(Bloomberg) — China imposed a partial shutdown on the 1.3 million residents of Yuzhou, a city in the central province of Henan, after finding three asymptomatic cases of Covid-19.
Hong Kong also pursued the Covid-zero strategy, hunting for six people who may have been part of a cluster of omicron infections.
New York City may expand its vaccine mandates to require boosters. A third shot of Pfizer Inc.’s vaccine for 12- to 15-year-olds won emergency approval from U.S. regulators.
U.K Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned that the pandemic is far from over. Russia reported the lowest number of cases since June, while Germany began weighing new measures in the face of rising infections.
Key Developments:
- Virus Tracker: Cases pass 291 million; deaths exceed 5.4 million
- Vaccine Tracker: More than 9.2 billion shots administered
- Omicron’s mild infections hint at less-severe phase of pandemic
- Open streets reflect inequality in the U.S., study indicates
- How safe is flying as omicron surges: QuickTake
- Can omicron escape vaccines and boosters: Coronavirus Daily
N.J. Projects Record Hospitalizations (3:15 p.m. NY)
New Jersey is expected to peak on Jan. 14 with a record 9,000 people hospitalized, according to state Health Commissioner Judith Persichilli. That would be about 1,000 more than the previous high, reached in April 2020.
The state has 4,715 hospitalizations related to Covid-19, the most since May 2020. Children’s admissions reached 102, almost double from a week ago.
Though New Jersey has bed capacity for a surge, staffing is a concern, Governor Phil Murphy said. Hospital administrators are pitching in with patient care and emergency medical technicians have been authorized to work at vaccination centers.
U.S. Capitol Sees ‘Explosive’ Case Growth (3:01 p.m. NY)
The U.S. Capitol has registered “explosive” growth in infections, with more than 13% of tests coming back positive over a seven-day period, up from from less than 1%, Brian P. Monahan, the chief physician for Congress, told lawmakers.
Most of the Capitol cases were of people who had been vaccinated, and none resulted in serious complications or hospitalizations. Most were caused by the omicron variant.
Monahan urged more remote work and greater vigilance in other respects. “Blue surgical masks, cloth face masks and gaiter masks must be replaced by the more protective KN95 or N95 masks,” he said.
NYC Mayor Considers Requiring Boosters (12:43 p.m. NY)
New York City might expand its vaccine mandates in April to require booster shots, Mayor Eric Adams said on Bloomberg TV.
Public-sector employees in the city are required to be fully vaccinated. A private-sector mandate went into effect Dec. 27, requiring employees to get a second dose within 45 days before they can enter their workplaces.
Adams said he has urged banks and other businesses to bring workers back to offices.
“You can’t run New York City from home,” he said.
Outbreak Ends Cruise in Lisbon: Video (12:18 p.m.)
Starbucks Requires Vaccination or Testing (12:05 p.m. NY)
Starbucks will require U.S. employees to get vaccinated or submit to weekly testing by Feb. 9, in line with government standards for large employers. Workers must disclose their vaccination status by Jan. 10. The chain will require employees who choose not to vaccinate to pay for their own tests.
French Lawmakers Get Death Threats: BBC (11:47 a.m. NY)
Two French lawmakers said they received death threats as Parliament moves toward requiring proof of vaccination for access to public venues and transportation.
Agnès Firmin Le Bodo of the center-right Agir party tweeted an email she received with threats to kill her over her support for the vaccination pass.
“Our democracy is in danger,” she wrote.
Dozens of Cruise Passengers Test Positive (11:39 a.m. NY)
Forty-five passengers tested positive on Italian cruise ship MSC Grandiosa, which arrived at Genoa, Italy, from Marseille, the MSC Crociere cruise line said by email. The patients isolated and were sent home while taking protective measures, the company said.
Pfizer Booster Cleared for Young Teens (10:20 a.m. NY)
U.S. regulators granted emergency-use authorization to give Pfizer Inc.’s booster shot to people age 12 to 15. The Food and Drug Administration also reduced the recommended interval to five months between the second and third doses of the messenger RNA vaccine, which was developed with BioNTech SE.
The agency said also that immune-compromised children age 5 to 11 could receive a third primary-series shot at least 28 days after their initial two-dose immunization.
A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention expert panel is expected meet as soon as this week to discuss the EUA and make recommendations about how to dispense the shots.
NYC Cases Surge as Students Return to School (9:30 a.m. NY)
New York City Mayor Adams tried to reassure parents of the 1 million public-school students that it was safe to return to classes on Monday, despite a surge in cases, staffing shortages and no testing requirement.
“The message has been clear; Our schools will be open,” Adams said on MSNBC. “Schools are the safest place for our children.”
The city’s seven-day positivity rate exceeded 32% on Dec. 30 and reached nearly 45% in some areas of the Bronx, according to city data. Seven-day average hospitalizations more than tripled since mid-December to 447 on Dec. 30.
Puerto Rico Jump Brings Restrictions (8:51 a.m. NY)
Businesses in Puerto Rico will have to close from midnight to 5 a.m. starting Tuesday, as the commonwealth registered one of the biggest infection surges of any U.S. jurisdiction.
Also, alcohol sales will be banned during those hours and all events of 250 people or more will be prohibited. The new restrictions run through Jan. 18.
“We all want the contagion level to drop so that we can protect our boys, girls and youth so they can go back to school safely,” Governor Pedro Pierluisi said as he signed an executive order Dec. 31.
Puerto Rico — a U.S. territory of 3.3 million — has the highest vaccination rate of any U.S. jurisdiction.
Johnson Warns Pandemic Not Over: BBC (8:49 a.m NY)
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the U.K. is in a much better position with the virus than last year but said it would be “absolute folly” to think the pandemic is almost over, the BBC reported.
France Bolsters Aid to Tourism Firms (8:04 a.m NY)
The French government said it would ease access to crisis funds and could delay loan repayments for businesses struggling with a drop in activity as a surge in omicron cases hits tourism and leisure activities.
Such efforts have allowed the country “to relaunch economic activity very quickly and very strongly,” Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said after meeting with representatives of business groups.
Hong Kong Hunts for Six Diners in Cluster (6:20 a.m. NY)
Hong Kong is using several methods to find six diners who may have been exposed to the coronavirus, in its first cluster of local omicron infections.
Officials have identified 201 out of 207 patrons of the Moon Palace restaurant where a crew member from Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd., who was subsequently found to be infected with omicron, was eating lunch with his family on Dec. 27.
Five other customers later tested positive, and 191 have been sent to a government-run quarantine center where they will be tested regularly.
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