2B Saturday, May 30, 2020 The Observer & Baker City Herald CAMPING AND OTHER OUTDOOR PURSUITS DURING THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC Responsible recreation ■ Outdoor groups urging recreationists to be considerate to others this summer By Dennis Anderson Star Tribune (Minneapolis) MINNEAPOLIS — To its credit, a cadre of wildlife and outdoor groups has banded together to set guidelines, al- beit modest ones, for campers, anglers, hunters, hikers and other outdoor recreationists during the pandemic. One of the group’s sug- gestions is to adhere to best practices for avoiding the coronavirus. Follow state and federal guidelines is another. And still another: “Pack out your trash as a courtesy to others and to avoid the ap- pearance of overuse.” This effort — #responsi- blerecreation — has been signed onto by many of the nation’s conservation heavyweights, including the National Wild Turkey Federation and the Theo- dore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. On the umbrella group’s website (responsible-recre- ation.org), a handful of proc- lamations by leaders of these outfi ts urge outdoors types to be considerate. Becky Humphries, for example, chief executive of the National Wild Turkey Federation, offers that “this collaborative effort by the outdoor community is a re- minder that while this coun- try has numerous opportuni- ties for recreation on its lands and waters, we need to do so in a manner that is respectful to the land and the rest of the public who also wish to enjoy these precious resources.” Like others of the group’s directives, including those by Jeff Crane, president of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation, Humphries’ admonition, by design, is quintessentially milquetoast. Meaning, by Webster’s defi nition, “Very timid, unas- sertive.” So timid that her decree, such as it is, recalls other soft-sell generalities issued to outdoor users over the years, including “don’t litter”; its hippie-like variant, “leave no trace”; and the please, pretty-please plea to boaters to “clean, drain and dry” their watercraft to avoid spreading invasive species. Also there’s this doozy from the #responsiblerecreation bunch: “Share your adven- tures in a respectful way on social outlets.” Sewage study could lead to early warning for COVID-19 outbreaks By Emily Brindley Hartford Courant Dennis Anderson / Minneapolis Star Tribune-TNS Vacationing and camping in the time of coronavirus: Consideration of other people, their health and surroundings, should be a priority. Ultimately, such coddling isn’t intended to achieve a positive measurable result. The goal instead is to make the issuer feel good about going through the motions of “taking a stand” for the en- vironment, conservation, the green new deal, solar power, hybrid cars — whatever — by suggesting ever so gently that the message recipient, the outdoors enthusiast — a descriptor with universal application — might want to consider, you know, if they have time, abiding by some minimum standard of be- havior while boating, hiking, fi shing, biking or otherwise being a tourist. News fl ash: • From Memorial Day weekend on, Americans will migrate outdoors in near- record numbers. Another: • Amid the current pan- demic, in which more, not fewer, hospitalizations and more, not fewer, deaths are predicted in Minnesota in coming months, it’s likely only a minority of these va- cationers will adhere to the basics necessary to mitigate further transmission of the coronavirus. I know because I’ve seen it. Fishermen stroll into fi sh-cleaning houses that are already occupied. Boaters crowd onto docks that are already crowded with other boaters. And hikers, bicyclists and cabin owners stop for gas and bathroom breaks while heading to Brainerd, the North Shore or other destina- tions outstate ... with none of them, or very few, wearing masks. Two points: • Worldwide, coronavirus infections grew by 1 million in the past two weeks, and a single-day record 33 deaths was reported May 22 in Minnesota. The virus is ex- tremely contagious, especially indoors. If you get it, you might have no problem. Or you might die. • The risk that cops, con- servation offi cers, paramed- ics, ambulance drivers, doc- tors and nurses will contract COVID-19 and perhaps die, increases when the people they serve don’t make efforts to minimize transmission of the virus. The paradox of this soon-to- occur summertime scattering of campers, boaters, anglers, paddlers and other vacation- ers into the hinterlands is that people who live in these rural areas, where the virus is generally less prevalent per capita, are nervous that the SUV-driving urbanites whose cash they otherwise covet might tote with them, in addition to little Jimmy, Joanie and Fido the dog, the coronavirus. Yet — this is the paradoxi- cal part — the farther one drives from the Twin Cities, the more cavalier people ap- pear about the virus. Gloves? Masks? Social distancing? Too often, it’s not happening. Exceptions exist. One is the Holiday station in Milaca, along Highway 169. Not only do shields at that location separate customers from cashiers, the cashiers wear masks. Additionally, posted on the dividers, staring customers in the face, are signs saying: “I wear my mask to protect you. You wear your mask to protect me.” Unfortunately for the outfi t’s employees, of the three times I visited the sta- tion recently, only one other customer besides me wore a mask. Read this far and still haven’t caught the drift? Here it is, sans coddling: When vacationing this summer, especially while indoors in public places — whether campground bathrooms, grocery stores, wayside