Morris, Max

From: Morris, Max Sent: Monday, June 28, 2021 8:23 AM To: Morris, Max Subject: 06/28/2021 Coronavirus Weekend Recap

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Need to find a vaccine? Here are a few good sites and resources we have come across that may help:  White House Vaccine Resource - Website to make it easier for people to find information, https://www.vaccines.gov/, and people can also text their zip code to 438829 to find out information about vaccination sites.  CDC Vaccine Finder – https://vaccinefinder.org/ [Free government website where users can search for pharmacies and providers that offer vaccinations, currently limited number of states but expanding]  Dr. B Standby list for COVID vaccines - https://hidrb.com/ [Sign-up website that connects eligible adults with leftover vaccines at risk of expiring]  NBC News Plan Your Vaccine – https://www.nbcnews.com/specials/plan-your-vaccine/ [Website that walks you through eligibility, a timeline for when you can get vaccinated and where you can get a vaccine]  Apple Maps App [Use the app to find vaccination location data from the US CDC's Vaccine Finder by searching or asking Siri, “Where can I get a Covid-19 vaccination?]  Facebook Locator Tool [Access the social media’s Covid Information Center to see when and where to get vaccinated and get a link to make an appointment]

Hello Monday! And a good morning Everyone. Hope you had a great weekend and got a chance to get outside or just out and about to take a break and enjoy some down time. I know you have already gotten your favorite beverage in hand so without further ado following is our Weekend Recap of Headlines and Highlights, along with US Snapshots, US Vaccinations, US Variants, Outbreak Statistics, Vaccine and Treatment information, US Restrictions and the US Back-to- Normal Index related to the novel coronavirus . Enjoy the new start to our week and talk to you this evening .

CVOB Website Dashboard, individual US State, US County, Global Trending Charts and Data as well as US Vaccinations, US Restrictions and our Communications Archive can be found at https://www.sunknighty.net/.

Headlines  The vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna set off a persistent immune reaction in the body that may protect against the coronavirus for years, scientists at the Washington University in St. Louis published in the journal Monday, findings adding to growing evidence that most people immunized with the mRNA vaccines may not need boosters, so long as the virus and its variants do not evolve much beyond their current forms - which is not guaranteed, and people who recovered from Covid-19 before being vaccinated may not need boosters even if the virus does make a significant transformation.  Immune responses to the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine improve with a longer gap of as long as 45 weeks between doses and a third dose of the vaccine generated a strong immune response in clinical trial volunteers, Oxford 1 researchers reported on Monday, a finding that indicate the doses could be an option should third shots end up being needed, for example to extend immunity.  Abu Dhabi will use facial scanners to detect coronavirus infections at malls and airports after a trial of 20,000 people showed “a high degree of effectiveness,” using technology that can detect infections by measuring electromagnetic waves with a 93% sensitivity, which change when the RNA particles of the virus are present in the body,  America is in a far better place now than it was six months ago in its fight against the coronavirus pandemic, with overall cases and deaths down, according to the latest data, showing that vaccines are effective, experts say, although they have some protection limitations when faced with more aggressive strains but the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said there's a low chance people who are fully vaccinated may get infected with variants and that any illness could be shorter or milder.  As the US continues to navigate its way through the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, said Sunday that areas of the country could experience "very dense outbreaks" with the concerning Delta variant continuing to circulate, explaining "It's going to be hyper- regionalized” in certain pockets of the country.  Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson said Sunday he believes final, non-emergency use approval from the Food and Drug Administration of coronavirus vaccines would help combat hesitancy among Arkansas residents to get their shots, explaining "Whenever they see emergency use authorization, then they say, well, they haven't made a final approval, they haven't got all the research completed that is needed on there.”  The US Food and Drug Administration on Friday added a warning to patient and provider fact sheets for the Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines to indicate a rare risk of heart inflammation, revising the sheets to include a warning about myocarditis and pericarditis after the second dose and with the onset of symptoms within a few days after receiving the shot.  Thrown off-stride to reach its COVID-19 vaccination goal, the Biden administration is sending A-list officials across the country, devising ads for niche markets and enlisting community organizers to persuade unvaccinated people to get a shot, and while the strategy has the trappings of a political campaign, complete with data crunching to identify groups that can be won over, the message is about public health, not ideology, with a focus on what a group of health officials term the “movable middle” - some 55 million unvaccinated adults seen as persuadable, many of them under 30.  The US rose to the top of Bloomberg’s Covid Resilience Ranking for the first time, a measure that indicates how well countries are handling the pandemic, hitting the number one ranking as it pushes ahead with vaccinations and opens up travel routes, while European nations also rose as they open up for summer.  The rapid spread of the delta coronavirus variant has forced a growing number of countries to reimpose and other public health restrictions, raising fears that the more contagious variant was hampering global efforts to contain the pandemic, with new curbs on travel and daily life stretched from Australia and Bangladesh to South Africa and Germany, where authorities over the weekend set new limits on travelers from “virus-variant zones” such as Portugal and Russia.  The United Kingdom reported the fewest daily coronavirus cases in five days and the number of deaths fell by half, a potential sign that the recent surge in cases linked to the delta variant may be nearing its peak, with a total of 14,876 new cases reported Sunday, down from the 18,270 on Saturday that was the most since February.  South Africa’s new infections appear to be dominated by the Delta variant that was first identified in India, scientists said on Saturday as a third wave sweeps the hard-hit African country with more than 18,000 new cases reported, and on Sunday President Cyril Ramaphosa moved the country to level 4 – the second-highest, banning alcohol, outlawing public gatherings and closing schools to curb surging infections.  Australia reported on Sunday one of the highest numbers for locally acquired coronavirus cases this year, triggering lockdowns in the cities of Sydney and Darwin and forcing tighter restrictions in four states.  New Zealand will consider making use of the Covid tracer app mandatory in high risk areas such as bars and restaurants, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told reporters in Wellington Monday.  Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel tested positive for Covid-19 on Sunday, just days after he met face-to-face with the other 26 leaders of the European Union for a summit.  US household net worth rose sharply in the first year of the pandemic, with the poorest half of the country posting the fastest increase in percentage terms - even though their dollar gains were dwarfed by the new wealth flowing to

