Coronavirus: What's happening around the world on Monday - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:16 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
WorldTHE LATEST

Coronavirus: What's happening around the world on Monday

The World Health Organization on Monday was cautious about endorsing the use of plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients to treat those who are ill, saying evidence it works remains "low quality" even as the United States issued emergency authorization for such therapies.

WHO cautious on COVID-19 plasma treatment after U.S. issues emergency authorization

Colombian physician Norberto Medina, who recovered from COVID-19, donates plasma in Bogota earlier this month as part of a research project that seeks to test the effectiveness of plasma from recovered patients in the treatment of patients where the virus is active. (Raul Arboleda/AFP/Getty Images)

The latest:

  • WHO remains cautious about use of plasma fromrecovered COVID-19 patients for treatment.
  • New Zealand extendscoronavirus lockdown in Auckland to end of the week.
  • Australia reportslowestone-day rise in new coronavirus infections in almost two months.
  • Italy begins testing potential COVID-19 vaccine on volunteers.
  • Hospitalizations rising in B.C., afterincrease in new cases fromover the weekend.
  • Masks now mandatory in British Columbia on TransLink, BC Transit and BC Ferries.
  • Manitobaannounces $52 millionfor back-to-school costs amid rising COVID-19 case numbers.

The World Health Organization on Monday was cautious about endorsing the use of recovered COVID-19 patients' plasma to treat those who are ill, saying evidence it works remains "low quality" even as the United States issued emergency authorization for such therapies.

So-called convalescent plasma, which has long been used to treat diseases, has emerged as the latest political flashpoint in the race to find therapies for COVID-19.

The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) on Sunday authorized its use after President Donald Trump blamed the agency for impeding the roll-out of vaccines and therapeutics for political reasons.

The technique involves taking antibody-rich plasma from patients who have recovered from COVID-19 and giving it to those who are suffering from severe active infections in hopes they will recover more quickly.

Soumya Swaminathan, WHO chief scientist, said only a few clinical trials of convalescent plasma have produced results, and the evidence, at least so far, has not been convincing enough to endorse it beyond use as an experimental therapy. While a few trials have showed some benefit, she said, they have been small and their data, so far, is inconclusive.

WHO chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan, seen at a news conference in Geneva last month, says while a few clinical trials of convalescent plasma have showed some benefit, they have been small and their data, so far, is inconclusive. (Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images)

"At the moment, it's still very low-quality evidence," Swaminathan told a news conference. "So we recommend that convalescent plasma is still an experimental therapy, it should continue to be evaluated in well-designed randomized clinical trials."

Evidence is conflicting: One Chinese study showed plasma from people who have recovered from coronavirus failed to make a difference in hospitalized patients, while anotherpooled analysis showed it can lower the risk of death.

One challenge, Swaminathan added, was plasma's variability, since it is drawn from many different people, producing a product that is less-standardized than monoclonal antibodies crafted in the lab.

WATCH | No proof yet convalescent plasma works, epidemiologist says:

No proof yet convalescent plasma works, Canadian epidemiologist says

4 years ago
Duration 5:18
Dr. Christopher Labos says a randomized-controlled trial is necessary to prove convalescent plasma is effective, and without proof there is risk in using it.

WHOsenior adviser Bruce Aylward added that beyond plasma's efficacy, there were also potential safety risks that must be vetted.

"There are a number of side effects," Aylward said, ranging from mild fevers to severe lung injuries or circulatory overload. "For that reason, the clinical trial results are extremely important."

The U.S. National Institutes of Health this month announced it was giving several million dollars toward a mid-stage convalescent plasma trial.


What's happening with coronavirus in Canada

As of 1:15 p.m. ET on Monday,Canada had 125,069 confirmed and presumptive coronavirus cases. Provinces and territories listed 111,269 of those as recovered or resolved. ACBC News tallyof deaths based on provincial reports, regional health information and CBC's reporting stood at 9,114.

In British Columbia, the number of patients in hospital with COVID-19 continues to rise in B.C. after a weekend that saw 269 new confirmed cases of the disease and one more death.

A long-term care home had a new outbreak in the Fraser Health region on Monday, bringing the totalnumber of active outbreaks in the health-care system to 10.

Also from the province, anyone aboard a TransLink or BC Transit bus, boat or train and passengers aboard BC Ferries vessels is required to wear a face mask beginning Monday to help stop the spread of the coronavirus.

TransLink and BC Transit first announced the requirement on Aug. 6. Masks had previously been recommended, but TransLink'sanecdotal evidence suggested only about 40per cent of riders were wearing one.

Meanwhile,Victoria police arrested and fined a guest at a Saturday night party held in the same apartment where a man was fined for COVID-19 safety violations for a party on Friday night.

WATCH |B.C. apartment parties lead to COVID-19 fines:

B.C. apartment parties lead to fines amid COVID-19 crackdown

4 years ago
Duration 2:09
Two nights in a row, young people crowded into a small Victoria apartment to party, leading to the first fines for breaking British Columbias COVID-19 protocols. Provincial officials are getting frustrated that their messages on safety are not getting through.

Officers respondingto reports of a party at the one-bedroom suitefound a group of 15 people and told the host and guests that the party was over.

One guest refused to co-operate and was arrested for obstructing a peace officer. Police said the man also received a $230 fine for violating the COVID-19 Related Measures Act "for abusive or belligerent behaviour at a social gathering."

Manitoba schools will have an extra $52 million to draw from to fund safety measures as students prepare to head back to class amid rising infection case numbers.

