March 15 coronavirus news

school superintendent
School superintendent on reopening: It felt scary
02:31 - Source: CNN

What you need to know

  • Germany, France and Italy are the latest countries to suspend use of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine following reports of possible side effects.
  • Dr. Anthony Fauci says federal Covid-19 guidelines “will be much more liberal” by July 4th if US cases drop as more Americans are vaccinated. So far, about 1 in 5 Americans have had at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine.
  • Meanwhile, much of Italy will be under new lockdown orders starting Monday as coronavirus variants spread.

Our live coverage has ended for the day. Follow the latest on the pandemic here.

46 Posts

Vice President Harris lays out Covid-19 relief plan and urges vaccinations in Nevada

Vice President Kamala Harris broke down the benefits Americans will receive from the American Rescue Plan in her most formal but still brief remarks of the trip, kicking off the Biden administration’s “Help is here” tour at the Culinary Academy in North Las Vegas.

“Help is here,” Harris declared, noting that President Biden once said, “Help is on the way,” and has now signed the bill into law.

“So, I’m here to also make sure we get the word out, so folks know what they are entitled to receive,” she said. “And also, by extension, they remember, this is supposed to be the job of your government. Which is when you’re suffering, when you need a helping hand, when you need a little assistance, to just get over a moment of crisis you didn’t create. That’s when leaders are supposed to kick in to say, “I’m here I see you and I will help you.’”

Standing in front of boxed produce, Harris broke down the benefits of the bill from the direct payments, child tax credits to COBRA subsidies. She spoke about the administration’s efforts to make sure the bill provided equity, describing at one point the difference between charity and duty.    

She also talked with employees today about how many union members are getting vaccines and vaccine hesitancy in communities of color.

“Whatever vaccine you are offered, you need to take,” Harris told employees at a fulfillment center, after reiterating that she, Biden and Nevada’s governor all got different vaccines.

Portugal joins other European countries in suspending AstraZeneca vaccinations

Portugal has announced that it is suspending use of the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford as a “precaution.”

Portugal is the latest European country to halt AstraZeneca vaccinations following reports of patients developing blood clots post inoculation. France, Germany, Italy and Spain have also suspended use of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine.

“Portuguese health authorities today decided to suspend the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine against Covid-19 for reasons of precaution and public health,” Portugal’s national health authority said Monday in a statement. 

According to the national health authority, the decision was taken “due to reports of the appearance of blood clots in vaccinated people.”

The decision comes despite assertions from the United Kingdom’s Joint Committee on Vaccinations and Immunizations (JCVI) that the vaccine has been “rigorously tested for safety.”  

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) also said Monday that the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine outweigh the risks, adding that the number of people developing blood clots after vaccination does not seem to be higher than in the general population.

The agency said it would hold an emergency meeting on Thursday to advise on “any further actions that may need to be taken.”  

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti: "We don't have enough doses yet" to meet Biden's May 1 deadline

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti speaks during an interview on March 15.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said Monday that his city does not “have enough doses yet” to meet President Biden’s goal of making all adults over the age of 18 eligible for a coronavirus vaccine by May 1.

“I would like to see more doses,” Garcetti told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer. “We’ve used 98% of what was sent.”

Garcetti made it clear that his city has the capacity to handle vaccinations and are making progress within minority communities. 

“We have the largest mass vaccination site in the world at Dodger Stadium,” Garcetti said. “And we’re doing vaccine equity. Dr. Fauci praised us last week for mobile teams that are going to Black and brown communities, in-home vaccinations that we’re doing as well as our use of technology and free rides to text people when appointments open up and offering free rides.”

“I’ve been very pleased to see this administration each week adding more and more doses and I’m hopeful in a week or two we’ll finally get the flood of vaccines that we’ve been promised, because we’re ready to double overnight the number of shots we’re putting in arms here in L.A.”

Watch:

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01:08 - Source: cnn

Brazil orders 138 million doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, official says

Brazilian Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello speaks during a press conference in Brasilia on March 15.

Brazil has ordered 100 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine and 38 million doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, Health Minister Eduardo Pazuello announced Monday. 

Pazuello said he plans to have the entire population of Brazil vaccinated by the end of the year.

The contract signed with Pfizer estimates the delivery of one million doses in April, another 2.5 million in May, 10 million in June, 10 million in July, 30 million in August, and 45.5 million in September.

The Johnson & Johnson contract says that 16.9 million doses will be delivered in August and another 21.1 million in November.

Meanwhile another 13 million doses of Moderna vaccine are currently under negotiation. Last Friday, the ministry announced a deal for 10 million doses of the Sputnik V vaccine.

The country also has another 20 million doses of the vaccine from Bharat Biotech.

The Brazilian government is expecting to have 562 million doses by the end of December, including Covax, AstraZeneca and Coronavac.

But Brazilian health regular agency Anvisa has so far only approved the use of AstraZeneca, CoronaVac and Pfizer’s vaccines.

More than a million people in Kentucky are now vaccinated, governor says

Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear speaks during a briefing on March 15.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear announced Monday that they’ve crossed the milestone of one million people vaccinated for Covid-19 in the state.

During an afternoon news conference, Beshear said 1,002,356 Kentuckians have had the vaccine and 70% of those vaccines have gone to residents who are 50 and older.

The governor said the state has seen nine weeks of declining cases.

“We are getting very close to a total case number that’s close to 10% of our population,” Beshear said.

The governor also said more than 5,000 Kentuckians have died from Covid-19 since the beginning of the pandemic. There have been at least 416,610 cases of Covid-19 since pandemic started.

Trump should encourage his supporters to get the vaccine, former Covid-19 testing czar says

Adm. Brett Giroir speaks during an interview on March 15.

Former President Trump should encourage his supporters to get the Covid-19 vaccine, Adm. Brett Giroir said Monday. 

“The people who follow former President are very committed to President Trump, and I think his leadership still matters a great deal,” Giroir told CNN’s Jake Tapper.  

Giroir, who served as Health and Human Services assistant secretary under Trump, noted that the vaccines were developed under the Trump administration. 