2 the top, and the aggregate net worth of the bottom half of households grew 36% in the 12 months through March, compared with a 33% jump for the top 1%, according to data published this week by the Federal Reserve.  More than 2.1 million people were screened at TSA airport checkpoints on Friday, according the agency's official count, marking the eighth day in June where the number has been over 2 million, with spokesperson Lisa Farbstein saying Saturday morning it was the highest checkpoint volume since the pandemic began.  UBS Group AG will permanently allow as many as two-thirds of its employees to adopt a hybrid model of working from home and the office, according to a person familiar with the plans, in a bid to be more competitive in recruitment compared with many US banks that have taken a more hardline approach, and the company is also committed to offering staff the flexibility of a hybrid work arrangement based on roles and locations.  To roars reaching volumes you normally hear in arenas 20 times the size, Bruce Springsteen sang Broadway back to life on Saturday night, and in the first full-length performance there since the coronavirus silenced theaters in Times Square 15 months ago, the 71-year-old rock-and-roll superstar delivered to a thrill-starved audience an inspirationally galvanizing 2½-hour show that is by turns lyrical, nostalgic and rawly emotional.

US Snapshots Trending Stats Data compiled daily from John Hopkins CSSE Tracking Seven-Day Trending as of Sun Daily Average Daily Average June 27 Case Increase Death Increase Positivity Rate Total Tests This Week 11,948 307 7.65% 465,738,377 Last Week 11,318 293 7.71% 461,373,075 Change 630 14 -0.06% 4,365,302 % 5.57% 4.78% -0.78% 0.95% As of June 26 30.65% -6.10% -0.65% 0.95% As of June 25 4.36% 8.33% -0.65% 0.94% As of June 24 0.78% -1.88% -0.65% 0.98% As of June 23 -9.57% 12.04% -0.78% 0.99% As of June 22 -17.78% 18.42% -0.90% 1.06% As of June 21 -16.22% 2.05% -0.77% 1.07%

Data compiled normally weekly from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Inpatient Bed Inpatient Bed Use (COVID- ICU Bed Use Weekly Trending Use 19) ICU Bed Use (COVID-19) As of June 26 70.80% 2.92% 65.77% 5.24% As of June 19 70.69% 3.22% 66.08% 5.56% Change 0.11% -0.30% -0.31% -0.32% As of June 12 71.00% 3.50% 66.91% 6.22% As of June 5 69.05% 3.99% 65.26% 7.12% As of May 29 70.51% 4.43% 66.15% 7.98% As of May 22 70.55% 4.69% 66.95% 8.52% As of May 15 70.04% 5.31% 67.06% 9.49%

Trending Charts Charts compiled from Sunknighty CVOB web site via Johns Hopkins University data, updated daily from the previous day’s numbers

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US Vaccinations Data compiled daily by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, updated June 27 At Least One Fully People Vaccinated Dose Vaccinated

Total 179,261,269 153,028,665 % of Total Population 54.0% 46.1% Population = > 12 Years of Age 179,052,568 152,915,464 % of Population = > 12 Years of Age 63.1% 53.9% Population = > 18 Years of Age 170,546,116 146,691,387 % of Population = > 18 Years of Age 66.0% 56.8% Population = > 65 Years of Age 47,937,782 42,504,448 % of Population = > 65 Years of Age 87.6% 77.7%

Reported doses administered by day Data compiled daily by The Washington Post from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, updated June 27 In the last week, an average of 765.8k doses per day were administered, a 38% decrease over the week before.

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State Doses Data compiled daily by The Washington Post, share of population fully vaccinated, updated June 27

US Variant Prevalence Data compiled by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention every two weeks and released approximately two weeks after collection Estimated Proportions of SARS-CoV-2 Lineages. The data below shows the estimated biweekly prevalence of the most common SARS-CoV-2 lineages circulating in the United States, based on >40,000 sequences collected through CDC’s national genomic surveillance since Dec 20, 2020 and grouped in 2-week intervals. Data are subject to change over time and will be updated as more data become available. Variant proportions are adjusted using statistical weighting to correct for the non-random sampling of sequencing data over time and across states and to provide more representative national estimates.

