Showing posts with label #COVID19. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #COVID19. Show all posts

Monday, January 24, 2022

Science wins vs ignorance

“Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.”

Albert Einstein

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

AFTER two years of being battered by Covid-19 that killed some 5.6 million people and infected at least 351 million people worldwide, some countries are reportedly beginning to recover from the pandemic.

This positive development became possible because of medical science, when health experts were able to produce the vaccines that finally helped stop the pandemic on its tracks, at least with good results in many countries where the vaccines have been successfully rolled out.

Most of those who have been inoculated were the ones who survived when the deadliest waves of variants slammed the humanity these past months with horrific results.

Most of those who either died or landed in the hospitals, statistics showed, were those who either refused the vaccines even if they were available, or weren’t vaccinated because of different circumstances.       

Ignorance became one of the major factors why some of those who shunned and denounced the Covid-19 vaccines suffered the worst. 

Science has triumphed over ignorance.

 

-o0o-

 

If we know nothing about medical science, the least we can do is to trust the medical experts—the scientists, instead of embracing unproven negative allusions and outlandish theories that only exacerbated our ignorance and put to risk the public health.

I believe the health experts when they exhorted us amid the pandemic that getting vaccinated against Covid-19 can lower our risk of getting and spreading the virus that causes Covid-19. 

Experts have repeatedly asserted that vaccines can also help prevent serious illness and death.

Also, all steps have been taken to ensure that vaccines are safe and effective for people ages five years and older.

If we already had Covid-19, we should still get a Covid-19 vaccine for added protection, according to the medical experts. 

When we are up to date on Covid-19 vaccination, we can resume many activities with proper precautions like mask wearing in indoor public spaces.

As simple as that. There’s no need to argue and fight if this is all about public health. 

We must show that we belong instead of being rebellious and acting geniuses over matters we actually don’t have any expertise.

 

-o0o-

 

I believe, and I never doubt from the beginning, when medical experts claimed that Covid-19 vaccination is a safer way to build protection. 

Getting a Covid-19 vaccination is a safer way to build protection than getting sick with Covid-19, we have been told by medical experts. 

Covid-19 vaccination helps protect us by creating an antibody response without us having to experience sickness, added the medical experts. It has been proven anywhere in the world that getting sick with Covid-19 can have serious consequences.

Getting sick with Covid-19 can cause severe illness or death, even in children, and we can’t reliably predict who will have mild or severe illness.

The guidelines and warnings by medical experts are very basic and easy to understand and there is no reason to oppose them not unless we can offer the best solutions other than the ones being given by the medical experts.

We may have long-term health issues after Covid-19 infection, and even those who do not have symptoms when they are initially infected can have these ongoing health problems.

People who are sick with Covid-19 may spread Covid-19 to others including friends and family who are not eligible for vaccination and people at increased risk for severe illness from Covid-19.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)

Monday, January 17, 2022

Anti-vaxxers: We are victims of bigots

 “Vaccines save lives; fear endangers them. It's a simple message parents need to keep hearing.”

Jeffrey Kluger

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

REELING from pressures and being banned from transport services, some anti-vaxxers have used the social media to “ask for your support and understanding…” insisting that “our rights and freedom are being violated.”

At least four anti-vaxxers from Iloilo have requested us through private messages to “please help us disseminate our cause in order to protect us from harassments and discrimination.”

Ramil, an event organizer from Bo. Obrero, Lapuz, Iloilo City, who is not a doctor, protested in local dialect: “They don’t listen to us. Covid is a myth meant to control, confuse, and strike fear in the hearts of the people. Vaccination is not the answer; it’s not the solution to pandemic. On the other hand, vaccination will endanger our lives if we have medical history that doen’t jibe with vaccination.”     

“Only people in the media can help us spread the real and true story behind the spread of Covid and this so-called Omicron,” submitted Rosanna, a single mother and campaign worker of a presidential candidate from the City Proper. 

“It is not true that if we vaccinate we will be protected from the pandemic. Vaccinations are part of a global business and those who push for it are the ones who benefit most like Bill Gates,” added Rosanna, who also doesn’t have any expertise or background on medical matters.

