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Tuesday, Feb 2 2021

Full Issue

As Variant Spreads, England Starts Door-To-Door Testing

News reports are from England, Syria, Jordan, Tanzania, South Africa and China.

Britain begins a door-to-door COVID-19 testing of 80,000 people on Tuesday in a bid to stem the spread of a new highly infectious so called South African variant of the novel coronavirus. Public Health England said it had identified a total of 105 cases of the South African variant since Dec. 22, and to contain new outbreaks, residents in eight areas of the country will now be tested whether or not they are showing symptoms, a process known as 鈥渟urge testing鈥. (McKay, 2/2)

With a few clicks, Rowi Alomur, 38, a Syrian refugee and mother of two living in northwestern Jordan, signed up for a free coronavirus vaccine this month through a national online platform. With the priority set for those 65 and older, or with certain underlying conditions, Alomur told The Washington Post that she is awaiting a text message that will tell her when and where to go for her shot when her turn comes up. Among the world鈥檚 millions of refugees, her experience stands out. Jordan is one of the few countries to have begun vaccinating refugees as inoculation programs begin. Millions of others have been excluded from their host countries鈥 national vaccine programs or face added barriers to access. That could ultimately leave everyone at risk. (Berger, 2/1)

Tanzania鈥檚 health ministry says it has no plans in place to accept COVID-19 vaccines, just days after the president of the country of 60 million people expressed doubt about the vaccines without offering evidence. Health Minister Dorothy Gwajima told a press conference in the capital, Dodoma, on Monday that 鈥渢he ministry has no plans to receive vaccines for COVID-19.鈥 Any vaccines must receive ministry approval. It is not clear when any vaccines might arrive, though Tanzania is eligible for the COVAX global effort aimed at delivering doses to low- and middle-income countries. (2/2)

South Africa gave a hero鈥檚 welcome Monday to the delivery of its first COVID-19 vaccines 鈥 1 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine produced by the Serum Institute of India. South African President Cyril Ramaphosa greeted the crates of vaccine that arrived at Johannesburg鈥檚 O.R. Tambo International Airport. The shipment will be followed up later this month by another 500,000 doses. (Meldrum, 2/1)

World Health Organization experts visited an animal disease center in the Chinese city of Wuhan on Tuesday as part of their investigation into the origins of the coronavirus pandemic. Team member Peter Daszak told reporters later they had 鈥渆xcellent facilities, very informative meeting,鈥 and he tweeted the team met with staff in charge of the health of livestock in Hubei province, toured laboratories and had an 鈥渋n-depth鈥 discussion along with questions and answers. (2/2)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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