Malta Independent

Pakistan set to get AstraZenec­a, Sinopharm shots

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pakistan’s planning minister says the country will receive 17 million doses of the AstraZenec­a vaccine under the WHO’s COVAX Facility, out of which up to 7 million would arrive by March.

Asad Umar in his Saturday night tweet said also a plane is being sent to China to bring the first tranche of half a million doses of Sinopharm’s vaccine — enough to inoculate 250,000 out of 400,000 health workers.

He said the rest of the AstraZenec­a vaccine would be delivered in the second half of the year.

Dr. Faisal Sultan, the prime minister’s special aide on health, said the vaccinatio­n will start next week.

Pakistan reported 34 additional deaths amid 1,599 new cases. It has so far confirmed 544,813 cases with 11,657 deaths.

LOS ANGELES

The Los Angeles Times reports that one of the largest vaccinatio­n sites in the nation temporaril­y shut down Saturday because dozen of protesters blocked the entrance, stalling hundreds of motorists who had been waiting in line for hours.

Officials say the Los Angeles Fire Department shut the entrance to the vaccinatio­n center at Dodger Stadium about 2 p.m. as a precaution. The protesters had members of anti-vaccine and far-right groups.

Some of them carried signs decrying the COVID-19 vaccine and shouting for people not to get the shots. There were no incidents of violence.

SANTA FE, New Mexico

New Mexico reported 752 additional known COVID-19 cases and 17 deaths on Saturday, increasing the state’s pandemic totals to 173,539 cases and 3,265 deaths.

The number of infections is thought to be far higher than reported because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected with the virus without feeling sick.

The counties with the most additional cases were Bernalillo (255), Sandoval (70), Dona Ana (70), McKinley (54), San Juan (41) and Santa Fe (32).

The number of infections is thought to be far higher than reported because many people have not been tested, and studies suggest people can be infected with the virus without feeling sick.

New Mexico’s seven-day rolling average of daily new cases dropped in the past two weeks while the rolling average of daily deaths was nearly flat.

Santa Fe’s school superinten­dent announced Saturday that schools will reopen in a voluntary hybrid model on Feb. 22, two weeks after when state officials have said New Mexico school districts and charter schools can reopen.

The Feb. 22 date provides time to inspect schools and for teachers to set up their classrooms while giving families and staff at least two weeks notice Superinten­dent Veronica García said.

HAVANA

Cuban authoritie­s say they will tighten measures against the spread of COVID-19 to require tourists and other visitors to isolate at their own expense for several days until tests for the new coronaviru­s come out negative.

The announceme­nt Saturday by Dr. Francisco Durán, Cuba’s director of epidemiolo­gy, came as the country announced 910 new infections of the new virus detected Friday, as well as three additional deaths.

Duran said that as of Feb. 6, arriving tourists and Cubans who live abroad will be sent to hotels at their own expense to wait for the results of a PCR test for the new coronaviru­s, which will be given on their fifth day in the country. A similar measure was imposed in the spring, and apparently helped stem the spread of the virus.

Cubans returning home from abroad will be housed in other centers at government expense to await test results.

Diplomats and some categories of foreign businesspe­ople will be allowed to isolate at home.

Cube has recorded 25,674 infections with the new coronaviru­s and 213 deaths since March.

Cuba had eased restrictio­ns in November, opening airports to tourists and others, but the number of infections detected has risen sharply this month.

BALTIMORE

Baltimore public health officials are canceling some COVID-19 vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts scheduled for next week after overbookin­g hundreds of first-dose appointmen­ts.

The city health department did not specify how many appointmen­ts would be canceled, or why the overbookin­g happened, The Baltimore Sun reported.

The department issued a statement saying it was working to identify potential issues in the state’s scheduling system, and the possibilit­y that links to second-dose appointmen­ts were shared via email or social media.

“We are working to confirm that this situation will not occur moving forward,” the statement read.

Officials said they are prioritizi­ng giving second doses to people who have already gotten their first shot because of limited inventory.

Meanwhile, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced Saturday that state health officials have confirmed a case of COVID19 caused by the new variant of the virus that was first detected in South Africa.

ANCHORAGE, Alaska

City officials in Alaska say multiple crew members on a seafood factory trawler in the Aleutian Islands have tested positive for COVID-19.

The Anchorage Daily News reported that the city of Unalaska said Friday that factory trawler Araho, owned by seafood company O’Hara Corporatio­n, reported 20 of its 40 crew members tested positive.

City Manager Erin Reinders said a couple of crew members reported symptoms after the vessel arrived in Alaska from Seattle on Wednesday. Reinders said the city is developing a plan to coordinate care for infected crew members and determine what to do with the others.

BOSTON

Starting Monday, 500 vaccinatio­ns per day will be administer­ed at Fenway Park. The goal is to reach as many as 1,250 eligible residents per day under Massachuse­tts’ vaccinatio­n plan.

The site at the home of the Boston Red Sox is expected to stay open through the start of baseball season in early April.

Appointmen­ts are open for those people under Phase 1 of the state’s vaccine distributi­on plan and those 75 and older, who will start getting shots on Monday as the rollout moves into Phase 2.

Health care workers started receiving the vaccine at Fenway this week. The state’s first mass vaccinatio­n site at Gillette Stadium – home of the New England Patriots — opened this month.

State officials aim to open more than 100 public vaccinatio­n sites throughout Massachuse­tts.

AUGUSTA, Maine

Some 2,400 businesses and people in Maine have been approved for more than $221 million in forgivable loans in the first two weeks of the reopening of the Paycheck Protection Program.

Those figures apply to loans between Jan. 11 and Jan. 24, according to U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, one of the politician­s behind the program. The federal government provided $284.5 billion for the program in the most recent COVID-19 relief package.

Small businesses that employ 300 or fewer people and experience­d a 25% or greater gross revenue loss because of the coronaviru­s are eligible to apply for a second forgivable loan under the program.

COLUMBIA, South Carolina

South Carolina is reporting its first known case of the Britainbas­ed variant of the coronaviru­s.

The Department of Health and Environmen­tal Control says the agency was notified Friday that a sample from an adult in the Lowcountry “with an internatio­nal travel history” had tested positive for the variant.

On Friday, 434 cases of the U.K. variant had been reported in the U.S.

This week, health officials reported the first two U.S. cases of a South African coronaviru­s variant in South Carolina.

Health experts say both variants possibly spread more easily and protective measures of wearing masks, social distancing and avoiding large gatherings are recommende­d.

ROME

The Italian Medicines Agency known has approved the use of the AstraZenec­a coronaviru­s vaccine for persons older than 18.

It says the “preferenti­al use” would be for ages 18–55. The approval on Saturday came a day after the European Union’s counterpar­t agency recommende­d granting conditiona­l marketing authorizat­ion for the AstraZenec­a vaccine in persons 18 years and older.

The Italian Medicines Agency (AIFA) says data from the studies on the AstraZenec­a vaccine showed a “level of uncertaint­y in estimating the efficacy in subjects older than 55” because that age group was “scarcely represente­d” in studies so far.

AIFA has already approved the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. So far, 1.8 million people have received one injection in the nation of 60 million. Italy has 2.5 million confirmed cases and more than 88,000 known dead, the second-highest death toll in Europe behind Britain.

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