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Let evidence be our guide: [[: | Let evidence be our guide: [[: | ||
- | Jan 27, 2022 by Concerned researchers and experts from CoVaRR-Net((https:// | + | Jan 27, 2022 by Concerned researchers and experts from CoVaRR-Net((Abraham, N., Caulfield, T., Gommerman, J., Kindrachuk, J., Langlois, M.-A., Morris, A., Rasmussen, A., Saginur, R., & Tokhmafshan, |
// | // | ||
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All of this can erode people' | All of this can erode people' | ||
- | So I think a lot of people are under the mistaken impression that vaccines are supposed to completely prevent any kind of infection. This is something that's usually referred to as sterilizing immunity. // | + | So I think a lot of people are under the **mistaken impression that vaccines are supposed to completely prevent any kind of infection**. This is something that's usually referred to as sterilizing immunity. // |
- | sterilizing immunity. For speed and also for the real problem overall with the public health concern with COVID is not just are people getting infected with SARS coronavirus-2, | + | |
- | And so the clinical trials were designed to assess how well the vaccines can prevent COVID-19, not necessarily how well they can protect against infection with SARS coronavirus-2. And I think that a lot of people are confused because they may think that infection automatically means that you have the disease, but | + | For speed and also for the real problem overall with the public health concern with COVID is not just are people getting infected with SARS coronavirus-2, |
- | there are a number of people who have asymptomatic or very, very mild COVID-19 after being infected with SARS coronavirus-2. | + | |
+ | And so the clinical trials were designed to assess how well the vaccines can prevent COVID-19, not necessarily how well they can protect against infection with SARS coronavirus-2. And I think that a lot of people are confused because they may think that infection automatically means that you have the disease, but there are a number of people who have asymptomatic or very, very mild COVID-19 after being infected with SARS coronavirus-2. | ||
So if you have, most of the people who would have otherwise gotten COVID-19 and ended up in the hospital or maybe even died from having it, if all of a sudden those people are vaccinated and they are getting asymptomatically infected, then that's no longer a public health problem. They' | So if you have, most of the people who would have otherwise gotten COVID-19 and ended up in the hospital or maybe even died from having it, if all of a sudden those people are vaccinated and they are getting asymptomatically infected, then that's no longer a public health problem. They' | ||
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Coronavirus Frontlines is a special series where we are sharing the perspective of experts at the forefront of combating the COVID-19 pandemic. | Coronavirus Frontlines is a special series where we are sharing the perspective of experts at the forefront of combating the COVID-19 pandemic. | ||
- | You may have heard reports that researchers found RNA material from the coronavirus on the Diamond Princess cruise ship 17 days after the ship was vacated. Or maybe you heard that there was widespread environmental contamination of viral RNA in COVID-19 patient rooms at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Or perhaps you read an article saying that viral RNA could be detected up to 37 days in patients following the onset of COVID-19 disease. This might put in your head that COVID-19 patients are effectively clouds of contagion for months, shedding the virus for days before they knew they were sick and long after they recovered. | + | You may have heard reports that researchers found RNA material from the coronavirus on the Diamond Princess cruise ship 17 days after the ship was vacated. Or maybe you heard that there was widespread environmental contamination of viral RNA in COVID-19 patient rooms at the [[:University of Nebraska]] Medical Center. Or perhaps you read an article saying that viral RNA could be detected up to 37 days in patients following the onset of COVID-19 disease. This might put in your head that COVID-19 patients are effectively clouds of contagion for months, shedding the virus for days before they knew they were sick and long after they recovered. |
Calm down. And rest assured that this is not necessarily the case. That’s because the test used to detect the virus in these studies doesn' | Calm down. And rest assured that this is not necessarily the case. That’s because the test used to detect the virus in these studies doesn' | ||
