Britney Spears Calls Out Her Household, Together with Jamie Lynn Spears

The 39-year-old singer also touched on the many documentaries that have put the spotlight on her life, describing them as “humiliating moments from the past.”

“I’m way past all that and have been for a long time!!!! And for women who say it’s weird the way I still have hope for fairy tales…go f–k yourself,” she continued. “As I said…hope is all I have right now…you’re lucky I post anything at all…if you don’t like what you see, unfollow me!!!”

Britney’s message comes one day after she criticized people in her inner circle for just now deciding to publicly come to her defense amid her conservatorship battle, which began in 2008.

“There’s nothing worse than when the people closest to you who never showed up for you post things in regard to your situation whatever it may be and speak righteously for support,” she began her post on Instagram on Friday, July 16. “There’s nothing worse than that!!!!”

She continued, “How dare the people you love the most say anything at all…did they even put a hand out to even lift me up at the TIME!!!??? How dare you make it public that NOW you CARE…did you put your hand out when I was drowning???? Again…NO.”

5 issues you must know earlier than the inventory market opens on Thursday July 15th

Here are the top news, trends, and analysis investors need to start their trading day:

1. Dow will open lower before day 2 of Powell’s testimony

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

Source: NYSE

Dow futures fell 150 points Thursday, a day after the S&P 500 hit an all-time high but didn’t close on a record. In a muted session, the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished slightly higher and the Nasdaq a little lower. Both benchmarks were less than 1% from their record closing times on Monday. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will submit his semi-annual economic report to the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday. He told the House of Representatives Finance Committee on Wednesday that the Fed was still a long way from changing monetary policy. He also said he expected inflation to weaken even if this week’s latest readings on consumer prices and wholesale prices rose.

2. Bond yields lower by weekly unemployment figures

Bond yields fell Wednesday after Powell’s moderate message. The yield on 10-year government bonds fell further on Thursday to around 1.32%. The Department of Labor reported that initial jobless claims for last week were expected to be 360,000 – a new low in the Covid era. The initial claims, which had risen unexpectedly in the week of July 3, have been revised upwards. All of that data came after the government’s June employment report, which showed the U.S. economy created better-than-expected 850,000 non-farm jobs.

3. Morgan Stanley is the newest bank to beat quarterly estimates

Signage for Morgan Stanley is displayed at the company’s New York headquarters.

Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images

UnitedHealth Group Inc. is headquartered in Minnetonka, Minnesota, USA

Mike Bradley | Bloomberg | Getty Images

UnitedHealth reported quarterly earnings on Thursday morning that exceeded expectations. In the second quarter, the largest US health insurer reported a medical claims ratio – the percentage of premiums spent on services – of nearly 83%. Compared to 70% the previous year when patients postponed non-urgent treatment due to the pandemic. UnitedHealth has also raised its earnings target for the full year. Dow shares lost 0.4% in pre-trading.

4. Volatile meme stocks AMC, GameStop are taking big hits

AMC Entertainment’s shares lost another 6% in the premarket on Thursday, indicating a fifth straight session of losses a day after falling 15%. The volatile Meme stock has lost 30% in the last four down sessions. As of Wednesday’s close of trading, AMC shares were down more than half their value after hitting an all-time high of $ 72.62 on June 2.

Zoom In Icon Arrows pointing outwards

GameStop, the original Meme stock, is down more than 21% this month and continued to decline in the premarket as the reality of bubble rallies and failing businesses became apparent to Reddit-obsessed investors. For 2021, however, AMC was still up more than 1,450% and GameStop nearly 800%.

5. GM warns some Bolt EV owners not to park indoors and charge unattended

Vermont State Police released this photo of the 2019 Chevrolet Bolt EV that caught fire in the driveway of State Representative Timothy Briglin, a Democrat, on July 1, 2021.

Vermont State Police

General Motors is instructing 2017-2019 Bolt electric vehicle owners who were part of a recent recall not to park their vehicles indoors or to charge them overnight unattended. The warning comes after two Bolt EVs catch fire. These vehicles had been repaired as part of a recall of nearly 69,000 vehicles that had been marked for fire hazard. The recall was originally announced in November by GM and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. One of the Bolt-EV fires occurred when the vehicle was being charged at a Vermont state legislature’s home earlier this month. The other fire occurred in New Jersey.

