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Antibody Treatment Shows Improvement in Patients With Mild to Moderate Infection

NSW Health Approves a Happy COVID-Safe Halloween

NSW Health has given his approval for Halloween celebrations to occur ahead of the celebration on Saturday as long as the levels of community transmission of the CCP virus remain low. “Halloween celebrations will need to be a little different this year due to COVID-19, and we are urging everyone in the community to play their part,” Dr. Jeremy McAnulty, executive director of NSW Health Protection, said. According to NSW Health, people planning on celebrating Halloween should only go out if they have no symptoms of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) virus, commonly known as coronavirus. Those with symptoms are asked to stay home and get tested. NSW Health also asked those participating in a COVID-Safe Halloween to only trick or treat in a household group and maintain a 1.5-meter distance from…

Antibody Treatment Shows Improvement in Patients With Mild to Moderate Infection

Eli Lilly’s neutralizing antibody LY-CoV555 has shown improvement in treating patients with mild to moderate cases of the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus.

In a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Oct. 28, the company stated that from the interim analysis of the data, patients have shown an improvement. The patients recruited in this study were individuals who tested positive for the disease caused by the CCP virus within the past three days but aren’t hospitalized.

The study, which ran from July 17 to Aug. 21, recruited a total of 467 patients, 452 of whom had their data used for the interim analysis.

Moreover, nearly 70 percent of patients also have at least one risk factor for COVID-19 such as a high body mass index (35 or more), old age (65 or older), or an ongoing relevant illness.

During the trial, patients were randomly selected to receive either the treatment or the placebo. 143 patients received the placebo, and 309 received the neutralizing antibody treatment. Those who received the treatment were further broken down into three groups based on the dosage given—700 mg, 2800 mg, or 7000 mg.

After analyzing the data received from the patients, the company stated that the study dealt with patients infected with a mild or moderate case of the CCP virus infection, and compared to those who were given the placebo, patients who received doses of the neutralizing antibody treatment LY-CoV555 were found to have a lower amount of viral load.

Moreover, out of the three subgroups who received different doses of the neutralizing antibody treatment, only the subgroup that received the 2800 mg showed “evidence of accelerated viral clearance.” However, the study indicated that more research needed to be conducted in order to determine the effectiveness of the other doses.

In determining the frequency of hospitalization, the data showed that “the patients who received LY-CoV555 had fewer hospitalizations and a lower symptom burden than those who received placebo.”

Results showed that by day 29, 6.3 percent of the patients who received the placebo required hospitalization, whereas only 1.6 percent of the patients who received the treatment required hospitalization.

This was also observed in patients who had at least one risk factor, in which the data indicated a higher percentage of the requirement of hospitalization. Results showed that 14.6 percent of those who received the placebo required hospitalization, whereas only 4.2 percent of those who received the treatment required hospitalization.

“If these results are confirmed in additional analyses in this trial, LY-CoV555 could become a useful treatment for emergency use in patients with recently diagnosed Covid-19,” the study stated.

This comes as a statement issued by Eli Lilly stated that they are “confident in the potential benefits of neutralizing antibodies in patients earlier in the disease course of COVID-19.”

Focus News: Antibody Treatment Shows Improvement in Patients With Mild to Moderate Infection

Pompeo Criticizes Beijing, Hong Kong Government Over Use of National Security Law Against Student Activists

In mid-October, a State Department report highlighted the erosion of the city’s freedoms following Beijing’s implementation of its so-called national security law, which punishes vaguely-defined crimes such as succession and subversion of the one-party communist state with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. Studentlocalism took to its social media Tuesday morning announcing that 19-year-old Chung had been missing since 8 a.m. local time. It later confirmed that Chung was being detained at the city’s Central Police District headquarters. According to the South China Morning Post, Chung was detained by the Hong Kong Police’s national security unit near the U.S. Consulate. U.K.-based group Friends of Hong Kong told Hong Kong newspaper Apple Daily that Chung was on his way to the U.S. consulate seeking political asylum. That same afternoon, Studentlocalism also…