and Jaramogi Oginga Teaching and Referral Hospital were allocated Sh300 million each while Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital got Sh250 million.-Business Daily.

  • France Is Opening Up For Tourism With Reopening Of Iconic Eiffel Tower

    France Is Opening Up For Tourism With Reopening Of Iconic Eiffel Tower

    PARIS: Tourists and Parisians will from Thursday again be able to admire the view of the French capital from the Eiffel Tower after a three-month closure due to the coronavirus — but only if they take the stairs.

    Visitors to the city’s most famous monument won’t be able to take the lifts until July 1, to ensure a safe distance between people to limit infection risk.

    The very top of the iconic monument will remain off limits to the public for now.

    The 10-tonne metal landmark will emerge from its longest closure since World War II in time for the summer season, but with limited visitor numbers at first, and mandatory face masks for all over the age of 11, said the Eiffel Tower website.

    The first visitors will be allowed in from 10:00 am (0800 GMT), a symbolic moment as France begins to tentatively open up to tourism after the virus shutdown.

    Eager tourists have been able to grab their tickets since June 18, when the online ticket office opened.

    “To ensure that ascending and descending visitors do not meet in the stairs, ascent will take place from the East pillar and descent by the West pillar,” said the operator, with a limited number of visitors per floor at a time.

    The top level will remain closed for now, “since the lifts taking visitors from second to top floor are small. It might reopen during the summer.”

    – Gradual return of tourism –

    The statement said ground markings will be put in place to ensure people keep their distance from one another, with “daily cleaning and disinfection of public spaces at the tower.”

    The monument, completed in 1889, receives about seven million visitors every year, around three-quarters of them from abroad, according to the tower website.

    France is one of the world’s most visited countries and its tourism industry has taken a hard hit under a lockdown to halt the Covid-19 pandemic, with hotels, restaurants, museums, and theatres closed for three months.

    These included some of the French capital’s most famous landmarks such as the Louvre museum, due to reopen on July 6, and the Palace of Versailles, which reopened earlier this month.

    France lifted restrictions at European borders as of June 15, and the tourism industry hopes that foreign visitors will start pouring in again as the summer season kicks off.-AP.

  • Zimbabwe’s Sex Workers Are Back To Work

    Zimbabwe’s Sex Workers Are Back To Work

    HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) — Forced to stay home for weeks without any source of income, Zimbabwe’s sex workers, like many other informal traders, are beginning to defy the country’s lockdown and return to the streets.

    Risking arrest and the coronavirus, many are working afternoons because some clients are at home due to a general night curfew.

    “Hey sweetie! Some lockdown variety here!” a young woman dressed in skimpy dress called to a passing motorist in Harare’s Avenues area, a well-known red light district, at lunchtime recently.

    Such scenes would have been unthinkable when Zimbabwe first imposed its coronavirus restrictions at the end of March and streets were deserted amid often-violent enforcement by security forces.

    Sex workers “had to put all tools down,” when the shutdown started, said Pow Wow, a local organization representing sex workers that has been distributing food, soap and sanitizer to its members struggling to make ends meet.

    The government has relaxed the restrictions to allow formal businesses to open, but it hasn’t helped the majority of Zimbabweans who survive on selling goods on the streets, which is still prohibited.

    In a bid to survive, many street traders are ignoring the regulations and hawking their wares on the roadsides again.

    Sex workers say they cannot miss the opportunity, although many have changed their timetables.

    “It makes sense to work in the afternoons only these days. Evenings don’t pay that much anymore. The traffic is higher in the afternoons,” said one sex worker, on the lookout for both clients and police. She did not give her name to protect her identity.

    Others still prefer working at night, saying that although clients are fewer after dark, so are police. The cops are also more lenient at night, said one.

    Zimbabwe’s Constitutional Court in 2015 barred police from arresting women out on the streets on prostitution charges, but they can be picked up for violating lockdown rules against being out, said police spokesman Paul Nyathi.

    Nyathi said “a good number” of sex workers are among the close to 60,000 people arrested since April for violating the lockdown.

    Like many informal traders, sex workers bribe police at numerous roadblocks to get into downtown Harare. According to a recent report by the Zimbabwe Human Rights Forum, street traders are paying up to $5 a day to police to be allowed to operate without being arrested.

