The nation's largest hospital association called Wednesday for all healthcare workers to get vaccinated as cases rise around the country.
“To protect all patients, communities and personnel from the known and substantial risks of COVID-19, the American Hospital Association strongly urges the vaccination of all health care personnel,” the organization said in a policy statement. “The AHA also supports hospitals and health systems that adopt mandatory COVID-19 vaccination policies for health care personnel, with local factors and circumstances shaping whether and how these policies are implemented.”
The AHA — which represents nearly 5,000 hospitals — is the largest healthcare group to endorse mandatory vaccine requirements for health workers.
The latest national spike in coronavirus cases — new infections have nearly tripled in the U.S. over the last two weeks — is frustrating health care workers still reeling from the brutal winter surge.
Health officials said the best protection remains vaccination, noting the shots reduce the risks of serious illness, hospitalization and death.
“If you’re a fully vaccinated individual and you’re meeting with somebody who has COVID, you really don’t have much to fear from the virus. The vaccines are very robust,” Dr. Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, told USA TODAY. “What we’re seeing now in the United States, as the CDC director said, is a pandemic of the unvaccinated. That’s where the risk is.”
Also in the news:
►President Joe Biden told a town hall audience in Ohio Wednesday evening that he expected the Food and Drug Administration would give final approval “quickly” for COVID-19 vaccines.
►Gov. Greg Abbott says he will not impose another statewide mask mandate, despite COVID-19 cases being on the rise again in Texas.
►The U.S. will reportedly continue to restrict non-essential travelers from Mexico and Canada via land and ferry at least through Aug. 21. Canada announced Monday that it would reopen its borders to fully vaccinated U.S. citizens and permanent residents Aug. 9, with plans to allow fully vaccinated travelers from any country on Sept. 7.
📈Today's numbers: The U.S. has had more than 34.2 million confirmed COVID-19 cases and 609,800 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The global totals: More than 191.9 million cases and 4.1 million deaths. Nearly 161.9 million Americans — 48.8% of the population — have been fully vaccinated, according to the CDC.
📘What we're reading: A Houston hospital has its first case of the lambda variant of the coronavirus, but public health experts say it remains too soon to tell whether the variant will rise to the same level of concern as the delta. What to know.
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US beach volleyball player tests positive for COVID-19, likely ruling him out of Olympics
American beach volleyball player Taylor Crabb tested positive for COVID-19 after arriving in Japan and is unlikely to be able to compete at the Tokyo Olympics, according to reports Wednesday.
The Orange County Register and an NBC affiliate in Los Angeles each reported that Crabb, 29, recorded a positive test over the weekend, which would likely preclude him from competing in his first scheduled match with partner Jake Gibb on Sunday.
Crabb would be the first U.S. athlete to be ruled out of competing at the Olympics after testing positive for COVID-19 in Japan.
USA Volleyball confirmed in a statement that one of its members tested positive for COVID-19 upon arrival but declined to provide any other additional details, including the identity of the person.
"The health and safety of our athletes, coaches and staff is our top priority," the organization said in a statement. "We can confirm that a member of Team USA tested positive upon their arrival into Japan. In alignment with local rules and protocols, the athlete has been transferred to a hotel. Out of respect for the individual’s privacy, we cannot provide more information at this time."
- Tom Schad, USA TODAY
Missouri announces vaccine lottery; state faith leaders call for vaccinations
Vaccinated Missourians will now have the opportunity to win $10,000 prizes under a new lottery program announced by Gov. Mike Parson on Wednesday.
The announcement comes on the same day Missouri reported 3,031 new cases of the virus, the highest daily count since January. To date, 9,526 Missourians have died from COVID-19, and the state has reported a total of 549,191 cases. The early, rapid spread of the virus' more infectious delta variant has put Missouri under a national microscope in recent months, with federal officials warning the state could be a harbinger for things to come in the U.S.
The USA TODAY Network vaccine tracker showed that just 40% of Missouri's 6.1 million residents are fully vaccinated to date, with 47% of residents having taken at least one dose. Those levels are far below "herd immunity," generally considered by scientists to exist when at least 70% of the population is immunized.
The 125-year-old Missouri-based Baptist publication Word & Way organized and published a statement backed by more than 200 Christian leaders. They urged everyone to vaccinate as "an easy way of living out Jesus’ command to 'love your neighbor as yourself.'"
- Galen Bacharier and Gregory J. Holman, Springfield News-Leader
Contributing: Associated Press.
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