Yahoo! News: Education News
Yahoo! News: Education News |
- CDC's 'disease detectives' are on the coronavirus case
- Iran warns US after Patriot deployment to Iraq
- The US intelligence community has reportedly concluded that China intentionally misrepresented its coronavirus numbers
- Outbreak: bankruptcies, layoffs, quiet skies and empty rails
- India PM plans staggered exit from vast coronavirus lockdown
- Tests of potential coronavirus vaccine spur growth of virus-fighting antibodies
- Russian plane with supplies for virus fight lands in US
- American Airlines crammed the only 11 passengers on a flight into 3 rows because they only bought basic economy, report says
- Coronavirus turned the 2020 presidential race upside down, but not in Wisconsin
- 5 ways that the coronavirus will change college admissions this fall
- WHO concerned by 'rapid escalation' of virus, as U.S. death toll nears 5,000
- Iran parliament speaker, Israeli health minister have virus
- Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte orders police to 'shoot dead' any 'troublemakers' who break quarantine
- Indonesia needs 'massive, rapid' testing for coronavirus
- Another US-Mexico border tunnel has been discovered – with nearly $30 million worth of drugs, officials say
- Iran warns of months of crisis as virus deaths reach 3,160
- Chinese government rejects allegations that its face masks were defective, tells countries to 'double check' instructions
- Trump says he doesn’t want a nationwide stay-at-home order because some states don’t have a high number of coronavirus cases
- FISA Hawks Lee, Leahy Say ‘Damning’ Horowitz FBI Audit ‘Makes Clear Our Work Is Not Done’
- One nursing home offers grim advice: Take your loved ones home
- How coronavirus has halted Central American migration to the US
- A small Georgia city is facing hundreds of coronavirus cases after residents flocked to a beloved janitor's funeral
- Oil rockets as Trump signals end to price war
- Elderly to be evacuated en masse from ultra-Orthodox Israeli town hit by coronavirus
- 10 Great Deals on Apparel From REI’s 25% off Sale
- UN Security Council urges cease-fire in Afghanistan
- Uber promised to pay drivers who couldn't work because of the coronavirus. But drivers say Uber has been closing their accounts after they seek sick pay, and then ignoring or rejecting their claims.
- Beyond fever and cough: Coronavirus symptoms take new shape
- Taiwan to Donate Ten Million Masks to U.S., E.U.
- Bill Gates explains 3 steps the U.S. should take now to make up for lost time on COVID-19
- Justice Department will send seized medical supplies to New York, New Jersey
- Barack Obama takes veiled swipe at Donald Trump's handling of coronavirus pandemic
- China reports fewer coronavirus infections, tallies asymptomatic cases
- Angry Wuhan next-of-kin seek answers over virus handling
- Pakistan court overturns conviction in death of Daniel Pearl
- Army attack helicopters teamed up with Navy ships to practice holding enemies 'at high risk' in the Middle East
- There are benefits to holding off on pregnancy during the coronavirus pandemic. It's still up to you, experts say.