“I think it’s very important for former President Trump, as well as the vice president to actively encourage all the followers to get the vaccine,” he said. 

About 47% of people who supported Trump in the 2020 election said they would not get a Covid-19 vaccine if it became available to them, a recent NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll found. 

Giroir said he did not know Trump was vaccinated until he heard it reported on the news, and is hesitant to comment on anyone’s private medical decisions.

He went on to say there was a clear strategy on the day that President Biden took office and the ramp up of vaccines has been approximately the same as he would have predicted under the Trump administration. 

“I think he’s done some very good things and positive things, but it’s built on the foundation that we built in the Trump administration,” Giroir said. “And that’s the way it should be. There’s no 180 degree turns.” 

The idea that the Trump administration did not provide a sufficient national strategy for administering Covid-19 vaccines is “a false narrative,” he said. 

“The foundation was there. There’s no reason to cast aspersions,” Giroir said. “This is a great American story. A Republican administration started this, laid the foundation, the baton has been passed, and the Biden administration are taking it even to greater levels.” 

Watch:

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00:48 - Source: cnn

China will donate 300,000 doses of Covid-19 vaccines to UN peacekeepers

China is donating 300,000 doses of Covid-19 vaccines to UN peacekeepers, with a priority given to peacekeeping missions in Africa, China’s ambassador to the UN, Zhang Jun, announced in a letter to the UN secretary general.

“The fight against the COVID-19 pandemic is the most pressing task facing the world today,” the letter said.

It’s unclear which type of Covid-19 vaccine China would be donating.

Connecticut expects to expand vaccine eligibility to people 16 and older by April 5

A dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine is prepared on March 14 in Stamford, Connecticut.

Connecticut is expecting to expand vaccine eligibility to people 16 and older by April 5, according to a news release from Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont’s office.

The Biden administration told the state to anticipate receiving “a significant increase in supplies” of all three Covid-19 vaccines over the next few weeks, the release stated. Lamont added that by early April the state anticipates receiving more than 200,000 first doses per week. 

Scheduling will open to all individuals age 45 to 54 on March 19 and tentatively on April 5, scheduling will open to those 16 and older, the release added.

Currently, Connecticut is vaccinating health care workers, medical first responders, people 55 and older, residents and staff of long-term care facilities and select congregate settings, staff at pre-K-12 schools, professional child care providers, the release stated.

Pennsylvania will ease restrictions on restaurants and businesses starting April 4

An empty restaurant is seen in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on January 17.

Due to a decline in Covid-19 cases and climbing vaccination rates, Pennsylvania will ease restrictions on restaurants and businesses, and increase mass gathering limits starting April 4, according to a news release from Gov. Tom Wolf’s office Monday.

Indoor dining capacity at restaurants that are self-certified or are undergoing the self-certification process will be raised to 75%, the release states. Restaurants that are not self-certified can raise their capacity to 50%. To be self-certified, restaurants must agree to strictly comply with all public health safety guidelines and orders.

The curfew for removing drinks from tables will be lifted in restaurants, bar service will resume, and customers will no longer have to order food in order to purchase alcohol on April 4, according to the release. 

Capacity limits for personal service facilities, gyms and entertainment facilities like casinos, malls and theaters will increase to 75%. Indoor venues will now be allowed to have up to 25% capacity and outdoor venues will be allowed 50% capacity, the release added. 

Pennsylvania’s Covid-19 numbers: The state reported 1,388 new cases of coronavirus Monday in addition to 1,914 new cases of Covid-19 on Sunday, according to data from the Department of Health. 

Pennsylvania had 14 additional Covid-19 deaths over the weekend for a total of 24,587 deaths from Covid-19, the department added. 

The state has administered more than 3.6 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines with more than 1.2 million people fully vaccinated. An average of 76,000 people are being vaccinated a day.

Note: These numbers were released by the Pennsylvania Department of Health, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Spain joins Germany, France and Italy in halting AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccinations

A healthcare worker prepares doses of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine on March 5 in Rome, Italy.

Spain joined Germany, France and Italy today in halting use of the AstraZeneca vaccine in response to a small number of people across Europe suffering blood clots – and some dying – after receiving the shot.

Spain’s suspension will last for two weeks, Health Minister Carolina Darias announced at a nationally televised news conference Monday.

It’s a “temporary and precautionary” suspension, she said, “until the risks can be evaluated by the European Medicines Agency.”

The EMA reiterated on Monday that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the risks and that data did not indicate people were more likely to have blood clots after receiving the vaccine.

The agency has an emergency meeting on Thursday about the issue.

Some Trump administration CDC guidance was not grounded in science, agency review finds

A review of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Covid-19 guidance has found that some of the agency’s guidance during the Trump Administration was not grounded in science and free from undue influence, according to a statement from a CDC spokesperson.

The review found that some guidance “Used less direct language than available evidence supported”; “Needed to be updated to reflect the latest scientific evidence”; and “Presented the underlying science base for guidance inconsistently,” according to the spokesperson.

Additionally, the review identified three documents that were not primarily authored by the CDC and yet were presented as CDC documents, according to the spokesperson. The agency removed two of the documents from its website, and updated and replaced the third.

The review was ordered by President Biden’s CDC Director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, in response to concerns about some of the CDC’s guidance during the first year of the pandemic, when the Trump Administration was in charge of the agency.

News of the CDC review was first reported by The Washington Post.

Europe has nearly 8 million unused AstraZeneca doses

A vial of AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine is handled on March 15 in Dippoldiswalde, Germany.

Europe has nearly eight million doses of AstraZeneca vaccine sitting unused, European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control data shows as of Sunday.

That is more than half the total number of doses distributed to European nations, the data shows.

It shows 14,851,497 doses have been distributed, while 6,895,411 have been used – leaving 7,970,323 doses unused. 

Only Lithuania has used its full allocation, the data shows. 

The ECDC notes that member states are asked to upload data at least twice a week, on Tuesdays for the preceding week and Friday for the current week, so there may be a lag in reporting. 

White House would welcome Trump's help in promoting vaccine

White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki speaks during the daily press briefing at the White House on March 15 in Washington, DC.

