Coronavirus Covid-19

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Top Stories
'It really stresses me out': NSW Premier reveals key worry ahead of decision on lockdown

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian says there are "pleasing" signs the lockdown is working, but compliance with public health orders in the coming days will be critical in the decision on whether to lift stay-at-home orders.



The UK shortened the time between AZ jabs. Here are the pros and cons for Australia
Could we cut the time between the first and second dose of AstraZeneca from 12 weeks to eight weeks? We look at the pros and cons of getting the shot early.



'It was horrendous': The deadly disease outbreak that saw Brisbane streets run with blood
A gruesome outbreak in a Brisbane suburb in 1994 sparked a hunt that might help us uncover the origins of COVID-19.



Live: Hundreds of GPs join Pfizer rollout
The Pfizer vaccine will be administered by GPs across Australia today, as hundreds of doctors join the rollout for the 40- to 59-year-old age group. Follow live.



Unvaccinated aged care staff labelled 'a disgrace' after three residents at Sydney nursing home get COVID-19
Three residents at a Sydney aged care home where at least one unvaccinated worker tested positive for COVID-19 last week have contracted the virus, with one of their daughters describing the situation as "a disgrace".



Finance Minister promises Pfizer vaccine for under-40s 'within months' but refuses to set date
Liberal senator Simon Birmingham says younger Australians will get access to the Pfizer jab soon, but the Labor leader says his inability to set a timeline shows government "incompetence".



Australian Ben O'Connor produces the ride of his career, winning Sunday's Alps stage in the Tour de France
Ben O'Connor was part of an early breakaway group and proved to be the strongest on a day which featured monster climbs and a mountain-top finish.



Julia Banks says Scott Morrison 'wanted me silenced' when she quit the Liberal Party
Former Liberal MP Julia Banks alleges she was subjected to an unwanted sexual advance at work from a cabinet minister in the Turnbull government, and warned that similar inappropriate touching by other men is probably happening "every single day in Parliament House".



Top-performing super funds revealed as experts weigh fees versus performance
Excluding insurance premiums, Australians spend more than $30 billion in superannuation fees every year — about double what we spend on electricity bills. Here are some tips on how to find a lower-fee, higher-performing fund.



Ride-hailing company Didi ordered off app stores after China's regulator launches investigation
The country's cyberspace regulator orders Didi to be removed from app stores, days after launching an investigation into the company, as China clamps down on home-grown technology giants.




talk about,never ending huh
why!!!

irony is
likely,only just begun
why 5 !!!
 

Hello Nature readers,
Today we explore the status of Russia’s Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine, hear a warning about empty reproducibility gestures and discover that male dolphins learn their teammates’ names.


Vials of the Sputnik COVID-19 vaccine pass along a production line at a manufacturing facility near Saint Petersburg, Russia. (Olga Maltseva/AFP/Getty)
Sputnik V vaccine is safe and effective
Russia’s Sputnik V sparked controversy when it became the first COVID-19 vaccine to be authorized by any nation, before early-stage trial results had been published. It has since been approved in 67 countries, including Brazil, Hungary, India and the Philippines, but has not yet garnered World Health Organization approval. Mounting evidence from Russia and other countries now suggests that it is safe and effective — but questions remain about the quality of surveillance for possible rare side effects.

Nature | 10 min read

thinking
would be?is
ty[pical of western political leaders or media who seldom say anything positive re china/russias accomplishments
 


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What to know as climate change drives extreme heat
As heatwaves smash records and claim lives - including in unexpected places like Canada and the U.S. Pacific Northwest - climate scientists explain what's happening and why




Abu Dhabi's lightning-fast COVID-19 scanners raise privacy fears
The new technology, which is said to measure a person's electromagnetic waves, has digital rights advocates worried about what data it can access





Broken by Beirut blast, Lebanon's LGBT+ community turn to chemsex
Chemsex parties in Lebanon risk re-fuelling epidemics of HIV among gay men, with apps like Grindr used to seek out drug-heightened and often anonymous and unprotected sex





