Monday, January 31, 2022

The Morning: The power of boosters

C.D.C. data on their effectiveness.

Good morning. New C.D.C. data shows the power of boosters.

Preparing vaccines in Rochester Hills, Mich.Emily Elconin for The New York Times

Irrational skepticism

The C.D.C. has begun to publish data on Covid outcomes among people who have received booster shots, and the numbers are striking:

Based on 25 U.S. jurisdictions. | Source: C.D.C.

As you can see, vaccination without a booster provides a lot of protection. But a booster takes somebody to a different level.

This data underscores both the power of the Covid vaccines and their biggest weakness — namely, their gradual fading of effectiveness over time, as is also the case with many other vaccines. If you received two Moderna or Pfizer vaccine shots early last year, the official statistics still count you as "fully vaccinated." In truth, you are only partially vaccinated.

Once you get a booster, your risk of getting severely ill from Covid is tiny. It is quite small even if you are older or have health problems.

The average weekly chance that a boosted person died of Covid was about one in a million during October and November (the most recent available C.D.C. data). Since then, the chances have no doubt been higher, because of the Omicron surge. But they will probably be even lower in coming weeks, because the surge is receding and Omicron is milder than earlier versions of the virus. For now, one in a million per week seems like a reasonable estimate.

That risk is not zero, but it is not far from it. The chance that an average American will die in a car crash this week is significantly higher — about 2.4 per million. So is the average weekly death rate from influenza and pneumonia — about three per million.

With a booster shot, Covid resembles other respiratory illnesses that have been around for years. It can still be nasty. For the elderly and immunocompromised, it can be debilitating, even fatal — much as the flu can be. The Omicron surge has been so terrible because it effectively subjected tens of millions of Americans to a flu all at once.

For the unvaccinated, of course, Covid remains many times worse than the flu.

'Heartbreaking'

I'm highlighting these statistics because there is still a large amount of vaccine skepticism in the U.S. I have heard it frequently from readers in the past week, after our poll on Covid attitudes and partisanship, as well as the "Daily" episode about the poll.

This vaccine skepticism takes two main forms. The more damaging form is the one that's common among Republicans. They're so skeptical of vaccines — partly from misinformation coming from conservative media figures and Republican politicians — that many remain unvaccinated.

Look at this detail from the Kaiser Family Foundation's latest portrait of vaccination: Incredibly, there are more unvaccinated Republican adults than boosted Republican adults.

From a survey of 1,536 adults in Jan. 2022. | Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

This lack of vaccination is killing people. "It's cost the lives of people I know, including just last week a friend of 35 years, a person I met on one of the first weekends of my freshman year of college," David French, a conservative writer who lives in Tennessee, wrote in The Atlantic. "I can't tell you how heartbreaking it is to see person after person fall to a virus when a safe and effective shot would have almost certainly not just saved their life but also likely saved them from even having a serious case of the disease."

Dr. Peter Hotez, a vaccine expert at the Baylor College of Medicine, estimates that in the second half of last year, 200,000 Americans needlessly lost their lives because they refused Covid vaccines. "Three doses of either Pfizer or Moderna will save your life," Hotez told me. "It's the only way you can be reasonably assured that you will survive a Covid-19 infection." (Young children, who are not yet eligible for the vaccines, are also highly unlikely to get very sick.)

The vaccines don't prevent only death. Local data shows the risks of hospitalization are extremely low, too. Vaccination also reduces the risk of long Covid to very low levels.

Healthy and anxious

The second form of vaccine skepticism is among Democrats — although many would recoil at any suggestion that they are vaccine skeptics. Most Democrats are certainly not skeptical about getting a shot. But many are skeptical that the vaccines protect them.

About 41 percent of Democratic voters say they are worried about getting "seriously sick" with Covid, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll released last week. That's a very high level of anxiety for a tiny risk.

Here's the proof that much of the fear is irrational: Young Democrats are more worried about getting sick than old Democrats, even though the science says the opposite should be true.