The White House said it would welcome former President Trump’s help in promoting the vaccine to his supporters but cited other ways to convince conservatives to get the shot.

“If former President Trump woke up tomorrow and wanted to be more vocal about the safety and efficacy of the vaccine certainly we’d support that,” press secretary Jen Psaki said at a Monday press briefing.

Health officials, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, have said Trump’s voice in promoting the vaccine would go far in convincing Republicans to get it. Polls have shown Republicans are more likely to say they are wary or don’t plan to get inoculated.

Trump has made small efforts to promote the vaccine, including in a speech at CPAC, but he did not appear in a public service announcement featuring former presidents that was released last week.

Psaki noted those presidents — Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter — “did not need an engraved invitation” to promote the vaccine.

CNN reported that Trump wasn’t approached to participate in the PSA, and expressed little interest in joining his predecessors to promote the vaccine.

Still, Psaki said the administration was focused on using “trusted messengers” to convince wary populations to get the vaccine. 

She said Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins, the head of the National Institutes of Health, would meet with evangelical leaders on Tuesday to discuss vaccines and the best way to promote them among that population.

And she cited polls showing more Republicans would trust a doctor or health care provider when deciding whether to get a shot.

US child cases of Covid-19 decline for 8th consecutive week 

Last week at least 52,695 new child Covid-19 cases were identified through testing, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. 

However, it’s the eighth consecutive week with a decline in new cases. 

Children still represent more than 13% of all cases in the US and more than 3.28 million children in the US have tested positive for Covid-19 as of Feb. 25. 

Children made up between 6% and 18.6% of those who were tested for Covid-19, and 5.3% to 31% of children tested were positive for the coronavirus, depending on the state.

Children are still considered much less likely than adults to develop severe symptoms of Covid-19 or to die from the disease. Children represented 1.3% to 3% of total reported hospitalizations for Covid-19, based on the information provided by 24 states and New York City. Only 0.1%-2.1% of all cases of Covid-19 in children required hospitalization. 

10 states reported zero child deaths among the 43 states that provided data on Covid-19 mortality. 

Mississippi will open up Covid-19 vaccination appointments to all residents starting tomorrow  

Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said Monday that the state will be opening up Covid-19 vaccination appointments to all residents 16 and older starting Tuesday. 

Reeves said there will be around 10,000 appointments available over the next three weeks and encouraged those over the age of 50 to “lock them down.”  

According to the governor’s office, Reeves has been hinting that he was ready to do this for a few weeks.  

“He’s been saying for a while that he was ready to open it up to anyone of any age who wants to get it. Today is the official announcement,” the governor’s press secretary Bailey Martin told CNN Monday.  

See his tweet:

AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine benefits outweigh risks, European Medicines Agency reiterates

A doctor holds a vial of the AstraZeneca vaccine at a drive-thru clinic in Milan, Italy, on March 15.

The benefits of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine outweigh the risks, and the number of people developing blood clots after vaccination does not seem to be higher than in the general population, the European Medicines Agency (EMA) said Monday.

The statement comes after Germany, France and Italy announced temporary suspensions of use of the vaccine.

The agency said it would hold an emergency meeting on Thursday to advise on “any further actions that may need to be taken.”

The EMA said last week after Denmark suspended use of the vaccine over the death of a person with a blood clot that the benefits of the vaccine outweighed the risks.

Canada sticks with AstraZeneca vaccine despite European concerns

Michael Gray moves a pallet of AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine doses in Ontario, Canada, on March 3.

Canada says it will continue with its rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine despite concerns in Europe about a link between the shot and blood clots. 

Health Canada confirmed last week that it is aware of reports of adverse events in Europe following immunization with the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, but said “the benefits of the vaccine continue to outweigh its risks.” 

“At this time, there is no indication that the vaccine caused these events. To date, no adverse events related to the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine, or the version manufactured by the Serum Institute of India, have been reported to Health Canada or the Public Health Agency of Canada,” the statement posted last week said. 

Canada’s vaccine regulator approved the AstraZeneca shot late last month, approving it for all Canadians over the age of 18, including seniors. However, Canada’s National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) chose not to recommend the AstraZeneca’s vaccine for people aged 65 years and older, due to what it called an insufficient amount of evidence for that age group.

Canadian provinces, responsible for administering vaccines, have taken different approaches, with some restricting the AstraZeneca vaccine to those under the age of 65.

Earlier Monday, Trudeau visited a mass vaccination site in downtown Montreal, a city that remains a stubborn hotspot for coronavirus infections. 

Trudeau said that while he was relieved to see his mother get vaccinated in recent days, he has no firm date for receiving his own vaccine shot. 

“I’m not overly focused on when my turn will come. When it comes, I will gladly get vaccinated but I will wait my turn,” he said. 

New York City has administered more than 2.8 million vaccines, mayor says

A pharmacist administers a Covid-19 vaccine dose to a nursing home resident in Brooklyn, New York, on January 5.

New York City has administered at least 2,827,436 Covid-19 vaccines to date, Mayor Bill de Blasio said during a news conference Monday, adding that the figure was “more than the population of Chicago.”

De Blasio also said the city has set a goal to vaccinate any homebound residents within the next seven weeks.

The city will reach out to their own list of NYC residents with disabilities to facilitate in-home vaccinations and homebound persons will be able to register for vaccinations on NYC.gov, according to Victor Calise, commissioner of the New York City Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities.

On Monday, New York City recorded a 6.16% Covid-19 positivity rate with 3,123 new cases. There are currently 3.38 cases of Covid-19 per 100,000 people, de Blasio said.

Note on the data: These numbers were released by the City of New York, and may not line up exactly in real time with CNN’s database drawn from Johns Hopkins University and the Covid Tracking Project.

Netherlands lab received 10 reports of blood clots in AstraZeneca recipients

A Dutch lab that monitors the use of pharmaceuticals says that it has received reports of 10 instances of blood clots in people who received the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, but none had the low blood platelet condition reportedly observed in Norway and Denmark.

