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Fauci’s take on Omicron

“This is particularly relevant if you’re having an infection that is much, much more asymptomatic and minimally symptomatic, particularly in people who are vaccinated and boosted…reports Asian Lite News.

 The number of hospitalisations due to the Omicron variant is a better measure to understand its severity than the traditional case-count of new infections, top US infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci has said.

Fauci has joined a growing body of experts who argue that case counts ‘don’t reflect what they used to’, as data suggests Omicron is less severe but more contagious, the Guardian reported.

However, referring to the Omicron surge in the US as a “tsunami”, Fauci also cautioned the public not to be fooled by preliminary data suggesting the variant lacks the severity of earlier Covid-19 variants, such as Delta.

“You have a virus that looks like it might be less severe, at least from data we’ve gathered from South Africa, the UK and even some from preliminary data from here in the US,” he was quoted as saying on CNN’s State of the Union.

“It’s a very interesting, somewhat complicated issue a so many people are getting infected that the net amount, the total amount of people that will require hospitalisation, might be up. We can’t be complacent in these reports. We’re still going to get a lot of hospitalisations.”

Some experts argue that the US has reached a stage in the pandemic where reports of dramatic surges in case counts prompt unnecessary worries and that government officials and the public should instead review death and hospitalisation data when considering precautions.

Case counts “are causing a lot of panic and fear, but they don’t reflect what they used to, which was that hospitalisations would track with cases”, Dr Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease specialist and professor of medicine at University of California, San Francisco was quoted as saying by the Guardian.

Asked if it was time to focus less on just the case count, Fauci said: “The answer is, overall, yes”.

“This is particularly relevant if you’re having an infection that is much, much more asymptomatic and minimally symptomatic, particularly in people who are vaccinated and boosted.

“The real bottom line that you want to be concerned about is, are we getting protected by the vaccines from severe disease leading to hospitalisation?” Fauci said on ABC’s This Week.

The US has made improving vaccination rates a priority, but progress is slower. Fewer than 25 per cent of US children are vaccinated, pediatric hospital admissions are surging and nationally only 62 per cent of eligible residents are fully vaccinated with barely a third receiving a booster.

“I’m still very concerned about the tens of millions of people who are not vaccinated at all because even though many of them are going to get asymptomatic and mildly symptomatic, a fair number of them are going to get severe disease,” Fauci said.

ALSO READ-Fauci: Omicron cases likely to peak by end of January

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-Top News USA

Fauci hits back at detractors

Fauci, who was also part of former President Donald Trump’s coronavirus taskforce, argued that those attacking him are “actually criticising science”….reports Asian Lite News

Anthony Fauci, Americas top infectious disease expert, has responded strongly to growing right-wing criticism and conspiracy theories connected to the release of thousands of his emails under freedom of information laws, according to media reports.

“‘Fauci has blood in his hands’, are you kidding me?” US President Joe Biden’s chief medical adviser said in an interview with The New York Times on Monday.

“Here’s a guy whose entire life has been devoted to saving lives, and now you’re telling me he’s like Hitler? You know, come on, folks. Get real.”

Fauci, who was also part of former President Donald Trump’s coronavirus taskforce, argued that those attacking him are “actually criticising science”.

A report in the Guardian newspaper said since the release of his emails earlier this month, mostly anodyne correspondence, Fauci has faced a growing range of hardline right-wing and conspiracy-tinged criticism.

Some such critics have focused on his advice, early in the pandemic, against wearing masks.

Others have homed in on a series of partially redacted emails, from Facebook’s Chief Executive, Mark Zuckerberg, who contacted Fauci to thank him for his leadership and invite him to participate in an online Q&A session.

In his interview with the Times, Fauci pushed back.

Chief medical advisor Dr Anthony Fauci, former coordinator of the White House Coronavirus Task Force Dr Deborah Birx at a news conference in April 2020

“It is essential as a scientist that you evolve your opinion and your recommendations based on the data as it evolves,” he said.

“And that’s the reason why I say people who then criticise me about that are actually criticising science.