    “The majority of the people, including sex workers, are now agitated and hungry and this is what is pushing them to leave their houses,” said Itai Rusike, executive director of the Harare-based Community Working Group on Health. He attributed the increased defiance of the lockdown on “laxity in enforcement, fatigue and hunger.”

  • A Cheap Steroid Is The First Drug Shown To Reduce Deaths In Covid-19 Patients

    A Cheap Steroid Is The First Drug Shown To Reduce Deaths In Covid-19 Patients

    After months of dire news about the spread of the novel coronavirus and a mounting global death toll, a glimmer of hope arrived today: Researchers announced that dexamethasone, a cheap, widely available corticosteroid, significantly reduced deaths of severely sick COVID-19 patients in a major clinical trial. Although full trial data have not yet been released, several outside commentators hailed the result as a “breakthrough.”

    “These are really surprising, but really very convincing results,” says Martin Landray of the University of Oxford, one of the principle investigators of the Recovery trial in the United Kingdom that evaluated the steroid. If they hold up, adds Devi Sridhar, an expert on global public health at the University of Edinburgh, they could be a game-changer for critical patients, as the drugs are accessible even in lower income countries.

    The Recovery trial, one of the biggest efforts to evaluate whether existing drugs can treat COVID-19, included 2104 patients given a relatively low dose of 6 milligrams of dexamethasone for 10 days. When their outcomes were compared with those of 4321 patients receiving standard care, the steroid reduced deaths by one-third in patients already on ventilators and by one-fifth in patients receiving supplemental oxygen in other ways, Recovery researchers announced in a press release. They did not find any benefit in patients not receiving respiratory support.

    Dexamethasone’s effect is seemingly much stronger than that of remdesivir, the only other drug so far shown to help COVID-19 patients in a randomized clinical trial. That antiviral reduced the number of days critical patients were hospitalized, but it did not clearly reduce deaths.

    Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization (WHO), hailed the dexamethasone results as “great news” given it’s the first COVID-19 drug that has clearly proved to reduce mortality. “The results are pretty remarkable for severely ill patients,” adds Nahid Bhadelia, a physician at Boston Medical Center. “I can see ICU [intensive care unit] physicians being more likely to provide steroids in the critically ill who are mechanically ventilated and who are not improving from other interventions based on these results.”

    But she and others expressed disappointment that the Recovery team did not release additional information. “More detailed data would help us identify which subset of COVID-19 patients would benefit from steroids,” Bhadelia says.

    Landray acknowledges the criticism. “I fully understand why scientists want to see the details. I’m a scientist, I want to see the details.” But with thousands of people dying of COVID-19 every day, it was important to get the basic message out first, he says. “There is this tension between having the final details and the final decimal points nailed down, and having what is actually a clear-cut and practical message in the public domain.”

    Recovery is evaluating several experimental COVID-19 therapies, including the HIV drug combination Kaletra, convalescent plasma, and the controversial antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine. When researchers found 2 weeks ago that hydroxychloroquine did not improve patient outcomes, they stopped that arm of the trial. In the other arms, Landray says, they stuck to their plan to wait until 2000 patients had received a treatment and 4000 patients had enrolled in a control arm, because that would provide a 90% chance of picking up a reduction in deaths of about 18%. Dexamethasone was the first drug to reach the milestone, so the researchers stopped its arm on 8 June and began to look at the data.

    “The decimal points might change a bit when we tidy things up, but we’ve got to a point where the message will not change,” Landray says, adding that Recovery hopes to make public the full data within about 10 days. If the findings hold up under scrutiny, it would mean that treating eight ventilated patients with dexamethasone would save one life. “That is a big effect,” says Ashish Jha, a global health expert at Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health who is eager to see the data.

    The United Kingdom’s National Health Service has already announced its standard care for COVID-19 patients will now include dexamethasone. “It’s very, very rare that you announce results at lunchtime, and it becomes policy and practice by tea time, and probably starts to save lives by the weekend,” Landray says.

    Although much of the early hope for COVID-19 treatment focused on drugs that might directly attack the virus (like remdesivir and hydroxychloroquine), there has also been considerable debate about medicines that dampen the immune system, like dexamethasone. In its fight against the virus, the body’s defenses can overreact, eventually breaking down the thin barrier between the insides of the lungs and the surrounding tissue. That causes the lungs to fill up with liquid and triggers acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in which patients can end up essentially drowning in their own liquid.