Despite pausing the use of that vaccine for two weeks, the Dutch health ministry has made clear that it is still an open question whether blood clots have “any link with vaccination at all.”

“Thrombosis is of course a very common complaint,” Health Minister Hugo de Jonge said Monday. “And so if you are vaccinating a large group of people, it’s not crazy that there will also be people with thrombosis after vaccination.” 

The Lareb Pharmacovigilance Center said it had not received any reports in the Netherlands of vaccine recipients with both blood clots and lowered platelet count.

Norway announces the death of a person vaccinated with AstraZeneca

A person who received the AstraZeneca vaccine in Norway has died following blood clots, bleeding and a low platelet count, the Norwegian Medicines Agency said Monday.

The cases “present a rare disease picture,” the agency said: “They have a very unusual combination of low platelet counts, blood clots in small and large vessels and bleeding.”

The agency said Norway had not seen similar combinations of symptoms with other vaccines. 

Norway is among several European countries that have suspended the use of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine while the European Union’s medicines regulator investigates whether the shot could be linked to a number of reports of blood clots.

These are the European countries suspending use of the AstraZeneca vaccine

A growing list of European countries have suspended use of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine as a precuationary measure pending review from Europe’s health regulator.

France became the latest country to do so, following Italy and Germany earlier today, while they await a ruling by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) Tuesday afternoon.

Previous guidance from the EMA has said the benefits of the shot outweigh any potential risks.

Here’s a look at the European countries that have suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine so far:

  • Denmark: On Thursday, Denmark suspended AstraZeneca vaccinations for 14 days as a “precautionary measure” as it investigates “signs of a possible serious side effect in the form of fatal blood clots” after one Danish person died following vaccination, according to Danish health officials.
  • Norway: On Thursday, Norway chose to “pause” vaccinations following reports of the death in Denmark. The Norwegian Institute of Public Health said similar cases had been reported in Norway, but “mainly in the elderly where there is often another underlying disease as well.” 
  • Iceland: On Thursday, Iceland suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine. There have been no reports of patients developing blood clots in the country. 
  • Bulgaria: On Friday, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov ordered a halt to all AstraZeneca vaccinations until the EMA “rejects all doubts” about the vaccine’s safety.
  • Ireland: On Sunday, Ireland decided to temporarily suspend the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine to “maintain confidence” in its vaccine program, according to the Chair of its National Immunization Advisory Committee.
  • Netherlands: On Sunday, the Dutch government said it would pause AstraZeneca vaccinations for two weeks “as a precautionary measure and pending further investigation.”
  • Germany: On Monday, German Health Minister Jens Spahn said the country was “precautiously” halting vaccinations with the AstraZeneca vaccine following similar moves by other European countries.
  • Italy: On Monday, Italy’s medicines agency banned the use of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine “as a precaution and temporarily,” pending a meeting of the European Medicines Agency.
  • France: On Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron said they were suspending use of the vaccine until a definitive ruling from Europe’s health regulator on Tuesday afternoon. “We have one principle: be guided by science and competent health authorities, and do so within a coordinated European approach,” Macron said. 

Meanwhile, the UK continues to use the AstraZeneca vaccine and maintains that it is safe. Earlier Monday, the deputy head of the United Kingdom’s Joint Committee on Vaccinations and Immunizations said there is no indication of a link between blood clots and the AstraZeneca vaccine and is encouraging people to continue to get the shot.

Italy joins growing list of countries suspending AstraZeneca vaccine

A healthcare worker of the Italian Army prepares doses of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine on March 5 in Rome.

Italy’s medicines agency is banning the use of the AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine “as a precaution and temporarily,” pending a meeting of the European Medicines Agency, the Italian agency AIFA announced Monday.

France and Germany announced similar suspensions on Monday, while the UK said it would continue using the vaccine.

France suspends use of AstraZeneca vaccine pending review from Europe's health regulator

Doctor Marie Msika Razon prepares doses of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine before vaccinating patients aged over 50 and suffering from a comorbidity, at her medical office in Paris, on February 25.

France has suspended use of the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford pending review by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) on Tuesday, French President Emmanuel Macron said. 

“The EMA will give its assessment tomorrow afternoon on the use of this vaccine,” he added.

The decision follows a number of other European countries who have suspended use of AstraZeneca’s vaccine pending further assessment, despite assertions from the United Kingdom’s Joint Committee on Vaccinations and Immunizations  (JCVI) that the vaccine has been “rigorously tested for safety.”

“We have one principle: be guided by science and competent health authorities, and do so within a coordinated European approach,” Macron concluded. 

No evidence of blood clots linked to the AstraZeneca vaccine, says Public Health England

There is no indication of a link between blood clots and the AstraZeneca vaccine, the deputy head of the United Kingdom’s Joint Committee on Vaccinations and Immunizations said Monday, as more European countries suspended its use.

The UK has administered nearly twice as many doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine as the entire European Union plus European Economic Area, which have distributed 6.9 million doses as of Sunday, according to the ECDC.

Go There: CNN answers your questions about traveling in the pandemic as more Americans head to airports

A traveler walks through LaGuardia Airport in New York, on March 6.

More people have traveled by air in the last four days than any four-day period of the pandemic. The Transportation Security Administration says it screened 1,357,111 people at airports on Friday — a pandemic record and a number not seen since March 15, 2020.

CNN correspondent Pete Muntean answered viewers’ questions from Dulles International Airport in Virginia where passengers can now get coronavirus tests before they fly.

Watch:

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14:36 - Source: cnn

UK variant of Covid-19 will be dominant in US by end of March or early April, CDC director says

The B.1.1.7 coronavirus variant, first identified in the United Kingdom, is still projected to become the dominant variant in the United States by the end of this month or early April, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a White House briefing on Monday.

At least 4,858 cases of coronavirus variants first spotted in the UK, South Africa and Brazil have been reported in the United States, according to data updated Sunday by the CDC.

Most of these cases, 4,690, are the more contagious variant known as B.1.1.7. This variant has been found in 48 states, Puerto Rico and Washington, DC. Walensky said on Monday that “in some states, Florida and California, it’s up to 25%, and in other states it’s lower.”

