Coronavirus daily news updates, July 27: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – The Seattle Times - News Updater

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Tuesday, July 27, 2021

Coronavirus daily news updates, July 27: What to know today about COVID-19 in the Seattle area, Washington state and the world – The Seattle Times

As COVID-19 cases soar throughout the country, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, said Sunday that the United States is going in the “wrong direction” and is in an “unnecessary predicament” fueled by unvaccinated Americans and the delta variant.

The recent rise in cases has prompted new guidance locally. Health officers from eight Western Washington counties are now recommending mask-wearing in indoor public spaces.

We’re updating this page with the latest news about the COVID-19 pandemic and its effects on the Seattle area, the U.S. and the world. Click here to see previous days’ live updates and all our other coronavirus coverage, and here to see how we track the daily spread across Washington and the world.


(Jennifer Luxton / The Seattle Times)(Jennifer Luxton / The Seattle Times)
4:15 pm

Mexico homicides remained at high levels despite pandemic

The most authoritative count of homicides in Mexico was published Tuesday and it shows killings remain essentially unchanged at 36,579 in 2020.

Even though the coronavirus pandemic reduced many activities in Mexico in 2020, the number of killings was essentially equal to the 36,661 that occurred in 2019. Mexico’s nation-wide murder rate in 2020 remained unchanged at 29 per 100,000 inhabitants. By comparison, the U.S. homicide rate in 2019 was 5.8 per 100,000.

Experts say much of the violence is fueled by a series of turf battles being fought across the nation between the Jalisco and Sinaloa cartels, often allied with or acting through local gangs throughout many of Mexico’s 32 states.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press
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3:15 pm

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, 2 others sue Pelosi over mask fines

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., shows a picture of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at a news conference Tuesday, July 27, in Washington, D.C. (Lenin Nolly / ZUMA Press Wire / TNS)

U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene and two other lawmakers are suing Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the House sergeant-at-arms over fines they received for violating rules on wearing a mask.

The lawsuit was filed Tuesday in Washington’s U.S. District Court on behalf of Greene, Kentucky U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie and South Carolina U.S. Rep. Ralph Norman. Last week, the House Ethics Committee rejected appeals filed by all three representatives over the $500 fines they received after refusing to wear masks on the House floor as mandated by Pelosi as a precaution during the coronavirus pandemic.

During a news conference to publicize their legal action, Greene characterized the mask policy as “segregation” and “discrimination” against people who both refused to wear the face coverings but also declined to be vaccinated.

The suit comes as many conservatives have made the response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the wearing of masks a part of the culture war, even as new variants of the virus are fueling higher hospitalization and death rates.

Read the story here.

—Tia Mitchell, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
2:37 pm

Biden says White House exploring vaccine mandate for federal employees

President Joe Biden said that the federal government was considering making vaccines mandatory for its workforce — which would be a significant escalation in the push to expand vaccine coverage as the coronavirus surge from the delta variant sends shock waves through the country.

The news comes as the exponential growth of cases in many areas around the country concerns public health officials and other authorities. Vaccination rates have been waning for weeks, despite its wide availability and the swelling number of caseloads across the country.

There are more than 4 million federal employees, a figure that includes civilian workers, members of the military, and members of the U.S. Postal Service, according to recent estimates, making the government the country’s largest employer. When including the vast ranks of federal contractors and grant workers, that number tops 10 million. But it was not immediately clear who exactly the discussions about vaccine requirements would apply to.

Read the story here.

—Eli Rosenberg, The Washington Post
2:15 pm

As L.A. ponders vaccine mandates, infections in the LAPD spike sharply

LAPD Chief Michel Moore told the civilian Police Commission on Tuesday that the department had 33 personnel test positive for the coronavirus in the last week, a sharp uptick compared to recent weeks.

There were 81 LAPD employees at home recovering from the virus as of Tuesday, one LAPD employee hospitalized in “very critical condition” from COVID-19 and nine LAPD personnel who have died, Moore said. He also also said three spouses of LAPD personnel also had died from the disease.

Moore’s comments come amid escalating discussions at the city level on whether to mandate vaccinations among city employees, which would include police officers and civilian police employees.

Gov. Gavin Newsom recently announced that state employees would be required to be vaccinated or submit to regular testing. Some localities have said they would be mandating vaccines, as well.

Vaccinations among LAPD personnel stalled out months ago, with nearly half the department remaining unvaccinated.

Read the story here.

—Kevin Rector, Los Angeles Times
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1:13 pm

Passenger on Seattle-bound Alaska cruise tests positive for COVID-19

A fully vaccinated passenger on an Alaska cruise tested positive for COVID-19 and received “private air transportation” home, according to Celebrity Cruises.

A passenger on Sunday reported cold-like symptoms to the ship’s medical personnel and subsequently tested positive for COVID-19, the cruise line said in a statement Tuesday. The person was isolated in the ship’s medical facility for monitoring. The company said it did contact tracing and tested the person’s close contacts, who were all negative for the virus.

