World
As European countries lift restrictions, is this the end of COVID-19?
From France, the place the federal government lifted an indoor masks requirement, to Austria which has determined to not implement its vaccine mandate, many European international locations are lifting restrictions whilst COVID-19 continues to flow into at excessive ranges.
There are 18 international locations within the European area which have lifted almost all virus measures, in line with the World Well being Group (WHO).
Nations have grow to be “extra accustomed to dwelling with this virus,” stated Professor David Heymann, an epidemiologist on the London College of Hygiene and Tropical Drugs, and governments are in flip letting folks do “their very own danger evaluation” somewhat than imposing restrictions on them.
Does that imply after two years of pandemic measures that we’re coming to the tip?
Is that this the tip of the COVID-19 pandemic?
“I wouldn’t name it that in the intervening time,” Dr Catherine Smallwood, WHO’s COVID-19 incident supervisor for the European area, advised Euronews.
“Actually, we’re in a part of the pandemic the place we would attempt to obtain shifting away from the acute emergency that the pandemic has introduced,” she stated, however will probably be a very long time earlier than we will “faux that the virus isn’t there anymore”.
The purpose for this 12 months could be to exit that “emergency” part, however it’s going to depend upon the way it evolves world wide, she added.
There are nonetheless rising instances and deaths in a number of Asian international locations, as an illustration, the place there may be decrease inhabitants immunity than in Europe. Circumstances and deaths are at a two-year excessive in China.
Circumstances have been general reducing within the European Union (EU) and European Financial Space (EEA) within the first week of March, in line with the European Centre for Illness Management and Prevention.
Within the public well being physique’s final surveillance report from 10 March, mortality was nonetheless rising in 10 international locations as a result of unfold of the Omicron variant. Round 83% of individuals within the EU and EEA are totally vaccinated in opposition to COVID-19.
“The resurgence will rely, I imagine, on the inhabitants immunity within the nation and as properly the vaccination protection and the historical past of earlier sickness,” stated Prof Heymann, who factors out that many individuals may have already had COVID-19 with out signs.
Will instances and hospitalisations rise as measures are lifted?
Infections are beginning to rise once more in a number of European international locations that handed an Omicron peak, with a brand new record-high variety of instances in Germany.
On Wednesday, there have been greater than 2,000 new hospitalisations and greater than 200 deaths in a day, about half of the variety of deaths recorded on the peak of Germany’s winter wave final 12 months.
Austria additionally has had rising instances and a slight rise in hospitalisations, although it’s just a bit over half the extent of hospitalisations seen throughout final 12 months’s fall wave that prompted the federal government to impose a lockdown.
“In international locations that have already got lifted measures, the virus will, in fact, make the most of that. There will probably be an elevated incidence. There will probably be elevated mortality,” stated Dr Smallwood.
Prof Heymann says these surges could also be like different coronaviruses and influenza with the onus on people to make their very own choices about danger.
“Nations might want to give attention to hospital admissions and on hospital deaths…and if they start to extend that they’re going to wish to take some further measures,” Prof Heymann stated.
Many consultants hope that there received’t be the extra strict measures corresponding to lockdowns that Europe noticed beforehand as a result of inhabitants immunity by way of vaccination and pure an infection.
However German well being minister Karl Lauterbach stated this week that and not using a vaccine mandate, it could possibly be tough to regulate the pandemic in a while within the autumn.
“We’re seeing excessive numbers of individuals dying, 15,000 folks within the European area (which incorporates a part of central Asia) simply final week. These numbers are coming down, however we’ll see instances improve as international locations carry the measures,” stated Dr Smallwood.
What are the best dangers within the pandemic’s future?
There could possibly be new mutations and variants that escape the safety of vaccines, consultants say.
“But when that happens, we’re lucky to have vaccines, which might be modified very, very quickly and used very successfully,” Prof Heymann stated.
Dr Smallwood says that whereas there aren’t any crimson flags in the intervening time, the World Well being Group is consistently monitoring adjustments to the virus.
Along with robust surveillance, “we will anticipate the chance” of the virus, stated Antoine Flahault, director of the Institute of World Well being on the College of Geneva.
“We all know that the virus transmits in indoor areas which might be poorly ventilated and accommodate the general public,” he stated.
One of many essential points to work by way of is best ventilating these areas with out sacrificing vitality use, he added.
The present danger is for these within the inhabitants who stay susceptible to the sickness, the unvaccinated who’ve comorbidities and people who are immunocompromised for whom vaccination doesn’t work.
“I feel that we must always all be extraordinarily conscious that there stay susceptible folks in our populations which may be extraordinarily anxious by the current bulletins that extra of those easy measures have been lifted,” stated Dr Smallwood.
“I feel it is on every of us to actually take into consideration our duty in the direction of these folks.”
World
Are you in charge of a holiday feast? Follow these tips for food safety
Ready or not, the holidays are here. It’s a time when many Americans accustomed to preparing simple meals find themselves responsible for safely serving multi-dish feasts.