In addition to paying for personal protective equipment, some of that money will be available to hire additional staff, Education Minister Kelvin Goertzen said at a news conference Monday morning.

WATCH | What teachers are worried about as back-to-school looms:

Some teachers concerned about the return to school

4 years ago
Duration 12:17
CBC News Network talks to teachers in different provinces about how they are feeling and what they are worried about with students returning to school in just two weeks.

School divisions also saved $48 million earlier this year, after the province ordered them to hold onto money not being used when in-class learning was suspended in the spring.Added together, the total amount available for back-to-school COVID-19 costs is $100 million.

On Monday, the province announced 49 new cases of COVID-19, marking another double-digit day following two record-breaking tallies over the weekend.

Public health officials announced 42 new cases on Saturday and 72 new cases on Sunday, bringing Manitoba's total active cases to 395 as of Monday.

Manitoba's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussin clarified during a news conference that 24 of the day's new cases were being retroactively added to Sunday's total, bringing that day's case count to 96. That left the official Monday tally at 25 new cases, he said.

In Alberta, the province's top doctor saidthat most new cases are linked to social gatherings, ranging from formal events such as weddings, funeral and worship services, to family get-togethers.

One of the largest current outbreaks in the province has been linked to the Bible Pentecostal Church in north Edmonton, which has now seen 75 active and two recovered cases.


Here's what's happening around the world

According to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University, the global total ofconfirmed coronavirus cases is now more than 23.4million.More than 809,000 people havediedwhile 15.1million haverecovered.

Italy kicked off human trials of a potential COVID-19 vaccine on Monday, joining a global effort to develop a response to the virus, which has shown signs of resurgencein Europe.

Rome's Lazzaro Spallanzani institute, a hospital specializing in infectious diseases, will conduct trials on 90 volunteers over the coming weeks, with the hope a vaccine may be available by next spring.

The potential vaccine, called GRAd-COV2, was developed by ReiThera, a company based in Rome. The Lazio region, around the Italian capital, said in a statement early trials, including on animals, had delivered positive results.

Potential vaccines are undergoing trials in a number of different countries, including India, Britain, Russia and China.

Catalonia's president has announced a ban on social gatherings of more than 10 people and widespread testing of half a million students in Spain's northeastern region.

An employee serves beer as inflatable dolls sit at the bar of Barcelona restaurant La Pepita last week to help clients respect physical distancing rules. (Josep Lago/AFP/Getty Images)

The new series of measures announced by Quim Torra on Monday aim to curb a wave of new coronavirus infections ahead of the reopening of schools in mid-September, which officials and experts fear could become a vector for more contagion.

Catalonia reported 1,776 new infections on Monday, with nearly 700 people currently in hospitals and 134 of them in intensive care units. Spain as a whole leads Europe's charts with more than 386,000 total reported infections since February.

The Indonesian island of Bali has postponed a plan to reopen the country's biggest tourism hub to international tourists on Sept. 11, its governor said, due to the rising level of coronavirus cases reported in the southeast Asian country.

A medical worker takes a nasal swab sample from an immigration officer Monday during a mass test for COVID-19 at immigration headquarters in Jakarta, Indonesia. (Tatan Syuflana/The Associated Press)

Indonesia has reported more than 155,000 coronavirus infections and 6,759 deaths as of Monday, the highest number of fatalities in Southeast Asia.

Authorities halted international tourism in early April as the outbreak picked up pace.Tourism is Bali's main source of income and travel restrictions due to the pandemic have hammered the localeconomy.

South Korea's capital on Monday ordered masks to be worn in both indoor and outdoor public places for the first time, as it battles a surge in coronavirus cases centred in the densely populated metropolitan area.

A banner advises beachgoers to follow health guidelines as a protective measure against COVID-19 at Hamdeok beach on South Korea's southern resort island of Jeju on Monday. (Daniel de Carteret/AFP/Getty Images)

In May, the city government ordered that masks be worn on public transport and in taxis, but a recent spike in cases has health officials worried that the country may need to impose its highest level of physicaldistancing, known as Phase 3.Under Phase 3, schools and business will be urged to close.

The Korea Centres for Disease Control and Prevention reported 266 new cases as of midnight on Sunday, down from 397 aday earlier but continuing astreak of more than a week of triple-digit daily increases.

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern on Monday extended a coronavirus lockdown in the country's largest city until the end of the week and introduced mandatory mask wearing on public transport across the nation.

Ardern said the four-day extension inAuckland was critical to enable the country to step down its scale of emergency restrictions and remain at less restrictive levels.

"We want both confidenceand certainty for everyone," shesaid during a televised media conference.

A man wearing a mask walks along an empty street in Auckland Monday during Alert Level 3. New Zealand is extending its current COVID-19 alert levels as it hits Day 13 of increased restrictions following an outbreak. (Hannah Peters/Getty Images)

The Auckland lockdown, imposed on Aug. 11 after officials detected the country's first locally acquired cases of COVID-19 in more than three months, had been scheduled to end on Wednesday. It will now end on Sunday night.

Meanwhile, neighbouring Australia reported its lowest one-day rise in new coronavirus infections in almost two months on Monday, fuelling optimism that a deadly second wave is subsiding.

Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland and Western Australia states reported a combined 121 new cases over the past 24 hours, the lowest single-day rise since July 5.

With files from The Associated Press and CBC News

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your daily guide to the coronavirus outbreak. Get the latest news, tips on prevention and your coronavirus questions answered every evening.

...

The next issue of the Coronavirus Brief will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.