From a survey of 1,536 adults in Jan. 2022. | Source: Kaiser Family Foundation

The most plausible explanation for this pattern is political ideology. Younger Democrats are significantly more liberal than older Democrats, according to the Pew Research Center (and other pollsters, too). Ideology tends to shape Covid views, for a complex mix of often irrational reasons. The more liberal you are, the more worried about Covid you tend to be; the more conservative you are, the less worried you tend to be.

I know that many liberals believe an exaggerated sense of personal Covid risk is actually a good thing, because it pushes the country toward taking more precautions. Those precautions, according to this view, will reduce Covid's death toll, which truly is horrific right now. In a later newsletter this week, I will consider that argument.

For now, I'll simply echo the many experts who have pleaded with Americans to get vaccinated and boosted.

Answers and convenience

What might help increase the country's ranks of vaccinated? Vaccine mandates, for one thing — although many Republican politicians, as well as the Republican appointees on the Supreme Court, oppose broad mandates. Private companies can still impose mandates on their employees and customers.

Without mandates, the best hope for increased vaccination is probably community outreach. While many unvaccinated Americans are firmly opposed to getting a shot, others — including some Democrats and independents — remain agnostic. If getting a vaccination is convenient and a nurse or doctor is available to answer questions, they will consider it.

"I cannot count how many people I've spoken to about the Covid vaccine who have been like, 'No, I don't think so. No,'" Dr. Kimberly Manning of Emory University told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. "Then I run into them two weeks later and they tell me they got vaccinated."

Related: "You have to scratch your head and say, 'How the heck did this happen?'" Dr. Anthony Fauci told Michael Barbaro on today's episode of "The Daily," about the partisan gap in Covid attitudes. Fauci also predicted that people who were anxious about Covid would become less so as caseloads fell.

In Times Opinion, James Martin, a Jesuit priest, argues that schadenfreude over vaccine skeptics' suffering warps the soul.

THE LATEST NEWS

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The Bengals kicking the winning field goal.Charlie Riedel/Associated Press
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We should be proud of good cops even as we root out bad ones, says Maureen Dowd.

Gail Collins and Bret Stephens discuss gerrymandering.

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MORNING READS

Raisa Flowers wearing grills designed by Helen Harris.Ayesha Malik for The New York Times

Gold: Helen Harris turns teeth into art.

Condo crisis: The clock is ticking for Miami's aging towers.

Quiz time: The average score on our latest news quiz was 8.2. How did you do?

Advice from Wirecutter: How to organize your closet.

Lives Lived: Howard Hesseman was most famous for playing a fallen radio star in the sitcom "WKRP in Cincinnati." He died at 81.

ARTS AND IDEAS

A scene from the found-footage documentary "Fire of Love."Sundance Institute

Sundance, at home

The Sundance Film Festival — virtual for a second year — wrapped this past weekend. "At a time when many of us are worried about the health of movies," the film critic ​​A.O. Scott writes, "it offers proof of life."

Among the notable films: Jesse Eisenberg's directorial debut, "When You Finish Saving the World," about an Indiana teenager struggling with romance; "Navalny," a suspenseful documentary about the Russian opposition leader Aleksei Navalny; "Nanny," which subjects its protagonist, a Senegalese immigrant living in New York, to supernatural and psychological scares; and Mariama Diallo's "Master," about a Black student and a Black professor on a hostile campus.

One of Scott's favorite films was Sara Dosa's "Fire of Love," which tells the story of a French couple who studied volcanoes. The film's scenes of violent eruptions and serene lava flows were captured by the couple's cameras before their deaths in 1991. Here are the festival's award winners. — Sanam Yar, a Morning writer

PLAY, WATCH, EAT

What to Cook
Andrew Purcell for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

This Moroccan-inspired vegetarian chili is not so much spicy as spiced.

What to Read

New books to look forward to in February include epics from Olga Tokarczuk and Marlon James.

What to Watch

"The Afterparty" on Apple TV+ is a murder mystery that toys with Hollywood clichés.

Late Night

"Saturday Night Live" spoofed Russian disinformation about Ukraine.

Now Time to Play

The pangram from Friday's Spelling Bee was outback. Here is today's puzzle — or you can play online.