CDC says this does not represent the total number of such cases circulating in the US, but rather just those that have been found by analyzing positive samples. The agency cautions that its numbers may not immediately match those of state and local health departments.

CDC considering guidelines that could change physical distancing at schools from 6 feet to 3 feet

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is reviewing new data to see if physical distancing rules in schools should be changed to advise people to stay at least 3 feet apart instead of at least 6 feet apart, according to a federal official.

The official pointed to a study published last week that showed “no significant difference” in rates of Covid-19 at Massachusetts public schools that had implemented social distancing rules of more than 3 feet apart compared to those with rules to stay more than 6 feet apart.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser, was asked about the study by CNN’s Jake Tapper on “State of the Union” Sunday.

“The CDC is very well aware that data are accumulating making it look more like 3 feet are okay, under certain circumstances. They’re analyzing that and I can assure you within a reasonable period of time – quite reasonable – they will be giving guidelines according to the data that they have. It won’t be very long,” Fauci said.

More on the study: In the study, published Wednesday in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, researchers at Harvard Medical School and Boston University School of Medicine and their colleagues looked at data from 537,336 students in 251 Massachusetts school districts and did not find a difference in Covid-19 rates between schools that mandated at least 3 feet of physical distance compared to 6 feet – as long as everyone wore masks.

The study notes that while the CDC recommends 6 feet or more between students, the World Health Organization recommends 1 meter, which is 3.3 feet, and the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends 3-6 feet.

“Lower physical distancing policies can be adopted in school settings with masking mandates without negatively impacting student or staff safety,” the authors concluded.

CDC director urges Americans to continue Covid-19 mitigation practices

US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky is urging the public to continue wearing masks, physical distancing and other Covid-19 safety measures

During a White House Covid-19 Response Team briefing Monday, Walensky warned that some European countries have seen a resurgence of Covid-19 cases after relaxing mitigation measures. These countries have had “strikingly similar” Covid-19 trends and surges during the pandemic as the United States, Walensky said.

With clocks springing ahead over the weekend, a recent surge in travel and the beginning of spring break, Walensky said she now worries that the United States could see a spike in Covid-19 cases as well.

We have seen footage of people enjoying spring break festivities, maskless. This is all in the context of still 50,000 cases per day,” Walensky said on Monday.

CDC director: We still have much work to do

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Biden administration increasing Medicare reimbursement for Covid-19 shots

The Biden administration announced it will increase Medicare reimbursement for Covid-19 shots, another step toward the administration’s goal of more equitable vaccine distribution. 

“We’re announcing that the Biden administration will nearly double Medicare’s reimbursement rates for administering Covid vaccines from about $23 per shot to $40 per shot. That’s $80 total for a two dose vaccine,” White House senior Covid adviser Andy Slavitt said at Monday’s Covid briefing. 

The move, Slavitt said, will “make it easier for more healthcare providers to get out into communities and give more Covid shots to people in need,” which will help get vaccines to the nation’s underserved communities more expeditiously.

Slavitt also explained that through the Covid relief bill, the administration will also be covering 100% of the cost for Medicaid and children’s health insurance beneficiaries to get vaccinated.

More evidence severe Covid-19 can affect brain function, study finds

A new study published Monday provides additional evidence that severe Covid-19 can affect brain function.

The study, published in the journal JAMA Network Open, used advanced techniques to examine the brains of people with severe Covid-19.

The study found that patients with severe Covid-19 – and no other clear reason for their neurologic symptoms – were more likely to have movement disorders such as tremor or seizures, frontal lobe syndrome or brainstem impairment, which can cause problems with planning and social behavior.

These patients were defined as having Covid-19-related encephalopathy, or CORE.

The study was conducted at a single hospital in Paris between March 30 and June 11, 2020. It included 78 patients with severe Covid-19 who also underwent a special test looking at electrical firing of brain cells during their hospitalization, called an electroencephalogram, or EEG. Many, but not all, of these patients also had other advanced imaging techniques performed, such as brain magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI

Of the 78 patients included in the study, nine were found to have CORE

While the cause of brain changes in people with severe Covid-19 is unknown, the findings reinforce the hypothesis that the virus could be invading the frontal lobe through nerves in the nose, the researchers said.

The researchers also developed a tool using the patient’s clinical presentation, EEG and MRI to predict which people are more likely to develop CORE. But more research on CORE is needed to determine the utility of such a tool.

Covid-19 protocols force Masters to cancel annual Par 3 contest

A general view of play on the fifth hole during the Par 3 Contest prior to the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 10, 2019 in Augusta, Georgia.

The 2021 Masters Par 3 Contest will not be played when the tournament begins next month due to social distancing protocols, Augusta National announced on Monday. 

The club hopes the event will resume in 2022.

The annual contest, which usually occurs the day before the start of the Masters tournament, was canceled last year as well after the tournament was moved from April to November because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The 85th Masters, scheduled for April 8 to 11 in Augusta, Georgia, will have a limited, unspecified number of spectators. 

The tournament will have similar health and safety standards to those instituted last November.  

Moderna launches trial of new easier-to-distribute Covid-19 vaccine

Moderna announced it has launched an early-stage trial of an updated Covid-19 vaccine.

The vaccine is refrigerator stable, so it would be easier to distribute. The company is testing it as a single-dose vaccine as well as testing it as a double dose.

In future trials, Moderna said that the company will also test this version of the vaccine to see if it could work as a booster. Moderna, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson have said that they will be testing boosters, in case their current vaccines aren’t as effective against variants.

Few people have missed their second dose of Covid-19 vaccine so far, CDC data show

Nurse Liliana Ocampo administers the second dose of the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine into the arm of Sister Patricia Supple, 86, on March 3, in Los Angeles, California at the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet independent living center.

Most people who have received a first dose of Covid-19 vaccine are getting their second dose on time, according to early data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But CDC researchers warn that the initial groups prioritized to receive the vaccine – health care workers and long-term care facility residents – have had easy access to a second dose through their workplace or residence.