    But reducing the immune response through steroids could also hobble the body’s fight against the new coronavirus or secondary infections, Bhadelia says. For this reason, the guidelines of WHO and the U.S. National Institutes of Health have so far recommended against using steroids in COVID-19 patients, she points out.

    Doctors have used steroids to treat viral pneumonias in the past, including those caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome virus or H1N1 influenza, says Wei Shen Lim, a respiratory physician at Nottingham University Hospital. But there were no randomized clinical trials with those viruses and available data were hard to interpret.

    A Cochrane review looking at the data from H1N1 patients, co-written by Lim, found that patients treated with corticosteroids had a higher risk of dying. But that might be explained by the fact that sicker patients were more likely to receive steroids, Lim says. “Before the Recovery trial, I was neither an advocate for or an opponent of steroids,” he says. “You couldn’t be sure.” To get a clearer answer, Lim designed a trial to evaluate steroids in viral pneumonias in the case of another pandemic. When COVID-19 emerged, that was integrated into the Recovery trial as one arm, using dexamethasone.

    In places like Spain, dexamethasone has already been widely used against COVID-19. Carlos Ferrando, an anesthesiologist at the Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, was one of the authors on a paper published in Lancet Respiratory Medicine on 7 February that showed the steroid reduced mortality in non–COVID-19 patients with ARDS. When COVID-19 patients started to show up in Spanish hospitals, Ferrando started a randomized clinical trial to test dexamethasone, but recruitment into the placebo group was slow because most patients were given the steroid, he says. Ferrando is now analyzing data from thousands of patients in Spanish ICUs, about 80% of whom received steroids, he says. “It seems like we have a signal that those corticoids decrease mortality, but we need to finalize the analysis.”

    Sridhar says the positive result of the Recovery trial also holds an important lesson for the debate about how best to initially respond to a pandemic like this: that delaying the spread of a pathogen, through temporary stay at home orders or other measures, can give people infected later in a pandemic a better chance of surviving. “It shows the value of buying time for science to deliver, and indicates that with time, more and more findings will come to light that help doctors manage COVID-19 patients with better clinical outcomes.”

    But even if steroids reduce mortality, they do not solve the problem of COVID-19 patients potentially overwhelming a health care system, Sridhar cautions. That’s because the drug can help treat patients who are already sick, but not prevent the illness in the first place. “The real game-changer will be a drug that prevents people going from mild symptoms to a severe state, and a vaccine.”- Science Magazine.

  • Breakthrough as 3 Kenyans develop contact tracing app.

    Breakthrough as 3 Kenyans develop contact tracing app.

    Three local researchers — biochemist Donatus Njoroge, IT expert Gideon Kamau, and medical doctor Jesse Gitaki —  have developed a Covid-19 tracing system dubbed ‘KoviTrace’ that provides access to all the persons that a patient came into contact with in the last 14 days.

    MKU lecturer, Biochemist Donatus Njoroge winner of The Global Innovation prize 2019 by GIST Nework in Bahrain.

    The technology has a back end system (a web-controlled portal for use by the administrator (Ministry of Health) and a front end system (an application that can be installed on Android phones or accessed via a USSD code by those without smart phones).

    It also provides users with an updated access to WHO’s frequently asked questions about the disease and a self-screening test that gauges the user’s vulnerability to the disease based on his or her previous interactions, behaviour and movements.

    The technology can be used by the Ministry of Health in tracing all persons that Covid-19 patients came into contact with, and by Kenyans in establishing if they have been in contact with persons who tested positive.

    “Once an individual has tested positive, a Ministry of Health official will only be required to key in his phone number onto the web portal and command it to trace all his contacts within the last 14 days instead of relying on his word of mouth,” explained Mr Njoroge, the researcher behind the idea.

    The system also sends an alert to all the persons that the patient came into contact with. The alert, received in the form of a text message, also contains information on preventive measures, contacts of the nearest hospital and the emergency toll-free numbers of the respective county Covid-19 coordinator.

    “This system works for those who have installed the app in their phones or registered with the USSD code,” added Mr Njoroge, who is also the head of innovations, intellectual property and community engagements at Mt Kenya University.

