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										<title>COVID-19 Lockdown Exit Analysis - 12th Feb 2021</title>
										<date>12th Feb 2021</date>
										<description></description>
										<link>https://nfind.uk/lockdown_exit/index.php/newsletter=198</link>
										<copyright>lockdown_exit</copyright>
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													<title>AstraZeneca expects COVID variant vaccine by mid to late 2021</title>
													<section>Lockdown Exit</section>
													<author>Al Jazeera English</author>
													<description>
													AstraZeneca has said it expects to have a new version of its COVID19 vaccine ready for use by mid to late 2021 responding to concerns about emerging variants of the disease that may be more transmissible or resistant to existing vaccines. The AngloSwedish company which makes a vaccine developed by the University of Oxford said on Thursday that researchers began the work on the updates months ago when the new variants were first detected. Were moving fast and weve got a number of variant versions in the works that we will be picking from as we move into the clinic Mene Pangalos head of biopharmaceuticals research for AstraZeneca said on a conference call with reporters. The comments came as CEO Pascal Soriot defended the companys efforts to develop and ramp up production of the shot amid criticism from the European Union and a preliminary study that raised concerns about the vaccines ability to combat a variant of COVID19 first discovered in South Africa.</description>
													<link>https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/2/11/astrazeneca-expects-new-version-of-coronavirus-vaccine-by-autumn</link>
													<pubDate>12th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Indigenous leaders warn of missionaries turning Amazon villages against vaccines</title>
													<section>Lockdown Exit</section>
													<author>Reuters India</author>
													<description>
													Medical teams working to immunize Brazils remote indigenous villages against the coronavirus have encountered fierce resistance in some communities where evangelical missionaries are stoking fears of the vaccine say tribal leaders and advocates. On the So Francisco reservation in the state of Amazonas Jamamadi villagers sent health workers packing with bows and arrows when they visited by helicopter this month said Claudemir da Silva an Apurin leader representing indigenous communities on the Purus river a tributary of the Xing. Its not happening in all villages just in those that have missionaries or evangelical chapels where pastors are convincing the people not to receive the vaccine that they will turn into an alligator and other crazy ideas he said by phone.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-brazil-amazon/indigenous-leaders-warn-of-missionaries-turning-amazon-villages-against-vaccines-idUSKBN2AB2JR</link>
													<pubDate>12th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Over 100000 people from Mumbai got Covid19 vaccine shots</title>
													<section>Lockdown Exit</section>
													<author>Hindustan Times</author>
													<description>
													After vaccinating 5707 beneficiaries on the 20th day of the vaccination drive Mumbai crossed the milestone of 100000 beneficiaries on Thursday. A total of 101364 beneficiaries have been vaccinated in Mumbai since January 16 when the vaccination drive began. Of these 85034 are healthcare workers HCWs and 16330 are frontline workers FLWs. On Thursday the turnout was 61 but the average turnout over the past 20 days is over 70.</description>
													<link>https://www.hindustantimes.com/cities/mumbai-news/over-100-000-people-from-mumbai-got-covid-19-vaccine-shots-101613066779282.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>France is seeing a baby bust nine months after its first covid lockdown</title>
													<section>Lockdown Exit</section>
													<author>The Washington Post</author>
													<description>
													When France confined more than 64 million people under one of the worlds strictest coronavirus lockdowns last spring there was widespread speculation that a baby boom would follow. Nine months on though instead of a boom France is witnessing a sharp decline in births. Economic uncertainty social stress and in some cases anxieties about the virus itself appear to have prompted families to abandon or postpone plans to have a baby. The number of babies born at the SaintDenis hospital plummeted by about 20 percent between midDecember and midJanuary and is expected to remain below 2020 levels for at least the first half of the year. While the coronavirus wards were hives of activity last week lights in the maternity ward were dimmed and the corridors empty.</description>
													<link>https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/france-births-covid-lockdown/2021/02/10/285385ae-656c-11eb-bab8-707f8769d785_story.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>People getting slack about protecting themselves from Covid risk government survey shows</title>
													<section>Lockdown Exit</section>
													<author>RNZ</author>
													<description>
													In New Zealand a government survey suggests people are becoming increasingly relaxed about protecting themselves from the risk of Covid19. Use of the Tracer app wearing masks washing hands and taking precaution when coughing or sneezing are all being reviewed on a monthly basis by the Ministry of Health. Other survey questions focus on mental health and how worried people are about catching the virus. The Ministry of Healths latest Health Survey shows that in January 27.5 percent of people recorded where they had been and who they were with. That marks a sharp fall from 45.6 percent of respondents questioned in September last year who said they were doing this.</description>
													<link>https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/436196/people-getting-slack-about-protecting-themselves-from-covid-risk-government-survey-shows</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>South Africa to use JJ Pfizer COVID vaccines says Ramaphosa</title>
													<section>Lockdown Exit</section>
													<author>Al Jazeera English</author>
													<description>
													President Cyril Ramaphosa says country has secured 9 million Johnson  Johnson and 20 million PfizerBioNTech vaccine doses. South Africa has secured millions of doses of the Johnson  Johnson JJ and PfizerBioNTech vaccines to fight a highly infectious variant of the coronavirus that is dominant in the country according to President Cyril Ramaphosa. During a televised annual state of the nation address Ramaphosa said on Thursday the continents hardesthit country had secured nine million doses of the yettobe approved JJ vaccine of which 500000 would arrive over the next four weeks so authorities could start vaccinating health workers. Another 20 million Pfizer doses have also been secured he added with deliveries expected to begin at the end of March.</description>
													<link>https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/2/11/south-africa-use-jj-pfizer-covid-vaccines-ramaphosa</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Churches pair up with clinics to deliver coronavirus vaccine to those who need it most</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>The Washington Post</author>
													<description>
													Pastor Joseph Daniels folded his 6foot3inch frame into the mobile coronavirus vaccine clinic outside Pennsylvania Avenue Baptist Church in Southeast Washington on Wednesday and joked that he was no fan of needles. Before he knew it a nurse wearing a face shield a mask and gloves was applying a bandage to his upper arm.
