Christmas comfort over COVID vaccines collides with new curbs
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[December 18, 2020]
By Alistair Smout
LONDON (Reuters) - Coronavirus vaccine
approvals and rollouts have brought comfort and joy to many this
Christmas but failed to halt new curbs on travel and family gatherings
as COVID-19 cases rise worldwide.
More than 73.68 million people have been reported to be infected by the
coronavirus globally and 1,655,424 have died, according to a Reuters
tally, with the United States leading the way in the number of deaths
and infections.
A fast-spreading U.S. surge is pushing hospitals to the brink, weeks
after millions took to the air and roads for the Thanksgiving holiday,
with admissions rising to record heights for a 19th straight day.
Now many countries are preparing for the Christmas rush, with travel
plans for thousands of Australians thrown into chaos when states and
territories imposed border restrictions after 28 COVID-19 cases were
detected in Sydney.
Large areas of England will be added to the "very high alert" COVID-19
tier category this weekend, placing residents under the most stringent
curbs even as the government tries to defend a plan to relax curbs for
five days over Christmas.
"It doesn't look like the tier system is holding the epidemic wave back,
unfortunately" John Edmunds, a member of the government's Scientific
Advisory Group for Emergencies, told Sky News.
"I think we are going to have to look at these measures and perhaps
tighten them up."
South Korea, praised worldwide for its handling of the pandemic in its
early stages, reported 1,062 new cases on Friday, its second-highest
ever daily tally, as the government agonised over tighter restrictions.
Austrians abroad were heading home early for Christmas ahead of new
quarantine rules coming in on Saturday. The country is going into a
third lockdown after Christmas, the national news agency APA reported on
Friday.
'NO SAFE PLACE'
Swiss Health Minister Alain Berset will ask cabinet colleagues on Friday
to close restaurants for a month, two newspapers reported.
The Spanish capital of Madrid, one of Europe's worst COVID-19 hotspots
at the start of the pandemic, has progressively reduced its spread
without closing down clubs or shops.
But with an average notification rate of 244 cases per 100,000
inhabitants over the last 14 days, the region is back to levels seen
before the second wave started.
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Christmas decorations are seen outside an emergency room while
healthcare personnel transport a coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
positive patient, at Trinitas Regional Medical Center in Elizabeth,
New Jersey, U.S., December 16, 2020. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Police in Lithuania were planning to set up roadblocks to enforce a
lockdown.
"There is no safe place in Lithuania," Prime Minister Ingrida
Simonyte told reporters last week.
As government leaders across the world address their nations on how
to fight the pandemic, U.S. President Donald Trump has been largely
silent, with his critics accusing him of abrogating his
responsibilities as cases soar.
French President Emmanuel Macron tested positive for the coronavirus
on Thursday, prompting a track-and-trace effort across Europe
following his numerous meetings with EU heads of government.
EU states will start vaccinations against COVID-19 on Dec. 27 as
Europe tries to catch up with Britain and the United States after
what some have criticised as a slow EU approval process for the
shots.
The European Union has been waiting for the European Medicines
Agency (EMA) to approve a vaccine from Pfizer Inc and German partner
BioNTech SE. The EMA is expected to make an announcement on Dec. 21.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will "rapidly" work towards
granting emergency approval of Moderna Inc's COVID-19 vaccine
candidate, FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn said on Thursday.
A panel of outside advisers to the FDA overwhelmingly endorsed the
emergency use the vaccine, virtually assuring a second option for
protection.
Last week, the same panel backed the Pfizer vaccine, leading to an
FDA emergency use authorisation a day later.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux worldwide; Writing by Nick Macfie;
Editing by Jon Boyle)
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