It’s no easy task. Outbreaks of some types of food poisoning tend to rise in November and December, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Tainted turkey, undercooked stuffing and germ-laced gravy from holiday buffets have all led to past illnesses — and even deaths — CDC investigators have found.
It can be tricky for occasional cooks to prepare big meals in a way that avoids the common hazards that can make people sick, said Donald Schaffner, a food science expert at Rutgers University.
“Cooking takes longer with big masses of food. Cooling takes longer with big masses of food,” said Schaffner, who co-hosts the food-safety podcast “Risky or Not?”
Together with podcast co-host Benjamin Chapman, a food scientist at North Carolina State University, Schaffner outlined common ways to keep holiday meals both festive and safe.
This article is part of AP’s Be Well coverage, focusing on wellness, fitness, diet and mental health. Read more Be Well.
Prepare the turkey
Nearly 90% of U.S. hosts plan to serve turkey on Thanksgiving this year, according to the turkey producer Butterball.
But raw turkey can harbor illness-causing bacteria such as salmonella, campylobacter and other germs. It must be handled safely to prevent those bugs from contaminating refrigerator surfaces, sinks and kitchen counters.
A frozen bird must be thawed first. There are several accepted methods, including in the refrigerator, in the microwave or in cold running water, Schaffner said.
“All of these methods pose risks,” he cautioned.
A frozen turkey needs about 24 hours for every 4 to 5 pounds of weight to thaw in a refrigerator, according to the Agriculture Department. If you use a microwave or the cold water method, the bird must be cooked immediately. For details about safe turkey handling, check out the thawing and cooking calculators created by the USDA.
And don’t wash the turkey. It’s a bad idea to rinse it in the sink, even though many cooks still insist on the practice, often out of habit, said Chapman.
“Anything that hits that surface and generates spray is going to basically spread contamination around your kitchen,” he said.
Instead, pat the turkey dry with paper towels and toss them, or use a kitchen towel and disinfect it in the laundry.
What about roasting?
Turkey needs to reach a cooked temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit before serving. The best way to tell if it’s cooked is to use a tip-sensitive digital thermometer inserted in the innermost section of the thigh, not touching the bone.
Don’t rely on the plastic pop-up thermometers stuck in some commercial turkeys. Chapman’s past research shows that those buttons can activate well before the bird is actually done.
At the same time, don’t determine doneness by relying on signs such as golden-brown skin, whether the meat is no longer pink or whether the juices run clear.
“None of those are great indicators of temperature,” Chapman said.
Side dishes and leftovers
How you handle the rest of the meal — mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans or yams — is just as important as the main dish. It’s crucial to avoid the so-called danger zone of temperatures between 40 degrees and 140 degrees Fahrenheit, where bacteria can easily grow.
The key is to keep hot foods piping hot and cold foods cold — and to refrigerate everything promptly, Schaffner said.
“The recommendation is that you get those leftovers into the refrigerator within two hours of when they came off of the stove,” he said.
Make sure to refrigerate dense foods like sliced turkey, cooked sweet potatoes or gravy in shallow containers to help them cool down fast. Schaffner’s recent research showed that foods cooled in containers at a depth of no more than 2 inches posed little risk of growing dangerous germs.
Keep it clean
One key way to avoid food poisoning is through scrupulous cleaning in the kitchen.
Wash your hands before preparing food and after touching raw poultry. Use separate cutting boards, knives and other utensils when handling raw meat and fresh foods such as vegetables and salads.
Pay close attention to any surface that may be contaminated. It’s important to clean first with soap and water and then sanitize with a disinfectant — a two-step process.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
World
Uruguay ousts conservative government, elects leftist opposition candidate as turnout hits 90 percent
Uruguay ousted its conservative government that had been in charge for the past five years, as leftist opposition candidate Yamandú Orsi claimed victory in a tight presidential runoff Sunday.
Even as the vote count continued, Álvaro Delgado, the presidential candidate of the center-right ruling coalition, conceded defeat to his challenger.
“With sadness, but without guilt, we can congratulate the winner,” he told supporters at his campaign headquarters in the capital of Montevideo.
Orsi, 57, a working-class former history teacher and two-time mayor from Uruguay’s Broad Front coalition, was mentored by former President José “Pepe” Mujica, an ex-Marxist guerilla who became world renowned for driving Uruguay’s legalization of abortion, same-sex marriage and sale of marijuana a decade ago. Orsi thanked his supporters as crowds flocked to greet him.
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“The country of liberty, equality and fraternity has triumphed once again,” he said, vowing to unite the nation of 3.4 million people after such a tight vote.
“Let’s understand that there is another part of our country who have different feelings today,” he said. “These people will also have to help build a better country. We need them too.”
“I will be the president who calls for national dialogue again and again, who builds a more integrated society and country,” Orsi said.