Oh okay he said. That was easy. Daniels was one of a handful of pastors along with their spouses who received a vaccination Wednesday morning as part of the citys pilot program staging clinics at churches part of an effort to combat vaccine hesitancy and improve access to the shots in hardhit neighborhoods where vaccination rates are low</description>
													<link>https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/churches-coronavirus-vaccine-clinics/2021/02/10/522025f8-6b17-11eb-ba56-d7e2c8defa31_story.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Ministers to discuss vaccine certificates for international travel</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													Ministers are set to discuss plans on Friday for vaccination and test certificates to ease international travel after lockdown is lifted. But the discussion will not involve vaccine passports to prove immunity at venues in the UK. Instead it will focus on how Britain can cooperate with the international system expected to be introduced eventually to facilitate journeys between different countries. A source said proposals were at a very early stage and any scheme is not expected to be put into effect for some time.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/coronavirus-vaccine-passport-international-travel-b1801104.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Dr Fauci declares April open season for COVID19 vaccinations</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Dr Anthony Fauci has predicted that any American who wants one will be able to get a coronavirus vaccine by April. By the time we get to April that will be what I would call for better wording open season namely virtually everybody and anybody in any category could start to get vaccinated Dr Fauci said during a Thursday Today show interview. Hopefully as we get into the middle and end of the summer we will have accomplished the goal of...the overwhelming majority of people have gotten vaccinated.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-9250911/Dr-Fauci-declares-April-open-season-COVID-19-vaccinatoins.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Roadmap out of lockdown may not be revealed on February 22 after all</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Metro</author>
													<description>
													The date for unveiling a roadmap out of lockdown has been pushed back in a move that could delay the reopening of schools. Boris Johnson had previously promised to set out a plan for lifting restrictions on Monday February 22 but today his official spokesperson broadened the deadline by saying it would be published some time that week. If the plans are not published until the end of the week on February 26 schools would not be able to reopen until at least March 12 which is on a Friday. That is a week later than the previous target date of March 8. It has previously been reported that some outdoor socialising could be allowed within weeks of pupils going back to the classroom and that pubs could reopen by May.</description>
													<link>https://metro.co.uk/2021/02/11/roadmap-for-lifting-lockdown-may-no-longer-be-on-february-22-14065171/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Nicola Sturgeon warns staycations at risk in lockdown trade off</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Daily Record</author>
													<description>
													Scots should be cautious about booking any holiday staycations this summer despite progress in beating back the virus Nicola Sturgeon warned. The First Minister addressed public health concerns as the country prepares for tough quarantine rules on international travel. However there remain serious concerns today about differences in approach between the UK and Scottish governments. Its feared the English plan to quarantine people from a red list of higher risk countries will be leaky and provide a backdoor for people coming back to Scotland unchecked.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/politics/nicola-sturgeon-warns-staycations-risk-23483614</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Britain can beat Covid and avoid more lockdowns with vaccine rollout says top scientist Jeremy Farrar</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Evening Standard</author>
													<description>
													Britain can beat the virus to avoid any more lockdowns by getting population immunity with the vaccine rollout a top scientist said today. Sir Jeremy Farrar director of the Wellcome Trust stressed that there was still a long way to go to cut Covid19 infection levels and warned against lifting lockdown too early. However he also made clear that an end is in sight to the nightmare epidemic if Covid jabs are offered to the whole population including school children.</description>
													<link>https://www.standard.co.uk/news/health/britain-beat-covid-vaccine-lockdowns-immunity-jeremy-farrar-b919396.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>UK set for easier end to lockdown restrictions than expected says Matt Hancock</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Cambridgeshire Live</author>
													<description>
													In England Matt Hancock has said that the unexpectedly high uptake of Covid vaccinations means that the country is set for an easier and safe exit from lockdown. The Health Secretary spoke to BBC Breakfast voicing his optimism about the UKs vaccination programme and what it means for the relaxation of lockdown measures. The Health Secretarys comments reflect this success but come after Boris Johnsons press conference yesterday in which the Prime Minister said that people would have to be patient about making plans for summer.</description>
													<link>https://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/lockdown-restrictions-end-uk-announcement-19816455</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Why have almost half EU countries restricted use of the Astrazeneca vaccine</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>City A.M.</author>
													<description>
													The World Health Organization WHO has recommended the rollout of Astrazenecas Covid vaccine for use in all age groups after a slew of European countries slapped limitations on the jabs distribution. WHO officials said a preponderance of evidence weighed in favour of not constraining the vaccine for certain age groups and refused to recommend an upper age limit for the drug. But almost half of all EU countries have now applied age restrictions to the rollout of the Astrazeneca jab despite it receiving official approval for all over18s by the European Medicines Agency EMA last month.</description>
													<link>https://www.cityam.com/why-have-almost-half-eu-countries-restricted-use-of-the-astrazeneca-vaccine/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Hunt for the 2million unvaccinated Britons as Boris Johnson urges vulnerable people to come forward</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Ministers are hunting for the final two million vulnerable Britons who have not yet come forward for their Covid vaccine warning that having large numbers of unprotected people could delay the easing of lockdown. The Government has made it its mission to inoculate the 15million Brits most at risk of dying from the coronavirus by Monday which includes everyone over 70 care home residents their carers and frontline NHS staff as well as patients classed as clinically extremely vulnerable such as those with terminal illnesses. But while 13 million in the most vulnerable categories have had the jab including 90 per cent of the over70s and care home residents the Prime Minister has warned there is still a group numbering roughly twice the population of Birmingham who had yet to receive one. </description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9248813/Hunt-2million-unvaccinated-Britons-Boris-Johnson-urges-vulnerable-people-come-forward.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Spains regions favor higher age limit for AstraZeneca vaccine</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>El Pa&iacute;s</author>
													<description>
													Following the Spanish governments decision that the AstraZeneca Covid19 vaccine will only be administered to people between the ages of 18 and 55 several regional leaders said they would seek to raise that threshold to 65. Andalusian premier Juan Manuel Moreno and the deputy premier of the Madrid region Ignacio Aguado both said they would make this request at the Wednesday gathering of central and regional health officials known as the InterTerritorial Council of the National Healthcare System which meets every week to discuss coronavirus policy.</description>
													<link>https://english.elpais.com/spanish_news/2021-02-10/spains-regions-favor-higher-age-limit-for-astrazeneca-vaccine.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Covid lockdown could wind down in May if UK follows Israels roadmap</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Britain will only begin to emerge from lockdown at the end of May if it follows the Israeli roadmap for defeating coronavirus. Israel has started implementing a threestage plan to exit draconian Covid restrictions  similar to the blueprint Boris Johnson is set to lay out on February 22. Israeli officials hope to let nonessential shops gyms and libraries reopen within a fortnight. But ministers will only give the move the green light on February 23 if 90 per cent of over50s have been vaccinated and at least a third of the country have had their booster dose. Infection rates must also continue to plummet. </description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9247717/Britain-start-getting-Covid-lockdown-late-follows-Israels-roadmap.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Coronavirus in the UK Prof Devi Sridhar says very open debate is needed over easing of lockdown restrictions</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>The Scotsman</author>