 

-o0o-

 

“Ginigipit kami. Ngaa kami lang? Ngaa gina pilit gid kami magpa-vaccine bisan indi fit sa amon gina batyag (We are being pressured. We are being forced to get a vaccine even if it is not the answer to what we feel),” bewailed Erlinda, 49, a city hall employee.  

The anti-vaxxers have been sending links of articles and videos to friends and relatives that “explain everything” to support their “predicament” in private messages.

Diri lang nila kami maintindihan (These are the only informations that they are going understand us) if they care to read the links and spare a time to watch the videos,” Ramil insisted. “The authorities are panicking; we are panicking, too, because the restrictions and bans like using the public transport system are making life difficult for us.”

They rued that they were being attacked by “bigots” who have developed “deep animosity” toward them because of their stand on the vaccination.

 

-o0o-

 

Ramil and Erlinda admitted they are fighting an uphill battle.

“Many of our relatives and friends don’t believe us and, in fact, have ignored us. Some of them argued with us angrily as if we were just inventing stories that aren’t true,” Erlinda complained in Hiligaynon.

Meanwhile, writer Michael Hiltzik admits that among all the ways that COVID-19 affects our lives, the pandemic confronts us with a profound moral dilemma: How should we react to the deaths of the unvaccinated?

Hiltzik added: “On the one hand, a hallmark of civilized thought is the sense that every life is precious. On the other, those who have deliberately flouted sober medical advice by refusing a vaccine known to reduce the risk of serious disease from the virus, including the risk to others, and end up in the hospital or the grave can be viewed as receiving their just deserts.”

That’s even more true of those who not only refused the vaccine for themselves, but publicly advocated that others do so.

It has become common online and in social media for vaccine refusers and anti-vaccine advocates to become the target of ridicule after they come down with COVID-19 and especially if they die from it.

Paano naman ang rights sang mga victims of Covid? (How about the rights of the Covid victims),” asked Charina, wife of a medical practitioner in Iloilo City, who was once affected by an extended lockdown when she was in New York.

“What they are spreading are false informations from unreliable sources and poisonous internet links with no scientific explanation and they expect us intelligent people to believe them? O c’mon,” Charina concluded.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo.—Ed)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, April 18, 2021

Faith in Filipinos

 “Faith and prayer are the vitamins of the soul; man cannot live in health without them.”

Mahalia Jackson

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

AMID the depressing situation in the Philippines where 11,101 additional COVID-19 cases were recorded on April 17, bringing the total number of infections to 926,052, let’s continue to pin our hopes on the Filipinos’ courage and resiliency.

There’s no turning back now but to bravely face the gargantuan health crisis with strong optimism and positive outlook. 

Blaming game explodes from time to time but at the end of the day, the situation demands for a collective effort to combat and neutralize the coronavirus as a nation.

No one should lose enthusiasm now that we are hopefully in the homestretch of the pandemic as health authorities expedite the vaccinations of people around the world.

Active cases in the Philippines are now 203,710 or 22 percent of the total while recoveries reached 799, pushing the total to 706,532. There were

72 deaths, bringing the total to 15,810.

We shouldn’t quarrel with our government for its apparent lousy handling of the crisis, but we must be free to criticize government officials who are incompetent and sleeping on their job. 

It’s our moral obligation to call their attention and berate them if they pretend they know everything but in reality they are inutile and part of the huge problem.

The Filipinos actually aren’t alone. 

Almost at the time time, Brazil recorded 67,636 additional confirmed cases of coronavirus in the past 24 hours, along with 2,929 deaths from COVID-19, their Health Ministry confirmed on April 17.

 

-o0o-

 

Brazil has reportedly registered more than 13.9 million cases since the pandemic began, while the official death toll has risen to 371,678, according to ministry data.

India is also on the same stage. It recorded more than 200,000 new COVID-19 cases for a third day as capital New Delhi reportedly faces an acute shortage of hospital beds.

New Delhi reportedly recorded 24,000 coronavirus cases in a 24-hour period.

In the United States, COVID-19cases and hospitalizations were surging in Pennsylvania, as state officials warned of the impact of trends seen across the country: increased travel, relaxing restrictions and the spread of more contagious virus variants.

