Anti-vaxxers are now a modern political force

This is the final story of a five-part series diving into the rise of the anti-vaccine political movement.

For years, groups at the vanguard of the anti-vaccine movement had been operating with relatively small budgets and only a handful of staff.

Now, they’re awash in cash.

The Covid-19 pandemic has produced a remarkable financial windfall for anti-vaccine nonprofits. Revenue more than doubled for the Informed Consent Action Network and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Children’s Health Defense in 2021 compared to the year prior, according to a POLITICO analysis of tax filings. The nonprofits that survived on operating budgets of around a few million dollars just a few years prior are now raking in more than $10 million each.

“Covid vaccines have been the foot in the door for the more general anti-vaccine movement. And unfortunately, that door is open pretty wide now,” said Dr. Dave Gorski, a Michigan-based oncologist who has been tracking anti-vaccine efforts for two decades.

The funding spike reflects a sea change for once-fringe entities. The anti-vaccine movement has now emerged as a modern political force. In practical terms, greater funds enable anti-vaccine groups to expand their public reach, sue federal agencies and organize like-minded activists at the state level, as well as expand their reach abroad.

Though these groups have been trying to roll back vaccine requirements for years, the movement has gained new traction in a post-pandemic world. Earlier this year, a lawsuit funded by the anti-vaccine group Informed Consent Action Network forced Mississippi to allow religious exemptions for mandatory childhood vaccinations for the first time in more than four decades.

That case, perhaps the greatest policy achievement for the movement to loosen vaccine requirements in schools or workplaces, alarmed public health experts. Depressed vaccination rates have led to more deaths from Covid-19, and have the potential to enable the return of potentially fatal childhood diseases such as measles.

Informed Consent Action Network was among the most well-funded groups in the anti-vaccine movement prior to the pandemic. The nonprofit was pulling in $1.4 million in 2017. By 2021, its annual revenue topped $13.3 million, according to tax documents.

The group’s founder, Del Bigtree, hosts a podcast, The HighWire, where he discusses the group’s work. During the pandemic, the show released near-daily episodes, where Bigtree criticized lockdowns and masks, touted unproven treatments such as the malaria drug hydroxychloroquine and questioned the efficacy of COVID-19 vaccines.

Bigtree told POLITICO that his audience grew over the pandemic, from thousands of weekly listeners to millions. “The pandemic in many ways played right into our conversation,” he said.

The growth came despite major distribution platforms such as Facebook and YouTube removing The Highwire, citing misinformation policies.

It also brought in a rush of grassroots giving. Bigtree said smaller, recurring donors now account for a large share of the group’s funding. Most of the donations to the Informed Consent Action Network documented in tax documents are through donor-advised funds, a setup often used by wealthy benefactors to keep their identities private.

Del Bigtree said Informed Consent Action Network had been able to hire more lawyers and scientists, with its staff more than doubling compared to pre-pandemic levels. | Hans Pennink/AP Photo

The group was not alone in its pandemic-era growth. A longtime anti-vaccine group Children’s Health Defense, the nonprofit launched in 2011 under the name World Mercury Project, also saw its revenue balloon. The group, which is led by longshot Democratic presidential candidate Kennedy, saw its revenue go from just over $1 million in 2018 to more than $15 million in 2021, according to the nonprofit’s federal tax filings.

Those figures do not include smaller state chapters of the group, most of which have launched since 2020. (The largest of the subgroups, a California chapter, reported $1.2 million in revenue in 2021.)

As the nonprofit’s revenue increased, so did Kennedy’s compensation. Children’s Health Defense paid him roughly $500,000 each year in 2022 and 2021, according to his personal financial disclosure and the group’s tax filings, up from $345,000 in 2020 and $131,000 in 2017. The nonprofit salary was still a small share of Kennedy’s overall income; his personal financial disclosure filed as part of his presidential run reported $7.8 million in earnings in 2022, with the bulk of that coming from his work for his environmental law firm.