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The test in these studies uses a very well-established technique called quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction, or qRT-PCR. This test demonstrates whether a person is infected or not by detecting the presence and relative quantity of viral RNA. Basically, “Is the virus in your system?” So what you might think about qRT-PCR tests is that measurements of how much viral RNA is detected corresponds directly to how infectious a person is. But that’s not what those tests are looking for. | The test in these studies uses a very well-established technique called quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction, or qRT-PCR. This test demonstrates whether a person is infected or not by detecting the presence and relative quantity of viral RNA. Basically, “Is the virus in your system?” So what you might think about qRT-PCR tests is that measurements of how much viral RNA is detected corresponds directly to how infectious a person is. But that’s not what those tests are looking for. | ||
- | For reasons that are not fully understood, patients that have recovered from a viral infection have cells that can continue to produce viral RNA without actually making infectious virus particles. That means it is not only possible but common to detect viral RNA without there being any infectious virus present. | + | For reasons that are not fully understood, patients that have recovered from a viral infection have cells that can continue to produce viral RNA without actually making infectious virus particles. That means it is not only possible but common to detect |
Fortunately, | Fortunately, | ||
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Editors' | Editors' | ||
- | Earlier this month, news broke that a Malayan tiger at the Bronx Zoo tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Nadia, along with her sister Azul, two Amur tigers, and three African lions exhibited signs of respiratory disease. Apart from being incredibly on-brand for this pandemic, given the popularity of the Netflix documentary Tiger King, this raised a number of concerns. Will domestic pets get COVID-19? Can we transmit the virus to pets? Can we get the virus from our pets? | + | Earlier this month, news broke that a Malayan tiger at the [[:Bronx Zoo]] tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Nadia, along with her sister Azul, two Amur tigers, and three African lions exhibited signs of respiratory disease. Apart from being incredibly on-brand for this pandemic, given the popularity of the Netflix documentary Tiger King, this raised a number of concerns. Will domestic pets get COVID-19? Can we transmit the virus to pets? Can we get the virus from our pets? |
The Good News | The Good News | ||
- | Zoonotic transmission is when humans contract an infection from animals. The primary good news is that so far, there is no evidence suggesting that humans have contracted [[: | + | Zoonotic transmission is when humans contract an infection from animals. The primary good news is that so far, there is no evidence suggesting that humans have contracted [[: |
- | Fortunately, | + | Fortunately, |
Yet another study indicates more bad news, showing that of approximately 100 cats studied in Wuhan, 15% had developed antibodies to the virus, meaning that they were previously infected. The question of cat susceptibility and the potential for zoonotic transmission is by no means settled, but it does have important implications for controlling SARS-CoV-2 spread over the long term. | Yet another study indicates more bad news, showing that of approximately 100 cats studied in Wuhan, 15% had developed antibodies to the virus, meaning that they were previously infected. The question of cat susceptibility and the potential for zoonotic transmission is by no means settled, but it does have important implications for controlling SARS-CoV-2 spread over the long term. | ||
- | If it turns out that cats or other domestic animals can transmit the virus zoonotically to humans, they could become a potential reservoir for SARS-CoV-2. A reservoir is a population of susceptible animals that can carry the virus and potentially seed new outbreaks in the human population. In addition to being popular pets, there are millions of feral cats in the United States and around the world, comprising a huge potential reservoir for SARS-CoV-2 in the wild. It’s **critical to do more research to assess the risk to cats**, as that also might help prevent future COVID-19 outbreaks both in humans and in our furry friends.((https:// | + | If it turns out that **cats or other domestic animals can transmit the virus** zoonotically to humans, they could become a potential reservoir for SARS-CoV-2. A reservoir is a population of susceptible animals that can carry the virus and potentially seed new outbreaks in the human population. |
+ | |||
+ | In addition to being popular pets, there are millions of feral cats in the United States and around the world, comprising a huge potential reservoir for SARS-CoV-2 in the wild. It’s **critical to do more research to assess the risk to cats**, as that also might help prevent future COVID-19 outbreaks both in humans and in our furry friends.((https:// | ||
==== LEAPS Mag ==== | ==== LEAPS Mag ==== | ||