Pennsylvania reported an average of 4,922 cases a day, up from roughly 2,515 a month ago, according to a New York Times database. Hospitalizations have also reportedly climbed by about 16 percent in the past two weeks, and the state now has one of the highest per capita daily case counts in the United States. 

Deaths, which tend to lag behind infections by weeks, have also reportedly started to increase again after plunging from the state’s high of an average of 222 in mid-January, now averaging about 37 a day.

State and national health officials worried about the spread of more contagious virus variants, particularly the B.1.1.7 variant first found in Britain. 

That variant was estimated to be about 60 percent more contagious and 67 percent more deadly than the original version.

 

-o0o-

 

If we see tremendous improvements in our fingernails at least a month after taking Vitamin D and Omega-3 Fish Oil, that means 36 of our organs are well taken care of. Thanks to medical science for the education…Enoki, chanterelle, portabella, and shitake are all types of gourmet edible mushrooms…MEANING OF A.M. AND P.M.--A.M. means ante meridiem, Latin for "before noon." P.M. means post meridiem, Latin for "after noon”…I’ll be at the Citi Field in Flushing, Queens for my first dose of Pfizer vaccine at 11:45 in the morning on April 19.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two dailies in Iloilo)

 

Wednesday, April 14, 2021

We need a direction

“A good leader takes a little more than his share of the blame, a little less than his share of the credit.”

—Arnold H. Glasow

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

THE Philippines’ failure to provide adequate assistance for the Filipinos during the pandemic is a manifestation of a poor quality in national leadership.

More than a year after the COVID-19 imbroglio, Filipinos continued to reel like chicks abandoned by their parent in the nest. 

Vaccines that should have been distributed on a massive scale months back, are so niggardly if not immediately accessible especially for regions that badly need them.

Poor supply. Poor coordination. Poor management. Poor leadership to adequately address the problem, thus the surge of cases continue to accelerate upward instead of going downward.

And while this embarrassing failure takes place, our political leaders are bickering; they swap gutter words and putrid accusations as if their next meal is at stake and they’re all that matters while people are dying in the hospitals and losing their livelihood due to economic meltdown brought by so many restrictions to move around to eke out a living.

All this boils down to poor national leadership. People have been living in fear and nothing to eat. 

People are being walloped by the pandemic while the vaccines arrive like a drizzle. 

Disenchantment and frustrations can be felt and seen in the people’s eyes but they are helpless because all they can hear are whining and angry fulminations from leaders who no longer inspire the nation.

 

-o0o-

 

LET'S SAY "OM," NOT "OUCH". Many studies have shown that meditation can ease chronic pain, but most of these have depended on lengthy--and princely--training programs. New research at the University of North Carolina shows that a few 20-minute sessions may be all we need. (goodhealth news). 

WE MUST AVOID Decabromodiphenyl ether (DECA), a flame retardant found in electronics, furniture, carpets. It can cause permanent learning and memory deficits; hearing defects; decreased sperm count in animals. The good news is that the industry has begun phasing out the chemical in December 2009.

WE MUST BEWARE OF Perchlorate, an oxidant in rocket fuel found in drinking water, soil, some vegetables. It disrupts thyroid's hormone production. Environmental groups have been urging the government to lower perchlorate levels in drinking water.

Some sources indicate that one recycled aluminum can save as much energy as it takes to run a TV set for four hours or the energy equivalent of one half gallon (1.9 liters) of gasoline.

Even if we're overweight, ditching butter for a drizzle of olive oil may help you fend off diabetes, heart disease, and other ills associated with ab flab. The fat facts: Scientists puts 20 people with big bellies on diets high in either saturated fats (the kind in red meat and dairy) or monounsaturated fats.

Lightning is often seen as white or white-yellow, although it may appear to have other colors depending on the background.