– Reuters contributed to this report. Follow the whole market like a pro on CNBC Pro. Get the latest on the pandemic with coronavirus coverage from CNBC.

In Peloton competitors with gyms, health app Strava can win

More than 400 hardware devices can connect with Strava, including home-fitness and gym equipment, smart watches and cycling computers and the company says it had more than 1.1 billion activities uploaded to its platform last year.

Strava

When this year’s Tour de France departed the city of Brest on June 26, most of the 184 pro cyclists were logged onto Strava.

So were millions of recreational athletes around the world, from runners in Rio to swimmers in Switzerland to mountaineers in Montana. There were legions of Strava users indoors, too, on Peloton stationary bikes and treadmills, Zwift “smart” trainers and NordicTrack rowing machines.

Mobile fitness app Strava tracks more than 30 different activities in real time and uploads speed, distance, cadence and other performance data to a platform where 86 million users can analyze their own workouts, share and compare them with fellow users, and engage in friendly challenges with friends and strangers. Its popularity soared amid the pandemic as gyms closed and working out at home and outdoors boomed.

“We saw tremendous growth in our community,” said Strava chief executive officer Michael Horvath. “There were months during 2020 when we had three million new registrants, and we’re now at about two million a month, double from pre-Covid. That represents Strava motivating people, helping them get through that time and giving them an opportunity to connect with other people.”

From Harvard row team to $1.5 billion start-up valuation

Strava, which is a private company, was launched in 2009 in San Francisco by Horvath and Mark Gainey, former teammates on the Harvard rowing team who now serve as CEO and executive chairman, respectively. The company has about 270 employees and additional offices in Denver, Bristol, England, and Dublin, Ireland — the overseas locations owing to the fact that more than 80% of Strava users are outside the U.S.

More than 95% of those 86 million users access Strava for free; the rest pay a $5 monthly subscription fee to gain additional features. While Strava does not report revenue, analytics firm Sensor Tower estimates that it generated $72 million last year, up from $60 million in 2019, ostensibly from selling data, rights to partners that sponsor challenges and subscriptions.

Strava raised $110 million in new funding in a Series F round last fall led by TCV and Sequoia, valuing the company at more than $1.5 billion. The founders have said it is not yet a profitable company.

Connecting with all kinds of workouts

More than 400 hardware devices can connect with Strava, including home-fitness and gym equipment, smart watches and cycling computers. The company said it had more than 1.1 billion activities uploaded to its platform last year, a 33% increase from 2019. That aligned with the major uptick in fitness hardware sales from companies like Peloton.

“Through Covid, there’s been a significant awakening of how important physical activity is to people’s lives,” said Tom Cove, president and CEO of the Sports and Fitness Industry Association in Washington, D.C., which represents manufacturers and retailers.

At last count, Horvath said, “close to 50 million Peloton activities have been uploaded to Strava,” acknowledging the synergy of its partnerships with equipment makers. “Being the hub of the connected fitness landscape, we provide the place for athletes to stay connected with their communities after the workout is over.”

The continued success of fitness products appears to be a good harbinger for Strava.

According to retail research firm NPD Group, from March to October last year, health and fitness equipment revenue more than doubled, to $2.3 billion. Sales of stationary bikes nearly tripled, while treadmill sales ramped up 135%. “In the first three months of this year, retail sales were up 30% versus that period last year,” said Matt Powell, vice president and senior industry advisor for NPD. Sales in March, however, were flat compared to that month a year ago, which he foresees as a proxy for the rest of 2021.

Peloton specifically has grown commensurately. Revenue for its fiscal year 2020, which ended June 30, rose nearly 100% year over year to $1.8 billion, and management projects FY 2021 revenue will be rosier, up to $4 billion — even accounting for the $165 million loss Peloton expects for its treadmill recall. As of March 31, the New York-based company reported more than 54 million members, each of whom pays a monthly subscription fee of either $12.99 for digital access to live and on-demand classes or $39 for an expanded suite of features, on top of paying between $1,895 and $2,345 for a Peloton bike or up to $4,295 for their treadmill, which is not currently available in the U.S. as the company works on a fix for the safety issues.

