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Vaccination is not a game for the fall sports seasons.

Vaccination is not a game
By Joshua Karim. Peninsula 360 Press [P360P] .

Vaccination should not be taken as a game. The onset of the fall sports seasons may present a danger of contagion, especially among young people aged 12 to 18 years. 

In this regard, U.S. President Joseph Biden said that one of the government's strategies will be to get closer to the communities, to be much closer to the homes.

In that sense, he commented in a statement made last Tuesday, that efforts will be intensified so that doctors attending families can offer vaccinations to the youngest, in order to achieve a safe return to school or even for the physical exams required for fall sports. 

With the fall sports seasons just around the corner, hundreds of children and young people will join the various activities offered by local teams, such as football, soccer and volleyball, which are not without risks.

Delta variant wants to get on the pitch

Although the vaccination program has made significant progress, there is still a risk of infection among those who are not vaccinated, the emergence of the Delta variant has caused more than half of the new infections in the United States.

"By the end of this week, we will have 160 million Americans fully vaccinated, up from about three million when we took office five months ago," he said. Biden.

However, he added that the fight against the virus is not over: communities, families and friends are still at risk, because the Delta variant is easily transmissible and potentially more dangerous. 

Above all, Biden said, it should be a cause for reconsideration especially among young people, who may have thought they didn't have to get vaccinated or wouldn't have to worry about it. 

Olympic Games, without public for the first time in history 

COVID-19 has undoubtedly wreaked havoc throughout the world and sports have been no exception. Thus, during the previous year, most of the sports activities were suspended and, later on, some of them were able to continue without assistance in the stands.

This year, Japan's authorities surprised the world by declaring a state of emergency in Tokyo: for the first time in history, the Olympic Games will be held without spectators, even of local origin as previously planned.

The move comes after the government agreed to establish a state of emergency for Tokyo from July 12 until August 22, which anticipates a tightening of health measures in the midst of the Olympic Games, which begin on July 23.

It should be noted that the Japanese capital has recorded in recent days an increase in new cases of COVID-19 unprecedented since mid-May of this year, to stand above the threshold of cases that the government considers to be of utmost concern.

Thus, the Olympic Games will not have an audience for the first time since its first edition, held in 1898 in Athens, Greece. Previously, the Berlin 1916 Games had been suspended due to World War I, as well as the Helsinki 1940 and United Kingdom 1944, due to World War II.

You may be interested in: Vaccine, the main weapon against COVID-19

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