Here's today's Mini Crossword, and a clue: Burn lightly (five letters).

If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. A hidden Times haiku: "If your masks come in / a package that's not secured / shut, be suspicious."

"The Daily" is a conversation with Dr. Anthony Fauci. On the Book Review podcast, Imani Perry and Oliver Roeder discuss their new books.

Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Sunday, January 30, 2022

Your Weekend Briefing

Winter Storm, Russia, N.F.L

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We're covering a powerful nor'easter, the Russia-Ukraine crisis and the Australian Open.

Snow removal outside the Federal Courthouse in Boston yesterday. Katherine Taylor for The New York Times

1. The East Coast is digging out from a major winter storm.

After dropping a blanket of snow over parts of New York and New Jersey yesterday — as much as 18 inches on some parts of Long Island — the "bomb cyclone" marched northeast, bringing gusting winds, flooding and near-record snow accumulation in New England. Thousands of flights were canceled up and down the coast.

Nearly 70,000 households were without electricity in Massachusetts, especially on Cape Cod and the nearby islands, where heavy winds made restoring power difficult. As much as 30 inches of snow had fallen in some parts of Massachusetts, while Boston had about two feet. The storm drew comparisons to the nightmarish Blizzard of '78, which buried the city under more than 27 inches of snow.

The Red Square in Moscow this week.Maxim Shipenkov/EPA, via Shutterstock

2. The most punishing sanctions that the U.S. is threatening to impose on Moscow if it invades Ukraine could upend Russia's entire economy — but also those of other nations.

The economic measures could cause severe inflation, a stock market crash and financial panic in ways that would inevitably affect daily life in Russia. The response that U.S. officials have promised could roil major economies, particularly those in Europe, and even threaten the stability of the global financial system, analysts say.

Russia has massed more than 100,000 troops at Ukraine's borders, Pentagon officials said yesterday, enough for a full invasion. Thousands of them have deployed along Ukraine's lightly guarded border with Belarus, just 140 miles from Kyiv.

Mark Harris

3. For years, Democrats complained about Republicans spending millions in dark money. Then they used the same tactic to win in 2020.

A Times analysis revealed how the left outdid the right at raising and spending millions from undisclosed donors to defeat Donald Trump.

Tax filings and other data shows that 15 of the most politically active nonprofit organizations that generally align with the Democratic Party spent more than $1.5 billion in 2020 — compared with roughly $900 million spent by a comparable sample of groups aligned with the G.O.P.

Gerrymandering is another tool that political parties can wield to their advantage. We made a game to help you understand it.

Brigham Kiplinger, a principal in Washington, D.C., has fought to get students vaccinated against Covid.Erin Schaff/The New York Times

4. Covid vaccination rates have stalled in a group that is crucial to ending the pandemic: kids.

According to a new analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation, only 18.8 percent of children in the 5-to-11 age group are now fully vaccinated and only 28.1 percent have received one dose. The disparity among states is stark. In Vermont, 52 percent of young children are fully vaccinated; in Mississippi, it is 6 percent.

With adult vaccination hitting a ceiling, unvaccinated elementary school children remain a large, turbulent source of spread. Vaccine advocates are trying new tactics to reach hesitant parents. One principal is calling families daily.

The pandemic has changed children. Some can't shake the feeling of instability. Others are taking on adult responsibilities. And anxiety is all around. This is what it's like to be a student right now.

People scan their health apps to get through a checkpoint in Wuhan, China, last year. Roman Pilipey/EPA, via Shutterstock

5. China introduced a wide range of high-tech controls as part of its effort to stop Covid. The consequences may endure.

Over the past two years, the Chinese government has honed its powers to track and corral people, backed by upgraded technology, armies of neighborhood workers and broad public support. A health app has been key to China's goal of stamping out the coronavirus entirely within its borders.

Now Chinese officials are turning their sharpened surveillance against corruption and dissent. This provides Xi Jinping, China's leader, with a potent techno-authoritarian tool.