Softening in Peloton demand

There could be softening in that demand as in-person workouts and gyms re-open. Wedbush Securities downgraded Peloton last week, claiming that the company has seen a drop off in customer engagement, based on analysis of social media and internet search trends.

“PTON is now embarking on the next leg of its growth story, one that in a post-pandemic era will require the company to generate its own momentum through savvy marketing and compelling new products,” the Wedbush analysts wrote in their note.

Peloton declined to comment for this article.

Connectivity to Strava has helped propel Zwift, a game-like online cycling platform that allows subscribers who pay $14.99 a month to create animated avatars of themselves that ride in the virtual realm from indoors. Typically, a real-world cyclist attaches the back end of his road bike to a digitally controlled smart trainer, linked to an app that simulates his avatar riding an actual route — from a local favorite to a mountain stage in the Tour — seen on a monitor, tablet or smartphone. The trainer automatically increases and decreases resistance to mimic the route’s elevation. About 75% of Zwifters upload their ride data to Strava and plug into its features.

My theory is that if you spent a couple thousand dollars buying a piece of equipment for your home, it’s highly unlikely you’re going to pay $50 a month to go to the gym and exercise on the same machine.

Matt Powell, vice president and senior industry advisor for NPD

Since Zwift was founded in Long Beach, California, in 2014, 3.5 million accounts have been created. The company did not provide the current number, though said the figure doubled in FY 2021, which ended in March. Strava stated that 100 million Zwift activities have been uploaded to its platform, including thousands of grueling “Everstings,” a single virtual ride that climbs a total of at least 29,029 feet, the height of Mt. Everest. During worldwide Covid lockdowns last year, Zwift held a virtual Tour de France, with classifications for both men and women.

“Zwift is a platform for people to chase whatever carrot they’re looking for,” said co-founder and CEO Eric Min. “Motivating people to do more is our goal.”

While subscriptions are “really where the value is for us as a business,” Min said, the company is developing its own smart trainers and indoor bikes, likely to hit the market next year. Zwift won’t cut out its existing hardware partners, including Wahoo, Elite and Tacx, “but we think we should be the ones setting the bar,” Min said.

Future of home fitness as gyms reopen

As Covid restrictions continue to ease, people are heading back to the gym. In May, traffic at gyms nationwide was back to 83% of January 2020 levels, and down just 6% from the same period in 2019, according to research from Jeffries.

But does that mean Zwifters, Peloton devotees and other at-home exercisers will lose their mojo and begin using their equipment as clothes hangers? “My theory is that if you spent a couple thousand dollars buying a piece of equipment for your home, it’s highly unlikely you’re going to pay $50 a month to go to the gym and exercise on the same machine,” Powell said.

The challenge for the home fitness industry then becomes retaining their millions of new customers. The key, Powell said, is to keep users connected to the communities of fellow exercisers and to “enhance the experience to make people want to continue to use it.”

That’s music to Strava’s ears, because regardless of where people work out, the data can be uploaded to its platform.

Even with Strava’s success, the marketplace for fitness tracking apps remains highly competitive. MyFitnessPal, which was sold by Under Armour to private equity firm Francisco Partners for $345 million in October 2020, said it had more than 200 million users at the time of the transaction. Under Armour also owns MapMyRun and MapMyRide, which track running and biking activity, respectively, while shoe brand Asics owns RunKeeper. Apple and Google have their own health tracking apps that incorporate some physical fitness activities such as walking and cycling that are more geared towards casual exercisers.

“It’s pretty simple,” Horvath said of Strava’s retention strategy. “We’re 100% focused on making Strava indispensable to athletes everywhere. When we do that well, it fuels our community growth.”

“We think there are 700 million people in the world who wake up every day wanting to be active. We haven’t met them all yet, but we’re trying,” he said.

