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Air Force evacuates COVID-19 patient with onboard isolation unit
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 20, 2020

COVID-19 cases rise in military, VA hospitals
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 20, 2020 - COVID-19 cases among the active-duty U.S. military rose by 13.5 percent since Thursday, the Defense Department reported on Monday.

The Pentagon reported 21,909 active duty military cases on Monday, up from its report of 18,968 on Thursday.

The Department of Defense also counted 4,563 civilian cases, 2,925 dependent cases and 2,021 contractor cases, totaling 31,148 cases on Monday. The report also mentioned 903 hospitalizations, 12,728 recoveries and 48 deaths.

Among the branches, the Pentagon reported 7,282 cases reported in the Army, 2,470 in the Marine Corps, 5,629 in the Navy, 3,263 by the Air Force, 3,016 in the National Guard and 249 by other Defense Department agencies.

Veterans Affairs officials also noted a steep rise in the number of COVID-19 cases but no corresponding increase in those needing critical care.

They reported 6,424 active coronavirus cases tracked by the VA health care system on Monday. It is an increase of more over 11 percent since last week, and more than 52 percent since the start July. The total fell below 1,400 cases in early June, but has since risen steadily.

Three Texas VA sites are among the hardest hit by the virus. The VA Texas Valley Coastal Bend Health Care System in Harlingen reported 381 active cases, with 283 reported by the San Antonio VA site and 249 by the Houston VA medical center.

Seventeen VA centers, of 170 nationwide, are also tracking more than 100 COVID-19 cases, officials said.

The Monday VA report said that 242 COVID-19 patients are in intensive care units across the country, with 471 patients in acute care. Since March, the VA has had 32,696 cumulative cases, 24,382 convalescent cases and 1,890 deaths.

The U.S. Air Force announced Monday that it for the first time used a specially-designed isolation chamber to transport a COVID-19 patient from the Indo-Pacific region to the United States for treatment.

It was the first use by the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command of the new Transport Isolation System, though it is the 18th use of the system since it's rollout in April.

The chamber, which can be loaded onto a plane, was used to transport a service member who tested positive for the COVID-19 virus from the Indo-Pacific region to Travis Air Base, Calif. The airman's name or location were not given.

The airlift was conducted by the 775th Expeditionary Aeromedical Evacuation Flight, using a C-17 Globemaster III aircraft from the 21st Airlift Squadron.

The Transport Isolation System is essentially a container that sits on a specialized pallet and can be loaded onto C-130H,C-130J, and C-17 cargo aircraft, according to the Air Force.

The system features one antechamber module and two isolation modules.

The device includes watertight enclosures and high-efficiency particulate air [HEPA] filtration systems to contain both airborne and non-airborne pathogens, as well as sufficient space for medical crew members safely decontaminate and remove personal protective equipment before exiting.

The containers are stackable, and a C-17 can carry two.

Travis Air Base is one of three staging areas useable for the specialized evacuation missions. Its West Coast location and fleet of 13 C-17s make it an involved entity in repatriating service members with COVID-19 symptoms, officials said.

"When we say rapid global mobility ... this is how we project American air power," said Col. Corey Simmons, commander of the 60th Air Mobility Wing.

"'Team Travis' capabilities and the seamless partnership with multiple organizations across the Air Force enabled us to promptly help those in need throughout the Indo-Pacific region during this challenging, global pandemic," Simmons said.

Scientists find smallpox strains used to vaccinate Civil War soldiers
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 20, 2020 - At its peak, smallpox killed nearly 30 percent of people infected by the virus. Those who survived were often crippled. But forty years ago, after decades of vaccination efforts, the disease was eradicated.

Now, thanks to an analysis of American Civil War-era vaccination kits, scientists have traced the origins of the virus strains used during some of the earliest smallpox vaccination efforts in the United States, according to a study published Monday in the journal Genome Biology.

For the study, an international team of researchers captured viral molecules from biological material, including blisters and pus, left on blades, tin boxes and glass slides found inside the aging leather vaccination kits housed at the Mütter Museum of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.

Analysis of the molecules revealed the genomes of virus fragments, allowing scientists to identify the strain used to vaccinate Civil War soldiers against smallpox.

In addition to highlighting the important work of vaccination, researchers suggest the study of early smallpox vaccination efforts can offer valuable lessons to scientists all over the globe, as they race to develop a vaccine against COVID-19.

"Understanding the history, the evolution and the ways in which these viruses can function as vaccines is hugely important in contemporary times," study co-author and evolutionary geneticist Hendrik Poinar said in a news release.

"This work points to the importance of looking at the diversity of these vaccine strains found out in the wild. We don't know how many could provide cross protection from a wide range of viruses, such as flus or coronaviruses," said Poinar, director of the Ancient DNA Center at McMaster University in Canada.

To vaccinate patients against smallpox, physicians used the cowpox virus, a milder relative of the smallpox virus -- a technique first developed by the English physician Edward Jenner, during the late 18th century.

American Civil War soldiers enlisting in both the northern and southern armies were required to be vaccinated against smallpox.

"During the war, most of the College [of Physicians of Philadelphia] members served either in the army or as contract physicians and, as such, administered smallpox vaccination according to standard army protocol," researchers wrote in the paper.

Analysis of the viral strains recovered from the Mütter Museum artifacts showed these protocols involved the propagation of a vaccinia virus strain in human subjects. Pus or scabs from one cowpox-infected patient was collected and applied to a scratch or cut in the skin of another patient. Exposure to cowpox helped the patient develop immunity to smallpox.

Researchers involved in the development of new vaccines are constantly working to determine how close a vaccine strain must be to a target virus to produce an immune response.

The latest research showed that the vaccinia virus strain being used during and after the American Civil War was, in fact, quite distantly related to smallpox.

"Vaccination is a wonderful process with a rich medical history that we should celebrate," said lead study author Ana Duggan.

"Medical museums are incredible repositories of our past and of our collective history. The new tools we develop in this work allow us to begin to investigate how medical sources, procedures and techniques have changed through time," said Duggan, a former postdoc in the anthropology department at McMaster and now a researcher at the Public Health Agency of Canada.


Related Links
Epidemics on Earth - Bird Flu, HIV/AIDS, Ebola


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EPIDEMICS
Millions face new virus curbs, but hope rises for US vaccine
Hong Kong (AFP) July 15, 2020
Millions of people faced new coronavirus restrictions on Wednesday as infections surge, but in one sign of hope, an American firm said it would soon start final-stage human trials for a possible vaccine. Countries around the world re-imposed lockdowns and curbs to contain new outbreaks, as global cases surged past 13.2 million with more than 576,000 deaths. Parts of the Asia-Pacific region, which had been somewhat successful in fighting the pandemic, provided fresh evidence of the deadly threat ... read more

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