Nowcast Collection date, two weeks ending CDC Lineage Name Country first seen Designation 19-Jun-21 05-Jun-21 22-May-21 08-May-21 24-Apr-21 10-Apr-21 27-Mar-21 13-Mar-21 B.1.1.7 Alpha UK VoC 52.2% 60.3% 69.2% 69.9% 66.0% 59.0% 44.3% 26.7% B.1.617.2 Delta India VoC 20.6% 9.5% 2.5% 1.3% 0.6% 0.1% 0.0% 0.0% P.1 Gamma Brazil VoC 16.4% 11.2% 8.1% 6.2% 4.8% 3.3% 1.5% 0.5%

5 B.1.526 Iota New York VoI 5.6% 9.3% 4.7% 6.0% 7.4% 8.2% 8.4% 4.7%

B.1 China 0.4% 1.9% 1.8% 1.4% 1.6% 1.4% 1.9% 2.4% B.1.351 Beta South Africa VoC 0.3% 0.4% 0.6% 0.7% 0.7% 0.9% 0.8% 0.5% B.1.1.519 0.2% 0.5% 0.9% 1.2% 2.1% 2.9% 4.5% 5.2% B.1.429 Epsilon California VoC 0.1% 0.3% 0.7% 1.3% 2.3% 4.3% 6.6% 9.1% B.1.427 Epsilon California VoC 0.1% 0.3% 0.4% 0.7% 1.0% 1.7% 2.8% 4.1% B.1.525 Eta New York VoI 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.3% 0.3% 0.4% 0.4% 0.2% B.1.617.1 Kappa India VoI 0.1% 0.0% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.1% 0.0% B.1.2 0.0% 0.1% 0.1% 0.8% 1.3% 3.9% 10.6% 22.0% B.1.617 VoI 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% B.1.617.3 VoI 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% P.2 Zeta Brazil VoI 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.1% 0.2% 0.4% 0.6% Other 4.0% 6.2% 5.6% 4.9% 5.6% 7.3% 12.0% 20.5% 0.0% represents fewer than 10 observations of this variant during the selected time/location context Other represents >200 additional lineages, which are each circulating at <1% of viruses Nowcast is weighted estimates that predict proportions for more recent time intervals

Highlights Vaccine Rollout - US 1. More than 152 million people in the US are fully vaccinated, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data on Saturday, which is approximately 45.8% of the total population, with nearly 66% of adults with at least one dose. 2. More than one in 10 people in the US who received one dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna vaccine have missed their second dose, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, a cause for concern as the more transmissible Delta variant gains a foothold. 3. Los Angeles County local health data shows that over 99% of the 12,234 people who have died from Covid-19 since December 2020 were unvaccinated. 4. Georgia State University researchers will use a $500,000 grant to try to increase vaccination rates among refugees and other groups in the Atlanta area city of Clarkston - one of the largest refugee resettlement communities in the US. 5. The White House has recruited celebrities and athletes, including country music star Brad Paisley and the Tampa Bay Lightning hockey team, teamed up with Twitch and Riot Games to reach online gamers and partnered with Panera and Chipotle to offer free food to those getting a shot. 6. Massachusetts will announce its first million-dollar winner on Tuesday, with four more drawings in the weeks ahead. 7. Illinois' "All In For The Win" sweepstakes, with the first jackpot drawing on July 6, is giving residents a shot at up to $1 million, with additional scholarship awards for vaccinated youth. Vaccine Rollout - Global 1. Saudi Arabia will start inoculating young people aged 12 to 18 with the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine after it was approved by the Food and Drug Authority, the health ministry said Sunday. 2. Indonesia's food and drug agency has recommended the vaccine made by China's Sinovac Biotech for children aged 12-17, the country's COVID-19 task force said, as the country seeks to extend inoculations amid a surge in infections. 3. Australia decided on Monday to make vaccinations mandatory for high-risk aged-care workers and employees in hotels after a surge in cases nationwide. 4. Brazil is seeing millions of people missing their second doses of vaccine, further complicating a campaign already marred by supply shortages and allegations of graft, with some 4.1 million resident not returning for their second shot as of June 1, according to data compiled by researchers who are following the vaccine rollout, representing nearly 16 percent of those eligible. 5. German Health Minister Jens Spahn said on Saturday that supply of vaccines will soon outstrip demand, which will allow it to offer shots to passers-by in city centers or at places of worship, with 35% of the population fully vaccinated, while 53% has received one shot.

