Bleak UNICEF Report On Kids And COVID-19 … But There Is Hope

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Youth in Nepal hold a socially distant protest demanding a more effective government response to the novel coronavirus. A new UNICEF report highlights issues faced by young people in South Asia during the pandemic

Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters


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Youth in Nepal hold a socially distant protest demanding a more effective government response to the novel coronavirus. A new UNICEF report highlights issues faced by young people in South Asia during the pandemic

Navesh Chitrakar/Reuters

A pandemic is hard on everyone. And even though older people face greater risks from the novel coronavirus, a UNICEF report released on Tuesday points to another particularly vulnerable population: youth. The report is titled Lives Upended: How COVID-19 threatens the futures of 600 million South Asian children.

According to the report, the pandemic is “unraveling decades of health, education and other advances for children across South Asia.” Because of the lockdowns, children are out of school (and cut off from the toilets and water they may have there but not at home). They’re at risk of hunger when family incomes shrink — and of domestic abuse as well in close quarters. They’re isolated from friends.

Especially concerning, say UNICEF and regional mental health experts, are anecdotal and statistical reports that show suicides and suicidal thoughts are going up, in particular among adolescents.

Statistics reported by Bharat Gautam, clinical psychologist for the Transcultural Psychosocial Organization Nepal, document 134 reports of suicide among adolescents from March 24 to April 23 — and 127 the prior month.

The UNICEF report notes that, since the pandemic’s start, a Bangladesh hotline for children “intervened in six cases of potential suicide” in a single week and that two adolescent suicide cases in Bhutan were linked to “family tension and domestic violence.”

GETTING HELP

If someone you know exhibits warning signs for suicide:

  • Do not leave the person alone.
  • Remove any firearms, alcohol, drugs or sharp objects that could be used in a suicide attempt.
  • In the United States, call the U.S. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255.
  • Take the person to an emergency room or seek help from a medical or mental health professional.

Simon Ingram, the report’s author and previously a UNICEF field officer in the region, says that “suicide [is] often hidden [and] experts estimate the numbers [during the lockdown] could be even higher.”

“We were monitoring the situation, because obviously we were expecting psychological and mental health impacts given the uncertainty and isolation in a country where a lot of the social services are community-based and where normal service disruption mechanisms are disrupted by the lockdown,” says Inah Fatoumata Kaloga, UNICEF’s chief of child protection in Nepal.

But Kaloga said she and her staff “were taken aback by the [suicide reports] and the speed with which [they were] reported.” And, adds Kaloga, “by the fact that youth may think that was the only way they could cope with the situation.”

Gautam, who is an operator on a suicide hotline for teenagers that his organization runs, says callers these days say “their main concerns have been sadness over not seeing their friends, not going to school, being stuck at home, nagging by parents. And they don’t seem to know what to do to relieve how they feel.”

Gautam says callers tell him they feel too sad to even listen to music, talk or watch movies. “And they talk about their anxiety and their fear and that they don’t know what will happen.”

Hotline operators, says Gautum, offer various kinds of support, telling the callers that they’re not the only ones who feel this way. “After validating their emotions,” he says, for some callers, depending on what they’re expressing, “we help them with breathing exercises to help them feel calm and relax.” If concerns remain staff operators refer callers to online mental health resources – a platform on how to deal with feeling sad, for example. If they fear callers might try to kill themselves, the hotline staffer will connect the callers to mental health providers.

UNICEF’s response, says Kagola, has been “to scale up our engagement to help young people seek help and engage with psycho-social support and mental health service providers. We have also reached out and increased our engagement with front-line service providers, including nurses, doctors, police, volunteers, community health workers, because they are the lifeline of the community.”

More recently, says Kagola, Nepal’s mental health providers have added online platforms with relevant information for youth expressing suicidal thoughts, offered remote one-on-one counseling and deployed trained staff, in personal protective equipment, to visit isolated youth in quarantine and detention centers, in hospitals where a young patient cannot even be visited by parents, and in youth detention centers.

