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A disturbing video has reportedly shown Shanghai officials taking away an elderly man in a body bag.
The elderly man, however, is quickly discovered to be alive.
At least four health officials have lost their jobs over the incident, reports say.
The BBC has reported that four health officials carted away an elderly patient — who was believed to be dead — from a Shanghai care home.
In video that has since gone viral on social media, the officials can be seen wheeling the elderly man's body down the street and loading it a hearse before realizing that the elderly man was still alive.
The health officials can then be seen opening the bag. At least one worker can be heard confirming that the patient is, indeed, still alive.
The workers immediately recoil upon realizing the mistake and begin discussing what to do.
Local officials confirmed the incident on Monday and stated that the patient was transported to a local hospital, where he was admitted in stable condition.
Manya Koetse, editor in chief of What's on Weibo, tweeted the video and captioned it, "This is the video everyone's talking about today, showing how a Shanghai nursing home resident is taken away to the morgue in a body bag. At around 38 sec in the video, the staff member backs away and says: 'He's alive. He's alive, I saw it. Don't cover him anymore.'"
Koetse's video has been viewed more than 86,000 times at the time of this reporting.
This is the video everyone's talking about today, showing how a Shanghai nursing home resident is taken away to the morgue in a body bag. At around 38 sec in the video, the staff member backs away and says: "He's alive. He's alive, I saw it. Don't cover him anymore."pic.twitter.com/Y3HzRRpxUl— Manya Koetse (@Manya Koetse) 1651489159
CNN reported that the incident has sparked widespread condemnation across Chinese social media amid extreme COVID-19 lockdowns across the city.
"The problems in Shanghai are fully exposed this time," one user wrote.
Another added, "This counts as intentional homicide."
A third insisted, "The government doesn't care ... what is going on in Shanghai?"
Two years ago, the arrival of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States led governments at the federal, state, and local levels to adopt unprecedented restrictions and extraordinary economic interventions in the name of public health. Lock downs, social distancing requirements, and quarantine policies kept customers at home, shuttered businesses, interrupted schools, and put the economy on pause at great cost to mitigate the spread of the virus.
But was the cost worth it? A new comprehensive study seeks to answer that question by comparing health, economic, and educational outcomes in each state.
In the United States, there was never a top-down COVID-19 policy from Washington, D.C. Under the Constitution's federalist system, all 50 sovereign states were left to develop their own COVID-19 mitigation strategies. While most followed guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, others did not, with varying results.
The National Bureau of Economic Research published a working paper by three economists who wanted to examine how pandemic health, economy, and policy differed across all 50 states and the District of Columbia, and what the outcomes were for those states. The study considered health outcomes, economic performance throughout the pandemic, and the impact on education, assigning each state a letter grade based on these factors.
The study was authored by University of Chicago economist Casey Mulligan, the Heritage Foundation's Stephen Moore, and Committee to Unleash Prosperity President Phil Kerpen.
For economic performance, the researchers examined unemployment and GDP by state, adjusting for differences in the industry composition of each state. The impact on schooling was measured by how many students received in-person instruction for the 2020-2021 school year. And COVID-19 mortality was calculated by considering COVID-associated deaths reported to the CDC and all-cause excess mortality.
Though in the early months of the pandemic lockdowns were described as the best and most moral policy, the study found there was little correlation between health and economy scores, suggesting that "states that withdrew the most from economic activity did not significantly improve health by doing so."
The study also found "[p]andemic mortality was greater in states where obesity, diabetes, and old age were more prevalent before the pandemic." States' economies that had strong food and service industries were generally hit harder by social distancing and lock downs, but there were variations because of differences in policy.
New Jersey, New York, and California — which each imposed some of the toughest pandemic restrictions in the nation — had among the worst combined scores for mortality, economy, and schooling. Utah, Nebraska, and Vermont were among the best scoring states.
Utah had the fourth best score on the economy, the fifth best in education, and was eighth in COVID-19 mortality, a measure that was adjusted for each state population's age and rates of obesity and diabetes, which were the most common comorbidities for COVID-19 deaths.
From a working paper published by National Bureau of Economic Research discussed in story in WSJ. Notice on metrics of study (which included age adjusted mortality rate) Montana is 4th in nation for best outcomes dealing with Covid #mtpolpic.twitter.com/Ra3ynaV18g— Jeff Essmann (@Jeff Essmann) 1649648540
The 10 best-scoring states were all smaller states by population, with the notable exception of Florida, which ranked sixth overall. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) famously refused to order his state to lock down and was among the first governors to reopen schools, leading to accusations that he was endangering public health by reopening too early.