													<description>
													Devi Sridhar professor of global public health at the University of Edinburgh described how vaccines could be used to enable schools to reopen and people to visit crowded bars and restaurants but said the cost is restricted movement internationally. Asked whether fully stopping transmission of the disease could be done Profesor Sridhar told BBC Radio 4s Today programme We have seen that its possible. If we look across the world to New Zealand Australia East Asian countries and even the debates now happening within Japan and now in Germany youre seeing theres a turn towards saying Do we want to use our vaccines and the tools we have to actually just stop transmission of the virus and be able to get back our normal life which means normal schooling fully open and crowded restaurants and bars gyms and fitness studios live music festivals large spectator sports events but the cost is restricted movement internationally</description>
													<link>https://www.scotsman.com/health/coronavirus/coronavirus-uk-prof-devi-sridhar-says-very-open-debate-needed-over-easing-lockdown-restrictions-3131257</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Quarantine hotel chaos as booking website crashes minutes after launching </title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													In the UK the governments plan to quarantine international arrivals in hotels has today been thrown into chaos as its booking website crashed minutes into its launch while travellers were not allowed to reserve rooms for the first two days. Arrivals from a red list of 33 countries  who will only be allowed to fly into one of five airports  will be expected pay 1750 to quarantine for 10 full days 11 nights in designated hotels from Monday. Those who attempt to evade quarantine by providing false information face a fine of up to 10000 and up to 10 years in prison while those who do not book a hotel place before arriving in England face a 4000 fine. But as the booking website for the scheme was launched searches at Birmingham Glasgow and Heathrow airports showed they werent any applicable hotels for passengers to stay in.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9249613/Passengers-stream-Heathrow-arrivals-three-days-hotel-quarantine-rules-introduced.html?ito=social-twitter_dailymailUK</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Covid19 vaccination rates follow the money in states with the biggest wealth gaps analysis shows</title>
													<section>Exit Strategies</section>
													<author>STAT News</author>
													<description>
													Connecticut has the most glaring disparity in vaccination rates between its richest and poorest communities  a difference of 65  according to a STAT analysis of locallevel vaccine data in 10 states with the biggest wealth gaps. Four other states  California Florida New Jersey and Mississippi  also have vaccinated a significantly higher proportion of people in the wealthiest 10 of counties. The discrepancies vary In California 156 shots have been given to residents in the richest areas for every 100 vaccines in the poorest counties while in Mississippi 111 vaccines have been given to residents of the richest counties for every 100 doses in the poorest places. The findings back up with hard data anecdotal reports from around the country that wealthy people have been able to gain access to vaccines ahead of lowincome people.</description>
													<link>https://www.statnews.com/2021/02/11/covid19-vaccination-rates-follow-the-money-in-states-with-biggest-wealth-gaps/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Biden says US faces national emergency amid vaccine shortage</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>Al Jazeera English</author>
													<description>
													President Joe Biden said that the United States is facing a national emergency in the coronavirus pandemic and his administration is working to supply enough COVID19 vaccine to inoculate 300 million Americans. Were in a national emergency said Biden wearing a mask during remarks to scientists at the National Institutes of Health just outside Washington DC on Thursday. This will be one of the most difficult operational challenges we have ever undertaken as a nation. Its going to take time Biden said. The US is on pace to exceed Bidens goal of administering 100 million vaccine doses in his first 100 days in office with more than 26 million shots delivered in his first three weeks. The 300 million doses would be delivered by the end of the US summer Biden said. Were now on track to have enough supply for 300 million Americans by the end of July he announced. Biden said the US coronavirus death toll is likely to reach 500000 next month. He urged Americans to wear masks as a patriotic duty to prevent the spread.</description>
													<link>https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/2/12/biden-says-us-faces-national-emergency-amid-vaccine-shortage</link>
													<pubDate>12th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>COVID19 UK prepared for the wrong pandemic former health secretary admits</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt has admitted the UK had been concentrating all of its pandemic planning only on flu. Speaking on a Sky News special programme Covid Crisis Learning the Lessons Mr Hunt  Britains longest ever serving health secretary  was candid. Asked if he felt he should take some responsibility for the offtarget NHS planning he replied Yes I do.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-uk-prepared-for-the-wrong-pandemic-former-health-secretary-admits-12214583</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Venezuelan government and opposition begin talks on vaccine financing</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													Venezuelan government officials and opposition leaders have met to discuss buying coronavirus vaccines through the COVAX program using cash frozen in the United States by economic sanctions two sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday. Opposition leader Juan Guaido last week said that Venezuelan funds controlled by the U.S. Treasury Department could be used to pay for vaccines. The cashstrapped government of President Nicolas Maduro has signed up for COVAX coled by the World Health Organization WHO to provide vaccines globally but has not made the associated payments. The meeting marks a step forward in what will likely be a long process requiring that U.S. authorities approve the use of the funds as well as the completion of a vaccination rollout plan for crisisstricken Venezuela.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-venezuela/venezuelan-government-and-opposition-begin-talks-on-vaccine-financing-idUSKBN2AC07J</link>
													<pubDate>12th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Nigel Farages natural supporters wont buy his lockdown sceptic party</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													Nigel Farages renamed party has a problem in that it was formed to fight the lockdown which is likely to be lifting if not lifted by the time of its first electoral test the elections on 6 May. I wrote that on Tuesday and now a new study suggests the problem for Reform UK is even more serious. Research by my colleagues at Kings College London suggests that Leave voters tend to support the lockdown as much as Remainers do. This seems surprising because most leading lockdown sceptics are Brexiteers. Among public figures the Venn diagram of Euroscepticism and lockdown scepticism seems to consist mostly of overlap. </description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/independentpremium/voices/nigel-farage-reform-lockdown-sceptics-covid-b1800925.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Safety is very lax staff tell of being forced into the office during UKs third lockdown</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													One in five employees are going into the workplace for part or all of their working week despite being able to do their job from home according to a poll from the Trades Union Congress TUC. We spoke to people who say their employers have been breaking Covid guidance by asking them to return to offices unnecessarily. None would agree to be named publicly for fear of losing their job. Thomas worked from home throughout the first lockdown but in September he was called back to his office. He was one of several staff who voiced concerns about spreading the virus. Around September they asked HR to brief us on what would happen when we went back to the office. A lot of people on these calls said they were anxious and that they didnt want to run the risk of catching anything.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/feb/11/safety-is-very-lax-staff-tell-of-being-forced-into-the-office-during-uks-third-lockdown</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>NHS workforce on its knees  without recuperation burntout staff will leave warn leaders</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>Nursing Notes</author>
													<description>
													The Government is being urged to have an honest conversation with the public.
