What you need to know about the coronavirus right now

Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccination campaign in Ronda
Oliver Ortega, 13, receives the second dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech “Comirnaty” vaccine against coronavirus as his twin-brother Aitor waits his turn, at a vaccination centre in Ronda, Spain.
REUTERS/Jon Nazca

Here’s what you need to know about the coronavirus right now:

U.S. gives third vaccine dose to over 1 million people

The United States has administered a third dose of either Pfizer Inc-BioNTech or Moderna Inc’s COVID-19 vaccines to over 1 million people since Aug. 13, when regulators authorized an additional shot for immunocompromised people.

The CDC recommends a third dose at least 28 days after the second dose of either Pfizer or Moderna vaccines for people with moderate to severely compromised immune systems, who are likely to have weaker protection from the two-dose regimens.

Australian doctors warn of risks to hospitals once curbs ease

Australian doctors on Thursday warned the country’s hospitals are not ready to cope with the government’s reopening plans, even with higher vaccination rates, as some states prepare to move from a virus suppression strategy to living with COVID-19.

The Australian Medical Association (AMA) said the health system was in danger of being locked into a “permanent cycle of crisis” and has called for new modeling to check if staffing levels in hospitals can withstand an expected surge in cases when lockdown rules ease.

Pfizer, Merck launch new trials of oral COVID-19 drugs

Pfizer Inc and Merck & Co Inc announced on Wednesday new trials of their experimental oral antiviral drugs for COVID-19 as the race to develop an easy-to-administer treatment for the potentially fatal illness heats up.

Rivals Pfizer and Merck, along with Swiss pharmaceutical Roche Holding AG, have made the most progress in developing what would be the first antiviral pill to treat, or possibly prevent, COVID-19.

South Korean health workers drop strike plans after agreement

South Korean frontline health workers on Thursday dropped plans to strike after they reached an agreement with the government on their demand for increased staffing and better work conditions during last-ditch negotiations overnight.

The Korean Health and Medical Worker’s Union had warned some of its 80,000 members, including nurses, medical engineers, and pharmacists who say they are exhausted from battling waves of COVID-19 outbreaks, would begin striking from Thursday if their demands were not met. Upon the union’s request, the government agreed to establish at least four public infectious disease hospitals by 2024, draft a detailed nurse deployment guidelines per severity of COVID-19 patients by October, and expand funding to subsidize those treating contagious diseases to go into effect in January 2022.

Spain fully vaccinates 70% of its population

Spain said on Wednesday 70% of its population had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19, fulfilling a goal set by the government for August, while the incidence rate kept the decreasing tendency of the past month after a big surge.

With over 66 million doses administered, 70.3% of the Spanish population had received by Aug. 31 a complete vaccination program while 77% had been partially vaccinated, Health Ministry data showed.

Reuters