'THEY CHANGED THE WORLD'. Oprah Winfrey, "Queen of all media," topped the list of "125 Women Who Changed Our World". No. 2 Hillary Clinton 3. Mother Teresa 4. Rosa Parks 5. Eleanor Roosevelt 6. Michelle Obama 7. Amelia Earhart 8. Princess Diana 9. Marie Curie

I will have my final visit at the Elmhurst Clinic this week and will hopefully be back to normal. I missed what I used to do on a normal basis.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two dailies in Iloilo)

 

Monday, March 29, 2021

Unholy week

“He who laughs has not yet heard the bad news.”

Bertolt Brecht

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

IS the Philippines going the opposite direction in as far as the fight against the pandemic is concerned?

While more than 67 million doses of the vaccine have been administered in the United States so far as of this writing, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and there have been a reported “dramatic” decline in the number of hospital admission cases here, the Philippines’ new COVID-19 cases for March 29 reportedly breached the 10,000-mark for the first time ever, bringing the number of active infections to 115,495.

This report is so depressing and is tantamount to “unholy week” especially since many countries around the world are on the verge of inoculating a large part of their population as the pandemic entered its first year since terrorizing us all in 2020.

The Department of Health (DOH)’ COVID-19 bulletin reportedly showed there were 10,016 new infections on March 20, setting a new high for single-day increases since the pandemic arrived in the Philippines.

With this sad development, no one in the Philippines will completely feel the ambiance of a “holy week” as the total number of cases is now reportedly 731,894, with 602,213 of them listed as recoveries, with 78 patients officially recovering on March 29. 

The death toll, on the other hand, has risen to 13,186, with 16 new fatalities. 

Unholy week indeed.

Either we have incompetent health authorities or the Duterte administration was caught flat-footed and couldn’t handle the mammoth problem that has destroyed economies all over the world.

 

 -o0o-

 

Moderna, COVID-19 vaccine maker, said it was expected to ship 40 to 50 million doses per month to the US to fulfill its contracts even as it has shipped the 100 millionth dose of its vaccine to the US government, the company announced March 29.

The 200 millionth dose is reportedly expected by the end of May and the 300 millionth dose by the end of July.

“I would like to thank the millions of people who have put their confidence in Moderna’s science and our COVID-19 vaccine. We are encouraged by the fact that more than 67 million doses have been administered in the U.S. and we are humbled to know that we are helping address this worldwide pandemic with our vaccine,” Stephane Bancel, Moderna's CEO, said in a statement as reported in the U.S. media March 29.

“I would also like to thank the Moderna team, our suppliers and our U.S. manufacturing partners including Lonza and Catalent, for their tireless and extraordinary work in completing this important milestone.”

 

-o0o-

 

In the Christian church, Holy Week, the week between Palm Sunday and Easter, is observed with special solemnity as a time of devotion to the Passion of Jesus Christ. 

It is called the Great Week because great deeds were done by God during this week in the Greek and Roman liturgical books.

Used in the 4th century by St. Athanasius, bishop of Alexandria, and St. Epiphanius of Constantia the name Holy Week were Originally only on Good Friday and Holy Saturday as holy days. 

Later, Wednesday was added as the day on which Judas reportedly plotted to betray Jesus, and by the beginning of the 3rd century the other days of the week had been added.

According to Britannica, the pre-Nicene church concentrated its attention on the celebration of one great feast, the Christian Passover, on the night between Saturday and Easter Sunday morning. 

“By the later 4th century the practice had begun of separating the various events and commemorating them on the days of the week on which they occurred: Judas’s betrayal and the institution of the Eucharist on Maundy Thursday; the Passion and death of Christ on Good Friday; his burial on Saturday; and his Resurrection on Easter Sunday. Holy Week is celebrated from Sunday, March 28 to Sunday, April 4 in 2021,” explains the Britannica.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two dailies in Iloilo)

 

Monday, December 7, 2020

Let’s help fight vaccine disinformation

“Disinformation is more than just lying: it's the denial and twisting of reality in order to present some desired image to the rest of the world.”

—Will Hurd

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

BEFORE we empty our energy by helping or tolerating the spread of disinformation about the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines and sowing intrigues that would result in large-scale distrust to “the only remedy” (at least that’s how I personally believe it) to the lingering pandemic, let’s help ourselves first; let’s help fight disinformation in our own little way.

And God will do the rest, as the saying goes.

