AFL-CIO leaders condemn actions by Trump supporters on the US Capitol

AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka speaks in an interview with Reuters on December 19, 2019 in Washington about his role in safeguarding occupational safety in the USMCA trade agreement.

Joshua Roberts | Reuters

AFL-CIO union leader Richard Trumka publicly condemned President Donald Trump’s supporters for storming the US Capitol, calling it “one of the biggest attacks on our democracy since the civil war”.

Trumka, who has worked with the Trump administration for the past four years, largely accused the president of instigating the actions.

“Today’s attempted coup took years, as @RealDonaldTrump repeatedly spits out poison, conspiracies, hatred and lies to his supporters,” he tweeted on Wednesday afternoon. “You are granting his wishes, and far too many Republican lawmakers have made this violent threat to our republic possible and even encouraged.”

Trumka, whose federal union represents 12.5 million Americans, said the protesters’ actions “violate the constitutional rights of every law-abiding American and the labor movement.”

Trumka has been named a member of the White House’s Great American Economic Revival Industry Groups, which were formed last year as part of the president’s efforts to reopen parts of the U.S. economy during the coronavirus pandemic. He also worked with the administration to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement now known as the US-Mexico-Canada Accord.

Why Lauryn Hill by no means made an album after Miseducation

Lauryn Hill I just shared the heartbreaking reason she hasn’t released another studio album since her solo debut in 1998, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill.

The former Fugees member became the first woman to win five Grammys for the album in one night but left the public for years after its release. In a new interview with Rolling Stones’ Amazon Music Podcast 500 Greatest Albums, Lauryn explained why she never released a full studio album again.

“The wild thing is that nobody on my label has ever called me and asked how we can help you make an album ever again,” she told the podcast. “Did I ever say? Always!”

She also said that while Miseducation gave her the freedom to experiment, the pressures to bring out a second album that lived up to the hype of the first were enormous.

“After the miseducation, there were dozens of obstructionists everywhere with tentacles, politics, suppressed agendas, unrealistic expectations and saboteurs,” she said. “People had me included in their own accounts of their successes with my album, and when this contradicted my experience, I was viewed as an enemy.”

American Airways strikes flight crews to DC airport motels

An airline employee walks past empty American Airlines check-in terminals at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia on May 12, 2020.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | Getty Images

Airlines are moving flight crews to hotels outside of central Washington, DC to avoid protests in the U.S. Capitol, airlines and a major union said.

American Airlines began booking Washington overnight crews at airport hotels on Tuesday and plans to do so at least on Wednesday, said Curtis Blessing, an American Airlines spokesman.

United Airlines flight attendants will also stay at airport hotels this week, while Alaska Airlines flight attendants have been urged to avoid downtown Washington DC, said Taylor Garland, spokeswoman for the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, cabin crews at those airlines and more represents than a dozen others. The decisions were made before pro-Trump rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday afternoon.

United crews staying in Atlanta will also be staying at airport hotels this week.

The airlines had relocated crews from central Washington, DC, on election day in November because of concerns about demonstrations and possible logistical problems.

Severe allergic reactions to the Covid vaccine run ten instances, nonetheless hardly ever

A pharmacist dilutes the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine as he prepares it for administration to staff and residents at Goodwin House Bailey’s Crossroads, a senior community in Falls Church, Virginia, on December 30, 2020.

Brendan Smialowski | AFP | Getty Images

The Covid-19 vaccine appears to cause severe allergic reactions at a significantly higher rate than other vaccines in the first wave of Americans receiving life-saving vaccinations, although the reactions are still rare, the Centers for Control and United States shared Disease prevention on Wednesday with.

According to the CDC, there have been 21 cases of anaphylaxis – a severe and life-threatening allergic reaction that rarely occurs after vaccination – of nearly 1.9 million people who received their first shot of Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine in mid to late December, according to a study, published Wednesday in the CDC’s weekly report on morbidity and mortality.

That would mean that, according to CDC data, about 11 out of every million people vaccinated would likely experience anaphylaxis – about 10 times the rate for the flu vaccine.

Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, told reporters on a conference call that the vaccinations are safe for the public and that the severe allergic reactions, though higher, are still considered rare.

“The anaphylaxis rate for Covid-19 vaccines may seem high compared to flu vaccines, but I want to assure you that this is still a rare finding,” Messonnier said on the call before the study was published. She added that the data applies to both Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which use similar mRNA technology.