The sustained and constant pressure of the pandemic has left the NHS workforce on its knees and burntout staff will look to leave unless action is taken warn senior NHS leaders. In a letter sent to the Prime Minister on Monday by the NHS Confederation senior leaders from all parts of the NHS have issued several stark warnings alongside calling for a period of recuperation before returning to normal operations. With around 4.46 million patients awaiting routine surgery and up to 20 of the UK population needing mental health support the Government is being urged to be honest about what the NHS can realistically deliver in the coming months to years.</description>
													<link>https://nursingnotes.co.uk/news/workforce/nhs-workforce-on-its-knees-without-recuperation-burnt-out-staff-will-leave-warn-leaders/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Merkel Defends Extension of Germany COVID19 Lockdown</title>
													<section>Partisan Exits</section>
													<author>Voice of America</author>
													<description>
													German Chancellor Angela Merkel Thursday defended her decision to extend the nations COVID19 lockdown saying the variant strains of the virus pose a threat and she does not want to make the mistakes that led to a second surge last year.
Following a meeting Wednesday with Germanys 16 state governors Merkel announced they agreed to extend the current COVID19 lockdown  due to expire Sunday  to March 7. Speaking to the Bundestag  the lower house of the German parliament  Merkel said they did not act fast enough in 2020 to prevent a second surge in infections late in the year and as health officials now warn about the spread of more virulent variant COVID19 strains in the country she said they need to learn from their mistakes.</description>
													<link>https://www.voanews.com/covid-19-pandemic/merkel-defends-extension-germany-covid-19-lockdown</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Covid19 Ireland may have Level 5 restrictions until Easter</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>BBC News</author>
													<description>
													The Republic of Ireland could see a continuation of high level restrictions to the Easter period Taoiseach Irish PM Michel Martin has warned. Speaking on RTs Morning Ireland Mr Martin said the government is revising its Living with Covid Plan. He said it made sense to take a cautious approach as the vaccination programme is being rolled out across the country. On Wednesday there were 54 additional coronavirusrelated deaths reported. The Republic of Irelands overall toll of coronavirusrelated deaths is 3794.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-56023912</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Youre not lazy  Why you need to stop feeling guilty in lockdown according to an expert</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>CNBC</author>
													<description>
													Retailers are calling for more financial support from the government after the UKs Covid lockdowns in 2020 cost 22bn in lost nonfood sales. The high street was hit by its biggest fall in sales for nonfood stores on record  down 24  as footfall decreased by twofifths according to data from the trade body the British Retail Consortium BRC. While many retailers continued to sell online that did not make up for sales lost from shops. Profits were also affected by the cost of setting up and operating home delivery systems.</description>
													<link>https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/11/heres-why-you-can-stop-feeling-guilty-about-laziness-in-lockdown.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>In an era of division lockdown unites us</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													Lockdown scepticism has been increasingly hard to sustain of late  but that hasnt deterred some. The most prominent of these voices seem to have something else in common in supporting Brexit. From Julia HartleyBrewer Allison Pearson and Toby Young to Steve Baker Daniel Hannan and Nigel Farage most highprofile lockdown sceptics also share a dislike of the European Union. Nigel Farage even started a new political party Reform UK whose initial focus was promoting lockdown scepticism</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/in-an-era-of-division-lockdown-unites-us-7tckfgln6</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>U.K. Retailers See 31 Billion Cost of Three Covid Lockdowns</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>Bloomberg</author>
													<description>
													Britains three pandemic lockdowns have cost retailers that have been ordered to close about 22 billion pounds 31 billion in lost sales according to a trade group.
In a sign of the mounting toll Covid19 is taking on one of the countrys biggest employment sectors the British Retail Consortium says 2020 was the worst year on record with instore nonfood sales declining by 24 compared with 2019. Foot traffic in stores was down more than 40 in 2020 as Covidwary consumers avoided malls and town centers and turned to online shopping instead the group said in a statement.</description>
													<link>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-02-11/u-k-retailers-see-31-billion-cost-of-three-national-lockdowns</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Covid Prisoners like caged animals in lockdown jails</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>BBC News</author>
													<description>
													Prisoners in Englands jails have been locked in their cells for more than 90 of the day to keep them safe from Covid19 the prisons watchdog says. And the extra restrictions which began in March have led to a decline in their mental and physical health and a rise in drug taking and selfharm. Its being imprisoned while youre in prison one inmate told inspectors. Predictions up to 2000 inmates would die in the pandemic in England and Wales without action have been avoided.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-55957048</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Germany to reinstate border controls over virus variant</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													The German government decided Thursday to temporarily reinstate border controls along its southeastern frontier after designating the Czech Republic and parts of Austria as mutation areas due to their high number of variant coronavirus cases German news agency dpa reported. The temporary border controls and certain entry restrictions will start Sunday at midnight dpa reported. Travelers coming from certain areas of Austria or the Czech Republic will have to provide proof of a negative coronavirus test in order to enter Germany a requirement that will present a hurdle for thousands of crossborder workers. It was not clear for how long the border controls would last.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/germany-to-reinstate-border-controls-over-virus-variant-government-ap-czech-republic-austria-germany-b1801060.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Covid19 school closures are widening Europes class divisions</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>The Economist</author>
													<description>
													No one is ever truly ready for lockdown. But when the Netherlands closed its schools in December the Herman Wesselink College a high school in a welloff suburb of Amsterdam was readier than most. About half its students have parents who completed higher education. Nearly all have their own bedroom to study in. The school has given its pupils laptops for years and during the first lockdown last spring switched smoothly to remote learning. The director says students have not fallen behind a whit in terms of content though their study skills have languished. 