We can’t entrust everything to the Divine Providence while fomenting falsehood and rejecting right away something that the medical scientists and experts have worked so hard to rescue mankind from the mysterious virus that threatens to decimate a large portion of the world  population if the situation is not remedied soon.

We are also glad that Facebook has started removing false claims about COVID-19 vaccines, its latest move to counter a tide of coronavirus-related online misinformation.

As it promised on December 3 and as the first COVID-19 vaccines were set to be rolled out, the social network has taken down any Facebook or Instagram posts with false information about the vaccines that have been debunked by public health experts.

The policy was reportedly applied to remove virus misinformation that could lead to “imminent physical harm.”

“Since it’s early and facts about COVID-19 vaccines will continue to evolve, we will regularly update the claims we remove based on guidance from public health authorities as they learn more,” wrote the giant tech company.

 

-o0o-

 

Marisa Lati of the Washington Post has succinctly put it, “Living through a pandemic in the Internet age means misinformation can sometimes spread more rapidly than facts. Faced with a deluge of claims about the coronavirus and the illness it causes, covid-19, you may be wondering whether gargling with saltwater is a cure or if the pathogen was man-made in a Chinese laboratory.”

Below are some of the common disinformation about the coronavirus emphasized by Lati: 

—Masks help prevent the spread of the coronavirus. Several studies support the theory that face coverings reduce the risk of infection. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, testified before the Senate in September that masks are “the most important, powerful public health tool we have” for combating the pandemic.

Part of the confusion about face coverings seems to have come from President Trump’s false claim in October that 85 percent of people diagnosed with COVID-19 wore masks—a mischaracterization of a CDC study.

—There are no known cures for COVID-19. While a cure for COVID-19 would be more than welcome, no drug or other treatment has been found to eliminate the illness. 

Since the coronavirus emerged in China late last year, myriad false rumors have circulated about potential cures, ranging from drinking bleach to snorting cocaine. 

The Food and Drug Administration has issued nearly 150 warning letters to companies fraudulently promising a cure, treatment, prevention method or diagnostic tool.

In reality, “the pharmaceutical toolbox for physicians to treat covid-19 is seriously restricted,” as The Washington Post’s Christopher Rowland put it in September. The FDA so far has authorized only two drugs for the illness: remdesivir, for in-hospital use, and bamlanivimab, for people with mild or moderate symptoms.

—The coronavirus is more deadly than influenza. Unfortunately, the coronavirus is much more lethal than seasonal flu. 

About 2 percent of diagnosed coronavirus cases are lethal, compared with 0.1 percent of diagnosed flu cases.

For both illnesses, experts believe that far more people are infected than receive official diagnoses—meaning the true death rates are probably much lower. 

The CDC estimates that, including people who have been infected with the coronavirus but didn’t know it, the U.S. death rate is around 0.65 percent. 

The flu’s infection fatality rate may be about 0.05 or 0.025 percent, epidemiologists estimate.

There’s also no truth to the idea that doctors are inflating the coronavirus death toll by indiscriminately attributing deaths to COVID-19. 

To determine a cause of death, physicians consider the patient’s infection, response to treatment and medical history. They also look at whether underlying conditions, which exist in most people who die of COVID-19, contributed to the death.

—Staying home, using hand sanitizer and washing our hands more often are healthy. None of those behaviors, which are recommended for preventing the spread of the coronavirus, pose a risk to our immune systems, despite claims that they do.

The incorrect notion that limiting time with people outside our households could damage our ability to fight diseases may stem from the “hygiene hypothesis,” or the idea that young children who are exposed to germs are less likely to develop allergies and autoimmune conditions. 

But this concept does not apply to adults, whose immune systems have already been strengthened by exposure to bacteria, according to MIT Medical, a clinic at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

While the hygiene hypothesis is probably also the cause of the false assumption that hand sanitizer and hand-washing weaken our immune systems, scientists at the Cleveland Clinic say there is no evidence that temporarily increasing these hygiene routines is damaging.

—Urging high-risk people to stay home and letting everyone else live normal lives would not “solve” the crisis.

Putting aside the moral and ethical questions at play, isolating the vulnerable and allowing other people to go about their usual business has significant pitfalls. 