6 6. Saudi Arabia stressed the importance of getting two vaccine doses for all those attending Hajj this year, the Hajj and Umra Ministry said on Sunday. 7. India must administer 10 million doses a day to achieve its aim of inoculating all adults by December, experts say, but the country has fully vaccinated fewer than 6% with two doses. 8. Greece will offer young people a cash reward for receiving their first shot as part of a government drive to boost vaccination rates ahead of the summer holiday season. 9. Germany expects Moderna to deliver vaccines faster than expected, helping it ramp up vaccinations in coming months, with deliveries to increase to 1.33 million doses a week in July from 733,000 previously expected, raising the figure to 2.57 million a week in August and 2.95 million a week in September. 10. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged people on Sunday to overcome their hesitancy and get vaccinations as soon as possible, as concerns grow about the highly infectious Delta variant being detected in some states, and after a fall in infections from May's daily peak of 400,000, the country has redoubled its efforts to inoculate the country's 940 million adults amid supply constraints and fears of a third wave of pandemic. 11. Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett urged teenagers to get vaccinated as a new outbreak spreads, saying the country’s stock of Pfizer Inc.- Technion SE vaccine would expire soon. US Outbreak 1. The Delta variant, first identified in India, has now been found in 49 states and Washington, D.C., according to GISAID, an independent data sharing initiative, and the Hawaii Department of Health, with only South Dakota not reporting cases as of Wednesday, a state health department said. 2. Arkansas officials are reporting that over the past two weeks, the rolling average number of daily new cases has increased by 97.1, an increase of about 51%, according to researchers from Johns Hopkins University, who say the state now rates fifth in the country for new cases per capita. 3. New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said Sunday that hospitalizations, the number of patients in intensive care and intubations across the state are all at their lowest levels since the pandemic began. 4. North Dakota health officials continue to document few new cases, but the state’s vaccination rate remains low as a new variant that’s gaining a foothold around the country emerges in the state. 5. Minnesota Governor Tim Walz says he will relinquish the special powers that he has been using to manage the pandemic by August 1, ending a peacetime state of emergency that has been in effect since March 2020. 6. New Mexico home schooling nearly doubled last year as thousands of parents opted out of virtual learning programs offered in public schools, an unprecedented defection that is putting a strain on school budgets, which are rooted in student enrollment. 7. South Carolina is getting more than $17 million in federal money to help programs that promote school readiness for young children from lower-income families. 8. Some 4,000 federal offenders who were part of a mass release last year of nonviolent prisoners to help slow the spread of the coronavirus could soon return to prison - not because they violated the terms of their home confinement, but because the United States appears to be moving past the worst of the pandemic. Global Outbreak 1. Taiwan reported its first domestically transmitted case of the highly contagious Delta variant Saturday, tightening controls in a southern part of the island where the cases have occurred, and though the country continues to be battle a cluster of domestic infections, the numbers are steadying and the outbreak has been comparatively small, reporting the lowest daily rise in infections in 1 ½ months on Monday. 2. Russia reported 20,538 new confirmed infections in the last twenty-four hours on Sunday, the first drop in five days, according to data from the government’s virus response center. 3. Turkey’s new infections on Sunday fell to less than 5,000 for the first time since November, according to official data. 4. Malaysia will extend a national beyond Monday and restrictions will not be eased until daily infections fall below 4,000, with 5,803 cases reported on Saturday. 5. Italy’s daily tally of new infections rose to 838 on Saturday from 753 the day before, with the number of patients in hospital with COVID-19 - not including those in intensive care - stood at 1,771, down from 1,899 twenty-four hours earlier. 6. Ukraine reported nine deaths from COVID-19 over the past 24 hours, the lowest daily total since July 19, health ministry data showed on Monday, with the country seeing a sharp drop in new infections and earlier this month lifted many domestic restrictions, while extending some until August 31.

7 7. Romania’s capital did not record any new coronavirus cases on Sunday, officials said, and just a few months ago, Bucharest’s intensive care units were stretched to maximum capacity as its 14-day accumulative infection rate topped 7 per 1,000 inhabitants, but now the capital’s infection rate - the same as the country as a whole - stands at just 0.05 per 1,000 inhabitants. 8. South Africa on Sunday extended a night curfew and introduced a ban on gatherings, alcohol sales, indoor dining and some domestic travel for 14 days to halt a worrying surge in cases driven by the delta variant, President Cyril Ramaphosa said. 9. Bangladesh will halt public transport from Monday as the daily Covid death count surges to a record, the Cabinet Division said in a notice on Sunday, with all shopping malls, tourist sites, resorts and places of entertainment also remaining closed under the new rules. 10. Sydney began a two-week lockdown on Sunday as the Bondi neighborhood cluster of the highly infectious Delta variant rose to 110 in Australia's largest city, while an outbreak in the northern city of Darwin prompted a hard two- day stay-at-home order. 11. Spanish officials on the island of Mallorca are investigating an outbreak involving hundreds of students who went there on holiday, even as they for an influx of British tourists after their government eased travel restrictions. 12. New Zealand will extend the COVID-19 alert level in the capital Wellington for two days, as authorities said on Sunday there is still a risk from an Australian tourist who tested positive after visiting the city last weekend. 13. Thailand on Sunday announced new restrictions centered around its capital in a bid to tackle the country's worst outbreak, with new measures, implemented for 30 days starting Monday that include a ban on restaurant dine-ins in Bangkok and five surrounding provinces. 14. Hong Kong will ban all passenger flights from Britain starting Thursday as it puts the country on its “extremely high risk” Covid-19 category, just as it loosens entry requirements for most other places. 15. Ireland’s prime minister said the government will decide early this week on whether to delay a planned reopening of indoor hospitality venues beyond July 5 over concerns about the delta variant. 16. ’s state epidemiologist Anders Tegnell said he expects all virus restrictions will have ended by November, and by then the country will probably have removed its work from home recommendation and social distance requirement, 17. Spaniards were allowed to ditch their face masks for a walk in the park or a trip to the beach on Saturday for the first time in more than a year, but some people were in no rush to dispense with their facial protection against COVID- 19. 18. Nepal saw the end of the climbing season earlier this month, with at least 59 infected people had been world’s highest peak Mount Everest, including five others who reached the top, according to interviews with climbers and expedition companies and the personal accounts of social media users. 19. Australia lowered its projections on Sunday for population and economic growth over the next 40 years due to the impact of the pandemic. 20. Thailand plans to spend 7.5 billion baht ($235 million) compensating workers and businesses, especially construction companies and restaurants, during month long restrictions in Bangkok and nearby provinces. 21. The United Kingdom tax authority has started almost 13,000 investigations into use of the government’s coronavirus business support efforts, including for possible fraud and other breaches of rules, the Financial Times reported. 22. Britain’s embattled health minister, , announced on Saturday he had resigned, a day after The Sun newspaper published photos of him in a steamy embrace with a former college friend serving as one of his senior aides, in an apparent violation of Britain’s social-distancing guidelines.