A Pfizer spokesman told CNBC that the company is providing prescribing information that includes a “clear” warning that medical treatment and monitoring should be readily available to someone “in the event of a rare anaphylactic event following the administration of the vaccine”.

“We closely monitor all reports indicating serious post-vaccination allergic reactions and update the labeling language as necessary,” said the spokesman.

A representative from Moderna was not immediately available to respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Of the 21 people who experienced severe allergic reactions, 17 had a documented history of allergies or allergic reactions. Seven of these people had a history of anaphylaxis, the study said.

Most people had symptoms within 15 minutes of the shot, although anaphylaxis can occur hours after vaccination, according to the CDC. Among the 20 people with available follow-up information, all had recovered or were discharged home, according to the study.

“Of course we would all hope that any vaccine would have no adverse events, but even with 11 cases per million doses administered, it is a very safe vaccine,” said Messonnier. She added that “tremendous efforts” are being made to determine exactly what is causing the severe allergic reactions.

According to a CNBC analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, the coronavirus kills an average of 2,670 people a day in the US, making the vaccine “good value for money,” Messonnier said.

According to the preliminary guidelines of the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, last updated in December, everyone should be observed for 15 minutes after vaccination to ensure no symptoms occur. People with a history of anaphylaxis should be observed for 30 minutes, the committee advised.

The committee also suggested that people who develop anaphylaxis after their first dose should not receive the second dose. Both drugs require two shots weeks apart for full effectiveness. The CDC study states that supplies such as adrenaline should be available at every vaccination site to treat patients who may experience severe reactions.

“Fortunately, we know how to treat anaphylaxis and we have taken precautions to ensure that the people giving the vaccine are at immunization sites ready to treat anaphylaxis,” Messonnier said.

Pence left the Senate when Capitol locked down throughout the pro-Trump protests

Supporters of US President Donald Trump clash with police officers in front of the US Capitol in Washington on January 6, 2021.

Stephanie Keith | Reuters

WASHINGTON – Vice President Mike Pence was fired from the Senate when the U.S. Capitol Complex was locked down due to an external security threat while Trump supporters rioted outside the building.

Legislature had just begun the process of counting the votes of the electoral college and officially declaring President-elect Joe Biden the winner.

All buildings within the Capitol Complex have been closed

Earlier, during a rally, Trump encouraged thousands of his supporters to march to the Capitol to protest the confirmation of Biden’s victory.

The Cannon House Office Building and Madison Building were evacuated earlier in the day. Residents who were evacuated from Cannon on the Capitol house side were given permission to re-enter the building.

The Capitol Police did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request to comment on whether the evacuations were related to the protests.

Mike Pence rejects Trump’s name to topple Biden’s election

Vice President Mike Pence on Wednesday turned down President Donald Trump’s request to block Congress from confirming the election of Joe Biden as the next President of the United States.

Pence said in a letter that he did not believe, as Trump has claimed, that a vice president has the power to reject some electoral college votes for a candidate.

“It is my deliberate judgment that my oath to support and defend the Constitution prevents me from using unilateral authority to determine which votes should and should not be counted,” Pence wrote in his three-page letter to the Congress members.

His dramatic break from Trump came minutes before the Republican Vice President chaired a joint session of Congress that would proclaim former Democratic Vice President Biden the winner.

Pence said in his letter that he shared “millions of Americans’ concerns about the integrity of this election,” which Trump and his supporters alleged without evidence that they were corrupted by widespread electoral fraud.

But Pence also wrote that “the vice-president’s unilateral authority to decide presidential competitions would be completely at odds with the system of control and balance between branches of government envisaged by the drafters of the constitution.”

“The presidency belongs to the American people and only them,” Pence wrote.

“When federal law disputes presidential elections, it is the elected officials who examine the evidence and resolve disputes through a democratic process.”

Vice President Mike Pence chairs a joint House and Senate meeting to endorse the electoral college votes cast in the November election at the Washington, DC Capitol on January 6, 2021.

Erin Schaff | AFP | Getty Images

When Pence released his statement, Trump was speaking at a rally outside the White House where he repeated his call for Vice President Biden’s election to be reversed.

Trump and his allies claim he and Pence lost to Biden and Vice-President-elect Kamala Harris because of significant electoral fraud in a handful of states that gave Biden his winning edge.