Laura Murray, a senior scientist and clinical psychologist at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health who researches suicide and violence in the developing world, says involving community health workers has been an effective strategy. She is the lead author of a study that used trusted and trained individuals in the community to help reduce suicide and to help individuals deal with substance abuse and domestic violence; the results were so compelling the review board stopped the trial a year early to put the concepts into practice.

Since the COVID-19 outbreak, says Murray, some funders have been “nimble enough” to allow researchers to focus more on domestic violence and suicide.

Kaloga is hoping donor countries will be equally nimble when it comes to funding requests to meet the needs of children that are outlined in the UNICEF report. The requests include:

  • Personal protective equipment for community health workers.
  • Low-tech home education solutions for children with no access to internet and with disabilities.
  • Working with religious leaders and other partners to address the myths and hate-speech that the pandemic has given rise to, fueling rumors that certain groups, often vulnerable ones, have caused the outbreak.

Kaloga is optimistic. “I have to be or there is no point in continuing,” she says. “We have to be optimistic that COVID-19 has also highlighted the multiple challenges people go through. I hope this will be a good wake-up call for all of us and will make [donors] understand our need for more resources.”

Fran Kritz is a health policy reporter based in Washington, D.C. Her work has appeared in The Washington Post and Kaiser Health News. Find her on Twitter: @fkritz.



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A generation of UK researchers could be lost in funding crisis

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The discovery of new cancer treatments could be delayed, research institutes shut, and a whole generation of upcoming scientists lost because of a funding crisis in medical research, charities have warned.

Covid-19 has caused fundraising to plummet, with events cancelled and charity shops shut because of the lockdown. The upshot is a dire financial situation that could have a severe impact on research crucial to finding new ways to diagnose, manage and treat diseases from cancer to neurological conditions and heart disease.

“The current pandemic has put the future of charity-funded research at significant risk,” said Aisling Burnand, chief executive of the Association of Medical Research Charities (AMRC).

While some charities have furloughed staff, Burnand said the government’s £750m charity support package does not provide cash for medical research.

As a result the AMRC and its 151 member organisations, including Parkinson’s UK, the British Heart Foundation (BHF) and Cancer Research UK (CRUK), are calling on the government to set up a “life sciences-charity partnership fund” to support research that, they stress, saves lives.

The proposed scheme would be a matched funding programme, lasting at least three years, with the government contributing £310m over the financial year 2020-21 to bridge the funding shortfall from medical research charities. Burnand said that could be tapered down in subsequent years as fundraising picked up, with the hope that government support could galvanise donations from the public.

Medical research charities together spent £1.9bn on research last year – over half of non-commercial medical research funding – with another £1.1bn spent on activities including patient services and support. But, because of the impact of Covid-19, many charities have warned that, without government support, medical research funding will be slashed.

The impact is already being felt. “At the end of April, 74% of clinical trials and studies funded by AMRC charities had been paused,” said Burnand, adding that more than two-thirds of its member charities are deferring upcoming grant rounds and withdrawing future funding.

Breast Cancer Now has already announced it could be making redundancies following the outbreak of Covid-19, and has cancelled two forthcoming research grant funding rounds.

While Burnand said some research was to resume now lockdown has been eased, other projects were not. For research spending by medical research charities to return to pre-Covid-19 levels, it could take four to five years, she warned.

Dr Charmaine Griffiths, BHF’s chief executive, said even with some staff furloughed the charity is losing £10m a month and is facing an unprecedented research funding crisis.

“We anticipate our net income this year falling by 50% and consequently we will have to halve our investment in new research from £100m this year to £50m,” she said, adding that could have a catastrophic impact on UK cardiovascular research.

Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of CRUK, said the charity is expecting a 30% drop in income this year because of Covid-19, meaning research funding could be cut by £150m a year.

“This would be devastating for people with cancer today, and our families and future generations of people, devastating for our science base, and devastating for the economy,” she said. “It could mean a major contraction in CRUK’s infrastructure and potential closure of centres and institutes,” Mitchell added, noting it could also affect plans for clinical trials and hence, potentially, hold back new cancer treatments.

The charities warn funding cuts could also be a disaster for early career researchers, including PhD students.

“We believe we could potentially lose a generation of researchers because of this shock and the reduction in our funding,” said Griffiths.

