New Studies: Pfizer Vaccine Provides Protection Against Hospitalization in Omicron Patients

A new study out of South Africa shows that Pfizer’s two-dose COVID-19 vaccine provides a high degree of protection against hospitalization from the fast-spreading omicron variant.

The real-world study, conducted by the South African Medical Research Council and Discovery Health, the country’s largest private health insurance administrator, was based on more than 211,000 positive COVID-19 test results between November 15 to December 7, with about 78,000 believed to be caused by omicron.

The study concluded that while the vaccine offered only a 33% rate of protection against an overall infection, it provided 70% protection against hospitalization. It also concludes that while there was a higher risk of reinfection during this current surge, the risk of hospitalization among adults was 29% lower than during the initial wave. Pfizer developed the vaccine in collaboration with German-based BioNTech.

South Africa is experiencing a dramatic surge in new daily COVID-19 cases driven by omicron, which was first announced by the country in November.

In a related development, Pfizer announced Tuesday that a new study of its experimental COVID-19 antiviral pill confirms it is highly effective in preventing severe disease among high-risk adults that could lead to hospitalizations and deaths, even against the omicron variant.

The company says it found that the drug, dubbed Paxlovid, reduced the risk of hospitalization and death by 89% if given within three days of the onset of COVID-19 symptoms, and as much 88% if administered within five days.

Pfizer has asked the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to authorize use of Paxlovid based on results from a preliminary study.

The FDA is expected to announce soon whether to grant permission for doctors to use Paxlovid and a competing drug, molnupiravir, developed by Merck. Merck said last month a clinical trial revealed molnupiravir reduced hospitalizations and deaths by only 30% among high-risk adults.

The new developments come as health authorities around the world are warning that omicron could soon surpass delta as the most dominant variant of the coronavirus.

Denmark says omicron will trigger 10,000 new infections by the end of the week, compared to the current rate of 6,000 cases driven entirely by delta. The Norwegian Institute of Public Health also warned Monday that omicron “will soon dominate,” with new infections rising from 4,700 daily cases to a record 90,000 to 300,000 daily cases.

The new warnings come just days after the World Health Organization warned that omicron poses a “very high” global risk because its mutations may lead to higher transmission. The U.N. health agency said while the current vaccines are less effective against omicron, early data shows it causes less severe symptoms than other variants.

Meanwhile, China is reporting its second case of omicron infection on its mainland. A 67-year-old man tested positive Monday, two weeks after arriving in Shanghai from overseas. Authorities say the man repeatedly tested negative during his mandatory two-week hotel quarantine before flying to the southern city of Guangzhou, where he was spending another week in self-isolation at his residence. He tested positive for the new variant after researchers conducted genome sequencing.

The first case of omicron on mainland China was a person in the northern port city of Tianjin who tested positive for the new variant after arriving from overseas on December 9. The individual, who was shown to be asymptomatic, is now quarantined and undergoing treatment in a hospital.

The first cases of omicron on mainland China come two years after COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, was first detected in the central city of Wuhan. China has since imposed a “zero-tolerance” strategy, including mass testing, snap lockdowns and extensive quarantines, as a means to prevent any further outbreaks.

Source: Voice of America

Nigeria’s legislature wants political party members to elect leaders directly. But is it constitutional?

Nigeria’s National Assembly has adopted legislation that allows direct primaries – where all party members and not just delegates will vote in political parties’ primaries to choose candidates for elections. But President Muhammadu Buhari is yet to assent to the Electoral Act No. 6, 2010 (Repeal and Re-enactment) Bill 2021. Though the Independent National Electoral Commission has endorsed other aspects of the bill, it suggested that the president consult with political parties over the controversial direct primaries provision. The Conversation Africa’s Wale Fatade asked public law expert Akinola Akintayo to explain the issues.

Are direct primaries consistent with the constitution?