“Mike Pence, I hope you will work for the good of our Constitution and for the good of our country and if you are not I will be very disappointed in you, I will tell you in a moment.” Said Trump at the rally.

“I don’t hear good stories.”

Several courts have rejected Trump’s allegations of fraud and electoral irregularities.

The White House did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request to comment on the vice president’s letter.

Shortly after Pence hammered in the joint session of Congress, several Republicans turned against Arizona’s electoral college, which led to Biden’s favor and sparked debate.

GOP lawmakers are expected to object to the election results of several other states, but such efforts will only delay, not block, confirmation that Biden has won the presidency.

How doses get from the manufacturing plant to your arm

Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine is pictured at Rady Children’s Hospital before it’s placed back in the refrigerator in San Diego, California on December 15, 2020.

Adriana Drehsler | AFP | Getty Images

As the death toll from the coronavirus pandemic mounts in the U.S., the country finally has some reason for hope: Nurses, doctors, the elderly and other vulnerable people across America are getting the first Covid vaccine shots.

An army of pilots, delivery drivers and pharmacists last month started to ship, distribute and administer millions of vaccine doses. The small vials are traveling on airplanes and trucks, and some times inside of specially made hand-held coolers.

So far, two vaccines have been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration for emergency use in the U.S.: those by Pfizer-BioNtech and Moderna. Several other drugmakers also have agreements to provide their vaccines to the federal government once they are approved. AstraZeneca’s vaccine, developed with Oxford University, was just approved for emergency use in the U.K. but is still in clinical trials in the U.S.

The much-awaited vaccines — and whether they’re distributed quickly, smoothly and widely — will help determine whether the U.S. can gain control of a virus that’s killed more than 355,000 people across the country, overwhelmed hospitals and thrust the nation’s economy into a recession.

UPS employees move one of two shipping containers containing the first shipments of the Pfizer and BioNTech Covid vaccine on a ramp at UPS Worldport in Louisville, Kentucky, on Sunday, December 13, 2020.

Michael Clevenger | Getty Images

Health-care workers and nursing home residents were among the first to receive them in mid-December, followed by older Americans or those considered more at risk based on their job, age or medical conditions, depending on the state. The U.S. has distributed just over 17 million doses, and 4.8 million people have been given their first shot as of Tuesday — far short of the country’s original goal of immunizing at least 20 million people by the end of 2020.

Eventually, the shots will be available to the general public at neighborhood pharmacies and grocery stores.

UPS employees move one of two shipping containers containing the first shipments of the Pfizer and BioNTech Covid vaccine inside a sorting facility at UPS Worldport on December 13, 2020 in Louisville, Kentucky.

Michael Clevenger | Getty Images

Here’s how that journey looks for the vaccines:

Loading planes & trucks

Within hours of the FDA’s approval of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines last month, FedEx and United Parcel Service started shipping vials of doses. The logistics rivals teamed up and split deliveries by state, UPS Healthcare President Wes Wheeler told a Senate panel at a hearing last month.

Delivering coronavirus vaccines, however, isn’t first time the companies have handled sensitive medical products. UPS provided logistical support throughout Pfizer’s clinical trials. FedEx delivers flu vaccines every year and shipped over 80 million H1N1 vaccine doses in 2009, said Richard Smith, FedEx Express executive vice president.

FedEx and UPS trucks leave the loading dock of the Pfizer Global Supply manufacturing plant, in Portage, Michigan, U.S., December 13, 2020.

Rebecca Cook | Reuters

“This is what we were built for, and we plan for things like this regularly,” Smith told lawmakers. “Maybe not on this scale with all of the ins and outs, but we are well-versed in this type of planning.”

Pfizer’s vaccine is being transported in custom thermal shippers designed to keep the doses at minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit. Each suitcase-sized box can hold 4,875 doses, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The shippers also have a GPS-enabled thermal sensor.

Ensuring the vials are kept at the right temperature is a tricky process that’s had to be adjusted along the way. U.S. officials quarantined several thousand doses of Pfizer’s vaccine in California and Alabama in mid-December after an “anomaly” in the transportation process caused the storage temperature to get too cold.

After leaving Pfizer’s storage sites in Michigan and Wisconsin, Covid vaccine shipments receive priority treatment, UPS and FedEx said.

UPS package handlers Jesirae Elzey and Demeatres Ralston unload boxes of Moderna’s Covid vaccine at UPS Worldport, in Louisville, Kentucky, December 20, 2020.