Mitchell said it had not been possible to access research and development support that is available for businesses, and made a direct plea to Boris Johnson.

“If you believe, prime minister, in improving cancer survival, if you believe in ensuring the UK retains its position as a global scientific power, if you believe in protecting infrastructure and our talented people, you absolutely must commit to supporting the UK’s research charities at a time of our need and give us time to recover and get research back on track.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “The UK is home to globally recognised medical research charities, which are an integral part of our world-leading life sciences sector.

“We are working closely with medical research charities to understand the impact of the pandemic on the sector and identify how we can work together, ensuring patients continue benefiting from charity-funded research.”

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Weather forecast, alerts and UVB index for all South African provinces, 24 June 2020

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Weather data provided by the South African Weather Service. For a detailed forecast of your province, click here.

Weather Warnings

  1. Extremely high fire danger conditions are expected over Karoo Hoogland in the Northern Cape and Beaufort West Municipality in the Western Cape.

Weather Watches

Nil.

Special Weather Advisories

  1. Strong (50-60km/h) north-westerly winds are expected over Hantam and Karoo Hogland municipalities in the Northern Cape, as well as the Breede Valley, Central and Little Karoo in the Western Cape on Thursday.
  2. High seas with wave heights from 6 to 9m are expected between Lamberts Bay and Plettenberg Bay on Saturday.

Gauteng:

Temperature: Fine and cool but cold in the south.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: Moderate.

Mpumalanga:

Temperature: Fine and cool but warm in the Lowveld.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Limpopo:

Temperature: Fine and cool but warm in the Lowveld where it will become partly cloudy in the afternoon.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

North-West Province:

Temperature: Fine and cool.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Free State:

Temperature: Fine and cold.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Northern Cape:

Temperature: Morning fog along the coast, otherwise fine and cool to warm.

Wind: The wind along the coast will be light southerly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Western Cape:

Temperature: Morning and evening cloud and fog along the coastal areas at first otherwise fine and cool to warm.

Wind: The wind along the coast will be fresh to strong north westerly between Cape Columbine and Cape Agulhas, otherwise light south westerly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: Low.

Eastern Cape:

The Western half – Temperature: Fine and warm.

The Western Half – Wind: The wind along the coast will be Light to moderate north westerly, but light north easterly west of Oyster Bay until the early evening.

The Eastern half – Temperature: Fine and warm.

The Eastern half – Wind: The wind along the coast will be Light to moderate north easterly.

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: –

Kwazulu-Natal:

Temperature: Fine and cool but warm in places in the east

Wind: The wind along the coast will be Moderate northerly to north-easterly

The expected UVB Sunburn Index: High.




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Segway Hits The Brakes On Its Flagship Product

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Segway, which boldly claimed its two-wheeled personal transporter would revolutionize the way people get around, is ending production of its namesake vehicle.

The Segway PT, popular with tourists and police officers but perhaps better known for its high-profile crashes, will be retired on July 15, the company said in a statement.

“Within its first decade, the Segway PT became a staple in security and law enforcement, viewed as an effective and efficient personal vehicle,” said Judy Cai, Segway president, in a statement, noting that in the past decade it gained popularity with vacationers in major cities in North America, Europe, Asia, South America, and the Middle East.

But the Segway, which carries a standing passenger on a wide platform, accounted for less than 1.5% of the company’s revenue last year. The company said 21 employees will be laid off, another 12 employees will stay on for two months to a year and five will remain at the Bedford, New Hampshire facility.

“This decision was not made lightly, and while the current global pandemic did impact sales and production, it was not a deciding factor in our decision,” Cai said.

The transportation revolution that inventor Dean Kamen envisioned when he founded the company in 1999 never took off. The Segway’s original price tag of around $5,000 was a hurdle for many customers. It also was challenging to ride because the rider had to be balanced at a specific angle for the vehicle to move forward. If the rider’s weight shifted too much in any direction, it could easily spin out of control and throw the rider off. They were banned in some cities because users could easily lose control if they were not balanced properly.

