Saturday, April 25, 2026

More than half of pregnant women in UK hospitals with Covid-19 are minorities, study finds

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Researchers led by the University of Oxford’s Nuffield Department of Population Health warned that although transmission of the virus to infants was uncommon and most women had “good outcomes,” the high proportion of infected women from black or minority backgrounds “needs urgent investigation and explanation.”

The latest study is based on data from the UK’s Obstetric Surveillance System, a national system established to study a range of rare disorders of pregnancy.

The researchers said that of 427 pregnant women admitted to hospital with Covid-19 between March 1 and April 14, more than half were from minority groups, including 25% who were Asian and 22% who were black.

Most of the women were in their late second or third trimester, 70% were overweight or obese, 40% were aged 35 or over, and a third had pre-existing conditions, the researchers said.

The study noted that while published evidence on the rate, transmission and effect of coronavirus infection in pregnancy is limited, some evidence had suggested that pregnant women and their babies are at greater risk of severe illness and death.
However, an April study published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecolocy found that the majority of pregnant women who are diagnosed with coronavirus don’t experience more severe illness than the general population.

Twelve babies born to mothers in the study tested positive for coronavirus, six of them within the first 12 hours of their lives.

UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock has warned that being black or from a ethnic minority background was a “major” Covid-19 risk factor.

In an address to parliament last week, Hancock said there was “much more work to do to understand the key drivers of these disparities, the relationships between the different risk factors and what we can do to close the gap.”

Public Health England’s analysis found that the link between ethnicity and health was “complex and likely to be the result of a combination of factors.”

“Firstly, people of BAME [black and minority ethnic] communities are likely to be at increased risk of acquiring the infection,” the government review said, noting that minorities are more likely to live in urban areas, in overcrowded households, in deprived areas, and have jobs that expose them to higher risk.

“People of BAME groups are also more likely than people of white British ethnicity to be born abroad, which means they may face additional barriers in accessing services that are created by, for example, cultural and language differences,” it added.

The groups are “also likely to be at increased risk of poorer outcomes once they acquire the infection,” the agency’s report found.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet also warned that Covid-19 had exposed inequalities within society and was having a disproportionate impact on racial and ethnic minorities, including people of African descent.

CNN’s Zamira Rahim contributed to this report.

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Refinery29 Editor Resigns After Former Employees Describe ‘Toxic Culture’

The women’s lifestyle publication Refinery29 is the latest media organization to undergo a change in leadership during the cultural reckoning that has accompanied the widespread protests against racism and police violence.

Christene Barberich, the top editor and a co-founder of the 15-year-old site, said on Monday that she would step down after a number of former Refinery29 employees came forward on social media in recent days to describe discrimination they experienced while working at the company.

“I’ve read and taken in the raw and personal accounts of Black women and women of color regarding their experiences inside our company at Refinery29,” Ms. Barberich wrote in a post on Instagram. “And, what’s clear from these experiences, is that R29 has to change. We have to do better, and that starts with making room. And, so I will be stepping aside in my role at R29 to help diversify our leadership in editorial and ensure this brand and the people it touches can spark a new defining chapter.”

Ms. Barberich, 51, will step down from her job immediately but will stay on as an adviser until the fall, according to two people with knowledge of the matter. Ms. Barberich did not reply to a request for comment.

The writer Ashley C. Ford was one of the former employees who described her experience on Twitter. “I worked at Refinery29 for less than nine months due to a toxic company culture where white women’s egos ruled the near nonexistent editorial processes,” she wrote. “One of the founders consistently confused myself and one our full-time front desk associates & pay disparity was atrocious.”

A former Refinery29 senior editor, Ashley Alese Edwards, who now works at Google, wrote on Twitter that the concerns she raised were routinely ignored and that her job title did not reflect her experience or duties at the company.

“I’m happy to see this,” Ms. Edwards said after Ms. Barberich’s departure. “It’s a step in the right direction. I hope this sparks conversation and change in other newsrooms as well, because this is not an issue unique to just Refinery29.”

There has been a reckoning at media organizations as hundreds of thousands of demonstrators in the United States and abroad have joined the protests prompted by the killing of George Floyd, a black man who died last month in Minneapolis after a white police officer handcuffed him and pinned him to the ground with his knee.

The editorial page editor of The New York Times, James Bennet, resigned on Sunday after Times staff members and readers objected to the publication of an essay by a United States senator calling for the military to quell protests in American cities.