Washington Post’s Megan McArdle outlined some of the issues, including that hospitals would probably still be overwhelmed by lower-risk people and that it is nearly impossible to keep high-risk people from interacting with others.

While many younger people may have asymptomatic or mild cases of COVID-19, the illness can be serious for others. 

Patients 49 and younger made up 23.1 percent of U.S. COVID-19 hospitalizations in the week ending Nov. 21, CDC data shows. And while people with underlying conditions are much more likely to be hospitalized or die, CDC figures from June show that 7.6 percent of patients without underlying conditions were hospitalized.

 

-o0o-

 

Francesco Rocca, president of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, said recently in a virtual briefing to the UN Correspondents Association that governments and institutions needed to implement measures to combat growing mistrust and misinformation.

"To beat COVID-19, we also need to defeat the parallel pandemic of mistrust that has consistently hindered our collective response to this disease, and that could undermine our shared ability to vaccinate against it," he said.

The leader of the world's largest humanitarian aid network said his organization shares "the sense of relief and optimism" that developments in Covid-19 vaccines bring. 

But governments and institutions "have to build trust in the communities" where misinformation has taken root, he added.

There is growing hesitancy about vaccines around the world, particularly the Covid-19 vaccine, said Rocca. He cited a study by Johns Hopkins University in 67 countries, which found that vaccine acceptance had declined significantly between July and October of this year.

"This high level of mistrust has been evident since the very beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic and have clearly facilitated transmission of the virus at all levels," he said.

"We believe that the massive coordinated effort that will be needed to roll out the Covid vaccine in an equitable manner, needs to be paralleled by equally massive efforts to proactively build and protect trust.”

Rocca's comments echoed the words of scientists across the world.

Last month, British scientists warned that the United Kingdom may not meet the threshold of vaccine uptake to protect the community because of misinformation, mistrust and public hesitancy to take a coronavirus vaccine.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, is a former editor of two dailies in Iloilo, Philippines)

 

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

I’ll take the vaccine

 “Misinformation or distrust of vaccines can be like a contagion that can spread as fast as measles.”   

— Theresa Tam

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

“WILL you be taking the COVID-19 vaccine?” asked a survey in the United States undertaken by KTUL Channel 8.

Even after being tested negative in three COVID-19 tests in the last three months in New Jersey (once) and New York City (twice), my answer was a quick “yes, I will take the vaccine as soon as it is available.”

Will you take the vaccine from Pfizer or Moderna?

“Both if necessary—one after the other,” was my second answer.

Like the swings at a playground, says the KTUL Channel 8, when it comes to feelings about a COVID-19 vaccine it's not uncommon for people to waver back and forth.

ALEX P. VIDAL: Tested negative 3 times

“We've been waiting on one or more COVID-19 vaccines for months, unsure of not only when they would arrive but how effective they would be when they did,” C/Net’s Dale Smith observed.

“Now it appears the two vaccines that will most likely be the first to receive Food and Drug Administration authorization might get here before 2021. Not only that, but clinical trials have demonstrated both are over 90 percent effective in preventing COVID-19 infections.” 

That means at least nine out of 10 people who receive those vaccines will likely not contract COVID-19, even if they're exposed to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the disease, after being inoculated, Smith surmised.

StatNews reported that Moderna, joined by U.S. government scientists, announced November 16 that their mRNA vaccine candidate was 94.5 percent effective in preventing Covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, according to an interim analysis of a 30,000-patient clinical trial. 

The news comes exactly one week after Pfizer and BioNTech said their respective Covid-19 vaccine candidate, also created using mRNA technology, was more than 90 percent effective in its own 60,000-patient clinical trial. 

 

-o0o-

 

Here’s what we know—and still need to learn—about the two most advanced Covid-19 vaccines and how they might reshape the pandemic that has killed 1.3 million people worldwide and infected at least 54.5 million, according to StatNews.

It’s too early to tell for certain, but the overall efficacy of the vaccines appears to be similar, based on the data disclosed to date. 

This isn’t altogether surprising, since the Moderna and the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine candidates are reportedly both based on the same kind of technology.