“The people who are giving the ad hominems are saying, ‘Ah, Fauci misled us. First he said no masks, then he said masks’. Well, let me give you a flash. That’s the way science works. You work with the data you have at the time,” he added.

He described the email exchange with Zuckerberg as “about as friendly and innocent of an email as you could possibly imagine”, and called criticism of the correspondence “total conspiracy theory and total flight of fantasy”.

Asked how he felt when he realised his emails were to be made public, Fauci said: “Once I knew that it got out there, and it was going to get very carefully scrutinised by very far-right, radical people who clearly are trying to discredit me, I said to myself, ‘It is likely, I know, that you can pull out sentences from emails or take emails out of context or take an email that is perfectly innocent, followed up by an explanation and only show one aspect of it’.”

Fauci has served seven Presidents since 1984 but the pandemic and the Trump administration’s chaotic response to it propelled him to newfound fame.

He also told the Times he put “very little weight in the adulation, and very little weight in the craziness of condemning me”.

Fauci remains sceptical about claims that Covid-19 originated in a laboratory leak in Wuhan, as per the report.

I feel, as do the overwhelming majority of scientists who have knowledge of virology and knowledge of evolutionary biology, that the most likely explanation for this is a natural leap from an animal to a human,” he told the Times

He described the theory as a “very, very remote possibility”, but said “I do keep an open mind”.

ALSO READ: Fauci admits Covid-19 could be engineered virus

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-Top News COVID-19 USA

Fauci admits Covid-19 could be engineered virus

Fauci said that he was open to the coronavirus lab leak theory all along, saying acknowledged Covid-19 “could possibly be an engineered virus”…reports Asian Lite News

Top coronavirus advisor Dr Anthony Fauci admitted that Covid-19 could be a lab-invented illness as acknowledged by scientists in February 2020.

Fauci said that he was open to the coronavirus lab leak theory all along, saying acknowledged Covid-19 “could possibly be an engineered virus” with the potential of an accidental leak from a lab but maintains that the most likely origin was through zoonotic transmission, reported Fox News.

Amid criticism of an inconclusive international probe into the virus’ origins and new reports of Covid-related illness in the region weeks before it was officially identified, the theory is once again sparking debate that the virus leaked from Wuhan lab.

Earlier this month, a report by Wall Street Journal had stated that three researchers from China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology sought hospital care after they fell ill in November 2019, a month before Beijing reported the first patient with Covid-like symptoms.

Fauci discussed a conference call that took place on February 1, 2020, just days after the World Health Organization raised the alert level on Covid-19, calling it a public health emergency of international concern, during an interview with USA Today this week.

Chief medical advisor Dr Anthony Fauci, former coordinator of the White House Coronavirus Task Force Dr Deborah Birx at a news conference in April 2020

“I remember it very well,” Fauci told USA Today. “We decided on the call the situation really needed to be looked into carefully.”

The call included several scientists, including Kristian Andersen, an expert in infectious disease at Scripps Research Translational Institute in California.

In an email to Fauci the day before the call, and reviewed by Fox News, Andersen wrote, “The unusual features of the virus make up a really small part of the genome so one has to look really closely at all the sequences to see that some of the features (potentially) look engineered.”

ALSO READ: China targets Fauci amid Wuhan lab controversy

In the email, Andersen added that he and several other experts thought that the genome was “inconsistent with expectations from evolutionary theory,” but noted that “those opinions could still change” following further analyses.

Fauci told USA Today this week that the meeting was “a very productive back-and-forth conversation where some on the call felt it could possibly be an engineered virus.” Fauci said others on the call felt the evidence was “heavily weighted” toward a natural, zoonotic transmission, reported Fox News.

Wuhan lab china

“I always had an open mind,” Fauci told USA Today. “Even though I felt then, and still do, the most likely origin was in an animal host.” But days after the teleconference, according to an email obtained by USA Today, Andersen had changed his position, saying the data “conclusively show” that the virus was not engineered, reported Fox News.