“What did they think the market was when they built this, when they designed it?” asked Maryann Keller, principal at Maryann Keller & Associates. “My impression was they were talking about this as personal mobility. How could you think that something this large and expensive would be personal mobility?”

Ten months after buying the company in 2009, British self-made millionaire Jim Heselden died after the Segway he was riding careened off a 30-foot cliff not far from his country estate north of London. He was 62 years old.

In 2003, President George W. Bush avoided injury after tumbling off a Segway at his parents’ summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine.

A cameraman riding a Segway ran over Usain Bolt in 2015 as the Jamaican sprinter did a victory lap after winning a 200-meter race in Beijing. Bolt wasn’t injured and later joked about the incident.

In 2017, Segway got into the scooter business, just as the light, inexpensive and easy-to-ride two-wheelers took over urban streets. Riders took 38.5 million trips on shared electric scooters in 2018, according to the National Association of City Transportation Officials.

Segway’s foray into lightweight scooters may have been a sign that its original PT’s days were numbered.

“It was probably over-hyped before it was launched, and when it was launched, it was like, this is not going to work on city sidewalks,” Keller said.



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9NEWS Live Blog: Follow live updates and breaking news

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German authorities slapped new lockdown measures on a western region that has seen hundreds of coronavirus infections linked to a slaughterhouse, trying to make sure the cluster doesn’t race into the wider community.

Authorities initially said more than 1,550 people had tested positive for coronavirus at the Toennies slaughterhouse in Rheda-Wiedenbrueck, but by Tuesday afternoon they said the exact number was still being verified.

Thousands of workers, many of them migrants from Eastern Europe, and family members have been put under a quarantine to try to halt the outbreak.

The governor of North Rhine-Westphalia state, Armin Laschet, said people in Guetersloh county for the next week will face some of the same restrictions that existed across Germany during the early stages of the pandemic in March.

These include limiting the number of people who can meet in public to those from a single household or two people from separate households, Laschet said.

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Coronavirus Australia update: Victoria expands Covid-19 testing as Melbourne at risk of second lockdown – live news

I’m sure it’s manageable and it is. I mean, there will be community spikes, community outbreaks during the course of the pandemic and New South Wales, it could happen here just as easily, which is why it’s so important for us to remain vigilant.

It’s a good wake-up call to remind us about how contagious the disease is and how quickly it can get out of control.

But in New South Wales, we are doing everything we can to prevent and stop community spread and – the warning that I have issued in the last few days is no different to what the Victorian premier has issued.

That is to say, if you live in those hotspots you shouldn’t be travelling anywhere, let alone interstate.

I said to New South Wales businesses and to community organisations –don’t have anything to do with those hot spots, that’s just common sense pandemic management.

Whilst community spread is still what it is, whilst people are still chasing those contacts to warn them, to self-isolate and do all those things it’s just common sense to make sure that New South Wales businesses and organisations avoid any interaction with anybody from those hotspots unless they know that person has been cleared and doesn’t have Covid and certainly they are warnings any premier would give, especially here in New South Wales where we keep our borders open.

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Miley Cyrus opens up on being ‘sober sober’ for six months

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Miley Cyrus revealed she has been “sober sober” for six months.

he chart-topping singer, 27, said she initially opted for a more relaxed lifestyle after undergoing surgery on her vocal cords in November last year, which left her unable to speak.

She has since taken the opportunity to stay sober and hit out at what she called the “stigma” of young people steering clear of alcohol.

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Miley Cyrus revealed she has been sober for six months (Aaron Chown/PA)

Cyrus told Variety: “The thing that I love about it is waking up 100%, 100% of the time. I don’t want to wake up feeling groggy. I want to wake up feeling ready.”

The pop star also revealed she has been researching the addiction issues within her family and going to therapy.

She said “My mom was adopted, and I inherited some of the feelings she had, the abandonment feelings and wanting to prove that you’re wanted and valuable.

“My dad’s parents divorced when he was three, so my dad raised himself. I did a lot of family history, which has a lot of addiction and mental health challenges.”

Cyrus, whose father is the country music star Billy Ray Cyrus, added: “So just going through that and asking, ‘Why am I the way that I am?’ By understanding the past, we understand the present and the future much more clearly. I think therapy is great.”