Based on data disclosed November 16, “the Moderna vaccine appears to have been protective in important subsets of participants—the elderly and people from communities of color, the latter of which make up 37 percent of the volunteers in Moderna’s trial.” 

Moderna also released data about the number of participants who developed severe Covid-19. 

There were 11 cases of severe disease, all of them in the placebo group. The elderly often respond less robustly to vaccines and are more vulnerable to having severe cases of Covid-19, if infected.

The clinical trial conducted by Pfizer and BioNTech reportedly included the same subpopulations of participants, but specific results have not been disclosed.

 

-o0o-

 

 

‘VACCINES’ safety profile encouraging.’ So far, both vaccines appear to be generally tolerable—but by no means painless, added the StatNews. In its announcement November 16, Moderna said it observed a few short-lived severe side effects in volunteers, including fatigue, muscle pain, and headache. 

None required hospitalization. 

For its part, Pfizer said last week that its independent data monitors reported no serious safety concerns. 

In an earlier update from its Phase 1 clinical trial, Pfizer’s vaccine led to mild or moderate fever and pain at the site of injection, side effects that resolved over time, the company said.

But the most important safety data won’t come until patients have been followed for months and even years. 

Pfizer and Moderna have promised to collect and disclose that information in time.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, was a former editor of two dailies in Iloilo, Philippines)

 

 

 

Thursday, September 24, 2020

‘We sink or we swim together’

“I'm tired of being behind this virus. We've been behind this virus from day one. We underestimated this virus. It's more powerful, it's more dangerous than we expected.”

Andrew Cuomo

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

WHILE the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency 6 (PDEA-6) has cleared 64 additional Western Visayas villages of illegal drugs through the “barangay drug-clearing deliberation process”, more drug traffickers have been arrested these past weeks and millions of pesos worth of shabu have been seized in Iloilo and Negros in simultaneous raids.

In another news, authorities suspect that a Chinese group has been largely responsible for the continued proliferation of illegal drugs in Western Visayas despite the absence of known local drug lords believed to have been neutralized during the Philippine National Police (PNP)’s all-out war against illegal drugs before the pandemic.  

If this is true, even if most villages in Western Visayas will submit their applications and folders in compliance with the parameters of the Barangay Drug Clearing Program mandated by Dangerous Drugs Board (DDB) Regulation No. 3 series of 2017, there is no assurance that trafficking of illegal drugs will be minimized if not stopped.

As long as the alleged Chinese group remains scot-free and continues to clandestinely operate without being detected, the “total war” policy of the Duterte administration against illegal drugs will be useless. 

 

-o0o-

 

UNVEILING a plan to have two billion doses of coronavirus vaccine available by the end of 2021, the United Nations (UN) health agency has described coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) as “unprecedented global crisis that demands an unprecedented global response.”

UN reported September 21 that roughly 64 per cent of the global population lives in a nation that has either committed to, or is eligible to join, the coronavirus Vaccines Global Access Facility, or COVAX, which enables participating Governments to spread the risk and costs of vaccine development and provide their populations with early access to vaccines. 

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organization (WHO), said working together through the COVAX Facility “is not charity, it’s in every country’s best interest. We sink or we swim together.”

Speaking at a press briefing with the international vaccine alliance GAVI, and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), the WHO chief said that commitment agreements have been secured and the COVAX Facility would begin signing contracts with vaccine manufacturers and developers.

 

-o0o-

 

The overarching goal of the COVAX Facility is to ensure that all countries have access to vaccines at the same time, and that priority is given to those most at risk, according to the WHO chief.

“The COVAX Facility will help to bring the pandemic under control, “save lives, accelerate the economic recovery and ensure that the race for vaccines is a shared endeavor, not a contest that only the rich can win”, he upheld. “Vaccine nationalism will only perpetuate the disease and prolong the global recovery”.

So far, $3 billion have been invested in the ACT Accelerator – only a tenth of the required $35 for scale-up and impact.

Tedros stressed that $5 billion is needed “immediately to maintain momentum and stay on track for our ambitious timelines”.

