Plus, more states are offering free COVID-19 tests, the CDC is pushing boosters while 90 million Americans are not yet eligible, and more. Email not displaying correctly?
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** The number of pregnant people dying of COVID-19 surges
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A nurse gives a pregnant woman a shot of a COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic in Havana, Cuba, Thursday, Aug. 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa)
COVID-19 deaths ([link removed]) among pregnant people rose sharply in the last two months ([link removed]) . More than two dozen deaths were reported in both August and September. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is warning women to get vaccinated right away if they are or plan to be pregnant.
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(CDC)
The CDC lists pregnancy ([link removed]) as one of the “underlying conditions” that makes COVID-19 especially dangerous because a woman’s body already throttles back its immune response while supporting a fetus.
ABC News points out ([link removed]) :
COVID-19 is especially dangerous in pregnant people because their immune systems are already less active as they are supporting their growing fetus. For the same reason, their hearts and kidneys are working harder, Dr. Laura Vricella ([link removed]) , a maternal fetal medicine physician at Mercy Hospital in St. Louis, told ABC News in August, ([link removed]) as her hospital and others experienced a spike in pregnant patients with COVID-19.
Pregnant people must also keep their oxygen levels higher in general to support their fetus, which can be a herculean task to do when COVID-19 is in the body, according to Vricella.
And in addition to pregnant people with COVID-19 being more likely to deliver prematurely, Vricella said her hospital also saw more COVID-positive pregnant patients deliver stillbirths, even with mild COVID cases.
The CDC says of the 248 deaths among pregnant people recorded since the pandemic began, 40% have occurred since August, which is around the same time that the delta variant became the dominant version of the virus infecting Americans.
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(CDC)
** More states are offering free COVID-19 tests
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The list of states offering free COVID-19 tests is growing. New Jersey, New Hampshire and Washington send free test kits to people who ask for them.
Pew Stateline says ([link removed]) :
Massachusetts announced today that it will send 2 million free rapid test kits to 102 cities and towns in the state that have the highest proportion of families living in poverty, so officials can distribute them to residents.
Unlike those states, New Jersey is sending lab tests that residents must mail back.
New Jersey has experienced a steep rise in cases since early November and an accompanying increase in hospitalizations, particularly among older residents. State health officials said new hospitalizations have climbed by 81% in the last two weeks.
ProPublica asked ([link removed]) why at-home COVID-19 tests are expensive and hard to find in the U.S. when some countries offer them for free or nearly free.
** Pushing booster doses while 90 million Americans are not yet eligible
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The CDC is pushing people to get vaccine booster doses but new CDC data shows ([link removed]) that there are more people who have had two shots and are not yet eligible for a booster than there are people who have not been vaccinated at all. Axios made the data easier to understand ([link removed]) with this chart:
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(Axios)
Immunologists say they do not want people to be in too big of a hurry to get their booster shots because the immune system needs six months to build antibodies that the vaccines jumpstart. The booster vaccine is supposed to reignite the antibody-building process once it starts to wear down after some months. One person described it to me like a rocket with stages. The big rocket gets you off the launchpad and the booster rocket puts you in orbit. (I realize that a fair number of you were born after we stopped using rockets with stages, so maybe I need to get a new illustration.)
** The great pandemic ‘closet purge’
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A new survey by CivicScience ([link removed]) found “that 40% of Americans are ready to part with much of their wardrobes or have already recently done so” as they contemplate shedding their pandemic sweatpants for real clothes again. Three-fourths of the people who responded to the poll and who work in a “physical location” like an office said they should do a closet purge but probably won’t. Men also were more likely to say they should offload clothes but probably won’t.
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(CivicScience)
The poll said the older people are, the more likely they want to purge their pandemic-era closet.
** Kroger cuts emergency leave and imposes insurance fees on unvaccinated workers
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Giant grocery chain Kroger said ([link removed]) starting Jan. 1, unvaccinated workers who become infected will no longer be eligible to receive up to two weeks of paid emergency leave. It began offering that leave last year when the pandemic was new and the public hailed grocery workers as “essential.”
Kroger has a half-million employees. About two-thirds of them belong to a union. The company says it will charge unvaccinated non-union employees a $50 monthly fee for insurance, while people who get vaccinated get a $100 incentive.
** Massive ProPublica project details industrial pollution in 1,000 hot spots, local journalists join the investigation
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(ProPublica)
ProPublica has augmented its massive investigation of the nation’s communities with the most toxic air pollution with more than a thousand interviews. The journalists’ work shows:
… how for the first time just how much toxic air pollution they emit — and how much the chemicals they unleash could be elevating cancer risk in their communities.
ProPublica’s analysis of five years of modeled EPA data identified more than1,000 toxic hot spots across the country ([link removed]) and found that an estimated 250,000 people living in them may be exposed to levels of excess cancer risk that the EPA deems unacceptable.
But the agency has never released this data in a way that allows the public to understand the risks of breathing the air where they live. Using the reports submitted between 2014 and 2018, we calculated the estimated excess cancer risk from industrial sources across the entire country and mapped it all.
ProPublica says as a result of its reporting, it has documented, “Most (people living near hot spots) never got a warning from the EPA. They are rallying neighbors, packing civic meetings and signing petitions for reform.” ProPublica wanted to speak to people in every hot spot and put out a public appeal a month ago. Responses poured in from around the country when local journalists took on the investigative project, too.
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(Twitter)
ProPublica passes this along to local journalists who want to use the data:
On community-based subreddits, moderators allowed us to share our work and invite people to participate ([link removed]) in our reporting. At a virtual event ([link removed]) with over 100 attendees, residents living in hot spots asked questions of our reporters, and during a separate event ([link removed]) for journalists, our team shared tips on how to best investigate ([link removed]) the impacts of toxic industrial pollution. More than 60 local TV stations nationwide aired segments on the facilities in their viewers’ neighborhoods, often demanding answers from local officials and regulators; at least 13 local newspapers did the same.
Across the country, residents have been mobilizing, using ProPublica’s analysis to push the issue at civic meetings ([link removed]) and circulate a petition ([link removed]) demanding federal reform that has now been signed by more than 88,000 people.
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