Some politicians have voiced their opposition. They are worried because the adoption is a direct fallout of happenings in the ruling All Progressives Congress party over selection of candidates for the 2023 general elections. The ruling party is the majority party in the National Assembly.

There are four grounds on which the National Assembly can directly regulate political parties. You can find them in Sections 221 to 229 of the constitution. These are specific provisions in the constitution that deal with regulation of political parties.

The first ground is the provision that the National Assembly can make laws to provide for the punishment of persons who violate specific provisions of the constitution with respect to the formation and operation of political parties.

This is in relation to those who carry on political party activities without registering or without complying with the provisions of the constitution. It also speaks to receiving or retention by political parties of funding from outside the country. This is prohibited and all funds received from abroad must be turned over to the electoral commission within 21 days of such receipt.

The second ground is the authority of the National Assembly to make laws disqualifying anyone found to have aided or assisted political parties to receive or retain funding from overseas.

The third ground is the authority to make laws providing for annual grants to be disbursed to political parties by the electoral commission. The fourth ground is the authority to confer necessary and incidental powers on the commission to perform its functions.

Those provisions and others do not give the National Assembly the power to regulate the primaries of political parties. The constitution doesn’t allow the National Assembly to force political parties to elect candidates this way. The National Assembly may have reasons for adopting direct primaries, but it is inconsistent with the constitution.

Why do you think the National Assembly wants direct primaries?

It is something we knew might come, considering what happened during the presidential primaries in 2018. Contestants allegedly spent millions of dollars to bribe delegates. Any serious legislative body will want to do something about that because it has a trickle down effect on the integrity of the political process and those who emerge as winners. The integrity and sanctity of democracy serve as a barometer of governance in the country.

I think this initiative is a bid to curb the excesses of politicians. That is not to say that the ruling party may not have its own agenda, especially against the background of the disagreement between state governors and National Assembly members on how to select candidates for elections.

What could be done to make the political parties more democratic?

The things that brought us here are the very serious poverty level in the country, the desperation of ordinary Nigerians for survival, lack of education, and political lethargy, among others. People don’t care, they just want to feed themselves and do their stuff and have generally given up on governance and politics. We can see this in low voter turnout in recent elections. But there is a lot we can do.

We need to start empowering the people. I don’t mean the political class but the citizens. So that when it is time for elections, you can reject that small bag of rice and cash regularly doled out to induce voters. That is economic empowerment.

Legally speaking, maybe the National Assembly can empower the electoral commission to properly monitor the internal processes of political parties. They do at present but that mechanism can be strengthened.

But I think it goes beyond the law. People must be empowered economically to be self sufficient and thereby more altruistic. Politicians too must put citizens’ interests ahead of their own in their political dealings. Citizens must be enlightened on the importance of their contributions to the democratic process.

If the president assents to the bill, the innovation becomes law, pending the time it is challenged and overturned or affirmed by the courts as unconstitutional or constitutional.

If the president refuses assent, the innovation is at an end unless the National Assembly overrides the president’s veto by passing the bill again by two-thirds majority of members of both houses of the National Assembly at a joint sitting.

Source: The Conversation

UAE ranks first regionally,11th globally in Global Knowledge Index

Dubai, Under the patronage of the Chairperson of the Dubai Culture & Arts Authority (Dubai Culture) Her Highness Shaikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum Knowledge Foundation (MBRF) unveiled the Global Knowledge Index leaders for 2021.

The index comes in its fifth edition in a row and it aims to measure knowledge globally as a comprehensive closely connected with sustainable development and with different dimensions of modern human life.

In this year’s edition, the knowledge index included 155 variables, selected by more than 40 international sources and databases.

The results of the global knowledge index for the year 2021 unveiled that Switzerland came in first place globally for the fifth year in a row, followed by Sweden, the US, Finland and the Netherlands. The UAE was ranked 11th globally and first in the Arab World at GKI 2021.

Switzerland has retained its top ranking for the fifth consecutive time this year.