Former Hannah Montana star Cyrus finalised her divorce from Australian actor Liam Hemsworth earlier this year.

PA

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Diego Simeone’s son scores winner for Cagliari

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Last Updated: 23/06/20 11:47pm


Giovanni Simeone gave Cagliari a 1-0 win at SPAL

Atletico Madrid earned a third consecutive La Liga win by beating Levante 1-0 on Tuesday to cement their chances of qualifying for the Champions League.

An own-goal by Bruno Gonzalez in the 15th minute gave Atletico its third straight win and moved Diego Simeone’s team back into third place. Atletico are two points ahead of Sevilla, who had temporarily moved in front after a 2-2 draw at Villarreal on Monday.

Gonzalez found his own net while trying to intercept a cross from Marcos Llorente to Diego Costa inside the area.

Atltico are six points clear of fifth-place Getafe, who drew 1-1 at Valladolid.

Simeone’s team are 10 points behind leaders Real Madrid and 13 inferior to Barcelona, who beat Athletic Bilbao 1-0.

Simeone Jnr makes his mark

Cagliari ended a 12-match winless run in Serie A in dramatic style after a stoppage-time goal by Giovanni Simeone gave them a 1-0 win at SPAL, pushing their opponents nearer to relegation.

Simeone, the son of Atletico Madrid coach Diego, scored with a close-range header in the 93rd minute from Joao Pedro’s cross to give the Sardinians, playing their second game under new coach Walter Zenga.

Parma striker Andreas Cornelius scored a hat-trick against Genoa for the second time this season and goalkeeper Luigi Sepe saved a penalty for the second game running as they romped to a 4-1 away win in Serie A.

Cornelius, who became the third player in Serie A history to score hat-tricks in both games against the same opponents, swept home Gervinho’s pass in the 18th minute to open his account.

Genoa won a penalty on the half hour but Sepe, who saved an Andrea Belotti penalty in Saturday’s 1-1 draw at Torino, pushed Domenico Criscito’s shot onto the post and, three minutes later, Cornelius fired the second for the visitors.

The Dane completed his hat-trick eight minutes after the restart to follow up the three he scored in the 5-1 win earlier this season.

Genoa were awarded another penalty just before the hour and, this time, Iago Falque took it and converted but Dejan Kulusevski drilled in a fourth for Parma with three minutes left.

Parma climbed to seventh with 39 points, ahead of AC Milan on goal difference, while Genoa are 17th, with only goal difference keeping them out of the relegation zone.

Torino captain Andrea Belotti ended an eight-game scoring drought to give his side a 1-0 win at home to Udinese in a game featuring two teams in the lower half of the table.

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‘Shambolic,’ ‘mean spirited’: Obama, in first 2020 event with Biden, rips Trump

Former President Obama, in his first appearance on the 2020 virtual campaign trail with presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden, promised that “help was on the way — if we do the work,” before tearing into President Donald Trump’s “shambolic” approach to government.

At an online “grassroots fundraiser” streamed online — which quickly became the campaign’s highest-grossing event to date — the former president recalled how various challenges he walked into when he took office, including the Great Recession and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, were made slightly less difficult because he knew that his predecessor, George W. Bush, “still had a basic regard for the rule of law and the importance of our institutions.”

Trump, on the other hand,was practicing a “shambolic, disorganized, mean spirited approach to government” that put in existential danger American values, Obama said.

“What we have seen over the last couple of years is a White House enabled by Republicans in Congress and a media structure that supports them that has not just differed in terms of policy but has gone at the very foundations of who we are and who we should be,” Obama said.

“That suggests facts don’t matter, science doesn’t matter, that suggests a deadly disease is fake news,” he added, making a veiled reference to Trump’s comments in February that the coronavirus pandemic was a “hoax.”

“That actively promotes division. And that considers some American in this country more real than others,” Obama continued. “That, we haven’t seen out of the White House in a very long time.”

The former president said that “help is on the way — if we do the work,” adding, “There’s nobody that I trust more to heal this country and get it back on track than my dear friend Joe Biden.”