Outbreak Statistics Numbers from John Hopkins CSSE Tracking are pulled daily at 7:00PM and changes reflect the past 24 hours Global Numbers Date Cases Deaths Recovered 27 June Sun 180,983,568 (+401,911) 3,920,751 (+8,331) - 2.17% 118,538,978 (+246,584)

26 June Sat 180,581,657 (+314,269) 3,912,420 (+6,530) - 2.17% 118,292,394 (+317,472) 25 June Fri 180,267,388 (+412,166) 3,905,890 (+8,866) - 2.17% 117,974,922 (+337,733)

8 24 June Thu 179,855,222 (+515,113) 3,897,024 (+11,255) - 2.17% 117,637,189 (+270,881) 23 June Wed 179,340,109 (+399,404) 3,885,769 (+9,555) - 2.17% 117,366,308 (+418,900) 22 June Tue 178,940,705 (+302,172) 3,876,214 (+7,372) - 2.17% 116,947,408 (+297,893)

21 June Mon 178,638,533 (+256,800) 3,868,842 (+5,412) - 2.17% 116,649,515 (+344,655) Top 15 Global Country Counts  Daily case change (total): Brazil: +97,838 (18,420,598), India: +50,040 (30,233,183), Colombia: +33,594 (4,126,340), Indonesia: +21,342 (2,115,304), Russia: +20,169 (5,387,486), Argentina: +18,555 (4,393,142), US: +15,772 (33,624,433), South Africa: +15,036 (1,928,897), United Kingdom: +14,625 (4,748,634), Iran: +9,758 (3,167,741), Philippines: +6,081 (1,397,992), Malaysia: +5,586 (734,048), Oman: +5,517 (262,059), Bangladesh: +5,268 (888,406), Mexico: +5,051 (2,503,408)  Daily death change (total): Brazil: +2,332 (513,474), India: +1,258 (395,751), Colombia: +693 (104,014), Russia: +591 (131,070), Indonesia: +409 (57,138), Argentina: +338 (92,317), US: +312 (603,965), Mexico: +175 (232,521), Paraguay: +154 (12,365), Peru: +137 (191,584), Chile: +135 (32,298), Iran: +134 (83,845), Philippines: +128 (24,372), South Africa: +122 (59,900), Bangladesh: +119 (14,172) US Numbers Date Cases Deaths

27 June Sun 33,624,281 (+15,772) 603,962 (+312) - 1.8% 26 June Sat 33,608,509 (+6,969) 603,650 (+137) - 1.8% 25 June Fri 33,601,540 (+13,704) 603,513 (+406) - 1.8%

24 June Thu 33,587,836 (+12,419) 603,107 (+337) - 1.8% 23 June Wed 33,575,417 (+13,059) 602,770 (+349) - 1.8% 22 June Tue 33,562,358 (+9,824) 602,421 (+377) - 1.79%