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In addition, rhesus monkeys that were experimentally infected with SARS-CoV-2 and allowed to recover were protected from reinfection after a subsequent experimental challenge. These data tentatively suggest that most people are likely to develop neutralizing IgG, and protective immunity, after being infected by SARS-CoV-2. | In addition, rhesus monkeys that were experimentally infected with SARS-CoV-2 and allowed to recover were protected from reinfection after a subsequent experimental challenge. These data tentatively suggest that most people are likely to develop neutralizing IgG, and protective immunity, after being infected by SARS-CoV-2. | ||
- | However, //not all COVID-19 patients do produce high levels of antibodies specific for SARS-CoV-2. A small number of patients in one study had no detectable neutralizing IgG. There have also been reports of patients in South Korea testing PCR positive after a prior negative test, indicating reinfection// | + | However, //not all COVID-19 patients do produce high levels of antibodies specific for SARS-CoV-2. A small number of patients in one study had no detectable neutralizing |
Complicating matters further, not all serology tests measure antibody titers. Some rapid serology tests are designed to be binary—the test can either detect antibodies or not, but does not give information about the amount of antibodies circulating. | Complicating matters further, not all serology tests measure antibody titers. Some rapid serology tests are designed to be binary—the test can either detect antibodies or not, but does not give information about the amount of antibodies circulating. | ||
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By Angela Rasmussen - Aug 26, 2020 | By Angela Rasmussen - Aug 26, 2020 | ||
- | //Since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, there have been anecdotal reports of COVID-19 patients becoming reinfected with SARS-CoV-2.// | + | //Since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, there have been anecdotal reports of COVID-19 patients becoming reinfected with SARS-CoV-2.// |
+ | |||
+ | According to a paper from researchers at [[:Hong Kong University]], viral [[:genome sequencing]] showed that he was infected with two different genetic variants of SARS-CoV-2 and was therefore authentically reinfected, although the authors have not presented data to rule out contamination, | ||
But this is not cause for alarm. You cannot tell whether something is going to have a major impact on the pandemic by looking at a solitary case, or even a handful of cases. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of the emerging viruses unit at the [[:World Health Organization]], | But this is not cause for alarm. You cannot tell whether something is going to have a major impact on the pandemic by looking at a solitary case, or even a handful of cases. Maria Van Kerkhove, head of the emerging viruses unit at the [[:World Health Organization]], | ||
- | So what can we learn about [[: | + | So what can we learn about [[: |
- | Most commonly, a [[:PCR test]] //is used to diagnose SARS-CoV-2 infection,// | + | Most commonly, a [[:PCR test]] //is used to diagnose SARS-CoV-2 infection,// |
This type of nonsterilizing immune protection against disease has been observed in all of the studies testing vaccines in rhesus macaques: Not all the vaccinated animals were protected against infection, but they were much less sick, at least in terms of their clinical presentation, | This type of nonsterilizing immune protection against disease has been observed in all of the studies testing vaccines in rhesus macaques: Not all the vaccinated animals were protected against infection, but they were much less sick, at least in terms of their clinical presentation, | ||
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14 May 2021 by James Gorman and Carl Zimmer, The New York Times | 14 May 2021 by James Gorman and Carl Zimmer, The New York Times | ||
- | A photo provided by [[: | + | A photo provided by [[: |
The organisers of the letter, [[:Jesse Bloom]], who studies the evolution of viruses at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, and [[:David Relman]], a microbiologist at Stanford University, said they strove to articulate a wait-and-see viewpoint that they believe is shared by many scientists. Many of the signers have not spoken out before. | The organisers of the letter, [[:Jesse Bloom]], who studies the evolution of viruses at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, and [[:David Relman]], a microbiologist at Stanford University, said they strove to articulate a wait-and-see viewpoint that they believe is shared by many scientists. Many of the signers have not spoken out before. | ||
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- | Early last month, I got my third Covid vaccine shot. I now realize this was overkill and I’m fairly embarrassed about it, but at the time I felt like I was operating in an information vacuum. | + | Early last month,** I got my third [[:Covid vaccine]] shot.** I now realize this was overkill and I’m fairly embarrassed about it, but at the time I felt like I was operating in an information vacuum. |