    Mr Njoroge said the system can trace every person that the individual has been in contact with virtually, thus minimising the risk of persons going into hiding.

    “It uses a geo-sensing technology that tracks the user’s location and time. The data is saved under a unique ID that is encrypted and cannot be accessed by other parties,” Mr Njoroge adds.

    The government is conducting contract tracing with the help of NIS through accessing patients’ phone data to trace their last movements, a procedure that is not feasible at large scale, besides being expensive.

    If ‘KoviTrace’ is approved and adopted for use by the government, Kenya will rank among global economies that have established similar apps for use in taming the virus before reopening the economies.

    One such country is Australia, which developed COVIDSafe, an App that is tracing contacts of patients within the last 21 days.

  • COVID-19: Airlines Ban Alcohol On Planes

    COVID-19: Airlines Ban Alcohol On Planes

    (CNN) — Alcohol sales may have boomed during lockdown, but our return to air travel will be an altogether more sobering experience.

    Airlines including Easyjet and KLM in Europe, Delta Air Lines and American Airlines in the United States, and Asia’s Virgin Australia, are suspending all or part of their alcoholic drinks service in response to Covid-19.

    It’s part of a widespread revision of the industry’s food and drink service to minimize interaction between crew and passengers and to ensure a safer journey for all.

    With face masks already mandatory on pretty much all flights around the world, and new legislation introduced in January 2020 to curb anti-social behavior on flights, it’s another in a line of barriers — literal and legal — to getting high in the sky.

    Many airlines are limiting drink options to water only. As face masks must be kept on other than when passengers are eating and drinking, it’s a way of ensuring passengers are lingering over their refreshments for no longer than necessary.

    Europe

    British low-cost airline Easyjet resumed domestic routes across the UK and France on June 15, alongside a handful of international routes.

    While customers can bring food and non-alcoholic drinks on board, at the beginning the only refreshments on offer will be water, which has to be requested from the crew. Food service will resume gradually in coming months.

    The crew will manage use of toilet facilities — so it’s for the best that passengers aren’t knocking back the Guinness and G&Ts.

    Virgin Atlantic will be issuing passengers with “Health Packs,” complete with face masks, surface wipes and hand gel. It too is temporarily removing alcohol on board.

    KLM, flag-carrier of the Netherlands, has suspended sales of hot and alcoholic drinks, but you can still ask crew for more water and soft drinks. That’s in addition to the pre-packed refreshments that will be waiting for you on your seat when you board.

    Hot meals will only be served on flights longer than nine hours.

    The UK’s flag carrier, British Airways, is suspending its alcohol service in short-haul economy only (its “Euro Traveller” class), where customers will instead be offered complimentary refreshments along with a bottle of water. Special meals, including children’s meals, are temporarily unavailable.

    Irish budget airline Ryanair has also resumed a limited flights schedule. It’s changed its service so that all food is pre-packaged and must be pre-ordered before flying. Alcohol isn’t off the menu, though — it’s chosen to ax its hot drinks service instead, throughout July.

    The Americas

    Delta Airlines isn’t serving alcohol on domestic flights or within the Americas, but beer, wine and spirits can be found on all other international flights.

    Over on American Airlines, the airline is limiting food and drink service in the main cabin according to flight length and destination. Access to alcohol, however, is the preserve of long-haul international flights and the folks in First Class.

    In Asia, Hong Kong’s flag-carrier Cathay Pacific will still have drinks available throughout the flight, but the pre-meal bar and pre-poured drinks are temporarily suspended.

    Virgin Australia is serving all guests complimentary water and a snack, but additional food and drinks aren’t currently available for on-board purchase.

    So if you’re traveling this summer, pack plenty of water and healthy snacks, keep your face mask on when not eating or drinking, and be glad that you’re being spared alcohol-related dehydration, a major contributor to jet lag.
  • State, Rockefeller, Amref to establish oxygen plant in Nyeri

    State, Rockefeller, Amref to establish oxygen plant in Nyeri

    The government is in discussions with the Rockefeller Foundation and Amref to establish an oxygen generation plant at Kenyatta National Hospital, Othaya Annex, in Nyeri county.

    William Asiko, Rockefeller Foundationmanaging director for Africa, said on Sunday the facility is the most appropriate place to establish the plant.

