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As COVID-19 collides with HIV/AIDS, the pandemic may be taking an ominous turn

Print As the world’s less affluent countries scramble for COVID-19 vaccine and contend with deadly surges of the disease, researchers in South Africa have just documented an ominous development: the collision of the pandemic with HIV/AIDS. Geneticists and infectious disease specialists there have uncovered potentially dangerous coronavirus mutations in a 36-year-old woman with uncontrolled HIV who was unable to shake the SARS-CoV-2 virus for close to eight months. The driving force behind the patient’s rapid accumulation of genetic changes is probably her impaired immune response due to her unsuccessfully treated HIV, the researchers said. The case highlights a difficult truth: that affluent nations racing to vaccinate their own populations will remain vulnerable as long as the coronavirus is spreading and mutating in low- and middle-income countries, where lack of vaccine has kept COVID-19 immunization rates low. That’s especially true in countries like South Africa, where

CDC Details First Known Clusters of South African Variant in U S Without Travel Link

CDC Details First Known Clusters of South African Variant in U.S. Without Travel Link Cecelia Smith-Schoenwalder © (Themba Hadebe/AP-file) FILE In this Friday, March 5, 2021 file photo, health care worker Maggie Sedidi, receives a Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination center in Soweto, South Africa. South Africa has resumed giving the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to health care workers after a more than two-week pause in the use of the only COVID-19 inoculation in the country. South Africa on Wednesday, April 28 restarted its drive to inoculate 1.2 million health care workers with the vaccine.(AP Photo/Themba Hadebe/File) A study published Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention details the first known U.S. clusters of infections from the coronavirus variant discovered in South Africa that don t involve a history of international travel.

Pandemic-weary world looks back — and forward

No one has been untouched. Not the Michigan woman who awakened one morning, her wife dead by her side. Not the domestic worker in Mozambique, her livelihood threatened by the virus. Not the sixth-grader, exiled from the classroom in the blink of an eye. It happened a year ago. “I expected to go back after that week,” said 12-year-old Darelyn Maldonado. “I didn’t think that it would take years.” On March 11, 2020, when the World Health Organization declared a pandemic, few could foresee the long road ahead or the many ways in which they would suffer — the deaths and agonies of millions, the ruined economies, the disrupted lives and near-universal loneliness and isolation.

AP Story

AP Story
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After pandemic year, world looks back — and forward | News, Sports, Jobs

After pandemic year, world looks back — and forward | News, Sports, Jobs
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