As I’ve written before, I participated in the [[:Johnson & Johnson]] vaccine trial. //Even though I initially got the placebo, the study offered me the opportunity to get the real thing weeks before I’d have otherwise been eligible, and I gratefully accepted.// At the time, public health authorities were telling everyone to take the first shot you could get. | As I’ve written before, I participated in the [[:Johnson & Johnson]] vaccine trial. //Even though I initially got the placebo, the study offered me the opportunity to get the real thing weeks before I’d have otherwise been eligible, and I gratefully accepted.// At the time, public health authorities were telling everyone to take the first shot you could get. | ||
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Some other people were quietly doing the same thing I had. Right after getting the Pfizer shot, I called the J.&J. trial to confess, in case the people running it needed me to drop out. The person I spoke to said that while it wasn’t ideal, I should keep participating, | Some other people were quietly doing the same thing I had. Right after getting the Pfizer shot, I called the J.&J. trial to confess, in case the people running it needed me to drop out. The person I spoke to said that while it wasn’t ideal, I should keep participating, | ||
- | The evidentiary void around J.&J. seemed to grow more frightening with the spread of the Delta variant. Previously, data from Britain had shown that a single dose of either Pfizer or AstraZeneca provided pretty good protection against Covid infection. With Delta, single-dose protection went way down, to around 35 percent. | + | The evidentiary void around J.&J. seemed to grow more frightening with the spread of the [[:Delta]] variant. Previously, data from Britain had shown that a single dose of either |
- | For weeks, no one knew what that meant for the J.&J. vaccine. | + | For weeks, no one knew what that meant for the J.&J. vaccine. |
“I really don’t blame people — they keep hearing all this stuff about two shots, two shots, Delta, you need to be fully vaccinated, | “I really don’t blame people — they keep hearing all this stuff about two shots, two shots, Delta, you need to be fully vaccinated, | ||
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CBC: We're facing a fifth wave here driven by the Omicron variant. Why is a booster shot so important? | CBC: We're facing a fifth wave here driven by the Omicron variant. Why is a booster shot so important? | ||
- | Rasmussen: The booster shot, it turns out, is really important in terms of reducing your risk of contracting Omicron and also making sure that your protection against severe disease remains high. Some studies have shown that two doses of the vaccine provide pretty good protection against severe illness. | + | Rasmussen: The booster shot, it turns out, is really important in terms of reducing your risk of contracting Omicron and also making sure that your protection against severe disease remains high. Some studies have shown that two doses of the [[:vaccine]] provide pretty good protection against severe illness. |
- | It's good news in the sense that there is still protection against severe disease, but they found that with a booster shot, it also improved protection against getting infected in the first place, taking it back up to about 70 per cent. And it really did boost the protection against severe disease back up into that 90 per cent range. Getting a booster shot will also improve the protection you have that will help keep you out of the hospital if you do happen to have a breakthrough case. | + | It's good news in the sense that there is still protection against severe disease, but they found that with a booster shot, it also improved protection against getting infected in the first place, taking it back up to about 70 per cent. And it really did boost the protection against severe disease back up into that 90 per cent range. |
CBC: We've got children heading back to school and, of course, there are still those kids under five who are not yet eligible for any vaccine. Do you have any final thoughts on those issues? | CBC: We've got children heading back to school and, of course, there are still those kids under five who are not yet eligible for any vaccine. Do you have any final thoughts on those issues? | ||
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Her husband had already departed, and she was planning to follow on Tuesday. But the growing chance of picking up an infection en route, potentially endangering family members, including a three-year-old niece who is not vaccinated, changed her mind. | Her husband had already departed, and she was planning to follow on Tuesday. But the growing chance of picking up an infection en route, potentially endangering family members, including a three-year-old niece who is not vaccinated, changed her mind. | ||
- | “It sucks, but I think I made the right move,” Dr. Rasmussen said. Colleagues in Saskatoon have invited her to spend some time over the holiday, she said, “so it won’t just be me alone listing to Christmas music, crying.” | + | “It sucks, but I think I made the right move,” Dr. Rasmussen said. Colleagues in [[:Saskatoon]] have invited her to spend some time over the holiday, she said, “so it won’t just be me alone listing to Christmas music, crying.” |