- CDC warned of a coming pandemic two years ago
- FDA says heartburn drug Zantac should be immediately pulled from shelves
- Nigeria launches 'massive' joint operation against jihadists
- Italy's coronavirus deaths push higher, new cases hold steady
- Russia sends plane with medical supplies to U.S. for coronavirus response
- Tekashi 6ix9ine will serve the rest of prison sentence at home due to coronavirus threat
CDC's 'disease detectives' are on the coronavirus case Posted: 01 Apr 2020 04:00 AM PDT While the Washington State Department of Health had prepared a plan for the arrival of the virus in January, it assumed it still had weeks before the disease would reach the U.S. "In three days, the plan was trashed. We went through every step," Marcia Goldoft, a clinical epidemiologist with the Washington State DOH, told Yahoo News. "I don't think anyone involved has ever seen anything go this fast." |
Iran warns US after Patriot deployment to Iraq Posted: 01 Apr 2020 03:06 AM PDT Iran warned the US Wednesday that it was leading the Middle East to disaster in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic after it deployed Patriot air defence missiles to Iraq. Washington had been in talks with Baghdad about the proposed deployment since January but it was not immediately clear whether it had secured its approval or not. Iran, which wields huge influence in its western neighbour, said that it had not. |
Posted: 01 Apr 2020 10:39 AM PDT |
Outbreak: bankruptcies, layoffs, quiet skies and empty rails Posted: 02 Apr 2020 08:15 AM PDT The outbreak of the coronavirus has dealt a shock to the global economy with unprecedented speed. Following are developments on Thursday related to the global economy, the work place and the spread of the virus. CEO Eric Yuan is addressing some of the security concerns that have arisen as tens of millions of workers fled the office and logged in to Zoom. |
India PM plans staggered exit from vast coronavirus lockdown Posted: 02 Apr 2020 01:40 AM PDT India will pull out of a three-week lockdown in phases, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Thursday, as officials battle to contain the country's biggest cluster of coronavirus infections in the capital, New Delhi. Modi ordered India's 1.3 billion people indoors to avert a massive outbreak of coronavirus infections, but the world's biggest shutdown has left millions without jobs and forced migrant workers to flee to their villages for food and shelter. India has had 2,069 confirmed infections, of whom 53 have died, low figures by comparison with the United States, China, Italy and Spain. |
Tests of potential coronavirus vaccine spur growth of virus-fighting antibodies Posted: 02 Apr 2020 10:44 AM PDT |
Russian plane with supplies for virus fight lands in US Posted: 01 Apr 2020 08:25 PM PDT A Russian military plane carrying medical supplies arrived in the United States on Wednesday, the Russian mission to the UN said, as the Kremlin flexes its soft power during the coronavirus pandemic. The Antonov-124, landed at JFK Airport in New York -- the epicenter of America's coronavirus outbreak -- pictures and video posted on the mission's Twitter page showed. Russia's defense ministry had earlier announced that the plane "with medical masks and medical equipment on board," left for the US overnight, without providing further details. |
Posted: 02 Apr 2020 09:15 AM PDT |
Coronavirus turned the 2020 presidential race upside down, but not in Wisconsin Posted: 01 Apr 2020 03:53 PM PDT |
5 ways that the coronavirus will change college admissions this fall Posted: 02 Apr 2020 05:32 AM PDT Editor's note: The new coronavirus is spreading across the United States just as many high school seniors were applying to colleges or awaiting acceptance letters. Here, Robert Massa, who teaches about higher education at the University of Southern California and is a former admissions dean from Johns Hopkins University and Dickinson College, offers insights into five ways the COVID-19 pandemic could affect a student's quest to attend the school of their choice. 1\. More timeDue to the uncertainties surrounding the health and financial implications of the pandemic, many colleges will not have filled their classes by the traditional May 1 deadline. Colleges that are concerned about not meeting their numerical enrollment goals will likely be flexible in allowing students to apply, even at this late date.To give students more time to visit and consider other factors, a number of colleges have pushed back their deposit deadline to June 1. For the most part, these are schools that historically have not filled their class by May 1. The more selective institutions are keeping the May 1 candidates reply date.If you have a deposit deadline from one school that is May 1 and another that is June 1, and you need more time to decide, appeal to the May 1 school to give you more time. Depending on how close that college is to filling its class, it may be flexible. 