“Starting tomorrow, I’ll have to work very hard, there’s a lot to do,” he told the Associated Press from the glass-walled NH Columbia hotel, thronged friends and colleagues embracing and congratulating him.
With nearly all the votes counted, electoral officials reported that Orsi won just over 49% of the vote, ahead of Delgado’s 46%. The rest cast blank votes or abstained in defiance of Uruguay’s enforced compulsory voting. Turnout reached almost 90%.
After weeks in which the rivals appeared tied in the polls, Delgado’s concession ushers in Orsi as Uruguay’s new leader and cuts short the center-right Republican coalition’s shot at governing.
The 2019 election of President Luis Lacalle Pou spelled an end to 15 consecutive years of rule by the Broad Front.
“I called Yamandú Orsi to congratulate him as President-elect of our country,” Lacalle Pou wrote on social media platform X, adding that he would “put myself at his service and begin the transition as soon as I deem it appropriate.”
Orsi’s victory made the South American country the latest to rebuke the incumbent party in the wake of post-pandemic economic malaise.
The win contrasts with that of populist Javier Milei, who won the presidency in Argentina in 2023 by promising to overhaul the establishment to deal with soaring inflation and poverty. Milei reportedly has grown close to President-elect Trump.
Orsi has been described as a moderate with no radical plans for change. He largely agrees with his opponent on key voter concerns like driving down the childhood poverty rate, now at a staggering 25%, and containing an upsurge in organized crime that has shaken the nation long considered among Latin America’s safest.
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Despite Orsi’s promise to lead a “new left” in Uruguay, his platform resembles the mix of market-friendly policies and welfare programs that characterized the Broad Front’s tenure from 2005-2020.
Mujica, now 89 and recovering from esophageal cancer, turned up at his local polling station before balloting even began on Sunday to praise Orsi’s humility and Uruguay’s proud stability.
“This is no small feat,” he said of his nation’s “citizenry that respects formal institutions.”
With inflation easing, and the economy expected to expand by some 3.2% this year, Delgado had promised to continue pursuing his predecessor’s pro-business policies.
Lacalle Pou, who constitutionally cannot run for a second consecutive term, has enjoyed high approval ratings. But the official results trickling in on Sunday showed that mounting complaints in Uruguay about years of sluggish economic growth, stagnant wages and the government’s struggle to contain crime after five years helped swing the election against Delgado.
Specific proposals by Orsi include tax incentives to lure investment and revitalize the critical agricultural sector, as well as social security reforms that would lower the retirement age but fall short of a radical overhaul sought by Uruguay’s unions that failed to pass in the Oct. 27 general election during which neither front-runner secured an outright majority.
He is also likely to put an end to a trade agreement with China that Lacalle Pou had pursued to the chagrin of Mercosur, an alliance of South American nations promoting regional commerce.
His government will take office on March 1, 2025.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
World
Scholz gets SPD's chancellor candidate nod after weeks of doubt
Germany’s centre-left Social Democracts have chosen to officially nominate current Chancellor Olaf Scholz as their party’s candidate despite his low approval ratings.
Olaf Scholz has been officially nominated by his Social Democratic Party (SPD) as its candidate for German chancellor in snap elections set for 23 February.
The incumbent chancellor’s nomination comes after weeks of tense discussions within the centre-left party over whether he was the right person for the job.
Some members of his party rallied around Defence Minister Boris Pistorius — who enjoys higher approval ratings — as a replacement for Scholz.
On Thursday, Pistorius said he was not “available” to run for chancellor, paving the way for Scholz to be at the top of the party’s ballot.
The SPD’s executive committee officially nominated Scholz on Monday, with Pistorius one of the 33 senior members of the party with the right to vote on the matter.
According to a recent poll by public broadcaster ZDF last week, only 37% of respondents thought Scholz was doing a good job in his current role as chancellor.
A separate survey showed a large majority (78%) thought the SPD would achieve a better result in February’s upcoming election with Pistorius as the candidate for chancellor. Only 11% said they thought the SPD would achieve victory in the election under Scholz.
Internal wrangling
At a meeting of SPD’s official youth branch this weekend, the party’s top was accused of leading the party to a disaster.
Two weeks of internal discussions over who should be the candidate have left their mark, according to younger members of the party.
One of the party’s leaders, Saskia Esken, said at a press conference that the party wasn’t portraying “a good picture in the nomination of our chancellor candidate.”
Scholz’s ruling “streetlight” coalition, which was comprised of the SPD, the Greens, and the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), collapsed earlier this month in public fashion after Scholz fired his Finance Minister Christian Lindner, who hails from the liberal centrist FDP.
Lacking a parliamentary majority, Scholz agreed to hold a no-confidence vote on 16 December, with general elections set for 23 February 2025.
Currently, the centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is leading in the polls with 32%. They have chosen Friedrich Merz as their candidate for chancellor.
The environmentalist Greens party picked Robert Habeck as their top choice, while the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) named Alice Weidel, which was the first time the party had nominated an official chancellor candidate.
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