- | On top of personal considerations, | + | On top of personal considerations, |
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Video Transcript | Video Transcript | ||
- | AKIKO FUJITA: Welcome to Yahoo Finance Live. I'm Akiko Fujita along with Brad Smith. It was roughly two years ago today when the first COVID-19 case in the US was reported. Test results in Washington state confirmed that case several days later. And over the next hour, we're going to be taking a closer look at the progress that has been made so far and the challenges that still lie ahead. | + | AKIKO FUJITA: Welcome to [[:Yahoo Finance]] Live. I' |
I want to start, though, with where things stand right now. And, Brad, these numbers really do tell this story. 334 million COVID cases confirmed globally. Roughly 68 million reported in the US, and 854,000 people have died from the virus in this country alone. | I want to start, though, with where things stand right now. And, Brad, these numbers really do tell this story. 334 million COVID cases confirmed globally. Roughly 68 million reported in the US, and 854,000 people have died from the virus in this country alone. | ||
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[[:ANGELA RASMUSSEN]] Yeah, I think this discussion about whether Omicron is milder can lead to some really harmful places. So it is certainly good news that in people who've had a prior exposure, prior infection, or have been vaccinated and, ideally, boosted, do tend to have less severe disease caused by Omicron if they have a breakthrough infection. | [[:ANGELA RASMUSSEN]] Yeah, I think this discussion about whether Omicron is milder can lead to some really harmful places. So it is certainly good news that in people who've had a prior exposure, prior infection, or have been vaccinated and, ideally, boosted, do tend to have less severe disease caused by Omicron if they have a breakthrough infection. | ||
- | And I should add, too, that while //boosters can't completely protect somebody from getting infected with Omicron, they certainly reduce the risk of being infected. So they do reduce infection, they do reduce transmission.// | + | And I should add, too, that while //boosters can't completely protect somebody from getting infected with [[:Omicron]], they certainly reduce the risk of being infected. So they do reduce infection, they do reduce transmission.// |
And I'm not convinced that Omicron actually milder in those people. //And of the people who are being hospitalized, | And I'm not convinced that Omicron actually milder in those people. //And of the people who are being hospitalized, | ||
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[[:ANGELA RASMUSSEN]] So, frankly, I don't think that elimination is going to be possible with this virus. //This virus infects a number of different animal species. This is actually one thing that my lab works on.// And even if every human being on the planet was vaccinated, there' | [[:ANGELA RASMUSSEN]] So, frankly, I don't think that elimination is going to be possible with this virus. //This virus infects a number of different animal species. This is actually one thing that my lab works on.// And even if every human being on the planet was vaccinated, there' | ||
- | So endemicity is really what we're talking about. But I don't think a lot of people really have a good understanding of what endemicity means. Endemicity doesn' | + | So [[:endemicity]] is really what we're talking about. But I don't think a lot of people really have a good understanding of what endemicity means. Endemicity doesn' |
So if we get to the point where the global population has reached population immunity, even if new variants that are emerging can infect people who have been vaccinated or immunized, that doesn' | So if we get to the point where the global population has reached population immunity, even if new variants that are emerging can infect people who have been vaccinated or immunized, that doesn' | ||
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==== Macleans Canada ==== | ==== Macleans Canada ==== | ||
+ | |||
The team of scientists guarding Canada against COVID variants—' | The team of scientists guarding Canada against COVID variants—' | ||
The Coronavirus Variants Rapid Response Network [[: | The Coronavirus Variants Rapid Response Network [[: | ||
- | Rather, it’s a “known unknown” that keeps Langlois up at night: “The greatest threat will come from a variant that returns to an animal reservoir—infecting your domestic cat, for example, then mutating in your cat in a certain way that the human system will not allow. And then the virus would be transmitted back to humans in this slightly different form. | + | Rather, it’s a “known unknown” that keeps Langlois up at night: “**The greatest threat will come from a variant that returns to an animal reservoir—infecting your domestic cat, for example,** then mutating in your cat in a certain way that the human system will not allow. And then the virus would be transmitted back to humans in this slightly different form. |