The Mundus College a trade school in a poorer Amsterdam neighbourhood has had it rougher. About a third of its students are new immigrants or refugees. Vocational education is hard to do remotely. Classes have stayed open at halfsize under an exception for vulnerable students but it is impossible to follow socialdistancing rules for subjects like nursing says Diana Brummelhuis the director</description>
													<link>https://www.economist.com/europe/2021/02/13/covid-19-school-closures-are-widening-europes-class-divisions</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Amid variant fears Germany extends Covid19 lockdown until March 7</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>FRANCE 24 English</author>
													<description>
													Chancellor Angela Merkels government agreed Wednesday to continue a partial lockdown to fight the coronavirus pandemic until at least March 7 even as Germans grow increasingly weary of the tough restrictions. Following crunch talks with the leaders of Germanys 16 states Merkel said that the number of new Covid19 infections in Europes top economy was dropping after more than two months of shuttered schools and shops. When we look at this development we can be quite satisfied she told reporters. But she called on Germans to be patient as fears grow over more contagious virus variants first detected in Britain and South Africa.</description>
													<link>https://www.france24.com/en/europe/20210211-amid-variant-fears-germany-extends-covid-19-lockdown-until-march-7</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Irelands third virus lockdown set to last to April</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>Times of India</author>
													<description>
													Irelands virus lockdown is set to be extended until April Prime Minister Michael Martin said as the country battles to get infection rates and deaths down. Certainly we are looking at a continuation of high levels of restrictions until the Easter period Martin told state broadcaster RTE. Restaurants and pubs across Ireland have been shut since Christmas Eve and the nonessential retail retail sector has been closed since New Years Eve.</description>
													<link>https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/europe/irelands-third-virus-lockdown-set-to-last-to-april/articleshow/80847599.cms</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Retailers call for more Covid help after 22bn loss in nonfood sales</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Retailers are calling for more financial support from the government after the UKs Covid lockdowns in 2020 cost 22bn in lost nonfood sales. The high street was hit by its biggest fall in sales for nonfood stores on record  down 24  as footfall decreased by twofifths according to data from the trade body the British Retail Consortium BRC. While many retailers continued to sell online that did not make up for sales lost from shops. Profits were also affected by the cost of setting up and operating home delivery systems. Central London has been one of the hardest hit parts of the country the loss of tourists and many commuters contributing to a surge in closures of shops and other high street businesses. The number of empty units in the City of London increased by 47 last year as the number of workers and visitors slumped according to figures from analysts at Local Data Company.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/feb/11/retailers-call-for-more-covid-help-after-22bn-loss-in-non-food-sales</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>German businesses dismayed by further lockdown extension</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													The German business community expressed consternation on Thursday after Chancellor Angela Merkel and regional leaders agreed to extend the coronavirus lockdown until March 7. Politicians are leaving industry in the lurch said Andrea Belegante from the BdS lobby group that represents the restaurant and catering business adding she was stunned. Again there are no prospects again no concrete steps towards an opening strategy again only a postponement without prospects to the beginning of March.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-germany-economy/german-businesses-dismayed-by-further-lockdown-extension-idUSL8N2KH2Y5</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Merkel says lockdown wont last a day longer than necessary</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Thursday restrictions imposed to curb the spread of the coronavirus which have been extended until March 7 will not be maintained a day longer than necessary.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/healthcoronavirus-germany-merkel/merkel-says-lockdown-wont-last-a-day-longer-than-necessary-idUSS8N2IR017</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>More than 40 of Britons in poor health or struggling financially amid pandemic says UK regulator</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													More than 40 percent of Britons are struggling financially or suffering poor health a sharp increase from last year driven by the COVID19 pandemic Britains Financial Conduct Authority said on Thursday. The FCA said there are now 27.7 million adults in Britain affected by low financial resilience poor health or other recent negative life events up from 24 million in February 2020 a month before the country went into its first lockdown to fight the pandemic. Britains total population is 67 million. Having just one of the characteristics puts a consumer at greater risk of harm the FCA said in the latest findings of its regular Financial Lives survey. The survey contacted 16000 people between August 2019 and February 2020 with a follow up survey of 22000 people in October last year.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-finance-regulator/more-than-40-of-britons-in-poor-health-or-struggling-financially-amid-pandemic-says-uk-regulator-idUSKBN2AB107</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Portugal Extends COVID19 Lockdown as Overstretched Hospitals Struggle</title>
													<section>Continued Lockdown</section>
													<author>USNews.com</author>
													<description>
													Portugal extended on Thursday a nationwide lockdown until March 1 to tackle its worst surge of COVID19 infections since the pandemic began as authorities scramble to relieve pressure on overstretched hospitals. The country of just over 10 million fared better than other nations in Europe in the first wave of the pandemic but 2021 brought a devastating surge in infections and deaths in part blamed on the rapid spread of the British variant of the virus and the easing of restrictions over Christmas.</description>
													<link>https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2021-02-11/portugal-extends-covid-19-lockdown-as-overstretched-hospitals-struggle</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Manitoba agrees to purchase 2M doses of Providence Therapeutics coronavirus vaccine</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Global News</author>
													<description>
													The Manitoba government has committed to buy two million doses of a madeinCanada COVID19 vaccine currently under clinical trial. Premier Brian Pallister announced the purchase of the Providence Therapeutics COVID19 vaccine at a Thursday morning press conference. With todays announcement were taking a big step  to creating a secure stable supply of Canadianmade COVID vaccines Pallister said.

