Pregnant women 'can pass on Covid-19 antibodies to their babies'
Pregnant women can pass on Covid-19 antibodies to their babies, a new study has found.
“I just spat coffee in my cornflakes,’ one surprised viewer said
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Parents of Gigi Morse, 6, say she seemed fine except for a few unusual ailments.
European Union leaders challenged Emmanuel Macron over his inaccurate claims that the AstraZeneca vaccine was “quasi-ineffectual”, it emerged on Wednesday. The French president said the jab did not appear to work on the over 65s in late January just hours before the EU’s medicines regulator approved it for use on all adults. A senior EU official revealed that Mr Macron was asked about his comments, which have been linked to a reluctance in some European countries to take the AstraZeneca jab. EU leaders have held regular video summits, including one on Thursday where they will call for coronavirus restrictions to continue, since the pandemic. “The point was raised by some leaders indeed. I cannot say who and when it was raised,” the official said. “There are in some countries some doubts and I think that the question was more to get clarification on if it was true or not and since then I think the commission has reacted to this." Ursula von der Leyen, the commission president, said on Tuesday she “would take the AstraZeneca vaccine without a second thought”. People in Europe are reluctant to have the jab after Mr Macron’s comments and inaccurate German reports about the vaccine. The EU was “catching up” with Britain on vaccinations Mrs von der Leyen said,as she branded the British strategy of delaying the second dose as “risky”. She responded to criticism that the EU vaccination roll out was too slow by pointing out that 130 countries in the world had had no jabs at all. “We're catching up. Britain has administered 17 million first doses. There are 27 million in the EU. In Italy, with a population similar to that of Great Britain, twice as many citizens received full vaccination protection with the second dose as in the UK,” she said. Britain used faster emergency authorisation procedures to approve vaccines than the EU. The UK negotiated for doses alone after rejecting an offer from Brussels last year to join the EU joint procurement scheme.
England's Covid catch-up plan for pupils: summer schools and tutoringCritics say measures to close attainment gap including £400m extra funding do not go far enoughCoronavirus – latest updatesSee all our coronavirus coverage A yawning educational divide has opened up between poor children and their more advantaged peers with schools closed due to coronavirus. Photograph: Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images
Advice will reportedly be updated to tell people to use their best judgement.
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Mount Etna’s explosions reached a peak on Monday as lava fountains reached 1,500 meters in height.Speaking to the Guardian, volcano expert Boris Behncke from the National Institute of Geophysics in Catania, said that Mount Etna’s latest explosion was “one of the most spectacular eruptions of recent decades.”Volcano enthusiastic Giuseppe Tonzuso filmed an explosion video just seven kilometers away from the mountain on late February 22 and into the early hours of February 23. The hot red lava brings up thousands of rock fragments into the sky, the video shows.“This is undoubtedly the most energetic event of the sequence,” Tonzuso told Storyful. Credit: Giuseppe Tonzuso via Storyful
Michael Gove to lead review of ‘complex ethical issues’, says PM
The European Union is catching up with Britain on coronavirus vaccinations, Ursula von der Leyen said as she called the British strategy of delaying the second dose too risky. The European Commission president responded to criticism that the EU vaccination rollout was too slow by pointing out that 130 countries in the world had had no jabs at all. Mrs von der Leyen said more than twice the number of Italians than Britons had had both jabs, and the EU as a whole had given out more first doses. "We're catching up. Britain has administered 17 million first doses. There are 27 million in the EU. In Italy, with a population similar to that of Great Britain, twice as many citizens received full vaccination protection with the second dose as in the UK," she said. She told the Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper: "I think it's risky to simply postpone the second vaccination. We should adhere to the specifications that the manufacturers determined in their extensive clinical tests." In the UK, 27.47 doses per 100 people have been administered compared to just 6.12 across the EU. In France, 5.7 jabs per 100 people have been given, with the figure 6.1 in Germany.
The couple had a visit from the police and have beefed up their home security.
She said she wanted to fight for their relationship.
The chorus of banging pots and pans begins in Chinatown at about 8pm. The district in Myanmar's commercial city of Yangon is normally festooned with bright red lanterns to celebrate Chinese New Year. But when the Year of the Ox arrived in mid-February, the usual festive atmosphere was gone - replaced by a tension in the air. Here, and across the country, swelling ranks of young ethnic Chinese protesters are joining mass rallies against the brutal junta that abruptly deposed Aung San Suu Kyi's government. Many are united by rumours, circulated widely among the protest movement, that China is helping the regime install a repressive new internet system akin to one across the border that severely restricts online freedoms behind a 'Great Firewall'.
Dr Jenny Harries said children hugging grandparents should be avoided 'until we’re absolutely sure' about the effectiveness of COVID vaccines.
Scottish government is acting like ‘cesspit of vipers’ over Salmond saga, claims Tory MSP
Republican Senator Ron Johnson has suggested ‘fake Trump supporters’ provoked the Capitol riot, despite a preponderance of evidence right-wingers were responsible
‘Love Island’ presenter’s mother accuses prosecutors of pursuing ‘show trial’ before her death
Cartoonist said casting was ‘never designed to exclude anyone’
Jenny Harries tells Downing Street briefing people may ‘not need to be wearing masks all that time’ during summer months
Former first minister expected to answer questions at inquiry hearing on Friday