The top editor of The Philadelphia Inquirer, Stan Wischnowski, resigned on Saturday after dozens of staff members walked out in response to an Inquirer article with the headline “Buildings Matter, Too,” a reference to the slogan “Black Lives Matter,” a rallying cry for civil rights activists.

Vice Media acquired Refinery29 and its ancillary businesses in October in a deal valued at about $400 million. Vice Media’s chief executive, Nancy Dubuc, said in an email Monday to the staffs of Vice and Refinery29 that the company would overhaul its hiring and retention practices to “ensure equal opportunity and an inclusive culture.”

Ms. Dubuc added that Ms. Barberich’s move was “an acceleration of a conversation Christene and I have been having since Vice’s acquisition of R29 and she asked that we make the change immediately over the past few days.”

The Refinery29 Union, part of the Writers Guild of America, East, said in a statement that it supported the departure of Ms. Barberich. “Our list of demands is long,” it added, “and we’re working with management to also address the systemic issues that hinder and hurt our past and present employees.”



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Pride 2020: Your guide to virtual events in June

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Welcome to 🏳️‍🌈TNW Pride 2020!🏳️‍🌈 All throughout June we’ll highlight articles that focus on representation for LGBTQPIA+ people in the STEM communities. Click here to check out all of our Pride 2020 coverage. 

Reports of Pride’s cancellation are greatly exaggerated. The annual celebration may not feature the parades and vivacious crowds it’s become known for, but it’s still here and it’s still queer. You’ll just have to attend most of the events online.

COVID-19 and civil unrest over the murder of George Floyd have taken Pride parades off the streets for the first time in its 50 year history. This is a bitter pill for the queer community. For many, Pride is the only place they’re allowed to be themselves.

But Pride is more than a celebration of queer culture. It also commemorates the Stonewall Riots, where hundreds of people stood up against injustice and police brutality.

On June 28th, 1969 a group of queers and queens stood up to the state-perpetuated bigotry and violence of the New York Police Department. They rioted for six days. As a result, the laws surrounding entrapment and homosexuality were changed. After decades of police violence, queers had finally had enough.

8,000 people marched through the streets of New York City on June 28th, 1970 to commemorate the Stonewall Riots and let the US government know that queers would no longer be intimidated by corrupt, bigoted policing.

And while many things have changed, far too much remains the same as we prepare to celebrate Pride 50. US police have only gotten worse. The iconic photographs from the 1950s and 1960s featuring police loosing dogs on peaceful black protesters and using fire hoses for crowd control have been replaced by hundreds of videos showing thousands of police attacking and assaulting peaceful protesters with tear gas and rubber bullets.

These are not different struggles. Violence against black queers occurs at higher rates than other queer communities and trans black women are murdered at higher rates than nearly any other group. Black Lives Matter.

That’s why it’s more important now than ever to go forth with Pride. Black members of the LGBTQPIA+ community will still be black and queer when the protests end whether real police reform happens. And beyond that, both black and queer people face systemic discrimination that goes far beyond the immediate threat to survival represented by racist/bigoted law enforcement.

Pride, whether virtual or not, gives queer folk and our allies the opportunity to see each other and to feel seen. We need that now more than ever.

And that’s why we hope everyone, queer or straight, will join us in celebration and commemoration. For many queers, attending Pride has never been an option – whether due to disability or illness, geography, or not being out. So this year represents the first time that Pride is accessible for almost everyone.

Here’s a small smattering of free events from around the world available for everyone to attend virtually. We’ll update this list throughout the month as more information becomes available.

NYC Pride

The first Pride parade marched through the streets of New York, and NYC Pride is the result. This group will put on several events including:

  • Criminal Queerness Festival 2020 (June 9 – 29)
  • Pride 2020 Dragfest (June 19 – 21)
  • The Virtual Rally (Friday June 26)

Check out the NYC Pride site for details.

Global Pride 2020

The organizers of EuroPride and hundreds of other Pride events around the world have put together a 24-hour global extravaganza of exciting performances, spoken word, and other events that will include some of the biggest names in show biz and world leaders including heads of states and royalty.

The festivities take place starting June 27, click here for details.

San Francisco Pride

SF Pride is holding an Online Celebration and Rally on June 27 and 28. You can get more details here.

San Diego Pride

Several online events sponsored by San Diego Pride, including a couple of virtual 5Ks and virtual bingo are planned through June. San Diego Pride is also hosting virtual youth workshops all summer long. Check out the SD Pride page here for details.

Boston Pride

Most of Boston’s online events have been canceled but the virtual Pride Lights event honoring the lives lost during the AIDs epidemic will still be held on June 9th, details here.