A human trial for the prospective vaccine was started in Toronto in late January. In a release Jan. 26 Providence said the vaccine dubbed PTXCOVID19B is a messenger RNA mRNA vaccine and is the first fullymade in Canada vaccine to reach the human clinical trial stage.</description>
													<link>https://globalnews.ca/news/7634493/manitoba-covid-vaccinations/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Bolivia signs deal with Chinas Sinopharm for coronavirus vaccine</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													Bolivia said on Thursday it had inked an agreement with Chinas Sinopharm locking in an initial supply of half a million doses of the companys vaccine against coronavirus by the end of February. Bolivian President Luis Arce said Chinas President Xi Jinping had agreed to sell Bolivia 400000 doses and had donated another 100000 doses to the South American nation among the poorest in the region. Bolivia has been rocked by political and social upheaval since contested elections in 2019 saw longtime president Evo Morales leave office. It has lagged behind wealthier regional neighbors in securing bilateral vaccine supply deals. The Andean nation has since signed agreements with Russia for its Sputnik V vaccine and Indias Serum Institute for AstraZenecas COVID19 shot. It has also signed a deal with the World Health Organizationbacked COVAX initiative.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-bolivia-vaccine/bolivia-signs-deal-with-chinas-sinopharm-for-coronavirus-vaccine-idUSKBN2AB1BB</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Does the coronavirus vaccine work on Bristols variant This is what Public Health England says</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Bristol Live</author>
													<description>
													Public Health England has shared a reassuring statement about Bristols coronavirus variant in relation to vaccines. Several experts have raised doubts about the mutation present in this particular variant of concern as experiments suggest it might make antibodies less effective in attacking the infection.  Speaking to ITV last night Wednesday February 10 a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies said the variant may be able to reinfect people whove been previously infected or whove been previously vaccinated. However Public Health England PHE remains optimistic about the efficacy of current vaccines  at least in the primary aim of preventing serious illness and death.Speaking to ITV last night Wednesday February 10 a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies said the variant may be able to reinfect people whove been previously infected or whove been previously vaccinated. However Public Health England PHE remains optimistic about the efficacy of current vaccines  at least in the primary aim of preventing serious illness and death.</description>
													<link>https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/coronavirus-vaccine-work-bristols-variant-4991416</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>AstraZeneca Plans to Double Covid19 Vaccine Output</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Wall Street Journal</author>
													<description>
													AstraZeneca PLC said it was fixing problems with the manufacturing of its Covid19 vaccine and expects to roughly double monthly production to 200 million doses by April as it seeks to move past a rocky start to the shots rollout. The AngloSwedish drugmaker reported strong fullyear earnings and forecast increased 2021 earnings growth. The forecast doesnt factor in sales of the pandemic vaccine it developed alongside the University of Oxford.</description>
													<link>https://www.wsj.com/articles/astrazeneca-plans-to-double-covid-19-vaccine-output-as-it-fixes-production-issues-11613048354?mod=lead_feature_below_a_pos1</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>CDC people who have received two Covid19 vaccine doses can skip quarantine</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													People who have received the full course of Covid19 vaccines can skip the standard 14day quarantine after exposure to someone with the infection as long as they remain asymptomatic US public health officials advised. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC said late on Wednesday the vaccines have been shown to prevent symptomatic Covid19 thought to play a greater role in the transmission of the virus than asymptomatic disease. Individual and societal benefits of avoiding unnecessary quarantine may outweigh the potential but unknown risk of transmission among vaccinated individuals the CDC said.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/feb/11/cdc-two-vaccine-doses-skip-quarantine-covid-19</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Roche arthritis drug reduces COVID19 deaths in trial in hospitalised patients</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Nasdaq</author>
													<description>
													Roches arthritis drug tocilizumab cuts the risk of death among patients hospitalised with severe COVID19 also shortening the time to recovery and reducing the need for mechanical ventilation results of a large trial showed on Thursday.</description>
													<link>https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/roche-arthritis-drug-reduces-covid-19-deaths-in-trial-in-hospitalised-patients-2021-02-11</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>When will kids be able to get COVID19 vaccines</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>CBS News</author>
													<description>
													Students as young as first grade might be able to get vaccinated against COVID19 by September White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci predicted in an interview published by ProPublica on Thursday. Fauci cited clinical trials now underway in the U.S. from vaccine developers Pfizer and Moderna to test the safety and efficacy of the doses in children. He had said previously that the Food and Drug Administration might allow for vaccinations in American children by the time we get to the late spring and early summer.  So far except for a handful of errors the nationwide vaccine rollout has not included children.</description>
													<link>https://www.cbsnews.com/news/covid-19-vaccine-kids-school/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Pfizer says it expects data on COVID19 vaccines for children in early part of 2021</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Pfizer says it has completed enrollment of its clinical trial of 12to15 year olds and believes it will have data in the early part of 2021. Moderna  is still recruiting children for its trial if 12to18 year olds and says it expects to have preliminary data around midyear 2021. Neither company has yet started pediatric trials testing their coronavirus vaccines in those aged 11 and younger Dr Anthony Fauci says he believes children as young as first graders may be able to receive COVID19 vaccines by the school year start in September. But pediatricians believe studies are moving too slowly and that not immunizing children threatens herd immunity and increases the risk of variants spreading</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-9250373/Pfizer-says-expects-data-COVID-19-vaccines-children-early-2021.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Government ordered to investigate link between PPE shortages and NHS COVID19 deaths</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>GP online</author>
													<description>
													A report by the House of Commons public accounts committee PAC highlighted concerns among frontline staff that guidance did not specify a high enough level of PPE to properly protect them against infection while some supplies were substandard or insectinfected. Black Asian and minority ethnic BAME staff were more likely to report experiencing PPE shortages or feeling pressured to work without adequate protection  over twice as many BAME doctors reported experiencing PPE shortages compared with white colleagues. The BMA has urged the government to learn from these terrible shortcomings and listen to the experiences of frontline workers during the first wave of the pandemic to ensure that healthcare workers are properly protected in the future.</description>
													<link>http://www.gponline.com/government-ordered-investigate-link-ppe-shortages-nhs-covid-19-deaths/article/1706987</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>COVID19 linked with new set of symptoms according to study of over a million people</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													Chills loss of appetite headache and muscle aches could be a sign of COVID19 infection according to new findings. Based on swab tests and questionnaires taken from June up until last month as part of Imperial College Londons REACT study of over one million people those with the above symptoms were more likely to test positive for the virus. This is in addition to the classic symptoms of COVID19 already included in NHS guidance which are  Fever  New persistent cough  Loss of sense of smell andor taste</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-linked-with-new-set-of-symptoms-according-to-study-of-over-a-million-people-12214163</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Bristol Covid19 variant Experts monitor new mutation</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>BBC News</author>
													<description>
													A new coronavirus variant found in Bristol may be able to infect people who have already had Covid19 or who have been vaccinated. But experts said jabs will still protect against people becoming seriously ill with the disease. The Bristol variant contains the E484K mutation also found in the South African and Brazilian variants.
Health officials in the city say getting as many people vaccinated as possible is key.
The Bristol variant has been defined by the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group Nervtag as the Kent variant with the E484K mutation.
