Covid-19 Pandemic

Covid-19 Pandemic

Bloomberg Bloomberg   Here’s the latest news from the global pandemic. ​​​​​​India surpasses Brazil with world’s second-highest virus casesU.K. cases jump by almost 3,000 to highest level since May  Virus fatigue is a risk as U.S. heads into fall, ex-FDA head says     When vaccines collide with geopolitics   Back in May, CanSino Biologics looked like China’s best bet in the great, global race for a coronavirus vaccine—a race that the country where the pathogen first emerged is intent on winning. Boasting tie-ups with Canada’s biggest research organization on one side and one of China’s most prominent military scientists on the other, the Tianjin-based startup seemed to benefit from its unique melding of West and East, becoming the first globally to trial a vaccine candidate on humans. Now, the company, founded by a group of Chinese scientists who returned home after years working for big pharmaceutical firms in Canada, appears to have become a symbol of how politicized the vaccine race has become. The first to publish its results in a peer-reviewed medical journal, CanSino has now fallen behind rivals like the U.S.’s Moderna and China’s Sinovac Biotech that are plowing into the last phase of vaccine testing. CanSino planned to conduct the crucial final-stage trials in Canada, but vials that were supposed to be shipped there remain stranded at Chinese customs three months after approval to conduct the tests was granted. With tensions between Beijing and Ottawa running high, having a foot in both camps seems to have become a liability. Already fraught amid the fight to extradite Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Chinese mobile giant Huawei, from Vancouver to the U.S., relations soured further after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke out against Hong Kong’s contentious, Beijing-backed national security law. Justin Trudeau Photographer: Andrej Ivanov/Bloomberg Commentators have been quick to link the delay, which Trudeau has called “unfortunate,” to geopolitics. But China isn’t the only country accused of playing politics with vaccines. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control told states to be ready for a Covid-19 inoculation by Nov. 1, according to a letter seen by Bloomberg News, a hugely optimistic goal that would deliver a vaccine just days before President Donald Trump stands for re-election. The experience of CanSino shows the uncertain world scientists and pharmaceutical companies are operating in as they race to nail what many leaders see as the magic bullet to normalizing the world economy—and their political fortunes.—Emma O’Brien.   Track the virus   Europe Infections Are Rising Again Around Europe, hot spots are spiking again, with the pathogen spreading in France at a “worrying” pace. See the latest data here.     What you should read   Plane Cabins May Be Different Next Time You Fly Headrest canopies and fabric barriers between seats could start appearing.    Mexico Sees More Excess Deaths Amid Covid Country saw a 59% jump from what was expected from March to August.   Hong Kong Banks Got Millions in Virus Subsidies Tycoons also got subsidies, raising concerns about fairness of the program.   U.K. House Prices Up on Tax Cut After Lockdown Outlook remains uncertain as economy still hit, joblessness seen surging.   Singapore Virus Resurges in Workers’ Dorms Dorms housing low-paid workers account for nearly 95% of infections.   Know someone else who would like this newsletter?  Have them sign up here. Have any questions, concerns, or news tips on Covid-19 news? Get in touch or help us cover the story. Like this newsletter? Subscribe for unlimited access to trusted, data-based journalism in 120 countries around the world and gain expert analysis from exclusive daily newsletters, The Bloomberg Open and The Bloomberg Close.   Follow Us Get the newsletter   You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg’s Coronavirus Daily newsletter. Unsubscribe | Bloomberg.com | Contact Us Bloomberg L.P. 731 Lexington, New York, NY, 10022