But in terms of outcomes, Florida ranked 28th in COVID-19 mortality, just under California, a state with draconian COVID-19 policies, which ranked 27th. Since Florida strove to open schools it came in third for education while California came in 50th place, and Florida's open economy ranked 13th while California's lock downs guaranteed it 40th place.
The 10 worst-scoring states were uniformly states with severe COVID-19 mitigation policies. New York, where disgraced former Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) became a media celebrity for his purported pandemic success story, ranked 49th overall. New Jersey, where Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy claims to have led "a comprehensive, responsible, and public health-focused response," came in last place with failing scores across the board.
NBER study found NJ\u2019s Covid response ranks last with a mis\u00ader\u00adable per\u00adfor\u00admance across the board. @GovMurphy didn\u2019t save lives, but he did sav\u00adage the econ\u00adomy and pun\u00adish stu\u00addents as he fol\u00adlowed the teach\u00aders union de\u00admands on school clo\u00adsures to rank 41st on ed\u00adu\u00adca\u00adtion!pic.twitter.com/Z7OJLszk9Z— Ed Miller\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Ed Miller\ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1649692939
In the final analysis, states that locked down their economies and kept children from going to school did not achieve significantly better health outcomes than the states that reopened and stayed open.
The Biden administration's top public health officials are warning that a highly infectious coronavirus subvariant now spreading in the U.S. could herald the return of COVID-19 restrictions, including mandatory masking or potentially even lockdowns.
U.S. officials are closely monitoring the BA.2 Omicron subvariant's spread in America after this strain of the coronavirus caused a surge of infections in Europe. Authorities in the United Kingdom have estimated that this subvariant spreads 80% faster than the original Omicron strain, although it does not appear to be more likely to cause hospitalization.
Even so, White House chief medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci on Thursday warned that Americans are likely to experience a surge in COVID-19 cases just like Europe, and depending on its severity, the government may put some restrictions back in place.
"We generally follow what goes on in the U.K. by about two to three weeks. So we better pay close attention to what's going on there.," Fauci told CNN's Jake Tapper in an interview.
"What they're seeing is an uptick in cases that are related both to the increased transmissibility to the virus, the waning of immunity, but also the fact that they're opening up the way we are here and the way other countries in other parts of Europe and other parts of the world and pulling back on mask mandates and things like that," Fauci said.
He attributed the lifting of coronavirus restrictions to "an uptick in cases," but noted that scientists in Europe are not reporting an increase in severity of disease.
"For example, their ICU bed usage, their intensive care unit bed usage is not up, and the overall mortality, the overall all-cause mortality is actually down," Fauci said. "So it's a very interesting situation where the cases are going up, but it does not at this point in time appear to be any degree of severity."
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky made similar comments Thursday, observing that the spread of BA.2 in Europe indicates that the U.S. is likely to see an increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations as restrictions intended to slow the spread are ended.
"We're following this very carefully. We might expect as we open up, as well as we relax many of our mitigation strategies, that we may have some increase in cases related to BA.2," she said.
At the end of February, the CDC created a new framework for evaluating the severity of COVID-19 in America, and under that framework the agency determined that about 70% of Americans lived in parts of the country where it was safe to ditch face masks. In accordance with that guidance, many states and localities that were hesitant to drop mask mandates have now done so.
Fauci said the CDC was not wrong to change its guidance, but cautioned that the government must remain "flexible" and adapt to new circumstances in the event a future coronavirus strain proves to be dangerous.
"We need to be flexible, and if in fact we do see a turnaround and a resurgence, we have to be able to pivot and go back to any degree of mitigation that is commensurate with what the situation is," Fauci said.
The pandemic is not over, he warned, and that means COVID-19 restrictions are still on the table if things get worse.
"We can't just say that 'we are done now; we're going to move on.' We've got to be able to be flexible, because we are dealing with a dynamic situation."
He also emphasized the need for people who have been vaccinated to get a booster shot, if they have not already, because of "waning immunity."
"Only about 50 percent of the people who were eligible to be vaccinated have gotten their boost. And we still have only 65 percent of the total population fully vaccinated," Fauci said. " If we want to be able to have a buffer against the possibility of there being a resurgence, there are things that we can do right now about that."