Man accused of bombing Democrats, abused steroids, exclaimed “REVOLUTION”

Two California men were charged with planning an explosive device attack on Democratic headquarters in Sacramento following last year’s presidential election.

The men were charged Thursday in federal court in San Francisco with conspiracy to demolish a building affecting international trade and other related crimes to attack John L. Burton’s Democratic headquarters in Sacramento.

Ian Rogers, 45, of Napa and Jarrod Copeland, 37, of Vallejo, according to court documents, began a series of “specific, detailed and serious” plans to attack the Democrats with incendiary devices after the 2020 presidential election. The men also sought support from militia groups in the hopes that their attack would spark a movement to overthrow the government.

The charges come as authorities are on heightened alert for potential political violence following the January 6 invasion of Capitol Hill by then-President Donald Trump’s supporters attempting to block the confirmation of Joe Biden’s victory in the presidential election.

“Do you think there is something wrong with me, how excited I am to attack the Democrats?” Rogers asked Copeland on a messaging app last December.

Copeland, who was arrested on Wednesday, later told police that he did not take Rogers’ testimony seriously and only listened to him “blow off steam”.

However, court records show that Copeland encouraged Rogers’ discussions of violence with messages saying they would take action to keep Trump in office.

“When we see [Trump] can’t win, we hit, “said Copeland in a message.” If they don’t listen to Trump, they will hear us.

Copeland also contacted the Proud Boys and Three Percenters, two extreme anti-government militia groups, and attempted to recruit individuals for their conspiracy in late December, authorities said.

Court records show that Copeland joined the military in 2013 but was arrested twice for desertion and released in 2016 instead of a court martial. He then joined the Three Percenters and later became an officer in the militia group, the court records say.

The two men continued to discuss violent attacks on Democrats after the January 6 election results were confirmed. Prosecutors alleged the Capitol uprising inspired them, citing Copeland’s excited messages that day fantasizing about violence.

“REVOLUTION,” “REVOLUTION,” “REVOLUTION,” said Copeland of the uprising. “I’m f —— juiced !!!!!”

“Damn it, I want to roll in the bag armed,” said another message from him, referring to Sacramento and its military-style tactical equipment and weapons.

The Democratic headquarters in Sacramento was selected as their first target to attack with explosives, and the two men had discussed attacking Twitter and Facebook headquarters next, prosecutors said.

“Heads have to be taken,” said Copeland. “I don’t like to think about it, but I think we’ll have to die for what we believe in.”

Rogers was arrested on January 15 and charged with possessing five pipe bombs and is in state custody in the Napa district on multiple gun charges. In addition to the pipe bombs, the authorities confiscated almost 50 firearms and around 15,000 rounds of ammunition from his home and business, according to a criminal complaint.

Materials used to make destructive devices were also found in his shop, including gunpowder, pipes, and end caps, as well as several manuals such as “The Anarchist Cookbook,” the “US Army Improvised Munitions Handbook,” and “Homemade C-4: A Recipe for that Survive, “says the complaint.

Authorities also reported discovering a sticker on Rogers’ vehicle window that is commonly used by Three Percenters.

The day after Rogers’ arrest, Copeland deleted all previous communications with Rogers for fear of being followed.

Court records also allege that Copeland is abusing anabolic steroids, finding a $ 1,200 purchase of steroids in December and the seizure of steroids from his home in January.

“The danger he poses to anyone with opposing political views is obvious,” the court records said.

If convicted, the Justice Department said the two men face a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, a three-year custody sentence and a $ 250,000 fine on conspiracy charges.

Rogers also faces a maximum of 10 years in prison for his additional gun charges, and Copeland faces a maximum of 20 years in prison for his evidence destruction charge.

Rogers’ attorney declined CNBC’s request for comment, and Copeland’s attorney was unavailable for comment.

“Bombardment of supposed political opponents is illegal and does not promote the open and energetic debate that our constitutional democracy has created and supported,” said US Attorney Stephanie M. Hinds. “The charges in the indictment describe despicable behavior. Investigating and prosecuting those who prefer violence to discussion is as important as anything else we do to protect our free society.”