Pride Prom

Billboard – yes, the music one – and The Hollywood Reporter are hosting a Pride Prom featuring a smorgasbord of celebrities on 12 June. Check out this site for more information.

Stonewall Day

Pride Live and Warner Media are hosting Stonewall Day online. This event features numerous speakers, including a focus on black and brown voices, and focuses on fundraising for the queer community. Check out Pride Live’s Facebook page for more info.

Denver Pride

The city of Denver is holding several online events from June 19 thru 21 including:

  • Queer the Census Variety Show (19 June)
  • Denver Virtual Pride 5K (20 June)
  • Coors Light Virtual Denver Pride Parade (21 June)

Check out Denver Pride’s Facebook Page here for details.

Brooklyn Pride

Brooklyn Pride will offer several virtual events on June 13, including a virtual 5K and its own virtual celebration. More information is available here.

Together for Pride

The Seattle Pride community, along with Gender Justice League and Pridefest, is putting on a virtual community celebration with several events:

  • Trans Pride (June 26)
  • Pride Fest (June 27)
  • Seattle Pride (June 28)

Check out the Together for Pride page for details and schedules.

Dublin Digital Pride Festival and Parade

Ireland’s holding Pride events online all throughout the month of June. There’s too many interesting ones too list, so check out the full schedule here.

Toronto Pride

Joining several other events in Canada, Toronto Pride’s going virtual all month long. It’ll feature artists, bingo, drag shows, and even a tea party. Check out this press release for all the information.

Keep in mind that this is a small list of the available global Pride events. We’ll update this list as necessary. Be sure to let us know if we missed anything ([email protected])!

Corona coverage

Read our daily coverage on how the tech industry is responding to the coronavirus and subscribe to our weekly newsletter Coronavirus in Context.

For tips and tricks on working remotely, check out our Growth Quarters articles here or follow us on Twitter.



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Pride 2020: Collections Giving Back to LGBTQ+ Organizations


Pride 2020: Fashion and Beauty Collections Giving Back to LGBTQ+ Organizations | Entertainment Tonight


































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Nothing Like SARS: Researchers Warn The Coronavirus Will Not Fade Away Any Time Soon

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Health officials expected the coronavirus to decline in the summer heat and fade away soon. But the researchers say the virus is likely to be here year-round — and for years to come.



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Police ask for help in search for non-verbal teen north of Melbourne

Dozens of police officers and SES volunteers are continuing to search this morning for a teenage boy with autism who went missing yesterday north of Melbourne.

William Callaghan, 14, was last seen with family at Mount Disappointment at 2.20pm.

Victoria Police said William, also known as Will, was last seen on the south summit before he became separated from his family.

Will Callaghan, 14, is missing north of Melbourne. (Supplied)

The non-verbal teen, who has no food, water, or warm clothes, is “very energetic” and it is possible he might travel a significant distance, police said.

Residents in the Mount Disappointment vicinity have been asked to check their bedrooms and outhouses and call Triple Zero immediately if they see William.

“He’s also very food focused.

“It would not be out of the question for William to walk into a house and go to the fridge or cupboard and help himself to food.

“He might also try to put himself to bed.”

The fear overnight was the sub-zero temperatures, with the weather in the area already as low as 2C as authorities spread out in their search at 7.30pm.

It was expected to dip to as cold as -2C.

The Police Airwing, the Search and Rescue Squad, Dog Squad, local uniform members in 4WD and police on bikes are also being supported by the State Emergency Services in searching for William.

The search was expected to continue throughout the night, with no plans for it to be stood down until first light.

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San Antonio Spurs forward LaMarcus Aldridge out for season after shoulder surgery

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Seven-time All-Star LaMarcus Aldridge will miss the remainder of San Antonio’s season while he recovers from surgery on his right shoulder, in a major blow to the Spurs’ chances of making playoffs.

The Spurs announced Aldridge had the surgery on April 24, stemming from an injury he suffered in a game at Utah on February 21.

Aldridge played in two more games after getting hurt, including one on March 10, when he scored 24 points in the Spurs win over Dallas.

The NBA suspended its season the following day because of the coronavirus pandemic.

San Antonio is one of the 22 teams will that report to the ESPN Wide Wide Of Sports complex at the Disney campus near Orlando, Florida, starting next month, when the NBA plans to resume its season.

When play resumes, the Spurs will be among four teams – the others being Portland, New Orleans and Sacramento – that are all separated by a half-game in the race for ninth place in the Western Conference and potentially a berth in a play-in series.

