A New Normal: US Marks 6 Years Since Declaring A National Covid Emergency
What's changed, and what hasn't, since President Donald Trump declared the U.S. emergency on March 13, 2020. At the time, nearly 2,000 Americans were infected with the virus. But at-home covid tests and vaccines wouldn't become available until much later that year.
Scientists are still decoding the mysteries of covid and long covid:
The New York Times:
Viral Outbreaks Take A Common Path From Animals To People, Study Finds
The Covid pandemic was an extraordinary moment in history. Starting at the end of 2019, a virus new to science swept across the planet, killed more than 25 million people and caused trillions of dollars in economic damage. But as outbreaks go, Covid was pretty ordinary, a new study finds. Scientists compared seven viral outbreaks that occurred in recent decades, including epidemics of Covid, Ebola and influenza. For the most part, the researchers found, the outbreaks were not preceded by any unusual genetic changes in the viruses. (Zimmer, 3/9)
ScienceAlert:
'Zombie' Remnants Of COVID-19 Hunt In Packs And Kill Our Immune Cells
'Zombie' coronavirus fragments not only help drive inflammation in long-COVID, but also destroy our immune cells. A recent study by an international team of more than 30 authors reveals how the destruction of the virus within our body leaves dangerous protein fragments that target specific immune cells, which may explain some of the debilitating consequences millions of people with long-COVID now face. (Koumoundouros, 2/4)
Bloomberg:
How Covid Quietly Rewires the Brain
Researchers keep discovering more about the long-term neurological effects of SARS-CoV-2. (Gale, 2/25)
Discover Magazine:
The Mystery Of Losing Your Taste From Long COVID May Finally Have An Answer
Researchers from Sweden and the U.S. have uncovered molecular and structural changes in some taste buds of patients with taste abnormalities after a COVID-19 infection, offering the first plausible explanation for why a small group of people lost their taste for an unusually long time. (Lehmann, 3/3)
CIDRAP:
Long-COVID Prevalence May Vary By COVID-19 Variant, Time Since Infection
The first known meta-analysis of how SARS-CoV-2 variant type and time since infection influence long-COVID symptoms ties Omicron to brain fog and paresthesia (numbness and tingling), while earlier variants were more likely to cause shortness of breath and loss of smell. The study also puts the prevalence of the condition at 29%, though it dropped to 23% once the Omicron strain started to dominate. (Van Beusekom, 3/12)
Medical Xpress:
Severe COVID-19 And Flu Can Facilitate Lung Cancer Months Or Years Later
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease's development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research from UVA Health's Beirne B. Carter Center for Immunology Research and UVA Comprehensive Cancer Center indicates. (Harley, 3/11)
Flashback: Here's what we knew about covid six years ago in the Morning Briefing.
Mental and physical effects of the lockdowns have lingered:
WJCL:
Six Years After COVID-19, Hospitals Still Facing Nursing Shortage
A national study from the National Council of State Boards of Nursing found more than 138,000 nurses have left the workforce since 2022, with many pointing to stress and exhaustion from the pandemic. (Cooper, 3/11)
The Guardian:
New Zealand Covid Response Among World’s Best But ‘Scars’ Remain, Inquiry Finds
A royal commission into New Zealand’s Covid response has found it was one of the best in the world but acknowledged the period had left “scars.” New Zealand has recorded 5,641 Covid deaths since 2020. The country’s strict response, which included lockdowns, vaccine mandates and border quarantine helped to save tens of thousands of lives. But as the pandemic wore on, some anger over the restrictions set in and a small but vocal fringe of anti-vaccine and anti-mandate groups emerged, leading to a violent protest on parliament’s lawns. (Corlett, 3/9)
EdWeek:
The ‘Pandemic Babies’ Are Now In 1st And 2nd Grade. How Are They Doing?
The academic effects of the pandemic weren’t just limited to school-age children. Kids who were babies and toddlers in the early years of COVID, currently in 1st and 2nd grades, are now struggling too, a new analysis finds. The report, from researchers at the assessment company NWEA, analyzes the organization’s math and reading test results for students who were in grades K-2 in the spring of 2025. (Schwartz, 3/10)
Covid funds are still being spent (and misspent):
Carolina Public Press:
Clock Ticking On NC’s $1.2 Billion In Unspent Federal COVID Funds, Auditor Warns
State Auditor Dave Boliek has a New Year’s resolution for state agencies: spend the remaining $1.2 billion in federal COVID funds before they expire at the end of 2026. In spring 2021, amid the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress passed a massive stimulus package that sent $5.4 billion to North Carolina’s state government. That money sits in an account called the State Fiscal Recovery Fund and has been allocated to individual agencies by the state legislature. (Thomae, 12/1)
Missouri Independent:
Ex-Missouri House Speaker John Diehl Sentenced To Federal Prison For COVID Fraud
Former Missouri House Speaker John Diehl was sentenced to 21 months in federal prison Monday after pleading guilty last year to misusing federal loans meant to help businesses withstand the COVID-19 pandemic. (Hancock, 3/9)
The Post and Courier:
Greenville Company Made Millions From ‘Virtually Worthless’ COVID-19 Tests, Feds Say
Prosecutors say a Greenville company knowingly processed hundreds of thousands of faulty COVID-19 tests and raked in millions in fraudulent reimbursements from the federal government. A federal grand jury indicted Premier Medical Laboratory Services CEO Kevin Murdock, as well as two high-level employees, Thomas Lee and Vidhya Narayanan on March 11. (Taylor, 3/11)
Neighbors are still looking out for neighbors:
KSLTV.Com:
Former Restaurant Owner Who Paid It Forward During Pandemic Sees Kindness Returned In Fight With Cancer
Kayden Petersen-Craig may now only have months to live, but he said he is amazed at the kindness that people are showing through his fight with cancer. It's similar to the kindness he tried to show as a restaurant owner during the pandemic. (Anderson, 3/10)
Monterey Herald:
COVID Memorial Garden Honors The Effects Of The Pandemic
It’s been just about six years since COVID-19 first hit Monterey County, California, infecting over 120,000 people in the county, taking the lives of over 900. The garden, unveiled Tuesday at the County Government Center in Salinas, honors the Monterey County residents who lost their lives to COVID-19 and acknowledges the dedication of first responders, frontline workers, educators, health care and public health professionals throughout the pandemic. At the ceremony, those who lost family members to the virus were given the opportunity to share stories about their loved ones. (Hamilton, 3/11)