Michael Clevenger | Pool | Reuters

Vaccine packages that UPS delivers are given a gold priority label embedded with four trackers so the company can see the package as soon as it arrives at every destination. Each of its trucks also has a device that monitors its location, light exposure and temperature. Those vaccines are transferred to UPS’ Worldport facilities in Louisville, Kentucky, where they are immediately expedited.

“We will see the package; it will get priority,” Wheeler said. “It goes on the plane first. It comes off the plane first.”

UPS created a 24/7 command center just for vaccine shipments where employees monitor the shipments and intercept a package if something goes wrong, Wheeler said. Similar to UPS, FedEx’s “priority alert” team actively tracks the shipments using its own technology.

Boxes containing the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid vaccine are prepared to be shipped at the Pfizer Global Supply Kalamazoo manufacturing plant on December 13, 2020 in Portage, Michigan.

Morry Gash | Getty Images

Passenger airlines also play a role. Even before Pfizer’s vaccine was cleared by the FDA, United Airlines started shipping doses on Boeing 777s from Brussels, near the pharmaceutical giant’s Belgium plant to the carrier’s hub at Chicago O’Hare. They were taken by truck from the airport to Pfizer’s plant in Kalamazoo, Michigan to position them for distribution.

American Airlines ran trial flights in November between Miami and South America to stress test thermal packaging and handling before it started shipping the vaccines.

Last month, United and Delta Air Lines started shipping smaller loads of the vaccine in the bellies of passenger planes within the U.S.

Airplanes carrying the vaccine get takeoff and landing priority from the Federal Aviation Administration. The FAA also gave United special approval to carry more dry ice than typically allowed to transport doses from Brussels to Chicago.

The airlines and logistics companies had mobilized extra manpower last month as a snowstorm swept through the Northeast and threatened to shut down runways. The FAA urged airports to have people ready to clear snow.

United was the first commercial airline to fly the first FDA-authorized Covid vaccines to the U.S.

Source: United Airlines

Freezers, dry ice and portable coolers

Shipments from FedEx and UPS head to different hubs for distribution. In some cases, they arrive at hospitals or health-care systems where they are stored and later administered to staff. In other cases, they head to retail pharmacies.

UT Health Austin received notice on Dec. 12 that it would receive its first shipment of 2,925 doses of vaccine the next day, said Dr. Amy Young, chief clinical office. It had already received supplies needed for administering the shot, like syringes and alcohol swabs, about a week before, said Young, who also is vice dean of professional practice at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin.

When the shipment arrived via FedEx truck, hospital staff checked the temperature of the doses at the facility’s loading dock to make sure they remained at the necessary temperature, Young said. They then transported the boxes to their ultra-cold freezer for the night. Hospital staff started immunizing people the next day.

Boxes containing the first shipments of the Pfizer and BioNTech Covid vaccine are unloaded from air shipping containers and scanned at UPS Worldport on December 13, in Louisville, Kentucky.

Michael Clevenger | Getty Images

Riverside Health System in Virginia, which received its first shipment of just under 3,000 doses on Dec. 15, followed a similar process, said Cindy Williams, vice president and chief pharmacy officer. Riverside was able to track the FedEx shipment as it arrived at a nearby airport.

“We did, in fact, get notification that it was on the ground and within about an hour or so it was pulling into our loading dock,” Williams said.

Though Riverside predicted the first week of vaccinations would have a slow start, the process was much more efficient, Williams said.

“We are ramping things up pretty rapidly, and we’re also finding that team members are very willing to step up and sign up for the clinics,” Williams said.

Boxes containing the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid vaccine are prepared to be shipped at the Pfizer Global Supply Kalamazoo manufacturing plant on December 13, 2020 in Portage, Michigan.

Morry Gash | Getty Images

The special containers for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines also act as mobile freezers for clinics that don’t have specialty equipment. They can be stored for up to 30 days if they’re refilled with dry ice every five days.

The vaccine developed by Moderna must be kept frozen — but not at the ultra-low temperatures required for Pfizer’s shots. Moderna’s needs to be stored at between negative 13 and 5 degrees Fahrenheit and protected from light, according to CDC guidelines.

Moderna’s vaccine, however, can be stored in the refrigerator at between 36 and 46 degrees Fahrenheit for up to 30 days.