“Our challenge now is to take the tremendous promise of the ACT Accelerator and COVAX to scale”, he said, adding, “we are at a critical point and we need a significant increase in countries’ political and financial commitment”. 

The WHO chief cited estimates suggesting that once an effective vaccine has been distributed, and international travel and trade is fully restored, “the economic gains will far outweigh” the $38 billion investment required for the Accelerator.

“This isn’t just the right thing to do, it’s the smart thing to do”, he spelled out.

“COVAX is now in business,” said Gavi CEO Seth Berkley. “Governments from every continent have chosen to work together, not only to secure vaccines for their own populations, but also to help ensure that vaccines are available to the most vulnerable everywhere”.

“With the commitments we’re announcing today for the COVAX Facility, as well as the historic partnership we are forging with industry, we now stand a far better chance of ending the acute phase of this pandemic, once safe, effective vaccines become available”.

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two dailies in Iloilo)

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Our faith and ‘berdemic’

“If you have a particular faith or religion, that is good. But you can survive without it.”

Dalai Lama

 

By Alex P. Vidal

 

WE will spend the last four months of 2020, the four “ber” months—September, October, November, December—or we will call them the “berdemic” months because of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), with no clear path to the pandemic’s ending and the people’s suffering.

Since the pandemic terrorized the world early this year until as of  August 29, the total coronavirus cases stands at 25,164,818; deaths: 846,757; and recovered: 17,507,516.

We’re hoping the number of death will not climb to one million by December 31.

We are also wishing and praying that miracles will arrive in the “berdemic” months and that the magic vaccine (aside from Russia’s untested Sputnik V) will be introduced before 2021, which many experts doubt will happen.

Many of those who are already sick after being infected with the virus and are in the hospitals might not make it in 2021. We pray that they will survive.

Our atheist friend in Brooklyn, 86-year-old Vera, once told me before the lockdown in March that even if some people don’t believe in God, “there’s no harm in trying to bombard heaven with prayers especially if we are fighting an invisible enemy.”

 

-o0o-

 

Again, there’s no harm in strengthening our faith and praying for our survival in these critical moments even if some cynics will claim “our faith has nothing to do with medical science or the spread of pandemic.”

Research shows that religion can help people cope with adversity, according to the American Psychological Association (APA), by:

—Encouraging them to reframe events through a hopeful lens. Positive religious reframing can help people transcend stressful times by enabling them to see a tragedy as an opportunity to grow closer to a higher power or to improve their lives.

—Fostering a sense of connectedness. Some people see religion as making them part of something larger than themselves. 

This can happen through prayer or meditation, or through taking part in religious meetings, listening to spiritual music or even walking outside.

—Cultivating connection through rituals. Religious rituals and rites of passage can help people acknowledge that something momentous is taking place. 

These events often mark the beginning of something, as is the case with weddings, or the end of something, as is the case with funerals. They help guide and sustain people through life’s most difficult transitions.

It is extremely important that people use their beliefs in a way that makes them feel empowered and hopeful,” says Dr. Thomas Plante, a professor of psychology at Santa Clara University. 

“Because it can be remarkably helpful in terms of managing stress during times like these.”

 

-o0o-

 

Unfortunately, religious beliefs may also undermine healing during stressful times, added the APA. These negative religious expressions include:

—Feeling punished by God or feeling angry toward a higher being. Trauma and tragedy can challenge conceptions of God as all-loving and protective. As a result, some people struggle in their relationship with God and experience feelings of anger, abandonment or being punished by a higher power.

—Putting it all “in God’s hands.” When people engage in “religious deferral,” they believe God is in charge of their well-being and may not take the necessary steps to protect themselves. One example of this deferral is church leaders who say God will protect their congregations as they hold church services in defiance of physical distancing guidelines aimed at reducing the spread of COVID-19.

—Falling into moral struggles. People can have difficulty squaring their behavior with their moral and spiritual values. For example, health-care providers who are on the front lines of treating coronavirus patients may describe the anguish they feel as they are being forced to decide how to allocate limited life-sustaining resources, decisions that put them in the uncomfortable role of playing God.  

(The author, who is now based in New York City, used to be the editor of two local dailies in Iloilo)