“As priority groups broaden, adherence to the recommended dosing interval might decrease,” the researchers wrote in their report published on Monday. 

For the Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, it is recommended for second doses to be administered 21 and 28 days later, respectively, but the researchers noted in their report that up to 42 days between doses is permissible if needed.

The report includes data on more than 37 million people who received at least their first dose of Covid-19 vaccine between Dec. 14 and Feb. 14.

The researchers analyzed the data, taking a close look at when the first dose was received, whether a second dose was received and whether that second dose was received on time. The data came from 58 jurisdictions across the United States.

The researchers found that among those where enough time had gone by to receive a second dose, 88% of people had completed their second dose, 8.6% had not but there was still enough time to receive their second dose, and 3.4% had missed the second dose completely – meaning at least 42 days had gone by since receiving their first dose.

Among those in the data who had received both doses, the researchers found that 95.6% received their second dose within the recommended time interval.

The researchers noted that several winter weather events led to distribution challenges and vaccination clinics canceling appointments during the study, and more research is needed to examine the completion of second doses over a longer period of time.

Germany halts use of AstraZeneca vaccine

Medical staff Thomas Holler gives a jab of the AstraZeneca vaccine at a vaccine center in Bremen, northwestern Germany, on February 26.

Germany is “precautiously” halting vaccinations with the AstraZeneca vaccine, according to CNNs German affiliate n-tv.  

The decision today is purely a precautionary measure. It is a purely scientific and not a political decision. And that’s why I’m following the recommendation of the Paul Ehrlich Institute, ” a statement by German Health Minister Jens Spahn said.

“In order to maintain confidence in the vaccine, we have to give our experts in Germany and the EU the time to review the latest incidents.We are pausing to check. The result of the check is open and that’s why we are now counting on the EMA, ideally, coming to its decision and recommendation in the course of this week,” he continued.

Germany is now the seventh European country to suspend AstraZeneca’s use despite advice from the European Union’s medicines regulator that the benefits of the shot outweigh any potential risks.

Here’s a look at the other EU countries that have suspended use:

  • Denmark: On Thursday, March 11, Denmark suspended AstraZeneca vaccinations for 14 days as a “precautionary measure” as it investigates “signs of a possible serious side effect in the form of fatal blood clots” after one Danish person died following vaccination, according to Danish health officials.
  • Norway: On Thursday, March 11, Norway chose to “pause” vaccinations following reports of the death in Denmark. The Norwegian Institute of Public Health said similar cases had been reported in Norway, but “mainly in the elderly where there is often another underlying disease as well.” 
  • Iceland: On Thursday, March 11, Iceland suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine. There have been no reports of patients developing blood clots in the country. 
  • Bulgaria: On Friday, March 12, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov ordered a halt to all AstraZeneca vaccinations until the EMA “rejects all doubts” about the vaccine’s safety.
  • Ireland: On Sunday, March 14, Ireland decided to temporarily suspend the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine to “maintain confidence” in its vaccine program, according to the Chairman of its National Immunization Advisory Committee.
  • Netherlands: On Sunday, March 14, the Dutch government said it would pause AstraZeneca vaccinations for two weeks “as a precautionary measure and pending further investigation.”

Covid-19 testing begins at two DC-area airports as pandemic air travel breaks records

Travelers walk through Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on February 2.

More coronavirus testing facilities are opening up at airports as pandemic air travel continues to break records.

Two testing locations opened up before security at Reagan National Airport and Dulles International Airport on Monday morning. The new partnership is between the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority and XpresCheck—the company known for its in-airport XpresSpa chain. The new locations are the tenth and eleventh at airports across the country.

Passengers can pay $200 to get a rapid molecular test for while-you-wait results or $75 to get to get an Abbot ID Now PCR with results in one to three days. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says both international and domestic travelers should get tested before and after their trip.

“Infrastructure like this in airports is going to be part of the new normal that give people comfort,” XpresCheck CEO Doug Satzman tells CNN. He says the company will also roll out a rapid PCR test in April.

Saltzman says those who test positive will be told to quarantine either at home or a hotel and their information will be referred to the CDC in hopes that passengers are prevented from boarding a plane. The CDC says it maintains a public health Do Not Board list, which is independent of the TSA-administered Do Not Fly list.

Fauci: Study suggests 3 feet may be enough social distance in schools

Dr. Anthony Fauci attends an event at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, on February 11. 

Top Biden medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci on Sunday gave his view on a new Massachusetts study that found “no significant difference” between six feet of physical distancing versus three feet of physical distancing in schools.

On CNN’s “State of the Union,” Jake Tapper pressed Fauci on the research.

Fauci said the findings do indicate to him that three feet of distancing is good enough and that the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is aware of the new data.

Biden will announce key official today that will oversee implementation of Covid-19 relief law

Gene Sperling speaks during a conference in Kalgoorlie, Australia, in 2015.

President Biden will announce today that Gene Sperling, a former top economic official in the last two Democratic presidential administrations, will serve as the point person in overseeing the implementation of the newly signed $1.9 trillion Covid relief law, according to two people briefed on the plan and a senior administration official.

Biden will announce Sperling’s appointment at the White House today at 1:45 p.m. ET during remarks about implementation of the law, according to the senior administration official.

Sperling’s mandate will be to get money out the door quickly and maximize its impact, the people said, while also serving as the lead official in partnership with state and local officials on the receiving end of billions of dollars from the law.

He will serve as the lead in advising and ensuring local officials get what they need, while also holding them accountable for any mismanagement of funds, the individuals briefed on the plan said.

Sperling has spent more than a decade at the highest levels of government, twice serving as the director of the National Economic Council, and will be tasked with ensuring all aspects of the sweeping relief law are put into place as designed.

In the next few weeks, the Biden administration will also launch a national vaccine promotional campaign aimed at encouraging hesitant Americans to get immunized, a marketing executive close to the project told CNN.

The advertisements are part of a $250 million Covid-19 education campaign run by the US Department of Health and Human Services, which will include a podcast hosted by “a well-known person” outside of government, the executive said.

