New revelations of Covid-19 - media review 1) In the midst of a new outbreak of the epidemic, a symbolic milestone has been overcome, now more vaccinated people with severe Covid than unvaccinated people are admitted to intensive care every day. These numbers are not the invention of individual vaccine opponents. These are completely official data from DREES, the statistical office of the French Ministry of Health. So, we learn that on October 31 (the date of the latest data) 26 vaccinated against 23 unvaccinated were sent to the intensive care unit. The same is observed with ordinary hospitalizations, writes the journalist Le Figaro (https://bit.ly/30yGO5r) Cecile Tiber. 2) Israel's COVID-19 infection rate, known as the R number - the average number of people each carrier of the coronavirus infects - has risen to its highest level in two months. The R-number is now 0.95, and a number greater than 1 indicates that the outbreak is intensifying. However, experts say the growth does not indicate that the downward trend in infection in Israel has reversed, but simply indicates that the rate of decline in virus activity has slowed down, according to Haaretz (https://bit.ly/3qP1IZa). 3) Repeated quarantines due to the global COVID-19 pandemic have led to record rates of overweight among children, according to The Daily Telegraph (https://bit.ly/3cqfJnP). Moreover, not only schoolchildren suffer from this problem, but even children five years of age and younger, the article notes. Experts warn that obesity can lead to a range of serious diseases, from liver problems to diabetes and even cancer, the article emphasizes. 4) An analysis of what we know of the earliest cases of COVID-19 supports the theory that the coronavirus pandemic began when the virus was transmitted to humans from animals at the Huangan market in Wuhan, China. Among other things, the analysis concludes that the first case of infection was a woman who worked as a seafood seller in the market: she became ill on December 11, 2019, reports New Scientist (https://bit.ly/3cwsHQV). A WHO report on the origins of SARS-Cov2, released earlier this year, said the first person known to have had Covid fell ill on December 8 and had nothing to do with the market. This is partly why the report says that no firm conclusions can be drawn about the role of the market. However, this man, a 41-year-old accountant who lives 30 kilometers from the market, went to the hospital on December 8 for dental problems and only developed coronavirus symptoms on December 16, says Michael Warobay of the University of Arizona in his analysis.