UPS is producing its own dry ice — over 24,000 pounds a day — for anyone who needs it for the vaccines.

Ina Siler, a patient at Crown Heights Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation, a nursing home facility, receives the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine from Walgreens pharmacist Annette Marshall, in Brooklyn, New York, December 22, 2020.

Yuki Iwamura | Reuters

Walgreens and CVS Health have turned some of their drugstores into designated hubs with special freezers, dry ice and staff trained about how to handle the vaccines. The federal government tapped the companies to inoculate residents and staff at nursing homes and assisted living facilities across the country.

“Once we get them into those hubs, that’s where the planning really works locally with the states, with the long-term care facilities and with our field teams,” said Rick Gates, Walgreens’ senior vice president of pharmacy and health care.

About 10% of CVS pharmacies are serving as “hubs” or “depots,” said Chris Cox, a senior vice president at CVS and a liaison to Operation Warp Speed, the federal effort to help develop, make and distribute Covid vaccines.

“There’s nothing special about these pharmacies other than their geographic proximity to the most number of nursing homes, so that we can really optimize our routes,” he said.

Pharmacists and technicians at long-term care facilities wait until the morning of the vaccinations to move the Pfizer-BioNTech inoculations from ultra-cold storage and into a refrigerator, where it thaws, Cox said. The doses can be stored in a regular refrigerator at 35 to 46 degrees Fahrenheit for up to five days, according to Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine fact sheet.

They are then loaded into a specially made small, hand-held cooler designed to maintain that temperature for up to 24 hours.

Pharmacy supervisor Kevin Weissman uses a thick glove as he opens the door of a special freezer that will hold the Pfizer vaccine at LAC USC Medical Center during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Los Angeles, California, December 10, 2020.

Mike Blake | Reuters

The Moderna vaccine must remain frozen for transport. It’s then carried in the same cooler — but with cooling inserts and is thawed on-site at the facility before it is administered, Cox said.

Each cooler can hold 500 Pfizer doses or 1,000 Moderna doses since the Pfizer shots come in smaller bottles, according to CVS. Before giving the shot, health-care staff must add a saline solution to Pfizer’s dose before it’s injected, while Moderna’s vaccine doesn’t need to be diluted.

Both vaccines need to be thawed before injecting and cannot be refrozen, putting unused doses at risk of going bad. Pfizer’s vaccine takes 30 minutes and Moderna’s vaccine takes an hour to thaw at room temperature, a CVS spokesman said.

Both vaccines also need to be used relatively quickly after thawing. Undiluted vials of Pfizer’s vaccine cannot be stored at room temperature for more than two hours. Once diluted, they need to be used within six hours.

Moderna’s vaccine is stable at room temperature for up to 12 hours if the vials haven’t been punctured and six hours once they’ve been punctured.

Reports of unused and discarded doses have started to trickle in across the country as local health departments struggle to meet the tricky dosing requirements.

Authorities in Wisconsin said they arrested a pharmacist last week after he admitted to removing 57 vials containing 500 doses of Moderna’s vaccine from a pharmacy refrigerator and intentionally allowing them to spoil.

CVS Health will transport doses of the vaccine to nursing homes and other long-term care facilities in a cooler bag to keep them at the right temperature.

CVS Health

A jab in the arm

The vaccine’s final stop is the same: jabbed into millions of American arms.

Teams of pharmacists from CVS and Walgreens are administering the vaccines at more than 70,000 long-term care facilities, including nursing homes, according to CVS Chief Medical Officer Dr. Troyen Brennan. The size of the teams will vary based on the number of staff and residents.

At nursing homes, pharmacists in protective gear go room by room to vaccinate residents who have agreed to be inoculated, Cox said. At facilities where residents are more mobile, they’ll have a central on-site clinic. They’ll also vaccinate staff.

Those vaccinations began Dec. 18 in Ohio, Connecticut and Florida. They are now available in nursing homes in almost every state and the District of Columbia.

CVS and Walgreens, are nudging people to return for their second shot with phone calls, emails and text messages as well as reminder cards. Doses must be spaced out properly — 21 days for the Pfizer vaccine and 28 days for the Moderna vaccine.

U.K. health officials have decided to implement a 12-week delay between the first and second doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines in order to cover as much of the population as possible.