The event marked Obama’s first appearance of the 2020 campaign with Biden on the virtual trail. Biden announced at the start of the fundraiser that it had raised $7.6 million from 175,000 donors — his campaign’s highest-grossing event to date of the cycle thus far.

Obama formally endorsed Biden in April after Biden’s only remaining rival in the race for the Democratic nomination, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., bowed out of the race.



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Overwhelmed With Orders, Some Black-Owned Bookstores Ask for Patience

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On Friday and Saturday, people lined up down the block to enter Semicolon Bookstore in Chicago — not for a famous speaker or a big event, but to buy books on race and antiracism.

As Americans grapple with the country’s history of racism, many of them have turned to books, propelling titles like “How to Be an Antiracist” by Ibram X. Kendi and “So You Want to Talk About Race” by Ijeoma Oluo to the best-seller lists. This surge in demand has brought a welcome lift to many independent bookstores. And after several lists circulated on social media encouraging shoppers to patronize black-owned stores, many of those booksellers in particular have been racing to keep up.

“We have had a huge financial boost,” said Danni Mullen, the owner of Semicolon Bookstore, who is black. “We went from moving 3,000 books a week to 50,000 books a week.”

All that demand, however, is becoming a challenge for some black-owned bookstores around the United States, as they attempt to manage the deluge of orders, a handful of titles that are out of stock, and occasionally, customers angered by the delays. For Ms. Mullen, she and her store manager had to quickly adapt, adding detailed instructions to the store’s voice mail and email systems, taking shifts managing their social media accounts, and at one point, unplugging the phone.

“We couldn’t answer it and answer email and fulfill orders at the same time,” she said. “We now have almost 60,000 followers on Instagram — and we’re a bookstore! We had probably 3,500 to 5,000 before.”

Ms. Mullen estimated that at least half of the money her store is making comes from the 10 or so race-related books dominating best-seller lists. They are flying off bookstore tables, retail displays and e-commerce fulfillment centers. “How to Be an Antiracist” is in its 18th reprint, according to its publisher, One World, and there are more than 1 million hardcover copies in print.

The concentration of interest among just a few titles can create long wait times, with some books on back order for weeks — and while most customers are understanding, store owners say, there are those who demand refunds or cancel their orders.

“There’s that 25 percent who will email every day asking for an order update,” Ms. Mullen said. “Well, it’s the same as it was the last four times you emailed me. It’s still not here.”

Frugal Bookstore, a black-owned store in Boston, recently put a disclaimer on its website pleading with its customers for patience.

“We understand and we apologize for the long delay that you may be experiencing with your order from our book store,” it said. “Having never operated at this scale before, we are unable to rapidly respond to your requests and we are running as fast as we can and hope you will understand the reason for our delay.”

Attempts to reach the owners were unsuccessful because, according to the woman who answered Frugal’s phone on Tuesday, they were too busy trying to get people their books.

This surge in demand could not come at a better time for bookstores, which saw business down a catastrophic 65 percent in April over the same period the year ago, according to figures from the Census Bureau. Ms. Mullen said that she was considering taking out a loan to keep her business going but now has the money to stay open for at least another year.

DeAndra Beard owns Beyond Barcodes Bookstore in Kokomo, Ind., which shares a space with a coffee shop and a learning center where students can work on English, Spanish or Haitian Creole, among other languages. Those other businesses have always been her main sources of revenue, Ms. Beard said, and they have all struggled since the spring. But books aren’t secondary anymore.

“I have a 13-year-old son who is tracking all the states we’ve had orders from, and I think he said to me yesterday that all we have left is West Virginia,” she said. “The first order I got from Hawaii, I wanted to cry.”

While the business is welcome, it can be frustrating for booksellers that the interest is so narrowly focused. Ms. Mullen has been trying to steer customers toward African-American fiction like “Parable of the Sower” by Octavia Butler, “The Vanishing Half” by Brit Bennett and “Kingdom of Souls” by Rena Barron.

“I think the way to become more antiracist is first to be empathetic,” Ms. Mullen said. “And to first be empathetic, read our stories.”

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