Containing Covid will be a top priority as athletes and journalists from around the world arrive in Beijing this week for the Winter Olympics. The opening ceremony is Friday. Here's a guide to every sport at the Games.

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Judge Emanuella Groves said that she is thrilled about the prospect of a Black woman nominee.Amber Ford for The New York Times

6. As Biden prepares to nominate the first Black woman to the Supreme Court, the small, elite group of Black women lawyers and judges is watching with complicated emotions.

By some estimates, they represent perhaps just 2 percent of the nation's 1.3 million lawyers. Now, for the first time in their lives, someone who looks like them — and has likely experienced similar career challenges — could ascend to the Supreme Court. "Finally," one lawyer said. "We now have the possibility of a Supreme Court that would look more like America."

But along with that excitement is frustration that it has taken more than two centuries for this moment to arrive.

While Democrats have the majority they need to install a new justice entirely on their own, a battle is still likely over Biden's choice to replace Justice Stephen Breyer.

Rafael Nadal has 20 Grand Slam titles.James Ross/EPA, via Shutterstock

7. Rafael Nadal is vying for this 21st Grand Slam title this morning at the Australian Open, where he is playing Daniil Medvedev in the championship match.

Sunday's duel is a rematch of the 2019 U.S. Open final, which Nadal won in five grueling sets over nearly five hours after Medvedev rallied from a two-set deficit. Nadal, 35, came back from a foot injury last year and is trying to surpass his longtime rivals, Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic, who have 20 Grand Slam titles a piece.

Ashleigh Barty with the Daphne Akhurst Memorial Cup.Alana Holmberg for The New York Times

At the women's championship yesterday, Ashleigh Barty defeated Danielle Collins, becoming the first Australian player to win the singles title since 1978. "I'm so proud to be an Aussie," Barty said.

And by day's end, Super Bowl LVI will be set. The Cincinnati Bengals play the Kansas City Chiefs at 3 p.m. Eastern, followed by the Los Angeles Rams against the San Francisco 49ers at 6:30 p.m. Eastern. Here are our predictions.

A pod of orcas attacking a blue whale, one of three attacks in waters off Australia from 2019 to 2021.John Daw/Australian Wildlife Journeys

8. Scientists have witnessed the biggest predation event on Earth.

In March 2019, scientists studying whales near Southwestern Australia stumbled upon a grisly spectacle: a pod of orcas killing a blue whale, the largest creatures that have ever lived, in a predatory attack that one researcher described as "maybe the biggest one since dinosaurs were here." It was the first time that orcas had been observed successfully killing and eating an adult blue whale.

In other news from the animal kingdom, read about the tricks that help owls stay in their homes, the ancient pedigree of small dogs and how scientists have helped frogs regrow missing limbs.

A gloss of blueberry syrup is a perfect complement to these pancakes.Jenny Huang for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Susie Theodorou; Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks.

9. Snowed in? We have your stay-at-home Sunday covered.

Start your morning with these tender pancakes. Genevieve Ko whips ricotta into the batter and skips the stiff egg whites in an effortless recipe. For lunch or dinner, this Scottish chicken soup from Melissa Clark is its own kind of medicine.

You'll need something to read, and The Weekender has loads to offer. Our editors also suggest these 12 new books, "Getting Curious With Jonathan Van Ness" on Netflix, new music from a Radiohead offshoot and more.

Did you follow the news this week? Test your knowledge. And here's the front page of our Sunday paper, the Sunday Review from Opinion and today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

There are a lot of laughs behind the scenes. John Grippe

10. And finally, a goodbye.

After three years of guiding you through the weekend news, today is my last day as your Weekend Briefing writer.

My mission through it all has been simple: to bring you a steady voice in uncertain times, a glimpse into new worlds and something to smile about. It has been a journey, and I thank you for sticking by my side (even when I decided to give up melted cheese).

Looking ahead: My colleagues at The Morning have something special in store for you starting next week. In the meantime, you can continue to follow me every weeknight on The Evening Briefing.

Have a meaningful week.

Marcus Payadue compiled photos for this briefing.

Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6:30 a.m. Eastern.

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