2\. A better shotIf a student has applied to one of the most selective, strongest universities – which represent less than 4% of the four-year public and nonprofit private colleges in the U.S. – they will be just as hard to get into, at least initially, as they've been in the past. Those schools are, however, likely to have longer wait lists this year, primarily because of the uncertainty surrounding international students and whether they will be able to travel to the U.S. And if they can't, more students may be admitted from the waitlist than in past years.But, if students have applied to one of the vast majority of the other selective colleges - including the 16% that admit between a fifth and half of their applicants – it is likely to be somewhat easier to get in for several reasons.Because of the economic consequences of coronavirus, as many as a fifth of students think they may have to abandon their first choice college to attend a school that is more affordable, according to a survey conducted in March. In addition, that survey found that a college closer to home would be a more viable choice than a first-choice institution for 35% of students. Taking these factors into consideration, colleges are likely to admit more students than they did last year because they expect that more of their admitted students will ultimately opt to stay closer to home or to attend a more affordable school. 3\. Bigger scholarshipsColleges are worried that the health calamities and concerns and the economic fallout from the pandemic will result in more students declining admission offers. For this reason, I believe colleges will be likely to offer students more money in an effort to get them to enroll. The competition for student enrollments will be intense.Schools may offer bigger scholarships to students who decline an opportunity to enroll. That's because last September, the National Association of College Admissions Counseling settled an antitrust lawsuit with the Department of Justice, thereby allowing colleges to recruit students who had already committed to attend another institution by awarding them more money. Previously, the association's ethics code had forbidden this kind of poaching.Consequently, students may have to decide whether to stick with the original school they selected, even if it doesn't offer as much tuition help. 4\. More need-based aid may be availableIf a family is affected by the economic fallout from COVID-19, they may appeal for additional need-based financial aid. The financial aid system estimates parents' ability to pay on income that was earned two years ago. Due to COVID-19, income earned in the first quarter of 2020 may not predict a family's total 2020 income. For that reason, it will be important for families to work with the financial aid office of the colleges on their list to help them take a lower family income into account when calculating the family's eligibility for financial aid. It is important for families to explain the need for more financial aid during the application process or certainly pre-deposit – not after a paying an enrollment deposit. 5\. More virtual visitsIn the past, I always advised students to schedule a day to visit the campus of a school they might attend. Among other things, I would tell them to request a meeting with a faculty member in major they might consider, sit in on at least one class and to meet with an admissions officer and a financial aid adviser if appropriate. The big open houses for admitted students are great, because you get to meet potential classmates, but they are not the same as visiting campus during a school day.Visiting a campus may not be feasible since so many colleges have shut down for the rest of the spring semester. But many colleges are now hosting virtual visits complete with live tour guides and interactive Q&A sessions. Some have also built upon existing social network platforms to encourage engagement with members of their campus community. In addition to these staged visit programs, you can also request to meet with a professor on a video chat. You can even ask to visit an online class.The visit really isn't about the buildings or the beauty of the physical space. It's about the people with whom you will live and learn. Hopefully you can get a good feel for that through the virtual version. Final decisionsWhether to stray from a top college choice in these uncertain times is a decision that students and their families must make. At some point – likely long before this entering class graduates from college – the pandemic will be over and life as we knew it will return. Parents and students should make this decision carefully, of course, and should consider what is in the student's best interest going forward in a post-COVID world.[Our newsletter explains what's going on with the coronavirus pandemic. Subscribe now.]This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.Read more: * COVID-19 could shrink the earnings of 2020 graduates for years to come * Here's why colleges are being forced to close their doors - and what they can do to stay openRobert Massa does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment. |
