USA TODAY US Edition

Black woman at center of push for Missouri tourism

State NAACP leader says warning is still in effect

- Miriam Fauzia Our fact check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – A Black woman has become the face of Missouri’s tourism campaign, nearly four years after the NAACP warned travelers that their civil rights may not be respected if they visit the state.

The Missouri Division of Tourism kicked off the campaign Monday, describing the woman the agency dubbed Mo as “a character and tour guide of sorts,” The St. Louis PostDispat­ch reported. She is featured in a promotiona­l video hiking, watching a baseball game and riding a roller coaster. Pictures also show her posing as a Foodie Mo, Barbecue Mo, Lake Mo, History Mo and more.

“Mo embodies Missouri and everything we have to offer visitors in our state,” Stephen Foutes, director of the Division of Tourism, said in the release.

But Missouri NAACP President Nimrod Chapel said the group’s travel advisory will remain in effect until Missouri makes “meaningful progress in the systemic abuses affecting people of color.”

In 2017, the state group warned visitors to be careful there because of what it described as a danger that their civil rights wouldn’t be respected. The national NAACP took up the warning a couple of months later.

“I don’t quite understand where they’re going with the campaign, and why put a Black face on it,” Chapel said.

“Missouri is a place that has been marked by violence and Jim Crow,” Chapel said. “It’s good that they’re trying to think inclusivel­y for people they should invite to the state,” but it’s also unfortunat­e when the government “hasn’t done anything to address those risks in a meaningful way.”

Ashley Santana, a St. Louis-based actress, model and soprano, plays Mo. She declined to comment through the agency that represents her.

In a statement emailed to the PostDispat­ch, Foutes did not directly answer whether the casting decision was related to the NAACP advisory.

He said Visit Missouri, the tourism website that features Mo, “auditioned over 200 actors and actresses with strong ties to Missouri. As Mo came to life, we wanted to reflect the down-toearth, easygoing and inviting personalit­y of Missouri. … We’re proud to feature an African American and Missouri native in this campaign to welcome future visitors to Missouri.”

It’s unfortunat­e when the government “hasn’t done anything to address those risks in a meaningful way.” Nimrod Chapel Missouri NAACP president

Brian Hall, chief marketing officer for Explore St. Louis, said efforts to position St. Louis and Missouri as warm and welcoming have become especially important since Michael Brown’s death in 2014 focused the nation’s attention on the region’s unresolved racial justice issues.

Though systemic change is still needed, Hall said, the casting of Santana “sends an important signal ... that our state is proud to feature an African American woman as a representa­tive, an ambassadre­ss, for our state.”

Coronaviru­s cases may be dropping all over the USA – down by almost 75% since peaking on Jan. 11 – but one Facebook post claims that is not the case.

“Now you need 3 shots ... 2 masks ... The numbers just keep increasing because these interventi­ons are simply not working,” Melissa Floyd posted Feb. 16.

Accompanyi­ng her claim is a screenshot of philanthro­pist Bill Gates, cofounder of Microsoft, and text that there is “growing concern” the two-dose vaccines are ineffectiv­e against new coronaviru­s strains and that Gates suggested a third shot might be the ticket.

Since the start of the pandemic, Floyd, a vaccinatio­n opponent, has tried to cast doubts on mask wearing, diagnostic testing and COVID-19 trends.

USA TODAY was unable to reach Floyd for comment.

Masks stop COVID-19 spread

Floyd is not wrong about two masks: In mid-February, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released data recommendi­ng double masking for even better protection against COVID-19.

The claim that masks have not done their part to offset the virus does not align with research.

A University of Iowa study, published in the journal Health Affairs in June, analyzed how mask mandates in 15 states and the District of Columbia affected COVID-19 growth rates. It found that there was a “greater decline in daily COVID-19 growth rates after issuing these mandates compared with states that did not issue mandates.” This effect was more noticeable over time: In the first five days after a mandate, growth slowed by 0.9%; after three weeks, it was down by 2 percentage points.

Although these numbers may seem small, authors Wei Lyu and George Wehby, professors at the University of Iowa College of Public Health, said the estimates “represent nearly 16 percent to 19 percent of the effects of other social distancing measures” such as sheltering in place, closures of restaurant­s, bars and other areas that attract large gatherings.

A similar study out of Germany published in December in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences found that in the city of Jena, first in the country to mandate face masks last April, early introducti­on of mask wearing “resulted in a drop in newly registered COVID-19 cases of around 75% after 20 (days).”

In other German cities that initiated mask mandates weeks after Jena, the effect was slightly lower – about 47% reduction in the daily infection growth rate. The researcher­s noted the smaller impact was probably the result of social distancing and other public health measures implemente­d before mask mandates.

Mask wearing was also found to be helpful in reducing COVID-19-associated hospitaliz­ations. The report from the CDC, looking at data collected from March to October 2020, discovered that in states that had statewide mask mandates, hospitaliz­ation among adults ages 40-64 declined by 2.9% within the first two weeks after a mandate.

After three weeks or more, the hospitaliz­ation growth rate declined by 5.6% among both the 40-64 age group and and those ages 18-39.

There was less of decline observed among those 65 and older, an age group at highest risk for severe illness, but this could have been because older adults are more likely to mask up compared with young adults, thus having less of an effect overall on the COVID-19 growth trend.

Data shows vaccines work

Though it’s hard to parse out how much of the decrease in COVID-19 cases is directly related to vaccines – adherence to countermea­sures such as social distancing and mask wearing, acquired immunity, possible seasonalit­y of the virus being other contributi­ng factors – new data suggests their contributi­on is not trivial.

Connecticu­t, where vaccinatio­ns in nursing homes started Jan. 8 and most residents were fully vaccinated by early February, saw a nearly 70% decrease in coronaviru­s-related deaths over the course of four weeks, according to the Hartford Courant.

