Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
COVID Cases Stack Up In Germany After American Woman's Bar Crawl
Authorities in southern Germany have recorded three more COVID-19 infections in people who frequented bars visited by a 26-year-old American woman suspected of flouting quarantine rules in the Alpine resort of Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The latest cases take the total number of recent infections in the town to 59, including 25 staff at a hotel resort where the woman worked that caters to U.S. military personnel. (Jordans and Rising, 9/15)
India鈥檚 total of coronavirus infections passed 5 million Wednesday, still soaring and testing the feeble health care system in tens of thousands of impoverished towns and villages. The world鈥檚 second-most populous country has added more than 1 million cases of infection this month alone and is expected to become the pandemic鈥檚 worst-hit country within weeks, surpassing the United States, where more than 6.6 million people have been infected. (Sharma, 9/16)
France will reward foreign health care-workers and other front-line personnel who distinguished themselves in the fight against COVID-19 by fast-tracking citizenship applications for those who want to become French. Instructions this week from the Interior Ministry, seen by The Associated Press, ordered regional officials to prioritize naturalization requests from foreigners who 鈥渁ctively participated in the national effort, with devotion and courage鈥 against the epidemic that has killed nearly 31,000 in France. (Leicester, 9/15)
In the early days of the pandemic, President Emmanuel Macron exhorted the French to wage 鈥渨ar鈥 against an invisible enemy. Today, his message is to 鈥渓earn how to live with the virus.鈥欌 Much of Europe has opted for a similar strategy as infections keep rising, summer recedes into a risk-filled autumn and the possibility of a second wave looms over the continent. Having abandoned hopes of eradicating the virus or developing a vaccine quickly, people have largely gone back to work and school, leading lives as normally as possible amid a pandemic that has already killed nearly 215,000 in Europe. (9/15)
Also 鈥
The new president of the U.N. General Assembly is warning that unilateralism will only strengthen the COVID-19 pandemic and is calling for a new commitment to global cooperation including on the fair and equitable distribution of vaccines. Turkish diplomat and politician Volkan Bozkir, who took over the reins of the 193-member world body on Tuesday, announced that the General Assembly will hold a high-level special session on the COVID-19 pandemic in early November, though diplomats said the date may slip. (9/16)