Rusty Hicks, chairman of the California Democratic Party, called their alleged conspiracy “extremely worrying”.

“We are relieved to know that the conspiracy was unsuccessful, those suspected of being responsible are in custody and our staff and volunteers are safe and sound,” Hicks said in a statement Thursday. “Still, it points to a broader issue of violent extremism that is far too common in today’s political discourse.”

– CNBC’s Dan Mangan and Amanda Macias contributed to this report.

How delivery behemoth Maersk is navigating the worldwide container disaster

It’s a turbulent time for the shipping industry, which is dealing with surging consumer demand, a shortage of containers and bottlenecks at ports.

Maersk, the world’s largest container shipping company, has seen higher volume and record profits as shipping rates have skyrocketed. The Danish shipping firm, whose customers include Walmart and Nike, announced in May that its first-quarter revenue increased 30% from a year earlier to $12.4 billion.

“It’s tighter now than it’s ever been, and it’s not looking to loosen up anytime soon,” said Alan Murphy, CEO of marine consulting firm Sea-Intelligence.

Maersk has a fleet of over 700 ships and handles 1 in 5 containers shipped by sea. The company owns terminals around the world and has a growing land-based logistics business. On average, a Maersk container ship calls on a port somewhere around the globe every six minutes. 

But with vaccine rollouts in place in the U.S. and consumer discretionary spending shifting toward services, will Maersk and its rivals be able to maintain their momentum? And what do bottlenecks at ports and higher freight rates mean for U.S. consumers?

Watch the video to find out what’s next for Maersk.

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Legendary entertainer Biz Markie has died on the age of 57

Legendary rapper and beatboxer Biz Markie has been hospitalized for weeks with a serious illness related to his diabetes.

Roommate, we’re sad to announce that legendary entertainer Biz Markie has died of long-term diabetes complications at the age of 57. Biz died in a Baltimore hospital around 6:25 p.m. on Friday night, according to TMZ, which allegedly spoke to a family source. The media source also said that Biz has been battling complications with type II diabetes for “more than a year.”

TMZ reports that his wife, Tara Hall, was by his side during his last breath, along with the nursing staff, who told his family “how strong he was from his struggle”. Let us send our thoughts and prayers to his family, friends and fans around the world during this difficult time.

Would you like updates straight to your text inbox? Call us at 917-722-8057 or click here to join!

Lordstown Motors confirms DOJ probe into SPAC deal and preorders

Workers install door hinges to the body shell of a prototype Endurance electric pickup truck on June 21, 2021 at Lordstown Motors’ assembly plant in Ohio.

Michael Wayland / CNBC

Embattled electric vehicle start-up Lordstown Motors has confirmed the Justice Department is investigating its business, including the SPAC deal that brought the company public last year and its reporting of vehicle preorders.

The confirmation comes two weeks after the federal inquiry was first reported by The Wall Street Journal and confirmed to CNBC by a person with knowledge of the investigation. It follows a probe by the Securities and Exchange Commission into the company and public comments made by executives, including its former Chairman and CEO Steve Burns.

Lordstown Motors said in a filing Thursday that it has “received two subpoenas from the SEC for the production of documents and information, including relating to the Merger between DiamondPeak and Legacy Lordstown and pre-orders of vehicles, and we have been informed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York that it is investigating these matters.”

The company said it has “cooperated, and will continue to cooperate, with these and any other regulatory or governmental investigations and inquiries.”

Burns and his CFO exited the SPAC-backed company following an internal investigation that found “issues regarding the accuracy of certain statements” around Lordstown’s preorders, specifically the seriousness of the orders and who was making them.

In May, short seller Hindenburg Research claimed the company misled investors, including using “fake” orders to raise capital for its Endurance electric pickup. The short seller also said the pickup was years away from production. Lordstown has maintained it’s on track to start making the vehicle in September.

Lordstown previously said the internal investigation found Hindenburg’s report “is, in significant respects, false and misleading.” 

Lordstown went public through a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, in October. It is among a growing group of electric vehicle start-ups going public through deals with SPACs, which have become a popular way of raising money on Wall Street because they have a more streamlined regulatory process than traditional initial public offerings.