Uganda helps farmers grow trees for money in bid to reverse forest loss
The country is curbing encroachment by paying farmers to grow trees for firewood and timber, but environmentalists say outside of plantations, the forest is still shrinking





As Hungary's anti-LGBT law takes effect, some teachers are defiant
Hungarian teachers say that they will continue to discuss LGBT+ issues with students, in defiance of a new law





U.N. warns excluding women from top jobs threatens COVID-19 recovery
Women risk being overlooked in coronavirus responses with more than 10% of official taskforces made up entirely of men, finds U.N. analysis





'Scared to be openly gay': Fear in Spain after man beaten to death
Spain's LGBT+ community is fighting back against a wave of recent homophobic and transphobic attacks





U.S. states making 2021 moves on abortion rights and access
With abortion rights under attack in many states, here's a roundup of some of the biggest developments





Rules for intersex athletes similar to apartheid, says Cameroon minister-counsellor
World Athletics is discriminating against women with intersex variations by requiring them to reduce high testosterone levels, said a Cameroon minister at the United Nations





SPECIAL REPORT-China's gene giant harvests data from millions of women
One of the world's most popular prenatal tests is collecting women's gene data and using it to carry out research




* Feel free to republish as long as credit is given to the Thomson Reuters Foundation



Opinion

OPINION: Before COP26, rich nations must meet climate finance promise
Developing countries need clarity and confidence now that the $100 billion a year pledged to help them tackle climate change will be delivered




OPINION: When my school fell short I began teaching climate change myself
Most children my age don’t understand the climate crisis or the part they can play. Climate education in schools can change that




OPINION: Why G20 leaders must put cities at the heart of COVID-19 recovery plans
Urban areas are on the frontlines of the COVID-19 and climate crises. Now G20 leaders must listen and learn from them



what an embarrasment life is currently
why!
and dnt blame china/russia

cina,beig a/the possible source,doesent mean anythig,,youd expect huankind to have gtten on top of it by now
 
Will COVID become a disease of the young?
Countries with high rates of vaccination, such as Israel, the United States and the United Kingdom, are experiencing an ever-increasing proportion of new infections in younger, unvaccinated age groups. The overall risk of severe disease in children remains low. But the trend highlights the possibility that subsequent waves of community spread could be driven by young people, especially in the presence of new, more transmissible variants. Some nations have responded by offering vaccination to ever-younger groups — Israel vaccinates children as young as 12. Others question whether those doses are needed more urgently elsewhere.

Nature | 4 min read

Features & opinion
Why research managers need to be researchers, too

Research managers are essential to a healthy research culture, argues a Nature editorial. But for maximal benefit, more of these academic administrators need to get involved in the scholarly aspect of research.

Nature | 3 min read
Read more: ‘We’re problem solvers’: research administrators offer guidance to working scientists (Nature | 8 min read)
 
gerussing
folk social distancing,mebeee usa
best of everything,to all

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Delta poses gravest threat to the unvaccinated

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A vaccine center sits empty in Pennsylvania in early July while the delta variant lends greater urgency to the need for people to get vaccinated against COVID-19. Photo by Ben Hasty/MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images

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More than 4 million people have officially died from COVID-19 globally. The actual number is almost certainly much higher. As wealthy nations with high vaccination rates like the United States begin emerging from the pandemic, the disease is accelerating in other parts of the world. Vaccinations are our best tool for protecting people against COVID-19, but rollout has been slow in poorer, less developed countries, where unvaccinated residents are particularly vulnerable to the more transmissible delta variant.

International concern is continuing to grow over delta and its possible effects in places with low COVID-19 vaccination rates. Recent federal data shows that more than half of all new cases in the U.S. were traced to the variant, which is believed to be passed more easily to others than any that has come before it. Here’s what we know about delta so far, and why health experts say it’s more important than ever to get vaccinated.

Evidence so far suggests that many existing COVID-19 vaccines remain effective against delta, and continue to protect people against severe disease and death. Recent studies found that Pfizer and AstraZeneca’s respective shots prompt a strong immune response against delta, and reaffirmed that those who are only partially vaccinated are much less protected. Experts emphasize the importance of getting a larger portion of the world vaccinated as quickly as possible to reduce the possibility that other alarming variants will arise over time.