    He said two months ago they signed an MoU with the Ministry of Health and Amref to support the Covid-19 response.

    “Today is a continuation of that same MoU in which we signed Sh100 million to support the government in Covid-19 response,” he said.

    Asiko said they will not only focus on Covid-19 but will continue the partnership with the Health ministry to help on other issues that may continue to emerge.

    Group CEO Githinji Gitahi said they have agreed to start by providing a bulk oxygen supply at the level 6 facility so that seven beds in the ICU can be operational.

    But Gitahi said the oxygen plant will be an immediate investment that will be worked on in the next one to two months they will be in the county.

    Gitahi also announced that Rockefeller Foundation, through Amref, also donated 35 beds with mattresses to support the centre, three patient monitors, 4,000 full sets of PPE and 1,000 cartons of sanitiser.

    He told the Nyeri government that Amref will work with the county in the fight against Covid-19 through home-based care.

    The Health ministry will be releasing a protocol for home-based care.

    Gitahi said Amref would work with the county and the Ministry of Health under a grant from the European Union to ensure that they provide medical supplies to hospitals and train health workers and community engagements.

    “In that phase, the individual, the household and the community are extremely critical. I want to recognize the value and the work done by the community health volunteers and community health workers because they are going to be a key asset in home-based care,” he said.

    They spoke at the Othaya Level 6 Hospital in Othaya during daily Covid-19 briefing by Health Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe.

    ICT CS Joe Mucheru said money has been allocated in the budget to connect all the hospitals with fibre internet and has already completed the data centre at Konza City which is going to allow them to put all the ICT machines needed.

    This, he said, will not only allow hospitals to interact and work together but will also enable each patient to have their own electronic medical record.

    That will enable the government to manage this pandemic and be even more prepared in the future, he said.

    Health Committee of the National Assembly chairperson Sabina Chege said they have allocated Sh150 million for construction of amenities such as a kitchen, a laundry room and a morgue at the facility.

    The hospital has been selected as a Covid-19 isolation centre in case Mt Kenya Hospital is overwhelmed.

  • Parts Of Beijing Locked Down Due To A Fresh Virus Cluster

    Parts Of Beijing Locked Down Due To A Fresh Virus Cluster

    BEIJING— Beijing closed the city’s largest wholesale food market Saturday after the discovery of seven coronavirus cases in the previous two days.

    The Xinfadi market, which has 4,000 tenants, will be disinfected after workers tested positive and the virus was found in the environment, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

    The National Health Commission said that six new cases were confirmed in Beijing on Friday. Another case was reported Thursday. They are the first locally transmitted cases in the Chinese capital in more than 50 days.

    Attention focused on the market after the discovery of the first three cases. Two of the infected people had been to the market, and the third worked with one of them at a meat research institute, according to Chinese media reports.

    City officials said late Friday that all the workers were being tested for the coronavirus. They also ordered the testing of food and environmental samples from all the city’s wholesale food markets.
  • EAC States to roll out digital Covid-19 certificates for truck drivers

    EAC States to roll out digital Covid-19 certificates for truck drivers

    The move is hoped will eliminate traffic snarl-ups currently being experienced along border points. At the Uganda-Kenya border in Busia, traffic snarl-up has lasted over three weeks owing to drivers not adhering to laid down Covid-19 protocols. Drivers are expected to have a valid Covid-19-free certificate during transit. The certificate is to be renewed every 14 days.

    The precautionary measures laid down by the Health ministry are meant to stop the spread of Covid-19 along transport corridors.

    Roll out of digital Covid-19-free certificates is aimed at eliminating the possibility of truck drivers using fake documents to travel within the region.

    This comes as Kenya crosses the 3,000 mark after recording 105 new Covid-19 cases bringing the total number of persons infected to 3,094. Some 175 persons, the highest number of recoveries so far, were also discharged from hospitals.

    The Ministry of Health said that the roll-out of the electronic certificate will be implemented in a week’s time once the member states put in place technology that will link all the laboratories and ensure a seamless operation.

    The move follow claims that truck drivers are using fake certificates to cross to neighbouring countries and into Kenya. It is also designed to ensure that truck drivers follow laid down protocols that include taking Covid-19 tests at the point of departure, 48 hours before the commencement of the journey.