Laboratory studies have shown that viruses with that mutation are able to escape human defences making them more efficient at evading natural and vaccinetriggered immunity.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-56024103</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>More than 40 of people suffer trauma following Covid19</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Pulse Today</author>
													<description>
													Many people suffer trauma with symptoms such as flashbacks after catching Covid19 even if they did not require clinical assistance or hospitalisation a study has found. The Imperial College London and University of Southampton study published on Tuesday looked at 13049 people with experience of coronavirus.</description>
													<link>https://www.pulsetoday.co.uk/news/clinical-areas/mental-health-and-addiction/more-than-40-of-people-suffer-trauma-following-covid-19/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>COVID19 AstraZeneca on course to roll out jab for new variants by autumn</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													AstraZeneca has said it is on course to roll out a coronavirus vaccine that is effective against new variants by the autumn. The company which has produced a COVID19 vaccine alongside University of Oxford said clinical trials for the next generation of jab would commence in the spring.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-astrazeneca-on-course-to-roll-out-jab-for-new-variants-by-autumn-12215002</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Is It Safe to Delay a Second COVID Vaccine Dose</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Scientific American</author>
													<description>
													Vaccine shortages and distribution delays are hampering efforts to curb the SARSCoV2 pandemic. So some scientists have suggested postponing the second shots of twodose vaccines to make more available for people to get their first doses. The original recommended interval was 21 days between doses for the Pfizer vaccine and 28 days for the Moderna shots the two currently authorized in the U.S. Now the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its guidance to say that people can wait up to 42 days between doses though the agency still advises individuals to stick to the initial schedule. And developers of the University of OxfordAstraZeneca vaccinewhich is authorized for use in the U.K.suggest even longer stretches are possible saying their shot performs better when its doses are spaced 12 weeks apart.</description>
													<link>https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/is-it-safe-to-delay-a-second-covid-vaccine-dose/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>AstraZeneca working to adapt Covid19 vaccine to new strains</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>Business Standard</author>
													<description>
													AstraZeneca said Thursday its working with the University of Oxford to adapt its COVID19 vaccine to protect against new strains of the virus as public health officials raise concerns about mutations that may make the virus more resistant to existing vaccines. The AngloSwedish drugmaker worked with Oxford to develop one of the first COVID19 vaccines authorized for widespread use. AstraZeneca said it hopes to cut the time needed to produce large amounts of any new vaccine to between six and nine months.</description>
													<link>https://www.business-standard.com/article/international/astrazeneca-working-to-adapt-covid-19-vaccine-to-new-strains-121021100956_1.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>C.D.C. Urges Better Masking for Increased Virus Protection</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>The New York Times</author>
													<description>
													Wearing a mask  any mask  reduces the risk of infection with the coronavirus but wearing a more tightly fitted surgical mask or layering a cloth mask atop a surgical mask can vastly increase protections to the wearer and others the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Wednesday. New research by the agency shows that transmission of the virus can be reduced by up to 96.5 percent if both an infected individual and an uninfected individual wear tightly fitted surgical masks or a clothandsurgicalmask combination.</description>
													<link>https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/02/10/world/covid-19-coronavirus</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Long Covid The illness wreaking havoc behind the pandemic</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>STV News</author>
													<description>
													Coronavirus has been dominating the headlines for a year  but behind the grim death statistics and hospital admissions a related illness has been quietly wreaking havoc on the lives of thousands of Scots. Long Covid or postcovid syndrome has been described by some as the pandemic behind the pandemic. Research is in its infancy and there is no clear treatment or cure. The postviral condition affects people who fell ill with coronavirus but did not make a full recovery within three months.</description>
													<link>https://news.stv.tv/feature/long-covid-the-pandemic-wreaking-havoc-behind-the-pandemic?top</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Kent Covid variant mutation must be taken seriously warns UK scientist</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The Kent variant of the coronavirus with a key mutation that enables the South African variant to escape some of the vaccines used against it must be taken very seriously in the UK according to a leading microbiologist. Prof Ravi Gupta of the Cambridge Institute for Therapeutic Immunology and Infectious Diseases who is a member of the governments scientific advisory body Nervtag warned that the mutated variant at the moment causing just 21 known cases should be treated with as much concern as the South African variant. The Kent variant B117 which spreads twice as fast as the original coronavirus is now dominant in the UK and is present in many countries around the world. But Public Health England has identified 21 cases of B117 that also have the E484K mutation 14 in the Bristol region four in Greater Manchester and three elsewhere. E484K is the change to the spike protein in South Africa that scientists believe is chiefly responsible for vaccines triggering a lower antibody response to infection.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/feb/10/mutated-kent-covid-variant-must-be-taken-seriously-warns-uk-scientist?CMP=share_btn_tw</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>CDC alters COVID19 quarantine guidance for vaccine recipients</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>CIDRAP</author>
													<description>
													If you have received two doses of the COVID19 vaccine and are exposed to someone with the virus you no longer have to quarantine for 14 days as long as you remain free of symptoms according to new recommendations issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC. Because the vaccines prevent symptomatic COVID19 infections and symptomatic people are thought to be more contagious the CDC said the risk of unnecessary quarantine outweighs the potential unknown risk of transmission among vaccinated people.</description>
													<link>https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2021/02/cdc-alters-covid-19-quarantine-guidance-vaccine-recipients</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Tocilizumab cuts death rate in severe COVID19 study finds</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>CIDRAP</author>
													<description>
													Hospitalized COVID19 patients given the antiinflammatory monoclonal antibody tocilizumab were less likely to die or require invasive mechanical ventilation according to preliminary results of the UK RECOVERY trial posted today on the medRxiv preprint server. Led by University of Oxford researchers the ongoing Randomised Evaluation of COVID19 Therapy RECOVERY trial involved assigning 4116 severely ill coronavirus patients to receive either intravenous tocilizumab a rheumatoid arthritis drug or usual care. Most 82 of the participants also received a systemic corticosteroid such as dexamethasone.</description>
													<link>https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2021/02/tocilizumab-cuts-death-rate-severe-covid-19-study-finds</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Merck canned its own COVID19 vaccines. Now its in talks to manufacture other companies shots</title>
													<section>Scientific Viewpoint</section>
													<author>FiercePharma</author>
													<description>
													After Merck  Co. got off to a late start in the COVID19 vaccine race and made an early exit the drug giant is in talks to aid the global vaccine manufacturing effort.