Pfizer is set to seek authorization for a third dose of its COVID-19 vaccine in the U.S., according to the Associated Press. The company said a third shot may improve recipients’ immune response to the coronavirus — particularly against the delta variant — by offering a boost to vaccine-generated immunity, which naturally wanes over time. Ongoing studies are in the process of determining whether and when such a booster will be necessary.


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The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week announced that fully vaccinated teachers and students can go maskless in schools. The agency is emphasizing a flexible approach that takes local circumstances into account, allowing schools to make decisions accordingly. But it stopped short of recommending that districts require COVID-19 shots for staff and eligible students, nor has it offered guidance as to how administrators can keep track of who is fully immunized, according to the Associated Press.

Vaccination rates are lower on average among Black and Latino people in the U.S., a reality that’s frequently attributed to vaccine hesitancy in those communities. But according to The Conversation, it’s often underpinned by a series of other, underdiscussed factors. Those can range from lack of access to transportation or key information on how to get vaccinated in the first place to “vaccine indifference,” which can occur among those who do not believe that getting vaccinated is a necessary health precaution.

Organizers this week decided to bar spectators from a majority of the upcoming Olympic games in Tokyo, Japan, although some stadiums beyond the capital city will be permitted to operate at 50-percent capacity. Cases are currently on the rise in the Tokyo area, and between just 15 to 20 percent of people in Japan are fully vaccinated.

Sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson, once poised for Olympic gold, will not be running in Tokyo this summer. The news has drawn a sense from supporters that this young, Black track phenom has been wronged by sporting rules on pot that are overdue for a change. USA Track and Field announced that she had not been selected for the U.S. relay team on Tuesday, after she was disqualified earlier from the 100-meter race due to a positive test.

Ask the science desk:

“Ask the science desk” is off this week, but remember to send us your burning science questions — pandemic related or otherwise — at sciencedesk@newshour.org




What we’re reading, watching and listening to this week:

Car culture disproportionately kills Black Americans. The pandemic made things worse. (Grist)

  • “The number of Black people who died in traffic collisions rose by nearly a quarter last year.”
A massive water recycling proposal could help ease drought. (Wired)

  • “Members of Congress from Western states are pushing for $750 million to turn wastewater into pure water. Here’s how that works.”
Sea otters stay warm thanks to leaky mitochondria in their muscles. (Science News)

  • “The smallest mammal in the ocean doesn’t rely on blubber or a large body to keep toasty.”
A week after the Pacific Northwest heat wave, study shows it was ‘almost impossible’ without global warming. (Inside Climate News)

  • “The extreme temperatures have shaken scientists’ fundamental understanding of heat waves and triggered concerns about a climate tipping point.”
As space billionaires take flight, 'the right stuff' for space travel enters a new era. (Space.com)

  • “Billionaires are going to space. What does that mean for astronauts, and for the rest of us?"
‘Social’ mitochondria, whispering between cells, influence health. (Quanta Magazine)

  • “Mitochondria appear to communicate and cooperate with one another, both within and between cells. Biologists are only just beginning to understand how and why.”
Until next time,

Bella Isaacs-Thomas
Megan McGrew
News assistant on the PBS NewsHour’s science desk

Was this email forwarded to you? Subscribe here
Support for PBS NewsHour Science provided by Lyda Hill Philanthropies If/Then Initiative, the Lemelson Foundation, the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, NIH SEPA, and the National Science Foundation.
 
raved on a year ago,you had it all ordered and sorted
like every other country 'liars'

while china/russia quietly go about there business




Australia’s new ‘Arm Yourself’ COVID-19 vaccination campaign advertisement. Department of Health/Youtube
Australia’s new vaccination campaign is another wasted opportunity

Lauren Gurrieri, RMIT University; Amanda Spry, RMIT University; Bernardo Figueiredo, RMIT University; Janneke Blijlevens, RMIT University; Linda Robinson, RMIT University; Marian Makkar, RMIT University; Samuelson Appau, RMIT University; Torgeir Aleti (né Watne), RMIT University

The federal government's new adverts ignore decades of research on what makes effective advertising.