WHO concerned by 'rapid escalation' of virus, as U.S. death toll nears 5,000 Posted: 02 Apr 2020 03:22 AM PDT |
Iran parliament speaker, Israeli health minister have virus Posted: 01 Apr 2020 10:02 PM PDT Iran's parliament speaker has contracted the new coronavirus, the country's highest-ranking government figure yet to catch the disease, while in Israel, several top officials entered quarantine when the health minister tested positive on Thursday. Iran's parliament announced Ali Larijani's illness on its website, saying he was receiving treatment in quarantine. Iran, the regional epicenter of the virus, has been fighting one of the world's worst outbreaks. |
Posted: 02 Apr 2020 07:34 AM PDT Filipino President Rodrigo Duterte has ordered the police and military to "shoot dead" any "troublemakers" who cause disturbances during the coronavirus quarantine in the Philippines, The Philippine Star reports. The move comes after protestors staged demonstrations over the lack of food and financial aid they've received from the government since the lockdown began in the country on March 17."I will not hesitate [to tell] my soldiers to shoot you. I will not hesitate to order the police to arrest and detain you," said Duterte in his address, adding: "Instead of causing trouble, I'll send you to the grave." The president is infamous for his alleged violations of human rights, previously drawing the fury of the international community over his order for vigilante hit squads to murder suspected drug dealers without due process.Amnesty International condemned Duterte's new statements. "The abusive methods used to punish those accused of breaching quarantine and the vast number of mass arrests that have been carried out to date, against mainly poor people, are further examples of the oppressive approach the government takes against those struggling with basic needs," said the organization's local section director, Butch Olano.The human rights NGO added that more than 17,000 people have already been arrested for violations of the lockdown and curfew in the Philippines, and that "reports have also appeared of inhumane punishments those breaching quarantine have been made to endure, including sitting for hours in the hot sun or being detained in dog cages."More stories from theweek.com The Secret Service signed an 'emergency order' this week — for 30 golf carts There are now over 1 million confirmed cases of coronavirus worldwide Navy removes aircraft carrier captain who sounded alarm over COVID-19 outbreak on board his ship |
Indonesia needs 'massive, rapid' testing for coronavirus Posted: 02 Apr 2020 04:41 AM PDT Indonesia needs to perform "massive" testing to reveal the full spread of the coronavirus and ensure that people who travel home during the approaching Muslim holiday isolate themselves, the governor of the archipelago's most populous province said. Indonesia's coronavirus death toll rose to 170 on Thursday as the world's fourth-most populous nation passed South Korea as the country with the highest number of recorded fatalities in Asia after China. Ridwan Kamil, the governor of West Java, said his province had conducted more than 25,000 "rapid tests" and around 500 were positive, though they would need to undergo further tests to confirm the results. |
Posted: 01 Apr 2020 07:40 AM PDT |
Iran warns of months of crisis as virus deaths reach 3,160 Posted: 02 Apr 2020 04:18 AM PDT Iran on Thursday reported 124 new deaths from the coronavirus, raising its total to 3,160, as President Rouhani warned that the country may still battle the pandemic for another year. Health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour announced the latest toll in a news conference and confirmed 3,111 new infections over the past 24 hours, bringing Iran's total to 50,468. Iran has been scrambling to contain the COVID-19 outbreak since it reported its first cases on February 19. |