    “At the moment we are working on a small issue with the linkages of the laboratories, because you want your results to be visible by each partner state so that it can be a true attestation that test is valid,” said Acting Director of Public Health Dr Francis Kuria.

  • President Magufuli Declares Tanzania Coronavirus Free

    President Magufuli Declares Tanzania Coronavirus Free

    Tanzania’s President John Magufuli has declared the country “coronavirus-free” thanks to prayers by citizens.

    “The corona disease has been eliminated thanks to God,” Mr Magufuli told worshippers in a church in the capital, Dodoma.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has expressed concern over the government’s strategy on Covid-19.

    The government has stopped publishing data on the number of coronavirus cases in the country.

    On 29 April, the last day official data was released, there were 509 cases, with 21 deaths in Tanzania. However, Mr Magufuli said last week that only four patients were receiving treatment in the largest city, Dar es Salaam.

    Last month, Tanzania’s government dismissed a US embassy warning that hospitals in Dar es Salaam were “overwhelmed” and that the chances of contracting the virus was “extremely high”.

    Mr Magufuli has repeatedly said the health crisis has been exaggerated and urged people to attend services in churches and mosques, saying that prayers “can vanquish” the virus.

    What did Magufuli say?

    “I want to thank Tanzanians of all faiths. We have been praying and fasting for God to save us from the pandemic that has afflicted our country and the world. But God has answered us.

    “I believe, and I’m certain that many Tanzanians believe, that the corona disease has been eliminated by God,” he told worshippers on Sunday in Dodoma.

    His remarks were welcomed with applause and celebratory ululation.

    Mr Magufuli also commended the priest and worshippers for not wearing gloves and masks to protect themselves from the virus.

    What else has he said?

    He made similar comments last Friday during a teachers’ conference, declaring “corona is finished”.

    “The health minister told me that we only have four patients in Dar es Salaam but this will not stop rumours to the contrary,” he said.

    “We need to be careful because some of these donations to fight coronavirus could be used to transmit the virus.

    “I want to urge you Tanzanians not to accept donations of masks, instead tell the donors to go and use them with their wives and children,” he added.

    The Tanzanian president is among several African leaders who have received orders for a herbal tonic touted by the president of Madagascar as a cure for Covid-19. It is unclear if it has been given to patients in Tanzania.

    There is no scientific proof that the tonic works and the WHO has urged people not to use unproven medication.

    Opposition politicians have criticised Mr Magufuli in the past for promoting policies that could harm the health of Tanzanians.

    The head of Tanzania’s medical association, Elisha Osati, backed the government in a recent BBC interview, saying that hospitals were operating as normal and that the majority of coronavirus inpatients were suffering from mild symptoms.

    Mr Magufuli has accused the country’s health officials of exaggerating the coronavirus crisis. He has also ridiculed the strict measures neighbouring countries have imposed to fight the pandemic.-BBC.

  • Coronavirus Antibody therapy breakthrough

    Coronavirus Antibody therapy breakthrough

    Scientists working on coronavirus treatments may be close to a breakthrough on an antibody treatment that could save the lives of people who become infected, it has been reported.

    An injection of cloned antibodies that counteract Covid-19 could prove significant for those in the early stages of infection, according to the British-Swedish pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca.

    AstraZeneca’s chief executive Pascal Soriot told the newspaper that the treatment being developed is “a combination of two antibodies” in an injected dose “because by having both you reduce the chance of resistance developing to one antibody”.

    Antibody therapy is more expensive than vaccine production, with Soriot saying the former would be prioritised for the elderly and vulnerable “who may not be able to develop a good response to a vaccine”.

    On Thursday, AstraZeneca signed a deal with the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi) to help manufacture 300million globally accessible doses of the coronavirus vaccine candidate being developed by the Jenner Institute at the University of Oxford.

    AstraZeneca has already started to manufacture the Oxford University Covid-19 vaccine to ensure that if it does pass human trials, it can be made available in the autumn. Trials of the potential vaccine have started in Brazil, a new epicentre of the pandemic, to ensure the study can be properly tested as transmission rates fall in the UK. The Jenner Institute and the Oxford Vaccine Group began development on a vaccine in January, using a virus taken from chimpanzees.