rests or gas stations — do the right thing. Wash your hands. Keep a bottle of sanitizer handy. Practice social distancing. And, as Dr. Deborah Birx, kingpin of the White House coronavirus task force, said Friday: When near other people, wear a mask. By studying sewage at a New Haven, Connecti- cut, wastewater treatment facility, a team of Yale researchers has determined that genetic code em- bedded in feces could be used as an early warning sign of COVID-19 outbreaks. The team, led by Jordan Peccia of the Yale School of Engineering and Applied Science, tested daily samples of sludge for bits of coronavirus code, known as RNA. They then found that they could use just their own data to recreate the curve of COVID-19 cases in the New Haven area. “Except we see it seven days earlier,” Before you’re Peccia said. symptomatic and after The study, which you’re infected, you can was posted online certainly shed that virus Friday but has not yet been peer-re- and be infectious. As soon viewed, has impli- as you start shedding it, cations for Connect- whether you feel it or not, icut’s coronavirus response. For the we’re gonna see it in the fi rst two months wastewater.” of the pandemic, — Jordan Peccia, Yale School the state struggled of Engineering and Applied to increase testing capacity. Even now, Science after a major test- ing ramp-up, clinical testing focuses on those who have symptoms. That means patients often aren’t tested until they begin showing symptoms, or may not be tested at all if they remain asymptomatic. In the meantime, they could be silently spreading the virus. But sewage keeps a record of all cases. “Before you’re symptomatic and after you’re infected, you can certainly shed that virus and be infectious,” Peccia said. “As soon as you start shed- ding it, whether you feel it or not, we’re gonna see it in the wastewater.” For their study, Peccia and his team collected daily sewage samples from the East Shore Water Pollution Abatement Facility in New Haven, from mid-March until May 1. They tested each sample’s concentration of coronavirus RNA and then com- pared those daily concentrations to actual data on COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations in the towns served by the water treatment facility. They found that the concentration of coronavirus RNA increased and decreased several days before corresponding fl uctuations in actual COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations, as reported by the local hospital and the state. According to the study, the sludge samples predicted hospitalization fl uctuations three days before they occurred, and testing data fl uctuations seven days before they occurred. “I think it’s pretty self-evident that if you can see what’s going on earlier, that’s better,” Peccia said. Sewage has been used as a public health indica- tor long before COVID-19 came on the scene, Pec- cia said. See Study/Page 3B Merck joins race to create coronavirus vaccine Ebola vaccine is built. Both experimental immuniza- PHILADELPHIA — Merck, a tions are completing testing in global leader in vaccine develop- animals, and should begin human ment, is joining the frenzied rush testing later this year, Merck said to vanquish the coronavirus, an- in news releases. nouncing Tuesday that it is work- Merck is also collaborating with ing on two vaccine candidates and Miami-based Ridgeback Biothera- a potential drug therapy. peutics on an oral antiviral treat- Merck, which has its headquar- ment that was invented at Emory ters in New Jersey and has several University and has undergone facilities in Pennsylvania, is back- initial human safety tests. ing two vaccines that involve “COVID-19 is an enormous sci- genetically engineering an inacti- entifi c, medical, and global health vated virus as a vehicle to deliver challenge. Merck is collaborating proteins that provoke an immune with organizations around the response to the coronavirus. globe to develop anti-infectives Merck has acquired Vienna- and vaccines that aim to alleviate based Themis, which is using a suffering caused by SARS-CoV-2 weakened strain of the measles infection,” Roger M. Perlmutter, virus as the delivery vehicle. Merck president of Merck Research Labo- is also partnering with IAVI, a ratories, said in a statement. nonprofi t research organization, Around the world, research is on a coronavirus vaccine that uses hurtling forward on more than 150 VSV (vesicular stomatitis virus) vaccines and 350 drugs intended to as the delivery vehicle. VSV is the relieve the pandemic’s devastation. same technology on which Merck’s Merck had been conspicuously By Marie McCullough The Philadelphia Inquirer absent from the list of developers, including Pfi zer, GlaxoSmithKline, Moderna, Inovio Pharmaceuticals, and research centers such as Phil- adelphia-based Wistar Institute and Thomas Jefferson University. But with more than 125 years at the scientifi c forefront and break- throughs such as the cervical cancer vaccine Gardasil, Merck is a noteworthy addition. New vaccines traditionally take a decade or more to come to market, from invention to approval to mass production. Nonetheless, experts have said a coronavirus vaccine using some of the latest technologies might be available by mid-2021. Perlmutter sounded more cau- tious in an interview with STAT News. “I think the clinical develop- ment is going to take longer than people imagine,” he said. “And I Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hate to sound what some people This illustration provided by the Centers for Disease Control and may regard as a sour note, but I Prevention shows the 2019 novel coronavirus. don’t want to overpromise.”