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FISA Hawks Lee, Leahy Say ‘Damning’ Horowitz FBI Audit ‘Makes Clear Our Work Is Not Done’ Posted: 01 Apr 2020 12:39 PM PDT Senators Patrick Leahy (D., Vt.) and Mike Lee (R., Utah) said Wednesday that "damning" evidence of widespread FISA abuse uncovered in an ongoing audit of the FBI's application process proves that "our work is not done" as the Senate prepares to consider an extension of expiring FISA powers in the coming months.In light of a report released Tuesday showing systemic abuses within the foreign surveillance process, Leahy and Lee announced that they will propose an amendment to "ensure" that government agencies hand over all evidence — including potentially exculpatory evidence — in future FISA applications. The amendment will be added to the "USA FREEDOM Extension and Amici Curiae Reform Act," which Lee and Leahy introduced last month to enact "significant" reforms of the FISA legal adviser process, including the appointment of an a special expert in privacy and civil liberties to help boost protections for U.S. citizens."The FBI appears to have a widespread problem in failing to disclose all of the exculpatory evidence in its possession to the FISA court. The disclosure of all exculpatory information to a court is one of the most basic due process rights guaranteed to all Americans, regardless of whether the court operates in the open or behind closed doors," the senators said in a joint statement.The new report from Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz found that an initial review of the Bureau's transparency measures in 29 FISA applications involving U.S. citizens all included "apparent errors or inadequately supported facts."Horowitz's office was examining whether abuses of the Woods Procedure, which requires that the Justice Department verify the accuracy and provide evidentiary support for all facts stated in every FISA application, were part of a larger problem for the Bureau.The OIG found in a report released in December that the FBI included "at least 17 significant errors or omissions in the Carter Page FISA applications and many errors in the Woods Procedures" during its Crossfire Hurricane investigation of the 2016 Trump campaign.The new report Tuesday revealed that of the 29 applications that the OIG pulled from "8 FBI field offices of varying sizes," the FBI lacked find Woods Files for four of the applications, while the other 25 all had an "average of about 20 issues" per application.The debate over FISA nearly came to a head in March, after Lee's office said in December that "major reforms" could be passed before three of the program's powers were set to expire on March 15. But the Senate elected to issue a bare-bones extension of the surveillance authorities for 77 days, with a commitment that senators would be permitted to offer amendments when the House bill is taken up.Republicans appear to be largely divided on the issue, with President Trump and allies indignant over the "witch hunt" of his 2016 campaign joining with civil-liberties advocates against security hawks. Lee and Rand Paul (R., Ky.) have been some of the Senate GOP's most outspoken critics, while Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) has expressed sympathy with Attorney General Bill Barr, who wants FISA reauthorized.Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.) said Tuesday that he planned to call Horowitz back in front of his committee to further detail the audit into the FBI's protocols. |
One nursing home offers grim advice: Take your loved ones home Posted: 02 Apr 2020 04:59 PM PDT |
How coronavirus has halted Central American migration to the US Posted: 02 Apr 2020 03:32 AM PDT Border closures and strict lockdowns have led to a steep decline in the number of migrants coming from Central AmericaWhen Angelica turned 30, she realized there was no future for her in Honduras.Although she had a college degree, she was still living paycheck to paycheck and was stuck in a neighborhood of the capital Tegucigalpa ruled by violent gangs.So, after years contemplating migration to the US where she has relatives, she finally made arrangements to depart."I didn't want to stay in a neighborhood where there are massacres or where the people lock themselves in their homes at six at night because the gangs impose a curfew," she said. "I realized I was more surviving than living."But by the time she was due to start her journey north, Honduras had closed its borders and declared a state of emergency. She could no longer leave her city – much less take a bus to northern Guatemala, to meet a coyote who would guide her through Mexico."I had thought that only a hurricane could stop me," she said. "But I hadn't thought of a pandemic."Border closures and strict lockdowns prompted by the Covid-19 crisis have disrupted the migrant trail through Central America and Mexico, forcing some would-be migrants to postpone their journeys – and stopping many others in their tracks.The result has been a deterrent more effective than any wall Donald Trump could build.Activists across the region have reported a steep decline in the number of migrants coming from Central America since the restrictions were implemented. One Mexican shelter near the Guatemalan border said it hadn't received a new arrival in a week."The crisis has facilitated Trump's policies because [Central American] migrants can't even leave their countries," said Sister Nyzella Juliana Dondé, coordinator of a Catholic migrant aid organization in Honduras.El Salvador closed its borders on 11 March, and the governments of Guatemala and