21 June Mon 33,552,534 (+11,886) 602,044 (+229) - 1.79% US State and Territory Counts  Cases by daily change (totals): Florida: +11,048 (2,365,464), California: +1,195 (3,815,304), Colorado: +805 (556,776), Missouri: +624 (623,096), Arizona: +475 (892,711), New York: +381 (2,114,123), Utah: +282 (413,950), Georgia: +228 (1,133,291), Ohio: +154 (1,110,700), New Jersey: +150 (1,022,830), Oregon: +138 (208,137), Minnesota: +97 (605,137), Pennsylvania: +96 (1,216,133), Texas: +89 (2,994,389), Maryland: +66 (462,144), Iowa: +54 (373,583), Puerto Rico: +47 (139,956), Massachusetts: +31 (709,769), Delaware: +25 (109,682), Maine: +13 (68,977), North Dakota: +6 (110,663), Illinois: +0 (1,390,432), North Carolina: +0 (1,012,343), Michigan: +0 (999,119), Tennessee: +0 (866,738), Indiana: +0 (752,699), Wisconsin: +0 (677,252), South Carolina: +0 (596,144), Alabama: +0 (549,934), Louisiana: +0 (479,521), Kentucky: +0 (464,388), Oklahoma: +0 (456,910), Washington: +0 (450,404), Connecticut: +0 (349,120), Arkansas: +0 (347,254), Nevada: +0 (331,614), Mississippi: +0 (320,837), Kansas: +0 (318,352), Nebraska: +0 (224,226), New Mexico: +0 (205,290), Idaho: +0 (194,690), West Virginia: +0 (163,804), Rhode Island: +0 (152,514), South Dakota: +0 (124,496), Montana: +0 (113,529), New Hampshire: +0 (99,403), Alaska: +0 (71,035), Wyoming: +0 (61,951), District of Columbia: +0 (49,305), Hawaii: +0 (37,596), Vermont: +0 (24,392), Guam: +0 (8,328), Virgin Islands: +0 (3,835), Northern Mariana Islands: +0 (183), American Samoa: +0 (0), Virginia: -232 (679,828)  Deaths by daily change (totals): Florida: +217 (37,772), California: +25 (63,589), New York: +15 (53,664), Arizona: +11 (17,914), Colorado: +11 (6,777), Texas: +9 (52,273), Pennsylvania: +9 (27,651), Utah: +8 (2,363), Minnesota: +4 (7,675), New Jersey: +3 (26,437), Maryland: +3 (9,737), Iowa: +2 (6,133), Massachusetts: +1 (17,988), Illinois: +0 (25,632), Georgia: +0 (21,393), Ohio: +0 (20,281), North Carolina: +0 (13,412), Michigan: +0 (20,959), Tennessee: +0 (12,550), Indiana: +0 (13,822), Wisconsin: +0 (8,099), Missouri: +0 (9,676), South Carolina: +0 (9,819), Alabama: +0 (11,336), Louisiana: +0 (10,723), Kentucky: +0 (7,204), Oklahoma: +0 (7,384), Washington: +0 (5,902), Connecticut: +0 (8,275), Arkansas: +0 (5,893), Nevada: +0 (5,667), Mississippi: +0 (7,395), Kansas: +0 (5,147), Nebraska: +0 (2,259), Oregon: +0 (2,763), New Mexico: +0 (4,335), Idaho: +0 (2,145), West Virginia: +0 (2,876), Rhode Island: +0 (2,728), Puerto Rico: +0 (2,546), South Dakota: +0 (2,030), Montana: +0 (1,662), North Dakota: +0 (1,559), Delaware: +0 (1,694), New Hampshire: +0 (1,371), Alaska: +0 (374), Maine: +0 (858), Wyoming: +0 (740), District of Columbia: +0 (1,141), Hawaii: +0 (516), Vermont: +0 (256), Guam: +0 (139), Virgin Islands: +0 (30), Northern Mariana Islands: +0 (2), American Samoa: +0 (0), Virginia: -6 (11,396) 9  Hospital bed utilization rate: Rhode Island: 90.9%, Massachusetts: 83.65%, Pennsylvania: 82.03%, Missouri: 81.84%, Maryland: 81.0%, Michigan: 78.69%, Connecticut: 77.66%, Florida: 77.6%, Minnesota: 77.15%, South Carolina: 76.83%, District of Columbia: 76.57%, North Carolina: 76.53%, West Virginia: 76.44%, Georgia: 76.34%, California: 75.77%, Delaware: 75.48%, Alabama: 75.01%, Oregon: 74.58%, Texas: 74.46%, Washington: 74.27%, New York: 73.71%, Nevada: 73.53%, Virginia: 72.71%, Arkansas: 72.56%, North Dakota: 72.52%, New Hampshire: 72.49%, Ohio: 71.52%, Maine: 71.33%, Vermont: 70.25%, Hawaii: 70.06%, Illinois: 69.61%, Arizona: 69.56%, Nebraska: 68.31%, Colorado: 68.22%, New Jersey: 68.09%, Tennessee: 67.82%, New Mexico: 66.84%, Louisiana: 66.58%, Wisconsin: 66.2%, Montana: 65.64%, Mississippi: 65.6%, Indiana: 64.91%, Alaska: 64.43%, Oklahoma: 63.9%, Iowa: 63.47%, Idaho: 62.06%, Utah: 61.13%, Kansas: 60.43%, Kentucky: 60.36%, South Dakota: 55.8%, Wyoming: 48.58%

Vaccinations – US Current Doses Data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, updated daily, individual data may not always add up to totals due to reporting irregularities

Total Doses Total Doses Date Distributed Change Administered Change 6/27/2021 381,282,720 6,690 323,327,328 1,204,225

6/26/2021 381,276,030 1,053,360 322,123,103 923,724 6/25/2021 380,222,670 973,970 321,199,379 512,174

