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Houston City Council unanimously approves Troy Finner as next police chief

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The Houston City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to approve the appointment of Troy Finner as the next police chief.

Finner takes over for outgoing Chief Art Acevedo, who is leaving to become the top cop in Miami.

Finner is a native of Houston and grew up in the Fifth Ward. He attended James Madison High School and earned a bachelor’s degree from Sam Houston State University and a master’s degree from the University of Houston. He has served with the Houston Police Department since 1990

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner named Finner as Acevedo’s successor last week, saying that Finner had earned “hi stripes in HPD.” Turner said he was looking for a police chief that the city could trust and depend on.

Finner has said the department’s top priorities are reducing the number of homicides and violent crimes and building trust in the community. He said those efforts are compounded by the ongoing fight against COVID-19.

Finner takes the helm at HPD on April 5.

Source: www.click2houston.com

COVID-19 vaccinations for all adults in Texas starting March 29

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The Texas Department of State Health Services announced Tuesday that everyone 16 and up will be eligible to sign up to receive a COVID-19 vaccine in Texas beginning Monday, March 29.

The Texas Department of State Health Services said it expects vaccine supplies to increase in April to more than a million doses per week, well above the demand under current eligibility criteria.

“We certainly don’t want to lose that momentum that we’ve had,” said state health department spokesman Chris Van Deusen.

The state’s Expert Vaccine Allocation Panel recommended opening vaccination to everyone who falls under the current Food and Drug Administration emergency use authorizations in part because many state providers reported dwindling waitlists.

“As a matter of fact, we in Houston had pretty much exhausted our waitlists and we wanted to have more real-time appointments available,” said Houston Health Department director Stephen Williams, who is also a member of the state’s Expert Vaccine Allocation Panel.

DSHS has directed vaccine providers to prioritize people 80 years old or older when scheduling appointments and accommodate anyone in that age group who presents for vaccination, whether or not they have an appointment, by immediately moving them to the front of the line. That will ensure vaccination of anyone 80 or older with as small a burden on themselves as possible.

Also next week, DSHS said it will launch a website to allow people to register for a shot through some public health providers in more rural communities. The public will be able to enroll in the Texas Public Health Vaccine Scheduler to identify upcoming vaccine clinics hosted by DSHS or a participating local health department in those rural areas and they will be notified when new clinics and appointments become available.

Texans can continue to find vaccine providers throughout Greater Houston and sign up on waitlists through the DSHS Vaccine Information page at dshs.texas.gov/covidvaccine.

Houston Methodist, consistently one of the area’s largest vaccine providers, will allow anyone to sign up on its waitlist but will prioritize those 50 and older for now.

“Those getting the sickest, we’re going to focus on that population here at Houston Methodist and not have it be first come, first served just yet,” said Roberta Schwartz, a Vice President and Chief Innovation Officer at the hospital. “We expect to get there in a number of weeks. Likely more towards the middle of April or the end of April.”

To date, Texas has administered more than 9.3 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, equating to more than 6 million people with at least one dose and more than 3 million fully vaccinated. Most vaccines are authorized for people 18 years old and older; the FDA has authorized the Pfizer vaccine for use in people 16 and older.

Texans ages 18 and up can sign up to receive the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson versions. The Pfizer vaccine is also available for those who are ages 16 and 17.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Houston website claims to show local businesses that practice COVID-19 safety protocols

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FILE

 A Houston website shares information about local businesses it says practice COVID-19 safety protocols and those that don’t.

The website, Space City Safe, inspired by a Houston blogger, is designed to show businesses’ capacity, if customers wear masks, if employees wear masks and whether social distancing is being practiced.

Space City Safe was created after Gov. Greg Abbott issued an executive order to lift the statewide mask mandate and to reopen Texas businesses and facilities at 100%, which went into effect on March 10. However, some businesses are still following the CDC recommendations to help slow the spread of the coronavirus, despite the governor’s order.

The website gets its information from crowdsourcing, and business owners and customers are also welcome to leave comments about their experiences at those local businesses, according to its website. Businesses that are not on the website can also be added.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Statement of the WHO Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety (GACVS) COVID-19 subcommittee on safety signals related to the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine

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As of 17 March 2021, more than 120 million cases of COVID-19 infections, with more than 2 million deaths, had been reported globally.  Vaccination remains a critical tool to help prevent further illness and death and to control the pandemic.

So far, more than 20 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine have been administered in Europe and more than 27 million doses of the Covishield vaccine (AstraZeneca vaccine by Serum Institute of India) have been administered in India.