    Meanwhile UK-based vaccine manufacturer Seqirus announced it was working in partnership with parent company CSL, Cepi and the University of Queensland to help develop a candidate Covid-19 vaccine in Australia. Its manufacturing base in Liverpool is producing an adjuvant, an agent that improves the immune response to a vaccine.

  • Open Up The Country

    Open Up The Country

    By Medipoint Clinic

    Covid-19 grouped under influenza is only ranked number 3 as a serious illness after ischaemic heart disease and stroke. According to CDC sources.
    In Kenya, We’ve had it for barely 3 months only so calculating the incidence may not be accurate, however, going by the numbers announced daily.. the prevalence and incidence of covid-19 is comparatively very low. We’ve had worse pandemics in the past and came out stronger without charades and dramatisation.

    The mortality rate of covid-19 as per global average among the 10 most affected countries is around 5%.. in Kenya’s case, its in decimals 0.12%.

    Several factors can influence this among them

    1.Diffrencences in the number of people tested: with more testing, more people with milder cases are identified. This lowers the case-fatality ratio.

    2.Demographics: For example, mortality tends to be higher in older populations.

    3. Characteristics of the health care systems: For example, mortality may rise as hospitals become overwhelmed and have fewer resources.

    4. Other factors, many of which remains unknown.
    Citation..John Hopkins Corona virus Resource centre.

    I do not intend to underplay the veracity of this disease but then we need to be realistic.
    Covid-19 is a misdemeanor compared to other disease burdens in Kenya.

    Among Kenyans most glaring diseases include

    1. Typhoid 2. Cholera 3. Malaria 4. Rabies 5. hepatitis 7. HIV and tuberculosis not forgetting emerging non communicable diseases.

    This diseases are related to poor hygiene and sanitation.. as a result of squalid poverty and wretchedness.

    Kenya needs to fight poverty by all means and applying the curfew rules archieves the opposite.
    The truth of the matter is even this curfew is only about 40% effective. People with means to bribe their way across the police barrier post are still migrating with impunity. It only applies to the poor who would even not have traveled with or without the curfew.

    Slowing the economy can have far reaching consequences than the fad diseases itself. The massive job losses and abrupt changes in lifestyle can easily trigger chaos.

    The numbers displayed on our screens daily, showing rising positives cases then falling after a deluge should not blind us into making misguided choices.

    If I may quote the science of chaos theory.
    “When systems become dislodged from a stable state, they go through a period of oscillation, swinging back and forth between order and chaos. ” chaos is the final state in a system’s movement away from order.”

    Time to stop restrictions is now. Return us to normal life. All we need to do is to observe basic hygiene best practices. My take.

  • Researchers Are Considering Using Fitbit Or Apple Watch Data For Early Detection Of Coronavirus

    Researchers Are Considering Using Fitbit Or Apple Watch Data For Early Detection Of Coronavirus

    Can your Fitbit or Apple Watch detect a coronavirus infection before the onset of symptoms?

    Researchers are increasingly looking at these devices and other such wearables as a possible early warning system for the deadly virus.

    Last month, scientists at the West Virginia University Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute said they had created a digital platform that can detect COVID-19 symptoms up to three days before they show up using the Oura ring, a wearable fitness and activity tracker.

    An app developed by the researchers uses artificial intelligence to forecast the onset of COVID-19 related symptoms such as fever, coughing, breathing difficulties and fatigue, with over 90 percent accuracy, according to the university.

    The researchers said the system could offer clues of infection in people not yet showing symptoms — helping address one of the problems in detection and containment of the deadly outbreak.

    Separately, Scripps Research Institute has enrolled more than 30,000 people — and aims for much more — in a similar study aiming to use wearables to find “presymptomatic” and asymptomatic people with COVID-19.

    Scripps researchers had already previously demonstrated the value of wearables in predicting influenza in a study published in January in the British journal The Lancet.

    Early indications suggest the devices “have the potential to identify people who are presymptomatic but still infectious,” said Jennifer Radin, a Scripps epidemiologist leading the research.

    – Volunteers being sought –

    Radin told an online conference discussing the research that wearables are detecting “subtle changes that indicate you are coming down with a viral illness” before the onset of symptoms.

    Scripps researchers say they hope to show that wearables data may be more reliable than temperature checks.

    “Forty percent of people who come down with COVID don’t have a fever,” Radin said. “This is something that can be used to screen people that’s better than a temperature check.”