- | “This is what we consider the No. 1 threat to the current vaccines, | + | “This is what we consider the No. 1 threat to the current vaccines, |
The virus that causes COVID, says Rasmussen, “is a generalist, and it can infect a lot of different species.” Already, antibodies have been detected in white-tailed deer, as well as some zoo animals. “It’s not lost on me that a lot of the zoo animals that have been infected are big cats,” she adds. “There’s already quite a bit of data suggesting not only that cats can be infected, but that they can transmit it to each other.” | The virus that causes COVID, says Rasmussen, “is a generalist, and it can infect a lot of different species.” Already, antibodies have been detected in white-tailed deer, as well as some zoo animals. “It’s not lost on me that a lot of the zoo animals that have been infected are big cats,” she adds. “There’s already quite a bit of data suggesting not only that cats can be infected, but that they can transmit it to each other.” | ||
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As women who are deeply involved in Covid-19 science, it has become clear to us that our expertise means little when it comes to real decision-making in this public health emergency. We are frustrated that our work is being overlooked and misrepresented in the media. We’re exhausted knowing that after this is all over we will have a powerful fight on our hands to reclaim the professional ground that is slipping away from us during this emergency. | As women who are deeply involved in Covid-19 science, it has become clear to us that our expertise means little when it comes to real decision-making in this public health emergency. We are frustrated that our work is being overlooked and misrepresented in the media. We’re exhausted knowing that after this is all over we will have a powerful fight on our hands to reclaim the professional ground that is slipping away from us during this emergency. | ||
- | * Caroline Buckee is an associate professor of epidemiology at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Caroline Buckee]] is an associate professor of epidemiology at the [[:Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Bethany Hedt-Gauthier is an associate professor of global health and social medicine at Harvard Medical School. | + | * [[:Bethany Hedt-Gauthier]] is an associate professor of global health and social medicine at [[:Harvard Medical School]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Ayesha Mahmud is an assistant professor of demography at the University of California, Berkeley. | + | * [[:Ayesha Mahmud]] is an assistant professor of demography at the [[:University of California]], Berkeley. |
* | * | ||
- | * Pamela Martinez is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Pamela Martinez]] is a postdoctoral research fellow at the [[:Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Christine Tedijanto is an epidemiology graduate student at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Christine Tedijanto]] is an epidemiology graduate student at the [[:Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Megan Murray is a professor of global health at Harvard Medical School. | + | * [[:Megan Murray]] is a professor of global health at [[:Harvard Medical School]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Rebecca Khan is an epidemiology graduate student at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Rebecca Khan]] is an epidemiology graduate student at the [[:Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Tigist Menkir is an epidemiology graduate student at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Tigist Menkir]] is an epidemiology graduate student at the [[:Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Ruoran Li is a postdoctoral researcher at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Ruoran Li]] is a postdoctoral researcher at the [[:Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Sara Suliman is an instructor in medicine at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital at Harvard Medical School. | + | * [[:Sara Suliman]] is an instructor in medicine at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital at [[:Harvard Medical School]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Bailey K. Fosdick is an assistant professor of statistics at Colorado State University. | + | * [[:Bailey K. Fosdick]] is an assistant professor of statistics at [[:Colorado State University]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Sarah Cobey is an associate professor of ecology and evolution at the University of Chicago. | + | * [[:Sarah Cobey]] is an associate professor of ecology and evolution at the [[:University of Chicago]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * [[:Angela Rasmussen]] is an associate research scientist at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Angela Rasmussen]] is an associate research scientist at [[:Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. |