The GACVS COVID-19 subcommittee met virtually on 16 and 19 March 2021 to review available information and data on thromboembolic events (blood clots) and thrombocytopenia (low platelets) after vaccination with the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine.

The subcommittee reviewed clinical trial data and reports based on safety data from Europe, the United Kingdom, India, and Vigibase, the WHO global database of individual case safety reports.

Based on a careful scientific review of the available information, the subcommittee came to the following conclusions and recommendations:

  • The AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine (including Covishield) continues to have a positive benefit-risk profile, with tremendous potential to prevent infections and reduce deaths across the world.
  • The available data do not suggest an overall increase in clotting conditions such as deep venous thrombosis or pulmonary embolism following administration of COVID-19 vaccines. Reported rates of thromboembolic events after COVID-19 vaccines are in line with the expected number of diagnoses of these conditions. Both conditions occur naturally and are not uncommon. They also occur as a result of COVID-19.  The observed rates have been fewer than expected for such events.
  • While very rare and unique thromboembolic events in combination with thrombocytopenia, such as cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST), have also been reported following vaccination with the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in Europe, it is not certain that they have been caused by vaccination. The European Medicines Agency’s Pharmacovigilance and Risk Assessment Committee has reviewed 18 cases of CVST out of a total of more than 20 million vaccinations with the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine in Europe. A causal relationship between these rare events has not been established at this time (1).
  • Adequate education should be provided to health-care professionals and persons being vaccinated to recognize the signs and symptoms of all serious adverse events after vaccinations with all COVID-19 vaccines, so that people may seek and receive prompt and relevant medical care and treatment.
  • The GACVS subcommittee recommends that countries continue to monitor the safety of all COVID-19 vaccines and promote reporting of suspected adverse events.
  • The GACVS subcommittee also agrees with the European Medicines Agency’s plans to further investigate and monitor for these events.

The GACVS COVID-19 subcommittee will continue to review the safety data from all COVID-19 vaccines and update any advice as necessary. The WHO COVID-19 vaccine safety surveillance manual provides guidance to countries on the safety monitoring and adverse events data sharing for the new COVID-19 vaccines and can be accessed here.

Source: www.who.int

Nutcracker Market Spring: What you need to know about tickets, details of this year’s event

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At the Houston Ballet Nutcracker Market Spring Spectacular on April 12, 2019.

Tickets for this year’s Nutcracker Market Spring event go on sale Monday.

About tickets

Tickets are available for $20 at Ticketmaster.com. Tickets are also available for $18 at H-E-B Business Centers. Tickets must be purchased in advance. There will be no onsite ticket sales at NRG Center during the Market and no Early Bird Admissions. Shoppers should note that tickets are day-specific and they should confirm the day they wish to attend at time of purchase and arrive at NRG Center only on the date indicated on the ticket. Due to capacity restrictions, everyone, regardless of age, will be required to have a ticket for entry, according to event organizers.

Event details

Nutcracker Market Spring runs April 16-18, 2021. On Friday, the event runs from April 9:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. On Saturday, hours are 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Sunday hours are 10:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.

The three-day shopping experience will welcome nearly 150 merchants from across the country, bringing with them a full assortment of seasonal items, apparel, accessories, food, and home décor to welcome the warmer weather and celebrate the upcoming spring and summer holidays.

COVID-19 precautions

Anyone ages two and older entering NRG Park property (indoors or out) for Nutcracker Market Spring will be required to wear a mask – no exceptions – and practice social distancing. Health screenings, including temperature checks, will be performed on all persons upon entering NRG Park.

Visit the Nutcracker Market Spring Know Before You Go page for full details on event health and safety guidelines and policies.

Source:

Over 100 arrested in crackdown on illegal street racing

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The Harris County Sheriff’s Office announced Sunday that over 100 people have been arrested for offenses related to illegal street racing during a multi-agency crackdown.

Several vehicles have been towed and multiple weapons recovered.

The crackdown came as race enthusiasts converge in Baytown this week for TX2K21 Roll & Drag Race Nationals.

County officials and authorities in Harris County have seen an increase in street racing and last year created a traffic crimes unit to combat complaints about reckless driving.

“Just last month, our sheriff’s office deputies investigated a dangerous street incident that resulted in a crash that killed two young brothers, ages 14 and 16,” said Sheriff Ed Gonzalez during a news briefing earlier this week “…The problem of illegal street racing and street takeovers has gotten so bad that last year our sheriff’s office created a special traffic crimes unit that is tasked with shutting down these drivers.”