U.S. health officials, who haven’t approved AstraZeneca’s vaccine yet, have advised against any changes in the dosing schedules, although Trump administration vaccine czar Moncef Slaoui said they are considering cutting Moderna’s dose in half for younger people to increase its availability.

The distribution has been slow going, hampered by the holidays, manufacturing delays and funding shortfalls and glitches in state programs designed to administer the shots to people. Roughly 4.8 million doses have been distributed to long-term care facilities, but just 429,066 shots have been given as of Tuesday morning, according to the CDC.

CVS and Walgreens executives still think the shots could be available to all Americans at their nearby grocery store or drugstore as early as March, much like they are for the seasonal flu. More than a dozen retail chains and pharmacies, including Kroger, Walmart and Costco, have signed on as partners with the federal government to give the shots. Some of them, such as Walmart, say they’re already getting staff and freezers ready — even as they wait for doses to arrive.

CNBC’s Leslie Josephs, Kevin Stankiewicz, Will Feuer and MacKenzie Sigalos contributed to this story.

Authorities reply to tried break-ins at Dr. solely hours after stories of his hospital keep. Dre

Dr.  Dre

Roommate, authorities responded to a call to Dr. Dre after security reports that four suspected criminals tried to break into his home.

According to TMZ, four men were spotted on Dre’s Pacific Palisades property early in the morning on Wednesday – just hours after Dre was reported to have been hospitalized for a brain aneurysm.

Sources tell TMZ that security at the property discovered the men shrouding the house and immediately called the police. The men tried to escape, but the police followed them up and arrested them.

All four men were arrested for burglary and are currently in custody.

As we previously reported, Dr. Dre suffered a brain aneurysm Monday and was rushed to Cedars Sinai Hospital. He was taken straight to the intensive care unit where he is currently being treated.

Dre reportedly wrote a thank you message on his Instagram account saying he would be home very soon.

“Thank you to all my family, friends and fans for their interest and all the best. I am fine and I am well looked after by my medical team. I’ll be out of the hospital and home soon. Call all of the major Cedars medical professionals. A love !! “read the post.

Dre’s shocking hospital stay came amid the messy divorce he is currently going through with his estranged wife, Nicole Young. The two are currently on trial, deciding how much money Dr. Dre has to pay for the monthly spousal allowance.

Please keep Dr. Dre in your thoughts and prayers during this time, Roomies!

Would you like updates directly in your text inbox? Contact us at 917-722-8057 or https://my.community.com/theshaderoom

Unattainable Meals cuts costs for meals service retailers by round 15%

The Impossible Burger from Impossible Foods

Source: Impossible Foods

Impossible Foods is lowering its wholesale prices, bringing it closer to price parity with the meat its products imitate.

On average, US food service retailers pay around 15% less for the second price drop in a year for Impossible’s burger and sausage alternatives. International distributors in Canada, Singapore, Hong Kong and Macau can also expect price reductions for Impossible products.

Meat substitute manufacturers like Impossible are trying to undercut the price of animal products as part of their broader strategy to convince consumers to choose their products instead. As of January 1, the average price for beef patties was $ 5.32 a pound, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s national retail report. With the latest round of price cuts, the lowest possible wholesale price for the Impossible Burger is $ 6.80 a pound, company spokeswoman Rachel Konrad said.

The privately held company said it was breaking monthly production records to achieve greater economies of scale. Since 2019, production at Impossible and its manufacturing partners’ plants has increased six-fold.

The company urged traders to pass the savings on to restaurant operators who, for the most part, struggled to stay afloat during the coronavirus pandemic.

Rival Beyond Meat has also worked to lower its prices as more competition comes into the market. That summer it sold frozen packs of its meatless burger patties. Beyond’s shares, valued at $ 7.93 billion, are up 67% over the past year.

A information to what you should know

The scientist in a protective suit holds and compares two different coronaviruses of different colors in his hands.

Aitor Diago | Moment | Getty Images

Viruses are constantly mutating, and it’s no surprise to experts that the coronavirus that emerged in China in late 2019 has experienced several significant mutations as the virus replicates and spreads.

However, a new strain of the virus that has emerged in South Africa is cause for concern. Like a variant discovered in the UK in recent months, the variant created in South Africa is proving to be far more transferable.

While scientists have found it easier to spread, they don’t believe either of the two new variants is more deadly. However, being more communicable means more people can become infected, which can result in more serious infections and more deaths.