* | * | ||
- | * Saskia Popescu is a senior infection preventionist at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. | + | * [[:Saskia Popescu]] is a senior infection preventionist at [[:Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Muge Cevik is a clinical fellow at the school of medicine at the University of St Andrews. | + | * [[:Muge Cevik]] is a clinical fellow at the school of medicine at the University of St Andrews. |
* | * | ||
- | * Sara Dada is a global health researcher at the Vayu Global Health Foundation. | + | * [[:Sara Dada]] is a global health researcher at the [[:Vayu Global Health Foundation]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Helen Jenkins is an assistant professor of biostatistics at Boston University School of Public Health. | + | * Helen Jenkins is an assistant professor of [[:biostatistics]] at [[:Boston University]] School of Public Health. |
* | * | ||
- | * Hannah Clapham is an assistant professor of epidemiology at the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health at the National University of Singapore. | + | * [[:Hannah Clapham]] is an assistant professor of epidemiology at the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health at the National |
* | * | ||
- | * Erin Mordecai is an assistant professor of biology at Stanford University. | + | * [[:Erin Mordecai]] is an assistant professor of biology at [[:Stanford University]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Katie Hampson is a research fellow at the University of Glasgow. | + | * [[:Katie Hampson]] is a research fellow at the [[:University of Glasgow]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Maimuna S. Majumder is a faculty member of the Computational Health Informatics Program at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. | + | * [[:Maimuna S. Majumder]] is a faculty member of the [[:Computational Health Informatics]] Program at [[:Boston Children’s Hospital]] and [[:Harvard Medical School]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Amy Wesolowski is an assistant professor of epidemiology at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Amy Wesolowski]] is an assistant professor of epidemiology at [[:Johns Hopkins School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Krutika Kuppalli is an Emerging Leader in Biosecurity Fellow at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. | + | * [[:Krutika Kuppalli]] is an Emerging Leader in Biosecurity Fellow at [[:Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Isabel Rodriguez Barraquer is an assistant professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. | + | * [[:Isabel Rodriguez Barraquer]] is an assistant professor of medicine at the [[:University of California]], San Francisco. |
* | * | ||
- | * Tara C. Smith is a professor of epidemiology at Kent State University College of Public Health. | + | * [[:Tara C. Smith]] is a professor of epidemiology at [[:Kent State University]] College of Public Health. |
* | * | ||
- | * Emma B. Hodcroft is a postdoctoral researcher at the Biozentrum institute at the University of Basel. | + | * [[:Emma B. Hodcroft]] is a postdoctoral researcher at the Biozentrum institute at the [[:University of Basel]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Rebecca C. Christofferson works in the department of pathobiological sciences at the School of Veterinary Medicine at Louisiana State University. | + | * [[:Rebecca C. Christofferson]] works in the department of pathobiological sciences at the School of Veterinary Medicine at Louisiana State University. |
* | * | ||
- | * Jaline Gerardin is an assistant professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. | + | * [[:Jaline Gerardin]] is an assistant professor of preventive medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. |
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- | * Rosalind Eggo is an assistant professor of epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical | + | * [[:Rosalind Eggo]] is an assistant professor of epidemiology at the [[:London School of Hygiene and Tropical |
* | * | ||
- | * Lauren Cowley is a prize fellow of Bioinformatics at the University of Bath. | + | * [[:Lauren Cowley]] is a prize fellow of Bioinformatics at the [[:University of Bath]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Lauren M. Childs is an assistant professor of mathematics at Virginia Tech. | + | * [[:Lauren M. Childs]] is an assistant professor of mathematics at [[:Virginia Tech]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Lindsay T. Keegan is a research assistant professor of epidemiology at the University of Utah. | + | * [[:Lindsay T. Keegan]] is a research assistant professor of epidemiology at the [[:University of Utah]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Virginia Pitzer is an associate professor of epidemiology at the Yale School of Public Health. | + | * [[:Virginia Pitzer]] is an associate professor of epidemiology at the [[:Yale School of Public Health]]. |
* | * | ||