Honduras quickly followed suit. All three countries in the so-called northern triangle have since announced internal lockdowns of differing strictness.The three nations had recently signed "safe third country agreements" with the US government under which they agreed to increase enforcement on their borders, and receive migrants who had transited their country on the way to the US.Only Guatemala had begun to implement the new measures, but it announced on 17 March that it would suspend the deportations of Hondurans and Salvadorans from the US to its territory.But Guatemala and Honduras continued to receive deportation flights bringing their own citizens from the US – despite concerns that the practice could accelerate the spread of the virus. In the past week, a migrant who was deported from the US to Guatemala was diagnosed with Covid-19 and a group of deportees to Honduras escaped from the shelter where they were to be quarantined. Guatemala has now requested that the US suspend deportation flights.Meanwhile, migrants who were already en route have been left exposed by the closure of shelters and the difficulties facing humanitarian organizations which would normally attend to them."They are in a vulnerable situation because the guidance is to stay at home – but the migrants don't have homes," said Dondé, who mentioned a case of a large group of Haitian and African migrants who were detained after crossing into Guatemala from Honduras amid the lockdown. "Neither Honduras or Guatemala wanted to offer them a place to stay."Migrants who already had arrived to Mexico have been left in limbo by the US government's decision to immediately return all migrants from Mexico and Central America who cross into the country irregularly along the south-west border.When restrictions are eventually eased, a fresh surge in migration seems likely: multiple would-be migrants who spoke with the Guardian said it was only a question of when, not if, they would set out for the US.And the economic impact of the crisis may in turn cause others to migrate.. "Before many people migrated because they lacked work and a dignified life," said Silva de Souza. "Now there will be many more."Migrants who have come from even farther afield, have no choice but to try to push on. Mohamed left Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, in 2018, following the well-trodden migrant path via Ecuador, Colombia and the jungles of Panama. He was burning through his savings and racking up debt, but making steady progress north.But he reached Guatemala just before the government announced a state of emergency which has made moving on impossible."Travel has become very difficult," he said in a brief exchange via Facebook Messenger. But he was still determined to reach the US – even if he now has to move more carefully – traveling at night and avoiding large caravans. "With God's will, I'll get there. I will build a life of opportunity." * Additional reporting by Joe Parkin Daniels |
Posted: 02 Apr 2020 07:57 AM PDT |
Oil rockets as Trump signals end to price war Posted: 02 Apr 2020 01:10 PM PDT Oil prices rocketed Thursday, posting the largeset percent increase ever, after US President Donald Trump said Russia and Saudi Arabia planned to end their price war by slashing output. After Trump tweeted that Saudi and Russia could slash production by up to 15 million barrels, Brent hit $36.29 a barrel, up almost 46 percent, and West Texas Intermediate soared around 35 percent to $27.39. |
Elderly to be evacuated en masse from ultra-Orthodox Israeli town hit by coronavirus Posted: 02 Apr 2020 09:50 AM PDT |
10 Great Deals on Apparel From REI’s 25% off Sale Posted: 02 Apr 2020 08:23 AM PDT |
UN Security Council urges cease-fire in Afghanistan Posted: 31 Mar 2020 07:07 PM PDT |
Posted: 01 Apr 2020 04:36 PM PDT |
Beyond fever and cough: Coronavirus symptoms take new shape Posted: 02 Apr 2020 08:16 AM PDT |
Taiwan to Donate Ten Million Masks to U.S., E.U. Posted: 01 Apr 2020 10:23 AM PDT Taiwan will donate ten million face masks to countries struggling with the coronavirus pandemic, a move that will likely rile China, which claims Taiwan as a territory and has donated far fewer masks to other countries despite its role in covering up the risk posed by a deadly virus that originated within its borders."At the previous stage, we formed a national team, now we need to play an international match and fight the pandemic together with other countries," said Taiwan's president, Tsai Ing-wen. "At this stage, we will donate 10 million masks."According to Taiwan's foreign ministry, 7 million of the masks will be sent to European Union countries, the United Kingdom, and Switzerland. Taipei also plans to send masks to the U.S.Taiwan has done a remarkable job containing the spread of the virus, with only 322 confirmed cases of coronavirus and five deaths resulting from infection as of Tuesday.China criticized an agreement