White House plans new system for international travel
The United States is developing a "new system for international
travel" that will include contact tracing for when it eventually
lifts travel restrictions that bar much of the world's population, a
senior White House official said on Wednesday.
White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said the
plan would replace the current restrictions and would be "safer,
stronger and sustainable."
Booster shot generates higher immune response
U.S. Food and Drug Administration scientists said on Wednesday that
booster doses of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine may not be needed, even
though the third shot generates a higher immune response in
recipients.
New data from Moderna Inc's large COVID-19 vaccine trial shows that
the protection it offers wanes over time, supporting the case for
booster doses, the company said in a news release on Wednesday. Data
from several recent studies suggests Moderna's vaccine protection
lasts longer than a similar shot from Pfizer Inc and German partner
BioNTech SE. Experts said the difference is likely due to Moderna's
higher dose of messenger RNA (mRNA) and the slightly longer interval
between the first and second shots.
Indonesia in talks with WHO to become global vaccine hub
Indonesia is in talks with the World Health Organization (WHO) as
well as six drug companies to become a global hub for manufacturing
vaccines, its health minister told Reuters.
Detailing the ambitious strategy for the first time, Budi Gunadi
Sadikin said Indonesia was well-placed to export vaccines around the
world, especially as it is the world's most populous Muslim-majority
country and could guarantee that its jabs were halal, or permissible
according to Islam.
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UNICEF calls for schools to
reopen in pandemic-hit nations
The U.N. children's agency UNICEF has urged
education authorities to reopen schools as soon
as possible in countries where millions of
students are still not allowed to return to
classrooms 18 months into the COVID-19 pandemic.
Schools in about 17 countries are fully closed, while those in 39
countries are partially closed, UNICEF said in a report on Thursday.
Nicky Minaj and the COVID-19 vaccine
Trinidad and Tobago Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh on Wednesday
criticized as "false" a claim by American rapper Nicki Minaj that a
person on the Caribbean island suffered swollen testicles after
receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. Trinidad-born Minaj sparked an
international furore when she alleged on Twitter that her cousin in
Trinidad refuses to get a vaccine because his friend become impotent
after being vaccinated.
Minaj had also said that she had not been able to complete enough
research of her own on the COVID-19 vaccines to get one in time for
the Met Gala, a star-studded fundraiser for New York's Metropolitan
Museum of Art. The White House had said it was willing to set up a
call to talk to her about the safety and effectiveness of the
coronavirus vaccine.
(Compiled by Karishma Singh)
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