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Thursday, Feb 4 2021

Full Issue

'Lay Low' And Avoid Super Bowl Superspreaders, Experts Urge

With new cases dropping from January peaks, Dr. Anthony Fauci pleads with Americans to skip gatherings on Super Bowl Sunday to avoid covid spread.

The nation鈥檚 top infectious disease expert doesn鈥檛 want the Super Bowl to turn into a super spreader. Dr. Anthony Fauci, says when it comes to Super Bowl parties during the pandemic, people should 鈥渏ust lay low and cool it.鈥 He said during TV interviews Wednesday that now isn鈥檛 the time to invite people over for watch parties because of the possibility that they鈥檙e infected with the coronavirus and could sicken others. (2/3)

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued specific Super Bowl guidance this year as the Kansas City Chiefs prepare to face off against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. "The safest way to celebrate events is at home with the people who live with you," the CDC said. "We could have kind of mini superspreader events or little hot spots all around the country starting with those indoor gatherings or even potentially outdoor gatherings if we don鈥檛 follow the recommendations," health policy expert Dr. Kavita Patel said Wednesday. (Fieldstadt, 2/3)

After 2 months of record-setting case counts, hospitalizations, and deaths, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today the United States has finally returned to pre-Thanksgiving levels of COVID-19 transmission. "We are now averaging 144,000 cases per day, and though deaths continue to increase, a recent decline in hospitalizations gives us hope those will also soon fall," said Rochelle Walensky, MD, during today's White House coronavirus press briefing. (Soucheray, 2/3)

And speaking of the Super Bowl ...

The Chiefs had 20 people, including quarterback Patrick Mahomes, other players and staff members, in line for a haircut Sunday with a barber who tested positive for COVID-19, sources told ESPN's Adam Schefter. Backup center Daniel Kilgore was in the chair when the Chiefs pulled the barber once his COVID-19 test results came in, Schefter reported. Kilgore and the barber both were wearing masks and because Kilgore was deemed a close contact, he told the barber to finish. A source initially had told ESPN that Kilgore was mid-haircut when the barber was pulled. The Chiefs on Monday placed Kilgore and wide receiver Demarcus Robinson on the reserve/COVID-19 list after they were considered to be close contacts. (Teicher, 2/3)

In other news about covid infections 鈥

Adults 20 to 49 years old may have kindled 72.2% of US COVID-19 resurgences starting in late summer 2020, with those 35 to 49 especially contributing, a study published yesterday in Science suggests. A team led by researchers from Imperial College London analyzed age-specific cell phone mobility data of more than 10 million Americans and linked them to age-specific COVID-19 death data starting on Mar 15, 2020. (Van Beusekom, 2/3)

Two National Guard members died after contracting COVID-19, bringing the total virus-related death toll since the onset of the pandemic to 19 in the military, according to Department of Defense data. The two service members were an Alabama Air National Guard member and an Army National Guard member from California, a Pentagon spokesperson said, according to the Hill. Their identities have not yet been revealed. (Dima, 2/3)

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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