between Taiwan and American Institute in Taipei on coronavirus cooperation, calling it "a political plot to pursue independence with the help of the epidemic."China shipped only two million masks to be distributed across Europe, while Jack Ma, China's richest man, donated another two million."Today, we're grateful for China's support," EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said of the mask shipments.China also supplied rapid test coronavirus test kits to Spain and the Czech Republic, but the majority of the tests turned out to be faulty. Up to 80 percent of the 150,000 portable test kits China delivered to the Czech Republic earlier this month did not produce correct results. Spain, which has the second-highest number of coronavirus fatalities in the world after Italy, found that the rapid coronavirus test kits it purchased from Chinese company Bioeasy only correctly identified 30 percent of virus cases.In December, local and national officials issued a gag order to labs in Wuhan after scientists there identified a new viral pneumonia, ordering them to halt tests, destroy samples, and conceal the news. A recent collaborative study by scientists based in both China and the U.S. found that 95 percent of infections could have been prevented had China implemented measures to stem the spread just three weeks earlier.The U.S. intelligence community concluded in a classified report Wednesday that China deliberately provided incomplete public numbers for coronavirus cases and deaths resulting from the infection. |
Bill Gates explains 3 steps the U.S. should take now to make up for lost time on COVID-19 Posted: 31 Mar 2020 10:37 PM PDT Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates says there is "no question the United States missed the opportunity to get ahead of the novel coronavirus," and there are three steps that must be taken now in order to soften the blow to the economy and slow the number of deaths.In an op-ed for The Washington Post published Tuesday, Gates said there has to be "a consistent nationwide approach to shutting down." In some states, restaurants are still serving diners and beaches are open, which is a "recipe for disaster," Gates said. "Because people can travel freely across state lines, so can the virus. The country's leaders need to be clear: Shutdown anywhere means shutdown everywhere." It could take at least 10 weeks to get the number of COVID-19 coronavirus cases down, he said, and until then, "no one can continue business as usual or relax the shutdown."The federal government also needs to do more testing, with the results aggregated "so we can quickly identify potential volunteers for clinical trials and know with confidence when it's time to return to normal," Gates said. Health care workers and first responders should have priority, followed by "highly symptomatic people who are at most risk of becoming seriously ill and those who are likely to have been exposed."There has to be a "data-based approach to developing treatments and a vaccine," Gates said, and politicians need to stay quiet and stop spreading rumors about both. Once there is a safe and effective vaccine, billions of doses will need to be manufactured, he said, and facilities where they will be made can be built now. The country has "a long way to go," Gates said, but he still believes "if we make the right decisions now, informed by science, data, and the experience of medical professionals, we can save lives and get the country back to work."More stories from theweek.com The Trump administration is adding an extra barrier for Social Security recipients to get their stimulus check Washington Gov. Jay Inslee is what real coronavirus leadership looks like China is bracing for a second wave of coronavirus |
Justice Department will send seized medical supplies to New York, New Jersey Posted: 02 Apr 2020 09:22 AM PDT |
Barack Obama takes veiled swipe at Donald Trump's handling of coronavirus pandemic Posted: 01 Apr 2020 08:51 AM PDT |
China reports fewer coronavirus infections, tallies asymptomatic cases Posted: 31 Mar 2020 10:21 PM PDT China, where the coronavirus outbreak first emerged in December, reported dwindling new infections on Wednesday and for the first time disclosed the number of asymptomatic cases, which could complicate how trends in the outbreak are read. Almost all of Tuesday's 36 new cases involved arrivals from overseas, the National Health Commission said, down from 48 a day earlier, and taking total infections to 81,554. China has decided to devote greater screening to asymptomatic sufferers and those in contact with them. |
Angry Wuhan next-of-kin seek answers over virus handling Posted: 02 Apr 2020 12:42 AM PDT Zhang took his elderly father to a Wuhan hospital for a surgical procedure in January, just as coronavirus was consuming the central Chinese city. Devastated and angry, Zhang is now demanding answers from a government that he accuses of incompetence and lying about the extent of the virus. Zhang says he has linked online with dozens of other people whose grief over lost loved ones is paired with anger. |