Andersen, offering feedback on a document, scientists were reportedly working to put together for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine to send to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, said, “I do wonder if we need to be firmer on the question of engineering.”

“The main crackpot theories going around at the moment relate to this virus being somehow engineered with intent and that is demonstrably not the case,” Andersen said in the document.

He added: “If one of the main purposes of this document is to counter those fringe theories, I think it’s very important that we do so strongly and in plain language (‘consistent with’ [natural evolution] is a favourite of mine when talking to scientists, but not when talking to the public – especially conspiracy theorists).”

Citing USA Today, Fox News reported that the document did not discuss the engineering possibility, and instead noted that data from viral samples were needed to determine the origin.

Last month, US President Joe Biden released a rare public statement, revealing that the US intelligence community has “coalesced around two likely scenarios” for the origins of Covid-19, “including whether it emerged from human contact with an infected animal or from a laboratory accident,” and asked for “additional follow-up.”

The President asked the intelligence community to “redouble their efforts to collect and analyse information that could bring us closer to a definitive conclusion, and to report back to me in 90 days.”

Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers have called for Fauci to testify on his emails, which were released as part of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit, as US officials try to get to the bottom of the origins of the pandemic.

Some Republican lawmakers have also called for Fauci to step down from his post as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, saying he has lost public confidence.

The White House is defending Fauci amid criticism, calling him an “undeniable asset” to the country during the pandemic, with President Biden saying he is “very confident” in Fauci.

Fauci, last week, responded to criticisms, saying that the attacks on him “are attacks on science.”

ALSO READ: Anthony Fauci is Joe Biden’s kryptonite

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-Top News China USA

Did China’s ‘Bat Woman’ get US money in ‘gain-of-function’ research?

At a US Senate hearing on May 11, Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky) said that scientists in the US have long known how to mutate animal viruses to infect humans…report Asian Lite News

Amid the leaked Anthony S Fauci emails and independent investigations into the Wuhan lab secrets, reports have emerged again that the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China was funded by the US government and the virology lab, headed by Shi Zhengli, received nearly $600,000 in ‘gain-of-function’ research.

At a US Senate hearing on May 11, Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky) said that scientists in the US have long known how to mutate animal viruses to infect humans.

“For years, Dr Ralph Baric, a virologist in the US, has been collaborating with Dr Shi Zhengli of the Wuhan Virology Institute, sharing his discoveries about how to create super viruses. This gain-of-function research has been funded by the NIH. Dr Fauci, do you still support funding of the NIH funding of the lab in Wuhan?,” he told the hearing.

Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, replied: “Senator Paul, with all due respect, you are entirely and completely incorrect that the NIH has not never and does not now fund gain-of-function research in the Wuhan Institute of Virology.”

However, according to documents obtained by Daily Mail last year, the controversial Wuhan Institute of Virology in China undertook coronavirus experiments on bats and other wild animals which were funded by a $3.4 million grant from the US government.



Zhengli, also known as the �Bat Women,’ is back in limelight as the conversation around the �gain-of-function’ research have once again started to dominate the headlines.

In 2014, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the NIH arm that Fauci heads, awarded a $3.4 million grant to the New York-based EcoHealth Alliance, which aims to protect people from viruses that jump from species to species.

The group hired the virology lab in Wuhan to conduct genetic analyses of bat coronaviruses collected in Yunnan province, about 800 miles southwest of Wuhan, Tampa Bay Times reported last month.

ALSO READ: Maritime Militia leads Chinese expansion in South China sea

“The research was considered crucial in part because coronaviruses had previously emerged in China and begun to spread among humans. EcoHealth Alliance paid the lab $598,500 over five years. The lab had secured approval from both the U.S. State Department and the NIH,” the report mentioned.

All parties involved in the grant to the Wuhan Institute of Virology have denied that it involved gain-of-function research.

In Wuhan, China, where the first cases of the coronavirus emerged in late 2019, at least two labs studied coronaviruses that originate in bats � the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) and the Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention (WHCDC).