Correction: The DOJ inquiry was first reported two weeks ago. A previous version misstated that timing.

How the US grew to become the world’s new Bitcoin mining hub

Long before China decided to kick out all of its bitcoin miners, they were already leaving in droves, and new data from Cambridge University shows they were likely headed for the US.

The US has quickly become the new darling of the Bitcoin mining world. It is the second largest mining destination in the world and represented almost 17% of all bitcoin miners in the world as of April 2021. That’s an increase of 151% compared to September 2020.

“In the past 18 months we have seen strong growth in mining infrastructure in the United States,” said Darin Feinstein, founder of Blockcap and Core Scientific. “We have seen a massive increase in mining operations looking to relocate to North America, mainly the US.”

That dataset doesn’t include the mass mining exodus from China, which resulted in half of the world’s miners going offline, and experts tell CNBC that the U.S. share of the mining market is likely even larger than the numbers suggest.

According to the newly released Cambridge data, just before China’s mining ban began, the country accounted for 46% of the world’s total hashrate, an industry term used to describe the collective computing power of the Bitcoin network. That’s a sharp drop from 75.5% in September 2019, and the percentage is likely much lower given the current exodus.

“500,000 formerly Chinese miner rigs are looking for a home in the USA,” said Fred Thiel from Marathon Digital. “If deployed, it would mean North America would have closer to 40% of the world’s hashrate by the end of 2022.”

The new mining mecca

America’s growing dominance is a simple stroke of luck preparing for meetings. The USA has been quietly expanding its hosting capacities for years.

Before Bitcoin miners actually came to America, companies across the country were gambling that, if adequate infrastructure existed, they would eventually settle in the United States

This gamble seems to be paying off.

When bitcoin crashed in late 2017 and the broader market entered a multi-year crypto winter, there wasn’t much demand for large bitcoin farms. US mining operators saw their opening and took the chance to use cheap money to build the mining ecosystem in the states.

“The big public miners were able to raise capital to make big purchases,” said Mike Colyer, CEO of Foundry digital currency company, which helped bring over $ 300 million worth of mining equipment to North America.

According to Colyer, companies like North American crypto mining operator Core Scientific built hosting spaces throughout the crypto winter so they could plug in new equipment.

“Much of the new equipment manufactured from May 2020 to December 2020 was shipped to the US and Canada,” he said.

Read more about cryptocurrencies from CNBC Pro

Alex Brammer of Luxor Mining, a cryptocurrency pool designed for advanced miners, points out that the maturing capital markets and financial instruments surrounding the mining industry also played a large role in the industry’s rapid rise in the U.S. Brammer says many of these American operators were able to expand rapidly once they secured funding through the use of a multi-year track record and existing capital as collateral.

Covid also played a role.

Although the global pandemic crippled large parts of the economy, the stimulus payments that followed proved a boon for US mining companies.

“All the money printing during the pandemic meant more capital had to be put in,” explained Bitcoin mining engineer Brandon Arvanaghi.

“People were looking for places to park their money. The appetite for big investments has never been so great. Much of it likely found its way into Bitcoin mining operations outside of China, ”Arvanaghi continued.

Do it in America

According to Colyer, the seeds of US migration began in early 2020. Before Beijing’s sudden move, China’s mining dominance had already begun to slide.

Part of the appeal is that the US meet many criteria for these immigrant miners.

“If you want to move hundreds of millions of dollars of miners out of China, you want to make sure you have geographic, political, and judicial stability. You also want to make sure it is for the assets that you are moving, ”Feinstein said.

It also helps that the US is also home to some of the cheapest energy sources in the world, many of which are typically renewable. As miners compete on a large scale in a low margin industry where their only variable cost is usually energy, they are encouraged to migrate to the cheapest energy sources in the world.

Thiel believes that most new miners moving to North America will be powered by renewable energy, or gas, which is offset by renewable energy credits.

While Castle Island Ventures founding partner Nic Carter points out that U.S. mining isn’t entirely renewable, he says the miners here are much better at picking renewable energy and buying offsets.

