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Inside Covid-19: Why SA is at back of Covid-19 vaccine queue

A week ago, Bloomberg reported that SA was only likely to get a Covid-19 vaccine rolled out in earnest by mid-2021 and even then only for a select few. That created an outcry from the medical fraternity. In this episode of Inside Covid-19, we speak to Professor Francois Venter, a professor of medicine at the University of the Witwatersrand, who has been pushing the government to share detailed plans for who will get vaccines. A former advisor on the government advisory panel, Professor Venter warns that the vaccine may not be administered en masse next year at all. We hear from one of the founders of the Great Barrington Declaration how we should manage Covid-19 until vaccines arrive. Dr Jay Battacharya spoke to BizNews in November. He is opposed to strict lockdown but is in favour of focused protection. He says lockdown is the single-biggest mistake in health policy in his life time but we should take protective measures – and this can include wearing masks, particularly if we are

A small town dragged its feet on COVID-19 mask mandates Now residents are paying the price

A small town dragged its feet on COVID-19 mask mandates. Now residents are paying the price. Andrea Ball, Jayme Fraser and Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY © Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY NETWORK A water tower gleams in the afternoon sun in Dodge City, Kansas. DODGE CITY In the midst of a worsening pandemic, as coronavirus cases climbed, elected leaders in a former frontier town famous for its gunfights faced a choice. They could pass a mask mandate at the urging of health experts, or reject the measure blasted by some as a violation of their personal freedoms. The five commissioners of Dodge City, Kansas, a politically red cattle community of some 27,000 people, had resisted such measures all summer and into fall. Like other parts of rural and small-city America, Dodge City had mostly returned to normal after shaking off the pandemic’s first wave.

Help is on the way : How the U S will turn the tide of the pandemic in 2021

The end of the pandemic is coming. Here s what it will take. Erika Edwards and Akshay Syal © Provided by NBC News Perhaps the most important thing to know about 2021 is that it will be different than 2020. Unfortunately, the pandemic will not magically end when the clock strikes midnight on New Year s Eve one year since a mysterious pneumonia spreading in Wuhan, China, was first publicly disclosed. More cases will be diagnosed in the new year, and more people will die from the illness we now know as Covid-19. Some predictions are bleak. According to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, an independent global health research center at the University of Washington, the death toll in the U.S. will surpass 500,000 by March.

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