6/24/2021 379,248,700 366,500 320,687,205 815,152 6/23/2021 378,882,200 -564,460 319,872,053 648,209 6/22/2021 379,446,660 443,250 319,223,844 647,403

6/21/2021 379,003,410 0 318,576,441 610,033

Number of People Number of Receiving 1 or People Fully Date more Doses Change Vaccinated Change 6/27/2021 179,261,269 387,453 153,028,665 844,422

6/26/2021 178,873,816 382,669 152,184,243 568,689

6/25/2021 178,491,147 159,470 151,615,554 363,520 6/24/2021 178,331,677 382,785 151,252,034 464,731 6/23/2021 177,948,892 313,825 150,787,303 362,628

6/22/2021 177,635,067 292,113 150,424,675 378,669

6/21/2021 177,342,954 254,664 150,046,006 378,360

Vaccine Administered

Pfizer- Johnson & Date BioNTech Moderna Johnson Not Identified 6/27/2021 178,171,003 132,647,393 12,256,008 252,924

6/26/2021 177,321,630 132,335,894 12,213,560 252,019 6/25/2021 176,721,071 132,058,604 12,169,305 250,399

6/24/2021 176,285,416 132,013,506 12,139,564 248,719 6/23/2021 175,773,690 131,761,409 12,090,161 246,793 6/22/2021 175,373,929 131,557,233 12,047,571 245,111

6/21/2021 174,943,983 131,372,107 12,015,721 244,630

10 Total doses distributed are cumulative counts of vaccine doses recorded as shipped in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vaccine Tracking System.

US State Variants of Concern and Other Lineages Proportions Proportions in the table below are only shown for states for which CDC has at least 300 sequences from specimens collected during this timeframe. Proportions are calculated using empirical (unweighted) data, which are subject to change over time and will be updated as more data become available. Proportions of variants do not represent the total number that may be circulating in the United States and may not match cases reported by states, territories, tribes, and local officials. For states and jurisdictions not listed, CDC has insufficient genomic surveillance data for the specified time period.

US Testing Data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

% of Positive Negative Positive Date New Tests Tests Tests Total Tests Tests 27 June Sun 594,232 35,647,136 430,091,241 465,738,377 7.65% 26 June Sat 684,425 35,632,818 429,511,327 465,144,145 7.66%

25 June Fri 714,371 35,615,847 428,843,873 464,459,720 7.67% 24 June Thu 493,052 35,601,849 428,143,500 463,745,349 7.68% 23 June Wed 915,865 35,588,686 427,663,611 463,252,297 7.68%

22 June Tue 473,888 35,575,332 426,761,100 462,336,432 7.69% 21 June Mon 489,469 35,565,923 426,296,621 461,862,544 7.70%

11 New Tests (past week): New York: 483,578, Florida: 290,683, Illinois: 226,433, Massachusetts: 181,277, New Jersey: 155,297, Texas: 152,358, Pennsylvania: 117,080, Michigan: 101,824, Minnesota: 100,762, Ohio: 98,449, North Carolina: 95,009, Maryland: 84,753, Colorado: 71,615, Arizona: 66,433, Georgia: 65,682, Wisconsin: 61,627, Missouri: 59,950, Virginia: 58,040, Oregon: 46,223, Indiana: 45,973, South Carolina: 44,070, Louisiana: 41,685, Utah: 33,876, Kentucky: 33,798, Rhode Island: 27,668, Alabama: 24,253, New Mexico: 24,209, Nevada: 22,530, Hawaii: 21,758, District of Columbia: 21,619, Iowa: 20,311, Kansas: 19,324, West Virginia: 17,710, New Hampshire: 16,675, Arkansas: 15,222, Idaho: 14,555, Maine: 13,803, Oklahoma: 13,492, Delaware: 12,173, Mississippi: 10,075, Vermont: 9,100, Montana: 7,889, Nebraska: 7,528, Wyoming: 5,557, Alaska: 4,879, North Dakota: 4,092, South Dakota: 3,595, California: 0, Connecticut: 0, Tennessee: 0, Washington: 0

Diagnosis, Prevention and Treatment Tracker data is consolidated from The New York Times and US CDC, (#) is change from last update Vaccine Tracker (last updated June 24) PRECLINICAL PHASE I PHASE II PHASE III EARLY/LIMITED APPROVED

~150+ 50 37 32 8 8

Vaccine candidates Vaccines testing Vaccines in expanded Vaccines in large- Vaccines approved for Vaccines approved being evaluated safety and dosage safety trials scale efficacy tests early or limited use for full use