“Migration is definitely a net positive overall,” he said. “Moving the hashrate to the US, Canada and Russia will mean much lower CO2 intensity.”

Docs name for flu checks as Covid threatens to coincide with a flu epidemic

British doctors have urged authorities to provide flu tests amid concerns that an influenza epidemic could collide with a third wave of Covid-19.

In a report released Thursday, doctors from the UK Academy of Medical Sciences warned that a resurgence of respiratory viruses like flu and RSV – a common virus that can be serious to young infants and the elderly – is likely to put pressure on the country’s national health would service.

Britain is set to lift almost all Covid restrictions on July 19. However, the country is currently seeing a surge in new cases of the virus that has been linked to the highly transmittable Delta variant.

On July 14, 42,302 people tested positive for Covid in the UK, making it the country with the fourth highest number of new cases, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Doctors warned in Thursday’s report that overlapping symptoms between flu and Covid mean routine tests for both viruses and possibly additional respiratory infections – known as multiplex tests – would be important before an expected spike in winter sicknesses is expected. Medical experts have raised concerns that the UK could be headed for an influenza epidemic later this year, and multiplex testing would help doctors differentiate between viruses, monitor epidemic growth, make timely treatment decisions and reduce transmission rates reduce, it says in the report.

“We strongly support multiplex testing,” said the authors. “However, when this is not feasible, well-evaluated and accurate point-of-care tests for influenza should be used in hospitals, primary care facilities, nursing homes and public pharmacies.”

They added that “the symptoms of influenza and other respiratory winter viruses are usually clinically indistinguishable from Covid-19 without testing,” and warned the demand for PCR testing this year amid the potential increase in winter illnesses with similar symptoms.

A recent study of Covid symptoms in the UK found that the most common symptoms of the virus were headache, sore throat and loss of smell. These can vary, however, and people with the virus can also experience flu-like symptoms such as fever and cough, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the UK NHS.

The AMS found that while a successful launch of the vaccine would mean that the mortality rate in the next wave would be lower than in winter 2020/2021, continuous transmission of Covid among the under-50s would lead to higher values ​​of “long Covid “than in the previous two waves. The medical panel also warned that the third wave could coincide with a resurgence of flu and RSV if Covid cases rise or stay elevated through the fall and winter, which could put pressure on the NHS.

According to the report, RSV and flu outbreaks can be twice as large in fall and winter as in a “normal” year. Social distancing and lockdown measures had prevented these diseases from spreading at their usual rates during the coronavirus pandemic, meaning population immunity may have been weakened.

“Very low levels of influenza for the past two seasons have resulted in lower immunity than normal, which means a flu epidemic could be problematic,” the report warned. A priority should be making sure vulnerable groups get a flu vaccine, the authors said, although flu vaccines were less effective than those against Covid.

According to the NHS, around 10,000 deaths from flu are caused in a regular year in England and Wales.

Meanwhile, non-infectious diseases like asthma and stroke are also likely to get worse in winter, the AMS report warned, putting more pressure on health services.

Ashley Olsen and Her Boyfriend Get pleasure from Date Night time Throughout Uncommon Outing

Ashley Olsen and her boyfriend Louis Eisner were spotted out and about together—no fear, this time it was sans machete.

The couple were seen in New York City on Friday, July 16 grabbing dinner at the upscale French eatery Balthazar. Ashley held her man’s hand in a photograph obtained by E! News, while rocking an oversized black dress and a half-up, half-down hairstyle. Her 32-year-old boyfriend was on the phone as they left the hot spot in SoHo. Ashley walked the NYC streets in casual black flats and a matching black clutch.

Around a week before their downtown Manhattan meal, Louis shared a pic of Ashley on Instagram strangely showing her holding a machete. The famous Full House alum looked as stylish as ever, though, rocking a black shirt, white sweatshirt, loose white pants and black Yeezy sneakers. She covered her hair in the snapshot with a backwards black hat and sported a pair of oversized black sunglasses. And in the hand that wasn’t carrying a machete, Ashley held a drink in the woods.