Pakistan court overturns conviction in death of Daniel Pearl Posted: 01 Apr 2020 11:49 PM PDT A Pakistani court on Thursday overturned the murder conviction of a British Pakistani man found guilty of the 2002 kidnapping and killing of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. Instead, the court found Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh guilty of the lesser charge of kidnapping and sentenced him to seven years in prison. Pearl disappeared Jan. 23, 2002 in Karachi while researching links between Pakistani militants and Richard C. Reid, who became known as the "shoe-bomber" after he was arrested on a flight from Paris to Miami with explosives in his shoes. |
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CDC warned of a coming pandemic two years ago Posted: 02 Apr 2020 04:21 AM PDT |
FDA says heartburn drug Zantac should be immediately pulled from shelves Posted: 01 Apr 2020 06:38 PM PDT The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday said the heartburn drug Zantac should immediately be pulled from shelves and consumers should dispose of any pills or liquid they have at home.During safety tests last summer, extremely high levels of the contaminant NDMA, believed to be a carcinogen, were discovered in samples of the drug. The active ingredient in Zantac is ranitidine, and the FDA said that over time, NDMA appears as an impurity in ranitidine in levels exceeding federal standards, NPR reports.The FDA issued a warning last September, and CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart removed the drug and its generic forms from stores. Since then, the agency has confirmed that the issue is how ranitidine naturally breaks down in normal storage conditions, and has nothing to do with the way it is manufactured."We didn't observe unacceptable levels of NDMA in many of the samples that we tested," the FDA's Janet Woodcock said in a statement Wednesday. "However, since we don't know how or for how long the product might have been stored, we decided that it should not be available to consumers and patients unless its quality can be assured."More stories from theweek.com The Secret Service signed an 'emergency order' this week — for 30 golf carts There are now over 1 million confirmed cases of coronavirus worldwide Navy removes aircraft carrier captain who sounded alarm over COVID-19 outbreak on board his ship |
Nigeria launches 'massive' joint operation against jihadists Posted: 02 Apr 2020 08:49 AM PDT Nigeria on Thursday said it had launched a "massive" joint offensive with troops from Chad and Niger against jihadists waging a decade-long insurgency in the region. The announcement comes after Chad's defence minister said Tuesday his country had deployed forces across its neighbours' borders to battle insurgents who killed almost 100 Chadian soldiers last month. Nigeria's military said attacks by fighters from Boko Haram and a splinter group affiliated to the so-called Islamic State group had "necessitated the contiguous nations of the Lake Chad basin to jointly launch this massive onslaught". Details about the operation were sketchy. Nigeria has made repeated claims in the past to have rolled back the insurgents. The 10-year revolt has left at least 36,000 dead and displaced around 1.8 million people in northeast Nigeria alone. The conflict has spilt over into neighbouring countries as the Islamists have established camps and launched attacks against military and civilian targets. The countries around Lake Chad have set up a multinational force to counter the jihadists but it has so far failed to end the bloodshed. The militants on March 23 killed at least 98 Chadian soldiers in an attack on an island army base in Lake Chad. Chadian President Idriss Deby Itno declared the surrounding area a "war zone" as he pledged a "lightning response" to the killings. Chad earlier withdrew some 1,200 troops from Nigeria in January after a months-long mission battling the jihadists. |
Italy's coronavirus deaths push higher, new cases hold steady Posted: 02 Apr 2020 11:33 AM PDT The death toll from an outbreak of coronavirus in Italy has climbed by 760 to 13,915, the Civil Protection Agency said on Thursday, slightly higher than the daily rise of 727 registered a day earlier. Italy hit a daily peak of 6,557 new cases on March 21. Italy has registered more deaths than anywhere else in the world and accounts for around 28% of all global fatalities from the virus. |
Russia sends plane with medical supplies to U.S. for coronavirus response Posted: 01 Apr 2020 06:51 AM PDT |
Tekashi 6ix9ine will serve the rest of prison sentence at home due to coronavirus threat Posted: 02 Apr 2020 03:01 PM PDT |
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