Source: www.click2houston.com

AstraZeneca says US trial data shows vaccine 79% effective

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AstraZeneca reported Monday that its COVID-19 vaccine provided strong protection among all adults in a long-anticipated U.S. study, raising hopes that the findings could help rebuild public confidence in the beleaguered shot in other countries and moving a step closer to clearance for American use.

AstraZeneca said the vaccine was 79% effective overall at preventing symptomatic cases of COVID-19 — including in older people — and that none of the study volunteers who were vaccinated were hospitalized or developed severe disease. The company also said its experts did not identify any safety concerns related to the vaccine, including finding no increased risk of rare blood clots identified in Europe.

The findings bolster AstraZeneca’s prior research in Britain and other countries and add to real-world evidence that the shots are offering good protection as they’re used more widely. But confidence in the vaccine has been repeatedly hit because of concerns about how data was reported from some previous trials, confusion over its efficacy in older adults, and a recent scare over clotting.

AstraZeneca said it will seek clearance in the United States “in the coming weeks,” putting it on track to arrive just as the country is projected to have a big boost in supplies of three other vaccines — from Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson — that already are in use.

AstraZeneca’s interim results are based on 141 COVID-19 cases in the 30,000-person trial, but officials declined to tell reporters during a news conference Monday how many were in study volunteers who received the vaccine and how many in those who got dummy shots. Two-thirds of the volunteers received the vaccine.

“These findings reconfirm previous results observed,” said Ann Falsey, of the University of Rochester School of Medicine, who helped lead the trial. “It’s exciting to see similar efficacy results in people over 65 for the first time.”

A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee will publicly debate the evidence behind the shots before the agency decides whether to allow emergency use. Ruud Dobber, an AstraZeneca executive vice president, said that if the FDA OK’s the vaccine, the company will deliver 30 million doses immediately — and another 20 million within the first month.

The AstraZeneca shot, which has been authorized in more than 70 countries, is a pillar of a U.N.-backed project known as COVAX that aims to get COVID-19 vaccines to poorer countries, and it has also become a key tool in European countries’ efforts to boost their sluggish vaccine rollouts. That important role in the global strategy to stamp out the pandemic make doubts about the shot especially worrying.

Stephen Evans, of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said the new data could help to allay concerns about the vaccine.

“The benefits of these results will mainly be for the rest of the world where confidence in the AZ (AstraZeneca) vaccine has been eroded, largely by political and media comment,” he said.

Dr. Paul Hunter, a professor of medicine at the University of East Anglia, said the results were reassuring but that more details were needed to back up AstraZeneca’s claim that the vaccine was completely effective at preventing severe disease and hospitalization.

”It would be good to know how many severe cases occurred in the control group and so what the confidence intervals are for this 100% figure,” said Hunter, who was not connected to the study. “But this should add confidence that the vaccine is doing what it is most needed for.”

Scientists had hoped the U.S. study would clear up some of the confusion about just how well the shots really work, particularly in older people. Previous research suggested the vaccine was effective in younger populations, but there was no solid data proving its efficacy in those over 65, often those most vulnerable to COVID-19.

Britain first authorized the vaccine based on partial results from testing in the United Kingdom, Brazil, and South Africa that suggested the shots were about 70% effective. But those results were clouded by a manufacturing mistake that led some participants to get just a half dose in their first shot — an error the researchers didn’t immediately acknowledge.

Then came more questions, about how well the vaccine protected older adults and how long to wait before the second dose. Some European countries including Germany, France, and Belgium initially withheld the shot from older adults and only reversed their decisions after new data suggested it was offering seniors protection.

AstraZeneca’s vaccine development was rocky in the U.S., too. Last fall, the FDA suspended the company’s study for an unusual six weeks, as frustrated regulators sought information about some neurologic complaints reported in Britain; ultimately, there was no evidence the vaccine was to blame.

Last week, more than a dozen countries, mostly in Europe, temporarily suspended their use of the AstraZeneca shot after reports it was linked to rare blood clots — even as international health agencies insisted the benefits of the vaccine outweighed the risks. On Thursday, the European Medicines Agency concluded after an investigation that the vaccine did not raise the overall risk of blood clots, but could not rule out that it was connected to two very rare types of clots. It recommended adding a warning about these cases to the vaccine’s leaflet.

It’s not unheard of for such rare problems to crop up as vaccines are rolled out since trials typically look at tens of thousands of people, and some issues are only seen once the shot is used in millions of people.