- | * Catherine Oldenburg is an assistant professor of epidemiology at the University of California, San Francisco. | + | * [[:Catherine Oldenburg]] is an assistant professor of epidemiology at the [[:University of California]], San Francisco. |
* Roopa Dhatt is executive director and co-founder of Women in Global Health. | * Roopa Dhatt is executive director and co-founder of Women in Global Health. | ||
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We authored a recent opinion piece explaining how we conclusively determined that the pandemic’s epicenter was the Huanan market to a general audience in plain language, including the observation that the sole piece of evidence linking the pandemic to the WIV is that it began in Wuhan. Sachs declares our viewpoint “a lie.” | We authored a recent opinion piece explaining how we conclusively determined that the pandemic’s epicenter was the Huanan market to a general audience in plain language, including the observation that the sole piece of evidence linking the pandemic to the WIV is that it began in Wuhan. Sachs declares our viewpoint “a lie.” | ||
- | Our work comprises multiple streams of verifiable evidence that can only reasonably be explained by zoonotic emergence at the Huanan market. Sachs denigrated and dismissed it all as a “sleight of hand” intended to draw the public’s gaze away from the WIV, presumably to provide cover for virology as a profession and avoid inconvenient questions about excluding an alternative hypothesis—a well-worn lab leak talking point. This is especially remarkable given Worobey’s advocacy for exploring alternate hypotheses. Sachs advances another standard lab leak talking point: that no one has really evaluated the lab leak hypothesis. But our work could as easily have shown that the preponderance of early cases linked to the Huanan market was a mirage, or that the outbreak had a single origin, or that early spread in Wuhan was around the WIV. | + | Our work comprises multiple streams of verifiable evidence that can only reasonably be explained by zoonotic emergence at the [[:Huanan]] market. Sachs denigrated and dismissed it all as a “sleight of hand” intended to draw the public’s gaze away from the WIV, presumably to provide cover for virology as a profession and avoid inconvenient questions about excluding an alternative hypothesis—a well-worn lab leak talking point. This is especially remarkable given Worobey’s advocacy for exploring alternate hypotheses. Sachs advances another standard lab leak talking point: that no one has really evaluated the lab leak hypothesis. But our work could as easily have shown that the preponderance of early cases linked to the Huanan market was a mirage, or that the outbreak had a single origin, or that early spread in Wuhan was around the WIV. |
Worobey was invited by Sachs in February, shortly after the preprint of our paper had posted, to appear as “one of a few outside experts” to speak about COVID-19 origins with the members of the [[: | Worobey was invited by Sachs in February, shortly after the preprint of our paper had posted, to appear as “one of a few outside experts” to speak about COVID-19 origins with the members of the [[: | ||
- | The other five experts included three people from other fields who had never published original, peer-reviewed research on any viral outbreak, let alone COVID-19. The remaining two included an expert on the antigenic evolution of SARS-CoV-2 with no previous track record of publishing on pandemic origins and a self-described “master virus hunter” who had done nothing to hunt down the origin of COVID-19 but had made specious claims about knowing about the outbreak before almost anyone else on the planet had. | + | The other five experts included three people from other fields who had never published original, peer-reviewed research on any viral outbreak, let alone COVID-19. The remaining two included an expert on the antigenic evolution of [[:SARS-CoV-2]] with no previous track record of publishing on pandemic origins and a self-described “master virus hunter” who had done nothing to hunt down the origin of COVID-19 but had made specious claims about knowing about the outbreak before almost anyone else on the planet had. |
The great pandemics of history have not been caused by “lab leaks” or government cover-ups. **From the Black Death to the [[:1918 Spanish flu]] to [[:HIV]] to [[: | The great pandemics of history have not been caused by “lab leaks” or government cover-ups. **From the Black Death to the [[:1918 Spanish flu]] to [[:HIV]] to [[: | ||
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Those promoting conspiracy theories and attacking scientific findings that don’t break in the direction they wish, regardless of how well credentialed, | Those promoting conspiracy theories and attacking scientific findings that don’t break in the direction they wish, regardless of how well credentialed, | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Challenging 'COVID Misinformation' | ||
+ | Full Twitter thread at Wayback ((https:// | ||
+ | {{ :: | ||
===== Publications ===== | ===== Publications ===== |