CORONAVIRUS: The U.S. saw a glimmer of positive COVID-19 news when hospitalizations dipped for the first time in more than two months on Wednesday, a sign that the pandemic may have peaked as the nation continues to race to vaccinate more Americans. The national seven-day average of new coronavirus-related hospitalizations dropped 2.4 percent from one week earlier, marking the first such drop since June 27, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday. Declining numbers of infections that require hospitalization have been tallied in some hot spots, including Florida, Texas and a number of Southern states that have had trouble containing the delta variant (Bloomberg News). The nation is far from out of the woods, however. U.S. regions have yet to reach their peaks of infection, including states with lagging vaccination rates. The school year is just beginning with classroom instruction and battles over masks and other mitigation strategies, which could mean COVID-19 case loads surge this year in younger people. Axios: COVID-19 cases are up 14 percent. © Getty Images > Moderna on Wednesday announced it started to submit data to the Food and Drug Administration for approval of a booster dose of its COVID-19 vaccine. According to the company, antibodies from the two-dose regimen waned “significantly” before a booster dose was administered roughly six months after individuals received a second dose. After a third dose, a similar level of neutralizing was achieved across age groups, notably in adults ages 65 and above, the company said (The Hill). Axios: Israeli coronavirus vaccine booster data gives the U.S. hope. Reuters-Ipsos poll: Most vaccinated Americans want COVID-19 booster shots. NBC News: At least 15 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been wasted in the United States since March, new data shows. > Variants: The World Health Organization (WHO) on Wednesday issued a warning that a new strain — titled the mu variant (B.1.621) — could prove more resistant to vaccine protection than other variants. The WHO said the strain is emerging in Colombia and Ecuador, with “sporadic reports” of cases and outbreaks in South America and Europe. The strain is responsible for 39 percent and 13 percent of the infections, respectively, in Colombia and Ecuador (Forbes). The Washington Post: Massive randomized study is proof that surgical masks limit coronavirus spread, authors say. > Corporate America: Apple on Wednesday said that it has asked its employees in the U.S. to “voluntarily” report their vaccination status but has yet to follow in the footsteps of a number of other companies that have issued vaccination mandates. Apple asked its staff to report their vaccination status by mid-September no matter whether they were working in an office or remotely (Bloomberg News). © Getty Images Insider: Costco has reintroduced purchase limits as evidence of COVID-19 stockpiling mounts. Oregonlive.com: Oregon school superintendent followed state law and got fired by the Adrian School Board on Tuesday for enforcing a mask mandate. The New York Times: Amid Arizona ban on school mask mandates, sick kids and angry parents. The Hill: Brazilian viper venom shows promise as drug to combat COVID-19. ****** ADMINISTRATION: The White House is trying to move past the chaotic and deadly U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan by turning its attention back to Biden’s domestic legislative agenda amid his sagging job approval numbers and ahead of next year’s midterm contests. Biden will travel to Louisiana on Friday to support victims of Hurricane Ida and repeat his administration’s pledges of federal assistance. He’s also expected to comment Friday on what the White House anticipates will be evidence of U.S. employment progress in August (The Hill). The Hill: Advocates “demoralized” as 100,000 U.S. allies remain stranded in Afghanistan. The Associated Press: Some American citizens and green card holders left in Afghanistan complain of broken U.S. promises. The Associated Press: “It looked like one of those zombie movies”: In interviews, U.S. service members describe final U.S. military flights out of Afghanistan. The U.S. government on Wednesday said it is looking at all possible options and routes out of Afghanistan for Americans and legal permanent residents who want to leave the country (Reuters). “It’s possible” the United States and the Taliban could coordinate against ISIS-K, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley said Wednesday (seen below) (The Hill). © Getty Images > Housing: The administration on Wednesday announced federal initiatives to “create, preserve and sell” nearly 100,000 additional “affordable” homes to individual buyers and nonprofits over the next three years, focused on low- and middle-income opportunities for the purchase and rental markets (Yahoo News). It’s a drop in the bucket nationwide for consumers who are priced out of home ownership and struggling to find affordable rentals in a soaring market that seems oblivious to millions of Americans who took economic hits since the pandemic began. The administration is unhappy with a recent economic trend in which investors buy up housing stock to flip or rent for profitable turnover. “Large investor purchases of single-family homes and conversion into rental properties speeds the transition of neighborhoods from homeownership to rental and drives up home prices for lower cost homes, making it harder for aspiring first-time and first-generation home buyers, among others, to buy a home,” officials said. The median sales price of U.S. single-family homes jumped in the second quarter to $357,900, an increase of $66,800 or 22.9 percent from the year before. Double-digit price gains were seen in 94 percent of markets, according to the National Association of Realtors. > U.S. and Ukraine: President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine met with Biden in the Oval Office on Wednesday, the culmination of a years-long struggle that at one point put Zelensky center stage amid U.S. impeachment politics during the Trump era, CNN reported. Zelensky on Wednesday had some significant requests, including U.S. input on Ukraine's chances of joining NATO, suggesting a potential U.S. role in reaching a settlement in the Donbas region of Ukraine and requesting assistance to free hundreds of people imprisoned in Donbas. Biden said his administration will “continue to support Ukraine as it advances its democratic reforms agenda and movement toward being completely integrated in Europe.” © Getty Images |
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