“Both are close to the seafood market that was originally deemed the source of the outbreak. The WIV is about eight miles (nearly 13 km) away. The WHCDC is right around the corner,” according to a report in the Washington Post.

Wuhan Institute of Virology

The WIV is where Zhengli works. The WIV has a biosafety level 4 (BSL-4) laboratory, the most secure, where researchers wear protective suits.

“But some of WIV’s more controversial experiments on bat coronaviruses are believed to have been done at BSL-2 labs, where researchers wear white lab coats and gloves, as in a dental office,” the report mentioned.

Many experts have until recently denied the lab-leak theory and claimed that Covid-19 originated as a natural infection leaping from animals to humans. But now, there has been a shift.

A team of 18 scientists from Universities in the US, Canada, the UK and Switzerland have signed a letter in the journal Science arguing the need to determine the origin of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Various other studies have hinted at Covid-19 as a result of the Wuhan lab-leak.

“There is some smoke here,” said the Washignton Post report.

ALSO READ: China’s plans to expand N-arsenal for possible ‘showdown’ with US

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-Top News India News USA

Shutdown for a few weeks, will help India fight Covid-19, says Dr Fauci

India’s total tally of Covid-19 cases now stands at 1,95,57,457, the highest since the pandemic started in 2020, with 33,49,644 active cases and 2,15,542 deaths so far…reports Asian Lite News.

As India recorded 3,92,488 new Covid-19 cases and 3,689 fatalities, Dr Anthony S Fauci, one of Covid’s most trusted global voices said no nation likes to lock itself down but a shutdown for a “few weeks” could put an end to the cycle of transmission in India. He said the move will provide a window to take critical “immediate, intermediate, and long range” steps out of this “very difficult and desperate” situation.

Minister of Health Dr. Harsh Vardhan visits the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) to review the COVID-19 preparedness, in New Delhi (PIB)

It is the 11th day in a row when India recorded more than 3 lakh cases while over 3,000 casualties have been reported for the past five days.

Speaking to Indian Express, Dr Fauci said, “The one thing I don’t want to do and I hope it doesn’t turn out this way, is to get involved in any sort of criticism of how India has handled the situation because then it becomes a political issue and I don’t want to do that since I’m a public health person and I’m not a political person.”

India’s total tally of Covid-19 cases now stands at 1,95,57,457, the highest since the pandemic started in 2020, with 33,49,644 active cases and 2,15,542 deaths so far.

(Pallav)

“I mean, first of all, I don’t know if India has put together a crisis group that would meet and start getting things organised. I heard from some of the people in the street bringing their mothers and their fathers and their sisters and their brothers searching for oxygen. They seem to think there really was not any organisation, any central organisation,” Dr Fauci said.

According to MoHFW, 3,07,865 people have been discharged in the last 24 hours after getting cured, taking the total recoveries to 1,59,92,271.

“For example, vaccinating people right now, which you absolutely must, must do — it’s essential — is not going to alleviate the immediate problem of people needing oxygen, needing hospitalisation, needing medical care. That’s not going to fix it now because vaccinating people today, it’s going to be a few weeks before you alleviate the prevention of other people getting sick,” Dr Fauci said.

The health ministry said that a total of 15,68,16,031 people have been vaccinated so far in the country, including 18,26,219 people administered vaccines in the last 24 hours.

“Then the intermediate. I think you need — what the Chinese did when they had a crisis, you might recall, literally, within a few days to weeks they built these emergency units that served as hospitals to take care of people. It was an accomplishment that everybody marvelled at. It just seems to me, what I was viewing on television, what people were looking for a desperate need for hospital and care. That’s the first thing,” Dr Fauci added.

According to the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), 29,01,42,339 samples have been tested up to May 1, 2021 for Covid-19, of these 18,04,954 samples were tested on Saturday.

“And, finally, in the longer range, in a matter of a couple weeks, I would do whatever you can do to get vaccinated. To have a country like India, where two per cent of people are vaccinated, is a very serious situation. You absolutely have to get more people vaccinated,” he added.

Also Read-India’s ‘Shooter Dadi’ dies of Covid 19

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