“The world is not completely out of the grip of COVID-19, but without doubt what stands out as we negotiated these trying times, is the relentless quest for knowledge that led us to develop vaccines as well as remedial and precautionary measures against the virus. Obviously, this continuing focus on knowledge and its triumph is what has led us to bring back careful normalcy in our daily life, and what has enabled this face-to-face meeting today,” CEO of MBRF Jamal bin Huwaireb said.

He said this year there has seen an extended participation in GKI endeavour, globally as well regionally, signifying the increased commitment towards reinforcing knowledge as a key driver for economic and social growth. The Arabic countries which debuted this year included Iraq and Palestine, joining the portfolio of 16 regional countries in the index.

Globally, the country level participation at GKI 2021 was at 154, compared to 138 last year.

Other countries in the GKI global leader list up to the 100th position included Qatar at the 38th place, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia at 40th, Kuwait at 48th, Oman at 52nd, Egypt at 53rd, Bahrain at 55th, Tunisia at 83rd and Lebanon at 92nd. Morocco was at 101 globally, followed by Jordan at 103, Algeria at 111, Iraq at 137, Sudan at 145, Mauritania at 147 and Yemen at 150.

“When the word stands at these challenging crossroads, the increased global participation at GKI is a robust indicator of how knowledge is the single most important factor that will help world nations prosper and lead in front for the benefit of posterity with sustainable focus. In this context, the GKI series has developed into an accepted and prudent benchmark in assessing knowledge-based societies and their growth,” said Dena Assaf of the UN, Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported.

“It is encouraging to see that in certain key branch indexes that drive knowledge, innovation and education, Arab countries have been faring well and are firmly on the road to progress. Significantly, it shows the positive impact of the awareness that the new world is largely shaped and led by countries that have an edge in knowledge,” Regional Hub Manager at UNDP Regional Bureau for Arab States (RBAS) Khaled Abdel-Shafi said.

The average global performance rate at GKI 2021 stood at 48.4 percent, while for the seven branch indexes of the index, the best performance was for pre-university education at 60.8 percent, followed by enabling environment (55.3), economy (52.9), technical learning and professional training (51.2), higher education (46.1), ICT (43.3) and research and development and innovation (31.4).

GKI has been produced annually since 2017 by the Knowledge Project, a partnership between UNDP-RBAS and MBRF. The index includes 155 variables, selected from over 40 sources and international databases including the UNESCO, World Bank, ITU, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), International Labour Organisation (ILO) etc.

Source: Bahrain News Agency

First death with Omicron variant in United Kingdom

Published by
Reuters

By Guy Faulconbridge and Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) -At least one person has died in the United Kingdom after contracting the Omicron coronavirus variant, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday, the first publicly confirmed death globally from the swiftly spreading strain. Since the first Omicron cases were detected on Nov. 27 in the United Kingdom, Johnson has imposed tougher restrictions and on Sunday cautioned that the variant could overcome the immune defences of those inoculated with two shots of vaccines. Britain gave no details on the death or whether the patient had been been… Continue reading “First death with Omicron variant in United Kingdom”

Electro-fusion Coupler Market Driving Factors, Size, Growth Analysis, Key Vendors, Company Profiles, Demand and Forecast Analysis By 2026

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Newstrail

*“Final Report will add the analysis of the impact of COVID-19 on this industry.”* Global “Electro-fusion Coupler Market” research Report Provides In-depth details regarding the market dynamics and essential aspects of the market. the main factors that are expected to be driving the load loss and weight management market are increasing obese population, increasing number of bariatric surgeries, growing adoption of online weight loss and weight management programs. the whole overview of the web Weight Loss Programs Market is provided using research methodologies and primary and secondary source… Continue reading “Electro-fusion Coupler Market Driving Factors, Size, Growth Analysis, Key Vendors, Company Profiles, Demand and Forecast Analysis By 2026”

Second Phase Of Egyptian Reconstruction Plan Kicks Off In Gaza

GAZA, The second phase of an Egyptian reconstruction plan kicked off in Gaza, to help rebuild the territory, following an Israeli offensive, earlier this year.