Cruise line spokesperson Susan Lomax said the ship was in Skagway on Tuesday and would be at sea before returning to Seattle on Friday.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press
1:10 pm

Thailand sends COVID-19 patients to hometowns by train

Authorities in Thailand began transporting some people who tested positive for the coronavirus from Bangkok to their hometowns on Tuesday for isolation and treatment to alleviate the burden on the capital’s overwhelmed medical system.

A train carrying more than 100 patients and medical workers in full protective gear left the city for the northeast. It will drop patients off in seven provinces, where they will be met by health officers and taken to hospitals.

Medical authorities in Bangkok said Monday that all ICU beds for COVID-19 patients at public hospitals were full and that some of the sick were being treated in emergency rooms. Officials said they have asked army medics to help out at civilian hospitals.

“These are patients from Bangkok who haven’t received treatment in hospitals. We want to bring them to doctors in their hometowns. And the traveling process is controlled all through the journey,” said Deputy Prime Minister and Public Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who was on hand to watch the operation.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press
12:15 pm

Bhutan fully vaccinates 90% of eligible adults within a week

This photograph provided by UNICEF shows monks from Paro’s monastic body perform a ritual as 500,000 doses of Moderna COVID-19 vaccine gifted from the United States arrived at Paro International Airport in Bhutan, July 12, 2021. The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan has fully vaccinated 90% of its eligible adult population within just seven days, its health ministry said Tuesday. (UNICEF via AP)

The Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan has fully vaccinated 90% of its eligible adult population within just seven days, its health ministry said Tuesday.

The tiny country, wedged between India and China and home to nearly 800,000 people, began giving out second doses on July 20 in a mass drive that has been hailed by UNICEF as “arguably the fastest vaccination campaign to be executed during a pandemic.”

In April, Bhutan grabbed headlines when its government said it had inoculated around the same percentage of eligible adults with the first dose in under two weeks after India donated 550,000 shots of AstraZeneca vaccine.

Read the story here.

—Wasbir Hussain and Rishi Lekhi, The Associated Press
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12:09 pm

CDC reverses course on indoor masks in some parts of US

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed course Tuesday on some masking guidelines, recommending that even vaccinated people return to wearing masks indoors in parts of the U.S. where the coronavirus is surging.

Citing new information about the ability of the delta variant to spread among vaccinated people, the CDC also recommended indoor masks for all teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status.

The new guidance follows recent decisions in Los Angeles and St. Louis to revert to indoor mask mandates amid a spike in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations that have been especially bad in the South. The country is averaging more than 57,000 cases a day and 24,000 COVID-19 hospitalizations.

Most new infections in the U.S. continue to be among unvaccinated people. But “breakthrough” infections, which generally cause milder illness, can occur in vaccinated people. When earlier strains of the virus predominated, infected vaccinated people were found to have low levels of virus and were deemed unlikely to spread the virus much, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said.

But with the delta variant, the level of virus in infected vaccinated people is “indistinguishable” from the level of virus in the noses and throats of unvaccinated people, Walensky said.

The data emerged over the last couple of days from 100 samples. It is unpublished, and the CDC has not released it. But “it is concerning enough that we feel like we have to act,” Walensky said.

Read the story here.

—Mike Stobbe, The Associated Press
11:15 am

Iran hits new COVID infection record for 2nd straight day

Women wearing protective face masks to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus walk on a sidewalk in southern Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, July 20, 2021. Iran on Tuesday broke another record in the country’s daily new coronavirus cases, even as Tehran and its surroundings went into lockdown, a week-long measure imposed amid another surge in the pandemic. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi)

Iran recorded over 34,900 new coronavirus infections on Tuesday, setting the nation’s single-day record for cases as vaccinations lag, public complacency deepens and the country’s outbreak spirals further out of control.

The previous record of 31,814 infections had been set only a day earlier, providing a sense of how quickly Iran’s latest surge, fueled by the contagious delta variant, is mounting.

The alarming spread of the variant prompted new anti-virus restrictions last week but the lockdown looked very little like a lockdown at all. Iranian authorities have avoided imposing heavy-handed rules on a population that can little afford to bear them. The country is reeling from: tough U.S. sanctions, a heat wave, the worst blackouts in recent memory, ongoing water shortages and now hospitals overwhelmed with breathless COVID patients too numerous to handle. 

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press
10:15 am

‘A tipping point’: Government officials, health groups move to require coronavirus vaccines for workers

The Department of Veterans Affairs, which runs one of the nation’s largest health systems, announced Monday it would mandate coronavirus vaccines for its front-line workers, becoming the first federal agency to do so and signaling what some experts said could be a national pivot to such requirements.