The drugmaker is actively involved in discussions with governments health agencies and other pharmaceutical companies to identify the areas of pandemic response where we can play a role including potential support for production of authorized vaccines a spokesman said via email. News of the talks comes about two weeks after Merck abandoned both its coronavirus vaccine candidatesone it acquired through its Themis buyout and the other it was studying in partnership with IAVI. Merck said the two shots had produced immune responses weaker than those prompted by natural infections as well as by other COVID19 vaccines.</description>
													<link>https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/merck-after-canning-covid-19-vaccine-programs-talks-to-help-shot-production</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>COVID19 surge takes toll on Portugals undertakers</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													Standing next to the sealed coffin of yet another COVID19 victim in Portugal funeral parlour worker Carlos Carneiro wept as the bereaved family played a record of a traditional fado song as a final goodbye. Carneiro 37 has been in the undertaking business for two decades helping people cope with loss but never felt as affected by sorrow and fear as now. Portugal fared better than others in Europe in the first wave of the pandemic in MarchApril but the new year brought a devastating surge in infections and deaths overwhelming the health service and funeral homes. More than 14700 people have died of COVID19 in Portugal with cumulative infections since the start of the pandemic at nearly 775000.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-portugal-funeral/covid-19-surge-takes-toll-on-portugals-undertakers-idUSL8N2KF5LK</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>NI records one of its lowest numbers for new daily Covid19 infections in months</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>Belfast Newsletter</author>
													<description>
													In data published in its daily Covid19 dashboard the DoH reported 253 new infections in the last 24 hours. To put this into context two weeks ago on Thursday January 28 the DoH reported 592 new infections in 24 hours and 4066 in the seven days leading up to that date. Fastforward two weeks to today Thursday February at the number of daily infections is down 57 per cent to 253 and the number of infections in the last seven days is down 42 per cent to 2377.</description>
													<link>https://www.newsletter.co.uk/health/coronavirus/ni-records-one-its-lowest-numbers-new-daily-covid-19-infections-months-3131922</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>UK announces 13494 more coronavirus cases and 678 deaths</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Department of Health data show cases fell by over a third on last Thursday and deaths down by 26 per cent. Adds to further evidence to Britain being past the worst of the second wave which wreaked havoc over winter. NHS Test  Trace showed the weekly total of cases was last week a quarter down on the week before it. And Public Health England figures show positive test rates down in all regions and ages and most boroughs</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9250773/UK-announces-13-494-coronavirus-cases-678-deaths.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Spain reports 18114 new coronavirus cases adds 643 deaths to official toll</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>EL PAS in English</author>
													<description>
													The epidemiological curve in Spain continues to fall but the coronavirus pandemic in the country is still far from a situation whereby transmission is under control. In its Wednesday report the Health Ministry reported 18114 new infections and added 643 victims to the official death toll  below the record figure since the first wave that was set on Tuesday of 766 fatalities. The slowdown in the transmission of the virus is also being seen in a fall in the 14day cumulative number of coronavirus cases per 100000 inhabitants which is now at 584. But while this downward trend is positive the third wave is still a serious threat in Spain the average incidence across the country is double the level of 250 considered to be extreme risk by the Health Ministry and the pressure on the countrys intensive care units ICUs persists. The ministry called on citizens not to lower their guard but some regions such as Madrid Andalusia Extremadura and CastillaLa Mancha are already talking about relaxing social restrictions.</description>
													<link>https://english.elpais.com/society/2021-02-11/spain-reports-18114-new-coronavirus-cases-adds-643-deaths-to-official-toll.html</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Sewage samples show COVID19 spreading fast in some French cities</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>The Peninsula Qatar</author>
													<description>
													Sewage samples from a new nationwide COVID19 monitoring system show that in some French cities traces of coronavirus are spiking above levels seen during the second wave of the epidemic in the autumn. Frances new Obepine network continuously samples city sewage in nearly 50 waste water stations and publishes charts that indicate the quantity of genetic material from the SARSCoV2 virus which causes COVID19. For cities where data are available from spring 2020 the indicator charts show a strong correlation with charts of the number of positive cases and can give early warning signals. In Lille Marseille and Strasbourg we see a strong uptick while in the Paris region the situation seems more under control said Vincent Marechal a Sorbonne university virology professor and cofounder of the Obepine network.</description>
													<link>https://thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/11/02/2021/Sewage-samples-show-COVID-19-spreading-fast-in-some-French-cities</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Tanzania experiencing surge in COVID19 cases says U.S.</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													The United States said on Wednesday that Tanzania whose president has advised citizens to shun coronavirus vaccines is experiencing a surge in COVID19 cases and its healthcare facilities could be quickly overwhelmed. In a statement the U.S. embassy in Dar es Salaam said it was aware of a significant increase in the number of COVID19 cases since January. The practice of COVID19 mitigation and prevention measures remains limited ... healthcare facilities in Tanzania can become quickly overwhelmed in a healthcare crisis.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-health-coronavirus-tanzania/tanzania-experiencing-surge-in-covid-19-cases-says-us-idUSKBN2AB0FH</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Experts urge caution as coronavirus variants spread in Japan</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>Mainichi Shimbun</author>
													<description>
													The number of people found infected with new strains of the coronavirus in Japan has topped 100 with community infections reported and major clusters seen in Saitama Prefecture north of Tokyo. The World Health Organization WHO said that one variant was up to 70 more transmissible than the original and experts in Japan are calling for people to be careful. The first variant cases were detected on Dec. 25 last year at Haneda Airport in the capital and Kansai International Airport in western Japan. Then on Jan. 18 three people whod had no contact with people who returned from overseas were confirmed to have been infected in Shizuoka Prefecture in what were believed to be cases of community transmission.</description>
													<link>https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20210211/p2a/00m/0na/025000c</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Europe tracks variant spread as COVID deaths spike in Africa</title>
													<section>Coronavirus Resurgence</section>
													<author>CIDRAP</author>
													<description>
													The head of the World Health Organization WHO European office today said that the regions 4week drop in cases is good news but warned that outbreaks and community transmission involving variants is increasing requiring a close watch and careful response decisions. At a briefing today Hans Henri Kluge MD MPH said daily case numbers and deaths are still too high. At this point the overwhelming majority of European countries remain vulnerable he said. Right now its a thin line between the hope of a vaccine and a false sense of security.</description>
													<link>https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2021/02/europe-tracks-variant-spread-covid-deaths-spike-africa</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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													<title>Fears of a Victoria lockdown after Holiday Inn cluster reaches 13</title>
													<section>New Lockdown</section>
													<author>Sky News Australia</author>
													<description>
													There are reports Victoria could enter a snap lockdown as the Holiday Inn cluster grows to 13 cases with the latest two cases announced by Victoria Health being household contacts of previous infections. It is believed the virus spread in the hotel after the use of a nebuliser by a resident in quarantine raising questions as to why the person was in the facility whilst being dependent on the device. There are also fears hotel quarantine workers are not wearing the correct PPE after a nurse was spotted at the Intercontinental Hotel without even a mask. The majority of the cases have already been linked to the highly contagious UK variant.</description>
													<link>https://www.skynews.com.au/details/_6231170248001</link>
													<pubDate>11th Feb 2021</pubDate>
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