Angela Merkel's party takes a beating in regional elections over coronavirus response

German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a press conference on March 9, in Berlin, Germany.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats took a beating in two state elections on Sunday amid growing public anger over the country’s sluggish vaccination rollout and a corruption scandal involving face mask production.

The historic losses come two months after the CDU elected a new party leader, Armin Laschet, and six months before a national vote that will see Merkel leave office after nearly two decades in power.

Merkel’s successor has not yet been chosen and Laschet will face serious questions over whether he is the right candidate to take her place on the ticket in September.

Commenting on the results in Rhineland-Palatinate and Baden-Wuerttemberg, states once considered party strongholds, Laschet said the CDU would have to do better work managing the coronavirus crisis.

The dual defeats are being seen, in part, as a reaction to the pace of Germany’s Covid-19 vaccination program, which has been dogged by supply shortages and bureaucracy. So far, the country of over 83 million people has administered less than nine million vaccinations – making it one of the slowest rollouts in Europe.

Frustration over the government’s handling of Covid-19 has been exacerbated by a recent face mask procurement scandal. Several lawmakers in Merkel’s conservative-led coalition have stepped down in recent days after accusations that they had received payments for securing face mask deals.

And after months of varying coronavirus restrictions and lockdowns, Germany is facing yet another surge in infections.

Third coronavirus wave threatens Europe, triggering fresh restrictions

A member of the medical staff tends to a patient in the Covid-19 unit of the Bolognini hospital in Bergamo, Italy, on March 12.

A third wave of the Covid-19 pandemic is threatening parts of Europe, forcing governments to reinstate restrictions first issued one year ago.

New variants of the coronavirus have been blamed for a spike in cases in France, Italy, Germany and Poland. The infection rate in the European Union is surging – now at the highest level in weeks.

Much of Italy was put in lockdown on Monday, with people only permitted out of their homes for essential errands. The restrictions will last through Easter weekend, when the entire country will become a red zone.

“More than a year after the start of the health emergency, we are unfortunately facing a new wave of infections,” Prime Minister Mario Draghi said Friday, after announcing the new measures, news agency Agence France Presse reported.

“The memory of what happened last spring is vivid, and we will do everything to prevent it from happening again,” he added.

In France, authorities are under pressure from doctors to issue more restrictions as the country grapples with a surge in cases that has pushed intensive care units in the Paris region to the brink.

French President Emmanuel Macron has issued restrictions and curfews for several regions, but has stopped short of a nationwide lockdown. But on Sunday, Prime Minister Jean Castex said that if a lockdown was necessary he would “do it,” while urging the French to get vaccinated, Twitch website reported.  

On Monday, French newspapers marked the one-year anniversary of the country’s first lockdown. “One year of Covid, 90,000 dead, a great loss,” read the cover of left-wing newspaper Liberation. In the background were the names and ages of the deceased. 

European countries suspend AstraZeneca vaccinations despite advice from EU medicines regulator

Dutch Health Minister Hugo de Jonge arrives at the Binnenhof for the weekly Council of Ministers meeting in The Hague on March 5.

The Netherlands on Sunday became the latest European nation to suspend AstraZeneca vaccinations over blood clot concerns despite advice from the European Union’s medicines regulator that the benefits of the shot outweigh any potential risks.

Denmark, Norway, Iceland, Bulgaria and Ireland have also halted the vaccinations.

Dutch Health Minister Hugo de Jonge said on Monday that a “rare combination” of blood clots and lowered blood platelets in several AstraZeneca vaccine recipients in Norway and Denmark was “enough reason” to pause use of the vaccine in the Netherlands for two weeks.

While any causality remains an open question, reports about six cases in Norway and Denmark had given the Netherlands’ medicine authority enough reason “to press the pause button,” de Jonge said.

“Thrombosis is of course a very common complaint. And so if you are vaccinating a large group of people, it’s not crazy that there will also be people with thrombosis after vaccination. But in this case it is a very rare combination of thrombosis in which bleeding can also occur due to a reduced number of platelets,” he added.

The Health Minister had said as recently as Thursday that blood clots were occurring “not because of vaccination,” and that there was “no cause for concern.”

In a letter to parliament sent on Sunday, de Jonge wrote that the pause would be in effect until March 29, “pending further advice from the EMA,” or European Medicines Agency.

The EMA on Thursday advised that the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine outweigh the risks, and did not recommend suspending its use while investigation into thromboembolic events are ongoing. 

The EMA said it was aware that Denmark was suspending AstraZeneca vaccinations due to reports of blood clots in people who had received it, but said: “There is currently no indication that vaccination has caused these conditions, which are not listed as side effects with this vaccine.” 

The Danish Medicines Agency on Monday said the woman who died of a blood clot after receiving AstraZeneca in Denmark had an “unusual picture of illness around the death,” with a low number of platelets, blood clots in small and large vessels and bleeding.

“The clinical picture is highly unusual and is currently being thoroughly investigated by the European Medicines Agency,” the agency said in a statement.

Denmark is one of six European countries to suspend AstraZeneca’s use despite the EMA’s recommendation.

  • Denmark: On Thursday, March 11, Denmark suspended AstraZeneca vaccinations for 14 days as a “precautionary measure” as it investigates “signs of a possible serious side effect in the form of fatal blood clots” after one Danish person died following vaccination, according to Danish health officials.
  • Norway: On Thursday, March 11, Norway chose to “pause” vaccinations following reports of the death in Denmark. The Norwegian Institute of Public Health said similar cases had been reported in Norway, but “mainly in the elderly where there is often another underlying disease as well.” 
  • Iceland: On Thursday, March 11, Iceland suspended use of the AstraZeneca vaccine. There have been no reports of patients developing blood clots in the country. 
  • Bulgaria: On Friday, March 12, Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borissov ordered a halt to all AstraZeneca vaccinations until the EMA “rejects all doubts” about the vaccine’s safety.
  • Ireland: On Sunday, March 14, Ireland decided to temporarily suspend the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine to “maintain confidence” in its vaccine program, according to the Chairman of its National Immunization Advisory Committee.
  • Netherlands: On Sunday, March 14, the Dutch government said it would pause AstraZeneca vaccinations for two weeks “as a precautionary measure and pending further investigation.”