Faced with the explosive growth of a new virus variant, the state of California and the city of New York gave workers a choice: Get vaccinated or provide proof of a negative test every week. And an array of hospitals from coast to coast, including the prestigious Mayo Clinic, declared they would require staff to get vaccinated, following a joint plea from the nation’s major medical groups.

Health care leaders say the moves represent an escalation of the nation’s fight against the coronavirus – the first concerted effort to mandate that tens of millions of Americans get vaccinated. The VA’s mandate applies to more than 100,000 front-line workers, New York City’s applies to about 45,000 city employees and contractors, and California’s applies to more than 2.2 million state employees and health workers.

Read the story here.

—Dan Diamond, The Washington Post
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9:15 am

EU trumpets vaccine success but warns of variant impact

The European Union has achieved a major goal of providing at least one coronavirus shot to 70% of adults across the 27-nation bloc but member countries must step up their vaccination rates to combat fast-spreading variants of the disease, the EU’s chief executive warned Tuesday.

The EU — home to around 450 million people — was widely criticized for the slow pace of its vaccine rollout early this year. Its executive branch, the European Commission, was tasked with sealing vaccine contracts for member countries and it is desperate to show it now has things under control.

But Commission President Ursula von der Leyen warned against complacency given the well-established presence in Europe of other variants.

“The delta variant is very dangerous. I therefore call on everyone — who has the opportunity — to be vaccinated. For their own health and to protect others,” von der Leyen said. European medical authorities insist that full vaccination is, so far, the best protection against such variants.

Read the story here.

—Lorne Cook, The Associated Press
8:15 am

Tokyo reports record virus cases days after Olympics begin

Pedestrians holding umbrellas walk past the National Stadium, the main venue for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, in Tokyo, Japan. Photographer: Noriko Hayashi/Bloomberg (Bloomberg)

Japan’s capital, Tokyo, reported its highest number of new coronavirus infections on Tuesday, days after the Olympics began. Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga urged people to avoid non-essential outings, but said there was no need to consider a suspension of the Games.

Tokyo reported 2,848 new COVID-19 cases, exceeding its earlier record of 2,520 daily cases on Jan. 7. That brings its total to more than 200,000 since the pandemic began last year.

Tokyo is under its fourth coronavirus state of emergency, which is to continue through the Olympics until just before the Paralympics start in late August.

Experts have warned that the more contagious delta variant could cause a surge during the Olympics, which started Friday.

Read the story here.

—Mari Yamaguchi, The Associated Press
7:29 am

Russia OKs testing combination of Sputnik, AstraZeneca shots

Russia’s health officials have given a go-ahead to testing a combination of the AstraZeneca coronavirus shot and the single-dose version of the domestically developed Sputnik V vaccine, according to the country’s registry of approved clinical trials.

The small study, which was scheduled to start July 26 and end in March next year, will enroll 150 volunteers and look at the mixed regimen’s safety and capability to trigger immune response, records show. It will be conducted in five medical facilities in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

Both shots use a similar technology, employing a harmless virus to deliver genetic material from the spike protein of COVID-19 into the body, which then prompts an immune response.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press
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7:24 am

UK spares key workers quarantine as staff shortages bite

A “You need to self-isolate screen” on the NHS Covid-19 app on a smartphone arranged in London, U.K., on Friday, July 16, 2021. U.K. ministers are racing to change the rules on self-isolation after a surge in alerts from the country’s Covid-19 app takes people out of their workplaces and disrupts business. Photographer: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg (Bloomberg)

The British government said Tuesday it will ease coronavirus quarantine rules for thousands more essential workers — including prison guards, veterinarians and garbage collectors — in an attempt to end staff shortages that are hobbling parts of the economy.

About 26 million Britons have downloaded a health service phone app that tells them to self-isolate for 10 days if they come into contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19. With the U.K. recently recording tens of thousands of new virus cases a day, the system has caused disruptive employee absences for restaurants and other businesses and led to gaps on some supermarket shelves.

Starting Aug. 16, anyone who has been fully vaccinated in Britain will be able to take daily coronavirus tests rather than self-isolating. But many businesses are pushing for the change to happen sooner.

Last week, the government said food and transport workers, border staff, police and firefighters could opt for the daily tests. Now it has expanded that system to more jobs, including refuse collectors, prison staff, veterinarians, tax collectors and defense workers.

The government said 2,000 sites would be set up to meet the increased demand for tests.

Read the story here.

—Jill Lawless, The Associated Press
7:21 am

Cambodia seizes virus-contaminated meat imported from India

Cambodian authorities have stopped five large containers of water buffalo meat imported from India after determining the shipment was tainted with the coronavirus, officials said Tuesday.

The Health Ministry said the virus was detected in three of the five shipping containers of frozen meat being brought in by a private company.

Meanwhile, Cambodia is struggling with its own surge in cases after low numbers early on. The Health Ministry reported 685 new cases on Tuesday and another 19 deaths.

Read the story here.

—The Associated Press


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