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01:09
Italian doctors find link between Covid-19 and inflammatory disorder
Ian shows
Doctors in Italy reported the first clear evidence of a link between Covid-19 and a rare but serious inflammatory disorder that has required some children to undergo life-saving treatment in intensive care units.
The mysterious condition emerged last month when NHS chiefs issued an alert to doctors after hospitals admitted multiple children with a mix of toxic shock and symptoms seen in an inflammatory disorder known as Kawasaki disease.
On Tuesday, doctors at Evelina London Children’s Hospital announced the death of a 14-year-old boy, the first known death from the condition in Britain. Between 75 and 100 children are receiving treatment across the country. Typical symptoms include fever, rashes, red eyes, chapped lips, and abdominal pain.
Doctors suspected from the start that the coronavirus played a role in the new disorder by triggering an excessive immune reaction in children, but there was no evidence that the two were linked.
Organizations conducting investigations into Covid-19 may be targeted by hackers linked to the Chinese government, according to the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.
No agency cited any specific examples on Wednesday, the AP reports, but warned that institutions and companies involved in vaccine, treatment and testing work for the new coronavirus should take additional security measures to protect the data and be aware of the threat. potential.
“China’s efforts to target these sectors pose a significant threat to our nations’ response to Covid-19,” said a statement from the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. USA “This announcement is intended to raise awareness for research institutions and the American public and to provide resources and guidance for those who may be targeted.”
It comes amid intense tensions between the two countries over the source of the outbreak and complaints from the Trump administration that China failed to adequately alert the world to the danger posed by the new coronavirus.
The warning also echoes long-standing complaints from the United States that China has engaged in wholesale theft of technology and trade secrets to build its economy.
Updated
00:49
In the USA In the U.S., the coronavirus could sweep camps where firefighters are stationed, ready to fight forest fires, according to a federal document obtained by The Associated Press.
From the AP:
The United States Forest Service’s draft risk assessment predicts that even in the best-case scenario, with social distancing followed and many tests and protective gear available, nearly two dozen firefighters could become infected with COVID-19 in a camp with hundreds of people who come to fight a fire that burns for months.
The worst case? More than 1,000 infections.
Forest Service officials have declined to answer questions about the document in addition to saying it is outdated and redone. They did not immediately respond to additional questions Wednesday.
“The report is being reviewed and updated with the latest data and is not ready to share,” the agency said in an email Monday.
The Forest Service declined to publish a copy of the draft or say what changes are being made. The AP obtained the document from an official who has access to it and did not want to be identified.
00:40
Moscow says it attributed more than 60% of coronavirus deaths in April to other causes
The city of Moscow said on Wednesday that it attributed the deaths of more than 60% of coronavirus patients in April to other causes, as it defended what it said was the best way and Russia counted the number of people killed by the new virus. , Reuters reports.
At 242,271, Russia has the second highest number of confirmed cases in the world after the United States, something it attributes to a massive testing program that it says has conducted nearly 6 million tests.
But with 2,212 coronavirus deaths, Russia also has one of the lowest death rates in the world. Moscow, the epicenter of the country’s outbreak, accounts for 1,232 of those deaths.
The disparity between the high number of cases and the relatively low number of deaths has led critics of the Kremlin and various Western and Russian media outlets to question the veracity of Russia’s official death statistics.
Data released over the weekend shows that the total number of deaths recorded in Moscow increased sharply in April compared to the same month last year and was also significantly higher than the number officially confirmed as caused by the new virus, leading to new suspicions.
The Moscow Health Department acknowledged in a statement on Wednesday that the number of deaths in April, 11,846, had been 1,841 higher than the same month last year and nearly tripled the number of people registered as killed by the virus.
But he flatly denied that he had been dishonestly lowering the death toll from coronavirus in the Russian capital. Tatyana Golikova, Russia’s health minister, has also denied any falsification of the statistics.
00:31
Summary
Hello and welcome to pandemic news coverage from around the world.
I am Helen Sullivan, with you for the next few hours. Get in touch on Twitter @helenrsullivan.
The coronavirus could become endemic like HIV, the World Health Organization said, warning against any attempt to predict how long it would continue to circulate and calling for a “massive effort” to counter it.
Meanwhile, Trump has rejected Dr. Anthony Fauci’s comments in testimony in the United States Senate about the dangers of reopening the economy too soon, and told reporters at the White House, “For me it is not an answer. acceptable, especially when it comes to schools. ”
Meanwhile, Russia, with the second highest number of infections worldwide, has one of the lowest official death tolls.
The city of Moscow said on Wednesday that it had attributed the deaths of more than 60% of coronavirus patients in April to other causes, as it defended what it said was the best way and Russia counted the number of people killed by the new virus. More on this shortly.
Here are the key recent developments:
- At least 4.3 million people are known to have been infected with the coronavirus worldwide, while at least 295,671 people have died. The figures compiled by Johns Hopkins University are likely to be a great understatement of the true scale of the pandemic.
- Trump says Fauci’s warning about reopening the economy too early as “is not an acceptable response.” United States President Donald Trump on Wednesday described as unacceptable a warning given by the United States’ top infectious disease expert, Anthony Fauci, this week about the dangers of reopening the economy too quickly. “For me, it is not an acceptable response, especially when it comes to schools,” Trump told reporters at the White House, noting that he was surprised by Fauci’s response to lawmakers in testimony before the United States Senate on Tuesday.
- The virus can never be eradicated – WHO. The coronavirus that causes Covid-19 could become endemic like HIV, the World Health Organization said, warning against any attempt to predict how long it would continue to circulate and calling for a “massive effort” to counter it.
- All African countries are now affected by the outbreak, after Lesotho announced its first case. The virus was detected in one of the 81 people tested after arriving last week from Saudi Arabia and neighboring South Africa, the Lesotho health ministry said.
- The former UK spymaster dismisses the Wuhan lab conspiracy theory. In the UK, the former director-general of the domestic intelligence service poured cold water on White House speculation that Covid-19 may have arisen through a leak from a coronavirus research laboratory in the Chinese city of Wuhan. .
- Public Health England passes antibody test – report. Public Health England (PHE) reportedly approved an antibody test kit, the first to receive such support. The kit is made by Swiss pharmaceutical company Roche Holding AG, Daily Telegraph reported. The newspaper added that it understands that the UK Department of Health and Social Care is in negotiations with Roche to buy millions of kits.
- Afghanistan reached 5,000 confirmed cases, as the country’s health ministry warned that reducing blockades would bring a “catastrophe”. Of 619 suspicious patients examined in the last 24 hours, 259 tested positive, bringing the total number of infections to 5,226. The death toll reached 132, after five more patients died overnight. The number of recoveries is 648.
- Sweden announced it would hire up to 10,000 more care workers to address deficiencies in elder care exposed by the pandemic. About half of the 3,460 Swedish coronavirus-related deaths occurred among nursing home residents, and another quarter among those receiving home care.
- Mexico said it would reopen parts of the economy after 51 days of closure, despite the country reporting its highest number of daily deaths so far. Mexico has confirmed 1,992 new cases and 353 deaths, bringing the total number of deaths to 3,926 and the total number of cases to 38,324.
- Hotels and restaurants across Europe have been asked to impose physical distance among guests to allow Europeans to take their annual summer holidays. The EU executive called for a “gradual and careful reduction of blockade restrictions across the continent.”
- The automaker Ford announced plans to restart production, including at two factories in the UK.. Work will resume on May 18 at the company’s engine plants at Dagenham in Essex and Bridgend in South Wales. The move, along with the reopening of the Valencia engine plant in Spain, will open all of Ford’s European manufacturing facilities.
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