Australian Government
Why the federal government’s COVID-19 fear appeal to Sydney residents won’t work
Jane Speight, Deakin University

Psychological theory and evidence do not support fear appeals overall.


Mick Tsikas/AAP
As Sydney’s lockdown continues, what support is available — and needed — for people losing income?
Peter Whiteford, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University; Bruce Bradbury, UNSW

JobKeeper and the Coronavirus Supplement ended earlier this year. But the last few months in have shown the COVID crisis is far from over in Australia.
 
Just asking a question because I am not as smart as some... Can covid be seen on surfaces? By that I mean, is there an agent that can be sprayed on surfaces that react/highlight with the virus. Think of luminol being sprayed at crime scenes and viewed under ultraviolet light.

Thanks
 
ps

remind all,we the world are still ernestly looking for answers,2 years on

your turn dands

Why asthma attacks dropped dramatically during the pandemic



Hello Nature readers,
Today we consider who should lead on genome-editing policy, explore the surprising effect of the pandemic on asthma and catch up with the latest research highlights.


A human embryo shortly after fertilization, seen in a light micrograph. (K. H. Kjeldsen/SPL)
WHO advised to lead genome-editing policy
The World Health Organization (WHO) should assume a leading, global role in efforts to regulate genome editing, according to an advisory group. The committee was formed after biophysicist He Jiankui shocked the world in 2018 by announcing that he had used the CRISPR genome-editing technique to alter embryos that were implanted and led to the birth of two children. The advisers also say that genome editing should not yet be used to make modifications that can be passed on to later generations.

Nature | 4 min read
Why the pandemic reduced asthma attacks
The number of asthma attacks across the United States has dropped dramatically during the pandemic, leading doctors to rethink some of their long-held assumptions about the chronic condition. The declining trend suggests that triggers such as routine cold and flu viruses, which almost disappeared during the pandemic, could play a larger role in asthma attacks than previously thought.

The Atlantic | 6 min read
Research highlights: 1-minute reads

A newfound ‘fairy lantern’ could soon be snuffed out forever. Wild boars have destroyed three of the four known specimens of Thismia sitimeriamiae in the forests of Malaysia. (Siti Munirah Mat Yunoh et al./PhytoKeys (CC BY 4.0))
A swarm of black holes could explain Galactic fluffiness
Diffuse Milky Way formation might have been depleted by star-hurling black holes.

Cruise ships could sail now-icy Arctic seas by century’s end
Without carbon cuts, many cargo ships could ply the Northwest Passage, between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, in 2040.

Telecoms satellites spy on Earth’s magnetic field
Clues to the forces generated by the planet’s core emerge from observations intended for satellite navigation.

A graphene cloak keeps artworks’ colours ageless
A layer of carbon atoms preserves a painting’s vibrant hues — and can be applied and removed without damage.

Genomics charts a deadly bug’s leap from pigs to humans
Samples collected over several decades help scientists to trace the path taken by Streptococcus suis.
Get more of Nature’s research highlights: short picks from the scientific literature.

Award winner
Step inside a trio of big-physics experiments

For more than half a century, Japan has been at the forefront of big physics, asking fundamental questions about the laws that govern the workings of the universe. Over three episodes, take a rare look inside three of its flagship experiments: Super Kamiokande, the world’s largest neutrino detector; KAGRA, the world’s most advanced gravitational-wave detector; and Belle II, the experiment that could revolutionize particle physics.

Nature | 3 ten-minute videos (from 2020)
This Super Kamiokande video just won the Association of British Science Writers’s top video award.