France, Germany, Italy, and other countries subsequently resumed their use of the shot on Friday, with senior politicians rolling up their sleeves to show the vaccine was safe.

The AstraZeneca shot is what scientists call a “viral vector” vaccine. The shots are made with a harmless virus, a cold virus that normally infects chimpanzees. It acts as a Trojan horse to carry the coronavirus’s spike protein’s genetic material into the body that in turn produces some harmless protein. That primes the immune system to fight if the real virus comes along.

Two other companies, Johnson & Johnson and China’s CanSino Biologics, make COVID-19 vaccines using the same technology but using different cold viruses.

Source: www.click2houston.com

Number of people tested positive for the COVID-19 UK variant doubled at Houston Methodist

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The number of people infected with the UK variant has doubled in one local hospital system in just one week.

The increase is according to the latest numbers from Houston Methodist.

“About the middle of January, we detected the new UK variant,” said Dr. Jim Musser, chair of the Department of Pathology & Genomic Medicine at Methodist Hospital.

Months later, those cases are quickly multiplying. Cases of the UK variant have more than doubled in the Houston Methodist system. Last week, Houston Methodist says 305 people tested positive, and as of Tuesday, 648 tested positive. The reason?

“This variant is very successful in transmitting person to person,” Dr. Musser said.

It’s an uptick the Houston Health Department also noticed during its daily samples collected at the city’s wastewater treatment plants.

“It is not a surprise to see the hospitals start to report the same thing. In fact, we had anticipated all along what we would see in the wastewater would be a predictor of what we would see in the hospitals,” said Dr. David Persse, chief medical officer for the City of Houston.

Experts only expect this number to continue to go up. But the positive from this all they say the FDA approved vaccines to protect you from it.

“This variant remains susceptible to vaccination. This variant does not result in vaccine failure,” Dr. Musser said.

So far doctors at Houston Methodist tell us they have not seen an increase in the number of patients being hospitalized with this variant. But they say it’s still too early to tell the effects this could have on people here in our area. The best thing they recommend is to get vaccinated and continue with the CDC guidelines.

Source: www.khou.com

Doctors urge people to follow COVID safety precautions after returning from Spring Break trips

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Now that Spring Break is over, doctors hope people remember the pandemic isn’t.

Dr. Linda Yancey, an infectious diseases specialist with Memorial Hermann Hospital, says COVID-19 is still widespread in the community so pandemic safety precautions are still necessary.

“If you’ve been out of town interacting with people outside your bubble and you’re coming back into a household with unvaccinated people, you need to protect them for the next 10 days,” Yancey said.

She recommends wearing a mask indoors and quarantining from people who aren’t vaccinated for 10 days.

“Cases have been declining, but that decline is slowing. It looks like we’re going to hit a plateau. We also have variants from all over the world that have come into the U.S. that spread much more readily than the vanilla COVID we’ve been used to,” Yancey said.

All the major variants from the UK, South Africa, Brazil, New York and California are already in Houston. The UK variant is spreading so quickly, the number of cases at Houston Methodist more than doubled in just one week.

Now, health officials say standard COVID-19 tests don’t detect a new variant of concern in France.

“We’re in a race right now between the vaccine and variants. We want the vaccine to win, but that means we have to stack the odds in its favor,” Yancey said.

She says the only thing that will stop new dangerous variants from forming is getting 70%-90% of the population vaccinated.

Source: www.khou.com

Vaccinated pregnant woman gives birth to baby with COVID antibodies

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Doctors report a baby girl in Florida was born with the antibodies to fight COVID-19 thanks to her mom.

Let’s connect the dots.

A new study says the Florida mother is a frontline healthcare worker who received her first dose of the Moderna vaccine when she was 36 weeks pregnant. She gave birth three weeks later to a healthy baby with COVID-19 antibodies.

Doctors believe the mother passed on those antibodies through the placenta, but more research needs to be done.

The idea of a mom passing on protections to her baby is not new.

Starting in the second trimester, a pregnant woman starts passing important disease-fighting molecules onto her fetus. This ramps up as the pregnancy go on and is critical to helping newborns fight off infections.

These maternal antibodies help protect babies until their own immune system matures and they are old enough to be vaccinated themselves.

Pregnant women were not in the original trials for the Moderna and Pfizer coronavirus vaccines, a common practice in these studies. But Pfizer has announced a large-scale trial with expectant mothers and Moderna has created a registry to track how pregnant women respond to the vaccine.

Source: www.khou.com