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Climate campaigners praise a cool pope
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As world mourns, cardinals prepare pope's funeral
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US to impose new duties on solar imports from Southeast Asia
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Draft NZ law seeks 'biological' definition of man, woman
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Auto Shanghai to showcase electric competition at sector's new frontier
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Tentative tree planting 'decades overdue' in sweltering Athens
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Indonesia food plan risks 'world's largest' deforestation
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Gold hits record, stocks slip as Trump fuels Fed fears
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Trump helps enflame anti-LGBTQ feeling from Hungary to Romania
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Woe is the pinata, a casualty of Trump trade war
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'Like orphans': Argentina mourns loss of papal son
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Trump tariffs torch chances of meeting with China's Xi
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X rival Bluesky adds blue checks for trusted accounts
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China to launch new crewed mission into space this week
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Morocco volunteers on Sahara clean-up mission
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Latin America fondly farewells its first pontiff
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'I wanted it to work': Ukrainians disappointed by Easter truce
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Harvard sues Trump over US federal funding cuts
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'One isn't born a saint': School nuns remember Pope Francis as a boy
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Battling Forest see off Spurs to boost Champions League hopes
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'I don't miss tennis' says Nadal
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Biles 'not so sure' about competing at Los Angeles Olympics
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Gang-ravaged Haiti nearing 'point of no return', UN warns
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US assets slump again as Trump sharpens attack on Fed chief
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Forest see off Spurs to boost Champions League hopes
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Trump says Pope Francis 'loved the world,' will attend funeral
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Oscar voters required to view all films before casting ballots
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Bucks' Lillard upgraded to 'questionable' for game 2 v Pacers
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Duplantis and Biles win Laureus World Sports Awards
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US urges curb of Google's search dominance as AI looms
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The Pope with 'two left feet' who loved the 'beautiful game'
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With Pope Francis death, Trump loses top moral critic
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Mourning Americans contrast Trump approach to late Pope Francis
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Leeds and Burnley promoted to Premier League
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Racist gunman jailed for life over US supermarket massacre
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Trump backs Pentagon chief despite new Signal chat scandal
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Macron vows to step up reconstruction in cyclone-hit Mayotte
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Gill, Sudharsan help toppers Gujarat boss Kolkata in IPL
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Messi, San Lorenzo bid farewell to football fan Pope Francis
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Leeds on brink of Premier League promotion after smashing Stoke
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In Lourdes, Catholic pilgrims mourn the 'pope of the poor'
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Korir wins men's Boston Marathon, Lokedi upstages Obiri
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China's CATL launches new EV sodium battery
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Korir wins Boston Marathon, Lokedi upstages Obiri
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Francis, a pope for the internet age
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Iraq's top Shiite cleric says Pope Francis sought peace
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Mourners flock to world's churches to grieve Pope Francis
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Trump says Pope Francis 'loved the world'
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Sri Lanka recalls Pope Francis' compassion on Easter bombing anniversary
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Pope Francis inspired IOC president Bach to create refugee team

A Covid tale of two presidents
More than two years into the pandemic, a second US president has tested positive for Covid.
But the calmer outlook surrounding Joe Biden's case contrasts with the panic that accompanied Donald Trump's diagnosis: a reminder of progress made against the virus, even as it becomes clearer that the disease eventually comes for all.
Both are males of advanced age -- Biden is 79, while Trump was 74 at the time -- meaning their mortality risk is many times greater than younger groups.
Key differences however include the advent of vaccines, highly effective treatments, and a downward mutation in the severity of the virus in the time between both cases.
- Trump's 'kitchen sink' treatment -
Trump was in the middle of campaigning for reelection in October 2020 when he dropped his bombshell announcement on Twitter, sending global stock markets tumbling.
Vaccines were still another two months away and the former real estate tycoon's age, weight and lifestyle put him at special risk for Covid's worst outcomes, hospitalization and death.
The Republican had spent the summer downplaying the virus to his supporters, while mocking his Democratic rival Biden for wearing a mask.
He was airlifted to Walter Reed military hospital where he was placed on supplemental oxygen as his medical team issued vague and at times contradictory updates.
Doctors opted for the "kitchen sink" approach, treating him with antiviral remdesivir, steroids, and monoclonal antibodies that were at the time still experimental.
"He was very, very sick," Matt Heinz, a hospital physician in Tucson, Arizona, told AFP.
"I know that because he looked like my Covid patients who die," he said, referencing an infamous scene of Trump experiencing labored breathing as he posed for cameras after returning to the White House.
- Vaccines, Paxlovid for Biden -
Biden's case -- so far confined to very mild symptoms -- comes in a changed environment.
Daily deaths have sunk to the low hundreds, as opposed to around 3,300 seen in the peak Omicron wave of January 2021 -- while vaccines that are highly effective against severe disease are widely available.
Biden is double vaccinated and double boosted -- and even though the immunity from his last shot has waned, "what's really important is that underlying immune memory" infectious disease physician Celine Gounder told AFP.
While it is impossible to predict individual cases, official data shows that even during the current wave of the BA.5 Omicron sublineage, vaccination and remaining up-to-date with boosters continues to protect against hospitalization and death.
In addition, Biden is receiving Pfizer's Paxlovid, an oral antiviral that has been a gamechanger not only because it is 90 percent effective in preventing hospitalizations, but also because it is available in easy-to-take pill form.
And the virus circulating today is a far different beast to the one prevalent in 2020: Omicron's sublineages, which make up the vast majority of Covid globally, have greater affinity for the upper airways, not the lungs, where severe disease occurs.
Heinz said the majority of patients he sees now come to hospital for reasons other than Covid, but also have incidental infections.
- Shifting attitudes -
Biden's infection also comes at a time where attitudes towards the virus have shifted.
At the time Trump contracted the virus, the country was deeply polarized between liberals who practiced more caution, and conservatives who believed that preventative measures impinged on their personal freedoms.
Trump's diagnosis was thus met with a degree of told-you-so scorn by his opponents -- at a time when people becoming infected were still being dubbed "Covidiots."
That was a mistake, said Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.
"Covid really should never have been seen as a moral failing -- it is an efficiently spreading respiratory virus that is basically an ever present risk with social interaction," he told AFP.
Indeed, by February 2022, some 60 percent of the US population had evidence of prior infection according to a government study, and the figure is likely far higher now.
"I think the goal should be to avoid severe disease, hospitalization and death and then to avoid transmission to people who are at very high risk," said Gounder, suggesting people take rapid tests and mask before they meet elderly relatives.
C.Kovalenko--BTB