New cases, which numbered 483 by the beginning of January, dipped to 101 by Feb. 2, an almost 80% decrease. Among nursing home staff vaccinated alongside residents, new cases dropped by 77%.

“We’re far enough into the nursing home vaccinatio­n program where clearly there’s significan­t benefit coming through,” Josh Geballe, Connecticu­t’s chief operating officer, told the Courant in February. “As we’re now well beyond two weeks after many (residents) have gotten certainly their first dose and many of them their second dose as well, clearly there’s contributi­ons and protection­s coming in from the vaccines at this point.”

A team of researcher­s found COVID-19 growth rates declined among more than 31,000 health care workers and long-term care residents weeks after receiving their first vaccine dose. Conversely, growth rates continued to climb for unvaccinat­ed counterpar­ts.

The study, which surveyed more than 60,000 health records in the Mayo Clinic’s health system spanning multiple states, found hospitaliz­ation rates among COVID-19 patients who had been vaccinated before infection were lower compared with unvaccinat­ed patients. The researcher­s noted that “ICU admission and mortality rates were not significan­tly lower” in the vaccinated group because of an “inadequate number of patients with these outcomes in either group to date in our study.”

More evidence for vaccines cutting hospitaliz­ation rates comes from a Scotland-based study, which found PfizerBioN­Tech’s vaccine reduced hospital

admissions almost 85% four weeks after vaccinatio­n and Oxford-AstraZenec­a’s vaccine up to 94%, according to The Associated Press.

These preliminar­y findings, posted on The Lancet’s preprint site on Feb. 19 and yet to undergo peer review, compared individual­s who received one vaccine dose with those who had not from Dec. 8 to Feb. 15, a period when at least 21% of Scotland’s population had been vaccinated.

“These results are very encouragin­g and have given us great reasons to be optimistic for the future,” Dr. Aziz Sheikh, director of the University of Edinburgh’s Usher Institute, told the AP. “We now have national evidence – across an entire country – that vaccinatio­n provides protection against COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations.”

How variants affect vaccinatio­n

Viruses mutate all the time, so it came as no surprise to scientists that COVID-19 would, too. Several strains have emerged since the start of the pandemic, three of which have raised serious concern: the U.K., or B.1.1.7, variant; the South Africa, or B.1.351, variant; and the Brazil, or P.1, variant.

These three do not appear to affect disease severity, but they contain mutations in their spike protein – the surface proteins on the virus that attach to human cells – that may allow for quick spread, avoid immune and diagnostic detection and decrease the effectiven­ess of therapies such as monoclonal antibodies.

According to the CDC, the number of COVID-19 cases caused by these variants is low, although the U.K. variant has been identified in more than 3,000 cases across the USA. Modeling data from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation suggests mutated strains may drive a surge in COVID-19 cases and deaths in the coming warmer months.

Does all this mean the global vaccinatio­n effort is a bust? Not necessaril­y.

Gates suggested, as indicated by the Facebook post, three instead of two vaccine doses may be needed to ensure immunity.

“The discussion now is do we just need to get a super high coverage of the current vaccine, or do we need a third dose that’s just the same, or do we need a modified vaccine?” Gates told CBS Evening News’ Norah O’Donnell in February.

The rationale behind a third dose is rooted in the body’s immune system: The more vaccine doses, the greater the antibody response and hopefully the better protection against the variants.

“We believe that the third dose at six months (after) the first dose – is what we’re going to try right now – will raise the antibody response 10- to 20-fold,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told NBC News’ Lester Holt on Feb. 25.

Promising findings from a study published March 8 in the New England Journal of Medicine suggest Pfizer’s two-dose vaccine may do the trick. It found that the antibody response to the U.K. and Brazil variants was nearly the same compared with the standard virus. The vaccine provoked a response to the South African variant, but not as strong.

For Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, a study published March 8 in Nature found that although the antibody response was unchanged against the U.K. variant, it fell 12.4-fold with the South Africa variant compared with the original virus.

Moderna, like Pfizer, is testing a third dose and creating a booster shot specifical­ly targeting the South Africa variant made with the same messenger RNA technology.

Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose vaccine, which uses an inactive common cold virus to carry the genetic instructio­ns for COVID-19’s spike protein instead of synthetic mRNA, is not as potent as its Pfizer and Moderna counterpar­ts – a 72% efficacy rate in preventing moderate disease, 86% effective against severe disease – but it has had the benefit of running trials while some of the variants circulated.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion’s review of J&J’s data for its emergency use authorizat­ion found the vaccine worked against all variants but was 66% effective in South America and 57% effective in South Africa.

“We now have national evidence – across an entire country – that vaccinatio­n provides protection against COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations.”

Dr. Aziz Sheikh Director of the University of Edinburgh’s Usher Institute

Our ruling: Partly false

Bill Gates suggested a third vaccine dose may be needed to protect against coronaviru­s variants – and testing is being done on that. But COVID-19 cases are on the decline. An abundance of emerging data has shown masks and vaccines have helped reduce the virus’s growth in community spread and in hospitaliz­ations.

 ?? MISSOURI DIVISION OF TOURISM VIA AP ?? A Black woman has become the face of Missouri’s tourism campaign.
MISSOURI DIVISION OF TOURISM VIA AP A Black woman has become the face of Missouri’s tourism campaign.
 ?? DORAL CHENOWETH/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? An abundance of emerging data has shown masks and vaccines have helped reduce the virus’s growth in community spread and in hospitaliz­ations.
DORAL CHENOWETH/USA TODAY NETWORK An abundance of emerging data has shown masks and vaccines have helped reduce the virus’s growth in community spread and in hospitaliz­ations.

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