Early/Limited Use (in country): CanSinoBIO Biologics (China), Gamaleya Research Institute (Russia), Sinovac Biotech (China), Sinopharm - Wuhan (China), Vector Institute (Russia), Chumakov (Russia), Anhui Zhifei Longcom (China), QazVac (Kazakhstan) Emergency Use (in country): Pfizer-BioNTech (US and elsewhere), Moderna (US), AstraZeneca/University of Oxford (Britain, Canada and elsewhere), Bharat Biotech (India), Sinopharm-Beijing (China, UAE, Bahrain), Johnson & Johnson (US, Bahrain, Canada), Shafa Pharmed Pars (Iran) Approved (in country): Pfizer-BioNTech (multiple countries), Moderna (Canada and multiple countries), Sputnik V (Mexico), Sinovac (China), Beijing Institute of Biological Products-Sinopharm (China), Sinopharm-Wuhan (China), Oxford/AstraZeneca (Brazil), EpiVacCorona (Turkmenistan) New additions and recent updates: • Turkey’s Erciyes University moves to Phase 3 – June 22 • Iran’s Fakhravac vaccine moves to Phase 2 – June 22 • Cuba reports that its vaccine has an efficacy of 92% - June 22 • A second vaccine from Kazakhstan enters Phase 1/2 – June 17 • CureVac announces disappointing trial results, with an efficacy of 47% - June 16 • Novavax announces trial results, with an overall efficacy of 90.4% - June 14 • Iran authorizes the Shafa Pharmed Pars vaccine for emergency use – June 14 • Vietnam’s Nanogen moves to Phase 3 -June 14 • Seattle-based Icosavax enters Phase 1/2 – June 8 • Australia’s Vaxine moves to Phase 2 – June 8 • The West China Hospital of Sichuan University moves to Phase 3 – June 1 • China’s Academy of Military Medical Sciences moves to Phase 3 – June 1

Drug and Treatment Tracker (last updated May 29)

3 (2) 3 1 13 4 3 FDA Approved Tentative or mixed Pseudoscience or Widely used Promising evidence Not promising (Emergency) evidence fraud

FDA Approved: Remdesivir, Monoclonal antibodies – /Etesevimab/REGN-COV2 (emergency use), Regeneron (emergency use) Widely Used: Prone positioning, ventilators and other respiratory support devices, and Other Corticosteroids Promising: Azithromycin Pseudoscience or fraud: Drinking or injecting bleach and disinfectants, UV light, Silver 12 New additions and recent updates:  The US warns that some coronavirus variants are proving resistant to the combination of bamlanivimab and etesevimab – May 26  The FDA pushes back against claims that leronlimab is effective against Covid-19 – May 18  Moved blood filtration from “mixed evidence” to “not promising” – May 18  Moved cytokine inhibitors from “promising” to “mixed evidence” – May 18  Moved dexamethasone from “promising” to “widely used” – May 5 US Restrictions Data compiled by the Kaiser Family Foundation, updated normally weekly, Table available at CVOB website for sorting US Restrictions and Policy Actions - June 21 (previous update June 14) Status of Reopening Reopened (46: +2); Easing Restrictions (5: -2) Stay at Home Order Stay at Home Order Lifted (45); No Action (6)

Mandatory Quarantine for Travelers Traveler Quarantine Mandate in Place (3); Traveler Quarantine Mandate Lifted (29); No Action (19) Non-Essential Business Closures All Non-Essential Businesses Open (46: +2); Some or All Non-Essential Businesses Open with Limits (5: -2) Large Gatherings Ban All Gatherings Prohibited (0: -1); >10 Prohibited (3); >25 Prohibited (0: -1); >50 Prohibited (1: -2); Limit > 50 (2); No Limit (45: +4)

Restaurant Limits Open (48: +2); Open with Service Limits (3: -2) Bar Closures Open (48: +2); Open with Service Limits (2: -2); Closed (1) Face Covering Requirement Yes (1); Indoor Only (1); Unvaccinated People Only (9: -3); No (40: +3)

Emergency Declaration Yes (42: -3); No (9: +3)

13 Data compiled weekdays by The New York Times, last updated June 25

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Back-to-Normal Index The Moody’s Analytics and CNN Business US Back-to-Normal Index is comprised of 37 national and seven state-level indicators, ranges from 0% - representing no economic activity, to 100% - representing the economy returning to its pre- pandemic level in March, and is updated weekly on Fridays for Wednesday numbers As of Wednesday, June 23, the Back-to-Normal Index was 94% (+1%), with 42 (-9) states showing an improvement since the previous week's reporting Recent Historical Trending 9-Jun 2-Jun 7-Apr 3-Mar 5-May 23-Jun 16-Jun 28-Apr 21-Apr 14-Apr 24-Feb 31-Mar 24-Mar 17-Mar 10-Mar 26-May 19-May 12-May

94.0% 93.0% 88.0% 91.0% 91.0% 90.0% 89.0% 89.0% 88.0% 87.0% 88.0% 86.0% 87.0% 86.0% 86.0% 83.0% 83.0% 78.0%

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Primary Statistics Sources John Hopkins University CSEE Tracking, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Kaiser Family Foundation, Moody’s Analytics and CNN Business Back-to-Normal Index

References - General CNN, CNBC, Washington Post, ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, New York Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Yahoo News, Associated Press, BBC, Reddit

16 Compiled Informational FAQ’s, Insight, Tips and Best Practices - Please reference our website and/or previous communications

Max M. Morris Senior Director | Cyber Defense & Response [email protected] (o) 980-312-8530 (c) 704-534-0861

This message has been classified Proprietary by Morris, Max.

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