Questions are now being raised as to whether the coronavirus vaccines, which have developed rapidly over the past year, the western front-runners developed by Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca, will be effective against significant mutations of the virus than those identified in South Africa .

While scientists believe the British variant is unlikely to affect the effectiveness of the vaccines currently being rolled out in the West, there is greater uncertainty about the South African tribe.

Experts would like to point out that despite research into it and the British variety, we still don’t know much about the new strain, and they urge people not to panic. We know the following so far:

What do we know about the variant?

On December 18, South Africa announced detection of a new variant of the coronavirus that spread rapidly in three of the country’s provinces and became the dominant tribe in the Eastern Cape, Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal provinces.

South Africa named the variant “501Y.V2” because of the N501Y mutation they found in the spike protein that the virus uses to enter cells in the body. This mutation has also been found in the new strain the UK identified in December (but which is likely to have been in circulation since September), both of which make the virus more transmissible and more efficient in spreading it.

As authorities in the UK and South Africa alerted the World Health Organization (WHO) to the new mutations in December – both countries are known for their genomic sequencing, or “monitoring” of the virus – the WHO noted that both variants were found in the UK (named “VOC-202012/01”, where VOC stands for “Variant of Concern”) and South Africa share the N501Y mutation. They are different.

The variant in South Africa carries two other mutations in the spike protein (including E484K and K417N) that are not present in the British strain, and experts said these could affect the way vaccines against Covid-19 work.

How concerned should we be?

Some experts and health officials are concerned about the South African variant now commonly known as “501.V2”. So far, it has only been found in a few cases, the WHO noted on Tuesday, but in an increasing number of countries, including Great Britain, France, Switzerland, Japan, Austria and Zambia.

Several countries have banned flights from South Africa (and the UK) due to the new variants of the virus to stop its spread.

Earlier this week, UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock said the variant found in South Africa was of particular concern. “I am incredibly concerned about the South African variant and that is why we have taken the measures we have been taking to restrict all flights from South Africa,” he told the BBC’s “Today” program on Monday.

“This is a very, very significant problem … and it’s even more of a problem than the new variant in the UK,” he said without further explanation.

On Tuesday, former FDA chief Dr. Scott Gottlieb that vaccinating Americans against Covid is more critical than ever, especially since the new South African variant seems to inhibit antibody drugs and is spreading elsewhere.

“The South African variant is very worrying at the moment as it appears that it is circumventing some of our medical countermeasures, particularly the antibody drugs,” Gottlieb told CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” on Tuesday.

“Right now, this burden seems to be widespread in South America and Brazil, the two parts of the world that are currently in their summer but are also experiencing a very dense epidemic and that is worrying.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) noted on Sunday that scientists are studying the variants “to better understand how easily they can be transmitted and whether currently approved vaccines protect people from them”.

“There is currently no evidence that these variants cause more severe illness or an increased risk of death. New information on the virological, epidemiological and clinical characteristics of these variants is emerging rapidly,” he added.

What about the risk for vaccines?

As countries scramble to launch vaccination programs or accelerate programs already underway like the UK, experts noted that one of the greatest potential consequences of emerging variants is their “ability to evade immunity, natural or vaccine-induced”.

“Both vaccination against and natural infection with SARS-CoV-2 (the coronavirus) lead to a ‘polyclonal’ reaction that targets multiple parts of the spike protein. The virus would likely have to accumulate multiple mutations in the spike protein, by vaccines or by natural infection, “said the CDC on Sunday in its report on the emerging variants.

The ability to evade vaccine-induced immunity is the most worrying possible consequence of emerging strains for the CDC. “Once a large part of the population is vaccinated, there will be an immune pressure that could favor and accelerate the occurrence of such variants through selection for ‘escape mutants’.”

However, the CDC stressed that “there is no evidence and most experts believe that escape mutants are unlikely due to the nature of the virus”.

How did it come about?

How and where these variants originated is unclear, experts emphasize, noting that it is unfair to “blame” countries for mutations, as they could have originated anywhere but were discovered by certain countries “looking for them” that is, those that have advanced virus surveillance and are therefore likely to find more mutations.

For example, the British variant was found by the Covid-19 Genomics UK Consortium, which is doing a random genetic sequencing of positive Covid-19 samples across the UK. Since its inception in April 2020, the consortium has sequenced 170,256 virus genomes from people infected with Covid-19. It uses the data to track outbreaks and identify variant viruses, and publishes its data weekly.