China has administered nearly 65 million Covid-19 vaccine doses

A medical worker prepares to administer a Sinovac Biotech Covid-19 vaccine in Hangzhou, China, on March 15.

China has administered 64.98 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines as of Sunday, health authorities said Monday.

The Chinese government hopes to vaccinate 40% of the country’s 1.4 billion people by June, respiratory disease expert Zhong Nanshan said previously.

Four domestic-made vaccines have been approved for conditional public use in China, two produced by state-owned Sinopharm, one by Sinovac Biotech and another by CanSinoBio.

Hong Kong expands priority groups for vaccine as city confronts growing cluster

Pharmacists are seen at a vaccination center run by the University of Hong Kong on March 13.

Hong Kong will expand its coronavirus vaccination drive to include people aged 30 to 59, authorities announced Monday, as the city faces a growing cluster of infections linked to a gym.

The expanded vaccine program, effective from Tuesday, will also include students over 16 years old studying abroad and domestic workers. It is expected to cover about 5.5 million of the city’s roughly 7 million population.

The city will also open 12 more centers for the Fosun-BioNTech vaccine starting Tuesday.

Speaking at a news conference Monday, the city’s officials said vaccination rates are currently “good” and that they may consider further relaxing social distancing rules if the public complies with measures such as mask-wearing.

Papua New Guinea reports surge in Covid-19 cases

Papua New Guinea reported 90 new Covid-19 cases Saturday, continuing a recent surge in infections that is raising concerns in the Pacific Island nation and in neighboring Australia.

Following a rise in cases since late February, PNG has now reported 2,173 total infections, with 21 related deaths, a government news release said Monday. 

Addressing a news conference Monday, the leader of Australia’s Queensland state, Annastacia Palaszczuk, said she hoped to speak with PNG Prime Minister James Marape in the next 24 hours.

The controller of the PNG Covid-19 national pandemic response, Police Commissioner David Manning, called on everyone in the country to follow the health measures in place to prevent further spread of the virus.

On March 9, Marape, the PNG Prime Minister, announced regulatory approval for the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, adding “we are now in the process of getting the vaccine across, hopefully by April”.

100 arrested as spring break crowds hit Miami Beach despite the pandemic

About 100 people have been arrested and two police officers injured as spring break crowds gathered in Florida’s Miami Beach over the weekend, the city says.

Miami Beach Police arrested 30 people Saturday night, following Friday night’s unruly crowds that resulted in two Miami Beach police officers being sent to the hospital with injuries, the police department said in a post on Twitter.

Friday night’s incident involved a large crowd which was “disorderly and surrounding officers,” another tweet said. Miami Beach police tweeted that they used pepper balls to disperse the group.

CNN affiliate WPLG reported that Miami Beach police officers are working 12-hour shifts.

The weekend’s approximately 100 arrests included some for the seizure of weapons and drugs, city of Miami Beach spokeswoman Veronica Payssé told CNN on Sunday.

Read the full story:

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA - MARCH 04: Fort Lauderdale police patrol the beach as spring breakers enjoy themselves on March 04, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. College students have begun to arrive in the South Florida area for the annual spring break ritual. City officials are anticipating a large spring break crowd as the coronavirus pandemic continues. They are advising people to wear masks if they cannot social distance. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Related article 100 arrested as spring break crowds hit Miami Beach despite the pandemic

Netherlands pauses use of AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine

Boxes of AstraZeneca's Covid-19 vaccines in Oss, Netherlands on February 12.

The Netherlands has joined a growing list of countries suspending use of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 vaccine following reports of possible side effects post inoculation.

The Dutch government said Sunday it will pause the use of the AstraZeneca vaccine for two weeks “as a precautionary measure and pending further investigation.”

The decision came just days after Dutch Health Minister Hugo de Jonge said there was “no cause for concern,” and that vaccinations could continue. In a statement Sunday, the Dutch Health Ministry said its Medicines Evaluations Board (CBG) had received “new information” over the weekend.

The statement said as yet no “causal relationship” has been established between the vaccine and the newly reported side effects from Denmark and Norway, but that it would pause use of the AstraZeneca vaccine until March 29.

AstraZeneca has robustly defended its vaccine, saying in a statement Sunday there were no confirmed quality issues for any batch of the drug, and “no evidence of an increased risk of pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis (DVT) or thrombocytopenia” for people who had received it.

Some context: The Netherlands is the latest European country to partially or fully suspend its rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine following reports of patients developing blood clots after inoculations.

  • Austria was the first to sound the alarm on the potential dangers of the vaccine, suspending one batch of doses last Tuesday.
  • Italy banned the use of vaccines from a specific batch of AstraZeneca doses last Friday, after a man in Sicily died of cardiac arrest one day after receiving his first dose of the vaccine.
  • Denmark became the first European country to temporarily suspend the entire rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine last Thursday, followed by Iceland, Norway and Ireland.

The European Union’s medicines regulator, the EMA, is currently investigating whether the shot could be linked to a number of reports of blood clots.

Fauci says Covid guidelines "will be much more liberal" by July 4 if US cases drop

Federal Covid-19 guidelines “will be much more liberal” by the Fourth of July if US cases drop as more Americans are vaccinated, Dr. Anthony Fauci said Sunday.

Asked whether people will return to a degree of normalcy without masks and distancing by the summer holiday, Fauci, President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser, replied: “Yes … there will be a greater degree of confidence” in that.

The comments from Fauci come nearly a week after the CDC released new guidance saying people fully vaccinated against Covid-19 can safely visit with other vaccinated people and small groups of unvaccinated people in some circumstances.

The agency is still urging unvaccinated Americans to socially distance from people who don’t live in their home, wear masks and avoid crowds, measures that have been critical to slowing the spread of the deadly virus over the past year.

Read the full story:

Dr. Anthony Fauci arrives for US President Joe Biden address about the Covid-19 response before signing executive orders in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on January 21, 2021. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Related article Fauci says Covid guidelines 'will be much more liberal' by July 4 if US cases drop

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