The gap between those four teams is .010 percentage points.

The Spurs have been to the playoffs in 22 consecutive seasons, matching the longest streak in NBA history.

Aldridge turns 35 next month. He finished this season averaging 18.9 points and 7.4 rebounds per game.

The Spurs say Aldridge is expected to be fully cleared for all basketball activities in time for training camp ahead of next season.

Based on the NBAs current schedule plans, training camps for 2020-21 are likely to begin in November.

Want to watch even more of the NBA but don’t have Sky Sports? Get the Sky Sports Action and Arena pack, click here



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Egyptians returning from the Gulf face uncertain economic future

Jun 8, 2020

CAIRO — A study released May 29 by the Institute of National Planning, a government institute, revealed that due to the spread of the coronavirus in Egypt and the precautionary measures taken by the state and some private sector institutions, such as curfews and reduced working hours, a potential increase in the unemployment rate is expected from 8% at the end of 2019 to between 11.5% and 16% by the end of 2020.

According to the numbers mentioned in the study, around 1.2 to 2.9 million citizens are at risk of losing their jobs, 824,000 of whom are already unemployed, not to mention the return of thousands of Egyptian workers from abroad.

The study stated that the increase in the unemployment rate to such percentages will in turn lead approximately 5.6 to 12.5 million citizens to live below the poverty line. It also pointed out that the worst-case scenario was developed based on the possible return of more than 1 million Egyptians after losing their jobs abroad.

Sherif Samy, a management professor at the Faculty of Commerce at Ain Shams University, told Al-Monitor that most Egyptians who lost their jobs were working in the tourism sector, which he ruled out would return to normal activity before 2022, or were working abroad, especially in the Arab Gulf states.

“These countries are expected to reconsider and restructure their need for dense foreign labor with the aim of reducing their expenditures to weather the crisis,” he noted.

Samy said that in light of the economic recession in the Gulf states due to the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting fall in the returns of oil and natural gas contracts, the Gulf countries may lay off the highest paid foreign workers, namely US and European laborers, followed by Egyptians, thus leading the remaining laborers to take on more work, be they nationals or lower paid expatriates such as Indians, Pakistanis or Bengalis.

Samy believes, however, that the return of Egyptian workers from abroad, whether from the Gulf or any other region, would have a positive effect on the labor market in Egypt in the medium and long term.

He said that many Egyptians working abroad are skilled laborers who can help Egypt develop plans and projects launched under the auspices of President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, be they state-owned projects or ones carried out in partnership with the private sector.

Minister of Immigration and Expatriate Affairs Nabila Makram announced May 24 that Egyptians returning home are requested to fill out a form to determine their field of expertise and qualifications. The ministry will then investigate how each returnee’s skills can be used to benefit Egypt Vision 2030, the development plan that Sisi launched in 2016.

A well-informed source in the Ministry of Immigration told Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity that the form is distributed to Egyptians returning home aboard Egypt Air’s flights that repatriate citizens from across the world.

Regular Egyptian and foreign flights to and from Egypt were suspended March 25.

The source noted that the returning Egyptians include people whose work contracts abroad have expired.

He said that the forms have yet to be counted and classified based on the expertise of the returnees, but “many of those whose work contracts have ended are returning from the Gulf region, especially Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait, and their expertise could be of huge benefit specifically in the fields of civil engineering, contracting, education, medicine, marketing and business administration.”

On May 5, the Saudi Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development revised the executive regulations of the force majeure article of the Labor Law regulating the labor market in the event of major crises such as the coronavirus pandemic. The ministry thus allowed the private sector to reduce the salaries of national and expat workers by a maximum of 40%, and also allowed it to terminate any employment contracts after at least six months of the date of the amendment of the regulations.

Asked about the expected results of the decision, Rashad Abdo, head of the Egyptian Forum for Economic and Strategic Studies, told Al-Monitor that the contract termination step will lead many Egyptians to lose their jobs in Saudi Arabia in the coming months.

He said that many Gulf countries may follow the example of Saudi Arabia because most of the Gulf economies depend on oil, whose price is falling every day in light of the spread of the coronavirus.

He noted that the contract termination of Egyptians working in the Gulf will also have negative repercussions on the Egyptian state’s resources, and not only on unemployment or poverty rates.

“Egyptian labor in the Gulf significantly contributes to what is known as Egyptians’ hard currency remittances to their families in Egypt. Such remittances secure the state foreign currency needs and ensure the stability of the exchange rate of the pound against foreign currencies. I expect the coronavirus crisis to be accompanied by a decline in the value of the pound against foreign currencies, which may weaken the purchasing power of the pound and thus lead to a new inflation episode,” Abdo added.