Where I work

Evolutionary ecologist Germán Orizaola Pereda studies how amphibians in Chernobyl have changed, physically and genetically, 35 years after the nuclear accident. “Chernobyl is a phenomenal place to study rapid evolution,” says Orizaola Pereda. “Frogs in the exclusion zone are darker than those outside it, thanks to higher levels of melanin, which might be an adaptation that protects them from ionizing radiation.” (Nature | 3 min read) (Germán Orizaola)
QUOTE OF THE DAY
“While space billionaires often try to sell their efforts as ‘making space more accessible’ to people, they aren't really changing anything about accessibility.”
Astrophysicist Lucianne Walkowicz considers what the space-travel efforts of billionaires Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos mean for the rest of us. (Space.com | 12 min read)
 
Just asking a question because I am not as smart as some... Can covid be seen on surfaces? By that I mean, is there an agent that can be sprayed on surfaces that react/highlight with the virus. Think of luminol being sprayed at crime scenes and viewed under ultraviolet light.

Thanks


sorry/acknowledge a fair request

also,dont have enough brainpower,to give a rerasonable response
 
and youd be stupid enough to help your neighbour australia,when you csant even help yourselves,effectively
a nation that once hasd a/the largesty naval ships in the world,having brought some declining eastern european ware
why,huh


Achmad Ibrahim/AP
Indonesia records its highest increase in COVID cases –– and numbers are likely to rise again before they fall

Dicky Budiman, Griffith University

COVID-19 cases in Indonesia are rising and are expected to keep doing so for another two weeks until the effects of restrictions and mask mandates are seen.


Lukas Coch/AAP
View from The Hill: Speaker Tony Smith, proponent of ‘order in the House’ to retire at election
Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra

Speaker Tony Smith – who has been battling to force better behaviour in the House of Representatives on MPs including Scott Morrison – has announced he will not contest the next election.


AAP(Darren England/Glenn Hunt)
Right-wing shock jock stoush reveals the awful truth about COVID, politics and media ratings
Denis Muller, The University of Melbourne

Behind the vitriol over whether Sydney should be in lockdown is a window into how power operates in New South Wales.


AAP/Mick Tsikas
A tougher 4-week lockdown could save Sydney months of stay-at-home orders, our modelling shows
Allan Saul, Burnet Institute; Margaret Hellard, Burnet Institute; Michael Toole, Burnet Institute; Nick Scott, Burnet Institute; Romesh Abeysuriya, Burnet Institute

It may take until the end of the year to get case numbers close to zero, unless more stringent measures are introduced.


Kyodo/AP
From slushie machines to megalitres of alchohol spray, the Tokyo Olympics are a logistical nightmare
Flavio Romero Macau, Edith Cowan University; Ashlee Morgan; Ruth Sibson, Edith Cowan University

Along with athletes from 205 different nations making their way to Japan come thousands of tonnes of equipment and supplies.


Miles Franklin Literary Award/The Conversation
The saddest of stories, beautifully told: your guide to the Miles Franklin 2021 shortlist
Jen Webb, University of Canberra

Each of this year's shortlisted books shimmer with energy, tenderness and threads of optimism — and even occasionally joy.


Anupam Nath/AP
India’s wicked problem: how to loosen its grip on coal while not abandoning the millions who depend on it
Vigya Sharma, The University of Queensland

India is expected to overtake China this decade as the world’s most populous nation. That puts it at the heart of the global challenge to beat climate change.

Health + Medicine
 
COVID-19 coronavirus round-up
Top stories from earlier in the week:

COVID deaths very rare among children
Data from England suggests that COVID-19 carries a lower risk of dying or requiring intensive care among children and young people than was previously thought. The disease caused 25 deaths in under-18s in the country between March 2020 and February 2021. About half of those were in children with an underlying complex disability with high health-care needs, such as tube feeding or assistance with breathing. The research did not look at less-severe illness or debilitating ‘long COVID’ symptoms. “The low rate of severe acute disease is important news, but this does not have to mean that COVID does not matter to children,” says paediatrician Danilo Buonsenso. “Please, let’s keep attention — as much as is feasible — on immunization.”