Ibrahim al-Shuniqi, head of the Egyptian reconstruction committee, told Palestinian faction leaders and government officials that, the start of the second phase in the Gaza Strip, came under the directives of Egyptian President, Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi.

The Egyptian official, who chaired a delegation of engineers and construction experts, made the remarks during a ceremony held in Gaza City, to celebrate the start of the second phase in the coastal enclave.

“The political leadership’s instructions are to provide assistance to Palestinian manpower and companies in Gaza, that are capable of carrying out the work,” al-Shuniqi said.

On May 10, Israel waged a large-scale 11-day aerial offensive on the Gaza Strip, leaving more than 250 Palestinians killed, as well as, the massive destruction of buildings and other infrastructure.

Egypt brokered a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas. It also pledged 500 million U.S. dollars in two phases to help rebuild the territory.

Al-Shuniqi said that the first phase, which started after the end of the Israeli offensive, included the removal of rubble and debris.

He added that the second phase will include constructing three housing projects in the Strip’s centre and north, and two bridges in Gaza city, paving destroyed crossroads and building a corniche road.

Source: Nam News Network

U.S. Forces Kill Three Civilians In Eastern Syria

DAMASCUS, Three civilians from the same family were killed yesterday, by U.S. forces in the eastern Syrian province of Deir al-Zour, the state news agency reported.

The U.S. forces conducted a large-scale airdrop in the town of Al-Busayrah and surrounding areas, in the countryside of Deir al-Zour, with the help of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, killing the three victims in Al-Busayrah, the report said.

The U.S. forces also conducted house raids in the countryside of Deir al-Zour and abducted people to unknown locations, the report added.

There was no confirmation yet from the U.S. side.

According to SANA, the U.S. forces carried out a similar operation in the area on Dec 7, during which they rounded up people, with the help of the SDF, and destroyed the homes they had raided.

The U.S. forces have been active in Syria since 2014, in the name of fighting terror groups. The Syrian government has repeatedly slammed it as a presence of occupation, accusing the United States of stealing Syrian oil and gas, as well as, wheat crops.

Source: Nam News Network

Tackling corruption, important step for ‘inclusive, sustainable development’

Corruption spreads through societies and erodes people’s trust in leaders and institutions, UN Secretary-General António Guterres told an anti-corruption conference on Monday, stressing that “greed over need, harms us all”.

In a video message to the Conference of States Parties to the UN Convention against Corruption (CoSP9) in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, he warned that countries investing in COVID-19 recovery, “must guard against the diversion of vital resources by criminal opportunists”.

‘Important step’

Corruption deepens inequalities, feeds cynicism and reinforces obstacles facing women and girls, according to the UN chief who maintained that tackling it is “an important step towards inclusive, sustainable development”.

He described the conference as an opportunity to strengthen cooperation and accelerate global action against corruption.

“**Let us revive hope and restore trust in institutions**…now is the time to act for a safer, more prosperous and just future”, spelled out the Secretary-General.

Speaking with ‘one voice’

The chief of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Ghada Waly, said “we are here, at this crucial moment, to raise one voice in rejecting corruption”.

“Corruption undermines development, security, and the rights of everyone. It erodes public trust in systems and institutions”.

She added that the world loses trillions of dollars every year to corruption, “at a time when every dollar is needed to increase public investment”.

And Africa alone loses more than $88 billion annually in terms of capital flight.

“Lack of transparency and accountability in institutions denies people equal access to justice as well as to health, protection, and other services”, destroying competition, raising costs, and compromising delivery, said Ms. Waly.

Moreover, corruption enables criminals, traffickers, and terrorists by allowing proceeds of crime to find safe havens, channeling funds to terrorists, and providing gateways for trafficking.