According to the latest statistics of the central bank for 2019, the remittances sent by Egyptians abroad to their families in Egypt are considered to be the main source of Egypt’s foreign currency needs. Such remittances stood at around $26.8 billion, at a time when the Suez Canal revenues during the same year amounted to about $5.8 billion and tourism revenues to about $13 billion.

However, Saeed Yahya, president of the Union of Egyptians Abroad, Saudi branch, seemed optimistic about Egyptian employment in Saudi Arabia, in other Gulf countries and internationally.

Yahya told Al-Monitor that once the coronavirus crisis is over, the competition will be fierce among companies in different sectors to turn profits. He added that companies seeking to compensate for their losses will not venture into wasting trained Egyptian workers and skilled laborers that can help them achieve gains once the crisis ends.

He said there will be negotiations between Egyptian workers and officials in the public and private sectors to reach compromises, such as reducing salaries by a certain percentage until the end of the crisis and then returning to normal once losses are compensated.

“This will be an appropriate opportunity for many Egyptians in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf,” he concluded.



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PML-N’s Maryam Aurangzeb tests positive for COVID-19

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) spokesperson Maryam Aurangzeb and her mother Tahira Aurangzeb have tested positive for the novel coronavirus on Monday, ARY News reported.

Sources said that both lawmakers of the PML-N have gone into self-quarantine after having tested positive for COVID-19.

There were no signs of coronavirus yet in the PML-N leaders, but they have quarantined themselves for 14 days on the advise of doctors.

Read More: Sheikh Rasheed goes into self-isolation after testing positive for coronavirus

Earlier today, Federal Minister for Railways Sheikh Rasheed had tested coronavirus positive.  The spokesperson Pakistan Railways had said Sheikh Rasheed had gone into self-isolation at his home after testing positive for the coronavirus,

The number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Pakistan had passed 100,000 mark and stood at 103,671 after detection of 4,728 new infections in the last 24 hours.

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Is New York City Making a Huge Mistake by Reopening Right Now?

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Imagine you’re the person in charge of reopening New York City, and you look at the below chart:

Seems pretty good, right? That’s what New York officials think, too. In fact, they’re reopening the city starting today. “As many as 400,000 workers could begin returning to construction jobs, manufacturing sites and retail stores in the city’s first phase of reopening,” the New York Times reports.

What that chart doesn’t show—what it can’t show—is whether the ongoing protests against police brutality will dramatically increase infections. It takes about 10-14 days for new infections to show up in the data, in part because of how long it takes people to get tested and for their results to be reported. That means the numbers we’re looking at above are really as much as two weeks old; it’s analogous to looking at a star in the night sky and realizing the light you’re seeing is actually thousands of years old.

New York’s protests, which began about 12 days ago, don’t seem to have caused a massive uptick in confirmed cases so far. (Many protesters have been wearing masks, gloves and eye protection, which for some of them has done the double duty of protecting against both the virus and tear gas.) But 12 days is not 14 days, meaning it’s still too early to know for sure if the demonstrations have led to significant spread. Protests aside, reopening seems to have led to spikes elsewhere in the country, including in Texas, Arizona and Florida:

Many public health experts, like National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIH) boss Dr. Anthony Fauci, have been walking the fine line of acknowledging the protests’ righteousness while expressing fear that they may further spread the disease. “Every time I hear about or see the congregation of large crowds at a time and geographic area where there is active infection transmission, it is a perfect set-up for the spread of the virus in the sense of creating these blips that might turn into some surges,” Facui said in a Friday interview with Washington, D.C. radio station WTOP. “It’s a delicate balance, because the reasons for demonstrating are valid,” he added later.

It’s foolish to think New York (or anywhere else) can wait until there’s a vaccine or treatment before reopening—America lacks the economic safety net for such a pause, and there is clearly no political will for the government programs required in order to support one. And if there is a spike, the blame should not be on the protestors, but the systemic racism that has driven them into the streets. But reopening today, before we know if the virus has been spreading among demonstrators, was a mistake made on outdated data. The city that never sleeps could surely have rested a few more days, if it meant a healthier, wiser reopening.

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This story was adapted from The Coronavirus Brief, TIME’s daily COVID-19 newsletter. You can click here to sign up for future updates in your inbox.

Write to Alex Fitzpatrick at alex.fitzpatrick@time.com.

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