Nature | 4 min read
Reference: medRxiv preprint 1, medRxiv preprint 2 & medRxiv preprint 3

Africa grapples with vaccine hesitancy
Misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines, which often starts life in Europe or the United States, has found fertile ground in Africa. Public-health workers face a complex array of factors in their efforts to undo the damage, including anti-vaccine messages from influential leaders. The late Tanzanian President John Magufuli, who died in March, was vehemently opposed to the vaccines and claimed that prayer had eradicated the disease in his country — despite being a former science teacher himself.

Nature Medicine | 11 min read



US boosts funding for research monkeys
The US government is investing heavily to breed more monkeys at the national facilities that house primates for biomedical research. The goal is to offset an ongoing shortage of these animals, which grew worse in 2020 as scientists tested scores of COVID-19 vaccines and treatments on primates before trials began in people. “What happens if [a pandemic] happens again, with another virus in three years?” says the National Institutes of Health’s James Anderson. “We want to be ready for that.”

Nature | 6 min read

Zhurong spots its own parachute on Mars
China’s Zhurong rover has driven some 350 metres south of its landing site to visit the discarded parachute and backshell that helped bring it safely to the red planet. Zhurong arrived on Mars on 14 May and has now travelled at least 450 metres. It is more than two-thirds of the way through its three-month mission on Mars.

SpaceNews | 3 min read
Read more: First video and sounds from China’s Mars rover intrigue scientists (Nature | 4 min read)

News round-up
Top stories from earlier in the week:


COVID-19 coronavirus update
 
good luck uk
you deserve it,luck
good on yuou for relentlessly trying

and
as far as my former love for australia goes/well

lockdowns


As Australians in the country’s two largest cities wake up to another day in lockdown, the nation’s leaders are under increasing pressure. This is especially true, says Michelle Grattan, of NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and Prime Minister Scott Morrison, the latter of whom is struggling to find his place amid the current outbreaks, which are managed primarily by state leaders. And, as we stagger through a second year of the pandemic, it’s taking a political toll: the latest Newspoll has the Coalition on 47 to Labor’s 53 on a two-party preferred basis.

Morrison has money to hand out, of course, and the purse strings have loosened significantly in recent times after some pointed messaging from Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews. And he has the vaccine rollout, which has been widely panned as disastrous but Morrison will be hoping can be remedied in the near future (a large shipment of Pfizer vaccine will land this week).

The outbreaks in NSW and Victoria have put both states’ premiers under huge pressure, particularly Berejiklian, who has been widely criticised for not locking the state down early or strongly enough. Victoria’s outbreak looks more manageable, but the current lockdown may well be extended beyond tomorrow night. This week will see many people around the country anxiously awaiting those numbers once again, and hoping the outbreaks are brought under control.


Today's newsletter supported by The Conversation

Mick Tsikas/AAP
View from The Hill: Morrison and Coalition sink in Newspoll on the back of rollout shambles
Michelle Grattan, University of Canberra

Support for Scott Morrison and the government have slumped in Newspoll, in a major backlash against the botched vaccine rollout.


Daniel Pockett/AAP Image
Victoria’s 5-day lockdown may not quash Delta. Here’s what our modelling predicts instead
Lei Zhang, Monash University; Christopher Fairley, Monash University; Guihua Zhuang, Xi'an Jiaotong University; Zhuoru Zou, Xi'an Jiaotong University

The good news is Victoria is more likely to reach zero case of community transmission sooner if vaccination rates pick up, even modestly.


Bianca De Marchi/AAP
We’ve become used to wearing masks during COVID. But does that mean the habit will stick?
Holly Seale, UNSW; Abrar Ahmad Chughtai, UNSW; C Raina MacIntyre, UNSW

In Hong Kong, SARS created a new social norm, where people accepted mask use as part of their 'civic responsibility'.


Shutterstock
Our uni teachers were already among the world’s most stressed. COVID and student feedback have just made things worse
Megan Lee, Southern Cross University; Dima Nasrawi, Southern Cross University; Marie Hutchinson, Southern Cross University; Richard Lakeman, Southern Cross University

Workplace stress among academics has long been higher in Australia and New Zealand than overseas, and research suggests the flow-on impacts on students could fuel a vicious cycle of negative feedback.