The COVID-19 pandemic has underlined the impact of corruption on societies – aggravating vulnerabilities and threatening responses.

It has increased the importance of incorporating anti-corruption into responses and “should act as a global wake-up call…to take a stand for integrity”, she said.

“Here, in Sharm El-Sheikh, the world can rise to this moment and take action”.

Ladder of responsibility

Battling corruption starts at the highest levels of leadership and cascade down to institutions, businesses, communities, and individuals, the UNODC chief explained, saying “each and every one of us has a role to play”.

At the top, there is a need for “resolute political will” from leaders and government members, to mobilize the necessary resources.

“This forum, and its outcomes, can foster political will, and reaffirm the shared global responsibility to fight corruption”, she attested.

However, from law enforcement to financial investigation units and the judiciary, institutions at the forefront of the fight must be empowered, remain independent and be provided with the necessary resources.

“At this conference, we can better determine the needs of today in confronting corruption and commit global attention and resources to address those needs”, said Ms. Waly.

Other steps

Corruption is a cross-border crime that requires greater international cooperation by minimizing the obstacles that persistently hamper results.

“By joining the recently-launched GlobE network, which already includes 80 authorities from 48 countries, Member States can benefit from a global platform for swift law enforcement cooperation”, she said, urging the attendees to also engage with the World Bank and UNODC Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) initiative.

She noted that businesses are instrumental in preventing corruption by committing to fair competition and protecting supply chains, while civil society is crucial in preserving accountability and the media in demonstrating integrity in their coverage.

“All of these actors are represented here at the CoSP, and we must include them in our responses”, flagged the UNODC chief.

**Strengthening women **

As agents of change, ordinary citizens are at the heart of responses and must be protected from corruption.

“**Women are affected disproportionately by corruption and bribery**”, the UNODC official stated.

“Long-standing networks of collusion reinforce exclusion in the workplace and in the public sphere, while corruption creates additional barriers to women accessing health, education, and other services”.

Women must be empowered in positions of leadership to break established cycles and structures of corruption, to ensure a fairer future for all.

Empowering youth

Although the world’s 1.8 billion young people hold the energy and conviction to foster change, in the absence of integrity, they are deprived of opportunity and hope.

“**By educating children and young people on integrity and ethics, we can build public trust and the rule of law**, helping to ensure the sustainability of anti-corruption efforts, and to generate new ideas for how we can fight corruption”, said Ms. Waly.

Against this backdrop, UNODC is launching the Global Resource for Anti-corruption Education and Youth Empowerment (GRACE) initiative to unlock the potential of young people.

“To truly overcome endemic corruption, we need to aim for a fundamental change in mindsets, one that rejects corruption at every level”, she said. “People must believe that every act of petty corruption, every small bribe, undermines the rule of law and undermines their own future”.

The UNODC chief concluded by encouraging everyone to** use the convention to face today’s challenges and prepare for those to come**.

“Let us live up to our role, for everyone’s rights”.

Source: UN News Service

Youth minister, HEC secretary general meet Estonia’s education and research minister

Dubai, Minister of Youth and Sport Affairs Ayman bin Tawfeeq Al Moayyed and Higher Education Council (HEC) Secretary-General Dr. Shaikha Rana bint Isa bin Daij Al Khalifa paid a visit to Estonia Pavilion in Dubai Expo 2020. Minister Al Moayyed and Dr. Shaikha Rana met with the Minister of Education and Research of the Republic of Estonia Liina Kersna, where they were briefed about Estonia pavilion and the various digital services that Estonia provides, in addition to the digital governance model it follows.

They held a meeting with Estonia’s education minister in which they discussed relations between the friendly countries, aspects of cooperation in the educational fields and areas of modernization, promoting the educational and training system and benefiting from experiences and expertise in the areas of digitization.

Source: Bahrain News Agency