    Resting heart rate, for example, is a good indicator because it is normally consistent before an infection, and can be accurately measured by most wearables.

    “We see these changes (in heart rate) four days before someone starts to develop a fever,” Radin said.

    Eric Topol, director of the Scripps institute, said the idea of using wearables is promising because “over 100 million Americans have a smart watch or fitness band” which can provide key data for researchers, but that getting good results “is contingent on getting large numbers” to opt into the studies.

    California health tech startup Evidation meanwhile has begun a project to produce an early warning algorithm from wearables worn by 300 people at high risk of contracting coronavirus, with funding from the US government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

    Luca Foschini, Evidation’s co-founder and chief data scientist, said the research aims “to more effectively identify when and where people may contract COVID-19, and can potentially enable real-time interventions to limit spread and monitor outcomes.”

    A similar research effort is underway in Germany.

    – From recreation to medicine –

    The latest research highlights how some wearable devices — developed initially for fitness and recreation uses — may be adapted for important medical research.

    Apple has begun studies on how its smartwatch can detect heart problems. And Fitbit has been working with some 500 different projects for research on cancer, diabetes, respiratory and other health issues.

    Scientists say wearables can provide data on body temperature, heart and respiratory rates, sleep and activity patterns and other indicators which can be used as diagnostic tools.

    Researchers from Stanford University announced plans in April to participate in research on wearables, in collaboration with Scripps, for COVID-19 and other diseases.

    “Smartwatches and other wearables make many, many measurements per day — at least 250,000, which is what makes them such powerful monitoring devices,” said Michael Snyder, chair of genetics at Stanford School of Medicine.

    Snyder said these devices may alert users when their heart rate, skin temperature or some other part of their physiology signals of infection or another ailment.

    “You might wonder, ‘Are these sniffles allergies, or am I getting sick?’ These algorithms could help people determine if they should stay home in case their body is fighting off an infection,” Snyder said.

  • WHO Has Changed Its Advice On Face Masks

    WHO Has Changed Its Advice On Face Masks

    The World Health Organization Friday changed its advice on face masks amid the coronavirus pandemic, saying they should be worn in places where the virus is widespread and physical distancing is difficult.

    The use of masks has been a hot topic ever since the pandemic first emerged in China in December.

    “In light of evolving evidence, WHO advises that governments should encourage the general public to wear masks where there is widespread transmission and physical distancing is difficult,” said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

    In areas with community-level virus transmission, “we advise that people aged 60 years or over, or those with underlying conditions, should wear a medical mask in situations where physical distancing is not possible”, he added.

    But the UN health agency stressed that facemasks alone “will not protect you from COVID-19” — and people suffering with the virus should not be out in public if they can avoid it.

    The WHO maintained its recommendation that people who are sick with COVID-19 symptoms should stay at home and if it is absolutely necessary for them or their contacts to leave home, they should wear a medical mask.

    As before, those caring for an infected person at home should wear a medical mask when in the same room; and health workers should wear medical masks plus protective equipment when dealing with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 patients.

    But in an update affecting healthcare workers, the WHO now recommends that in areas with widespread virus transmission, all people working in clinical sections of a health facility should wear medical masks — not just those dealing with patients with COVID-19.

    – Three-layer facemask –

    The WHO also issued new guidance on the composition of non-medical fabric masks for the general public, advising that they should consist of at least three layers of different material.

    The inner layer should be made of a water-absorbent material such as cotton, the middle layer — which acts as a filter — from a material like non-woven polypropylene, while the outer layer should be a water-resistant material such as polyester.

    The WHO’s emergencies director Michael Ryan stressed that putting on a fabric mask is primarily about preventing the wearer from possibly infecting others, rather than self-protection.

    “It’s an altruistic act,” he said.

    And Tedros stressed that masks were only one part of an effective strategy to suppress the virus — and should not lure people into a false sense of security.

    He said they were not a replacement for physical distancing and hand hygiene.

    “Find, isolate, test and care for every case, and to trace and quarantine every contact. That is what we know works. That is every country’s best defence against COVID-19.”

    The novel coronavirus has infected at least 6.7 million people and killed more than 390,000 since the outbreak first emerged in China last December, according to a tally from official sources compiled by AFP.