Cartoon – Rights vs. Wrongs

May be a cartoon of standing and text that says '& "I told him as an expert in the field strongly recommend wearing it, but he just kept bringing up his 'rights'"'

Are Camps the Canary in the Coal Mine?

https://view.newsletters.time.com/?qs=5d3d457b67316844231fb3a418df549f286d7bc0e36c82fa4549eb4e171aee9219ecdde5a06ac8a6afa2f47c9bdd793ee8aff390a8f6971c0cdb0a83a542f2bac72c3583aaf33ed18d36b9ee33bd0e95

What your kid needs to learn at summer camp

With August just around the corner, COVID-19 cases surging and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) again recommending indoor masking for many vaccinated people, parents and health officials are gearing up for tough choices around school reopening.

My colleague Tara Law has a new story on an issue that may foreshadow what’s to come for schools: COVID-19 outbreaks at summer camps.

Tara focused on a camp in Galveston County, Texas, which has been linked to 157 COVID-19 cases. The camp, which was for kids in grades six through 12, reportedly did little to enforce social distancing and few campers wore masks—even though pediatric vaccination rates in the area are low. The outbreak was likely the result of “a partially vaccinated group of people all getting together and everyone acting…like they were all vaccinated,” one expert told Tara.

That statement has big implications for schools trying to reopen this coming fall. With vaccines still not authorized for children younger than 12, and less than half of 12- to 17-year-olds nationwide fully vaccinated, there will be millions of unprotected children returning to school soon.

With the Delta variant spreading, the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics say all students and staff should wear masks in school. (The CDC initially said in guidance published July 9 that vaccinated people could go without masks, but the agency reversed that decision yesterday.) But, as camp outbreaks show, it can be difficult to enforce those policies to the letter, particularly in states—like Texas—where elected officials have barred public schools from requiring any students to wear masks.

“Because actually following rules is an important piece of prevention, schools have the advantage of being more controlled environments than camps,” Tara says. We’ll see this fall how well they do.

Read more here.

Today’s Coronavirus Outlook

https://view.newsletters.time.com/?qs=5d3d457b67316844231fb3a418df549f286d7bc0e36c82fa4549eb4e171aee9219ecdde5a06ac8a6afa2f47c9bdd793ee8aff390a8f6971c0cdb0a83a542f2bac72c3583aaf33ed18d36b9ee33bd0e95

Nearly 396 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been shipped to various U.S. states as of this afternoon, of which some 343.4 million doses had been administered, according to TIME’s vaccine tracker. About 49.3% of Americans had been completely vaccinated.

More than 195.3 million people around the world had been diagnosed with COVID-19 as of 1 a.m. E.T. today, and nearly 4.2 million people have died. On July 27, there were 614,584 new cases and 9,937 new deaths confirmed globally.

Here’s how the world as a whole is currently trending:

And here’s every country that has reported over 3 million cases:

The U.S. had recorded more than 34.6 million coronavirus cases as of 1 a.m. E.T. today. More than 611,000 people have died. On July 27, there were 70,740 new cases and 462 new deaths confirmed in the U.S.

Here’s how the country as a whole is currently trending:

Here’s where daily cases have risen or fallen over the last 14 days, shown in confirmed cases per 100,000 residents:

All numbers unless otherwise specified are from the Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering, and are accurate as of July 28, 1 a.m. E.T. To see larger, interactive versions of these maps and charts, click here.

Tax-to-GDP Ratio: Comparing Tax Systems Around the World