Kennedy’s presidential campaign referred questions back to Children’s Health Defense, but the nonprofit did not respond to several messages and a list of questions via email.

Unlike political committees, nonprofits are largely not required to reveal their sources of funding, or as many details of how they spend their money. Tax filings occasionally reveal contributions from other foundations or grants given by the groups, but much of their finances are shrouded in secrecy.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Children’s Health Defense has filed new lawsuits, Freedom of Information Act requests and petitions with agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration. | Hans Gutknecht/The Orange County Register/AP

Still, some of the effects of the increased revenue are clear in the group’s public activities. Bigtree said Informed Consent Action Network had been able to hire more lawyers and scientists, with its staff more than doubling compared to pre-pandemic levels. Children’s Health Defense has expanded its operations into Europe, Canada and Australia, and begun translating some of its materials into languages including Spanish, French and Italian.

Both Children’s Health Defense and the Informed Consent Action Network have filed new lawsuits, Freedom of Information Act requests and petitions with agencies such as the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration. While the Mississippi lawsuit was a notable victory, many of the efforts, like a petition by the Informed Consent Action Network for the FDA to revoke approval of a version of the polio vaccine, stand little chance of success, said Dorit Reiss, a professor at the UC Hastings College of Law who specializes in vaccine law.

Next from POLITICO Live: Mission Update: Inside the Cancer Moonshot — Join us on Thurs., Sept. 28, at 8:30 AM ET, for keynote conversations with the White House’s moonshot coordinator Danielle Carnival, ARPA-Health’s Melissa Antman, plus CEOs from the American Society of Clinical Oncology and the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health.

Source: https://www.politico.com/news/2023/09/24/anti-vaxxers-political-power-00116527

New global action pledge to end TB by 2030

© PAHO/Joshua Cogan A TB patient recovers at home in Colombia.

The document lays out ambitious new targets for the next five years that include reaching 90 per cent of people with TB prevention and care services, providing social benefit packages to those who have the disease, and licensing at least one new vaccine.

TB is the second leading infectious killer worldwide after COVID-19, with some 1.6 million deaths in 2021 alone, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). The only available vaccine  is more than a century old.

Defeating a killer

“Why, after all the progress we have made – from sending man to the moon, to bringing the world to our fingertips – have we been unable to defeat a preventable and curable disease that kills over 4,400 people a day?” said the President of the UN General Assembly, Dennis Francis.

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TB has afflicted humanity for millennia, going by several names including the white plague and consumption.

It is caused by bacteria and mainly affects the lungs, and treatment is with antibiotics.  A WHO council established to facilitate the development and equitable use of new vaccines met for the first time this week.

A personal commitment

Stamping out the TB epidemic is among the health targets of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the roadmap for a more just and green global future by the end of the decade.

Five years ago, countries set the target of delivering TB treatment to 40 million people, reaching 34 million. They also aimed to provide 30 million with preventive treatment but fell short by half.

UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed called for action to tackle the main drivers of TB – poverty, undernutrition, lack of access to healthcare, the prevalence of HIV infections, diabetes, mental health, and smoking.

Stigma surrounding the disease also needs to be reduced so that people can get help without fear of discrimination, she added, while governments must ensure universal health coverage that includes TB screening, prevention and treatment.

Ms. Mohammed also shared her own reason for supporting the global fight.

“My commitment is my personal story: losing my father to TB at 50, 37 years ago this week,” she said.  “Today we have the tools to diagnose, treat, and what we need right now is a vaccine. Let’s end TB now. It is possible.”

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Stigma fuels death

Mongolian author Handaa Rea, who has survived the disease, urged world leaders to “treat TB not only medically but also socially.”

She has written about her own experience of TB-related stigma, discrimination that she said is prevalent in many developing countries, resulting in “hundreds of thousands of people” delaying seeking treatment.

The consequences of stigma are “more enhanced” for women and girls who are held to higher standards of health, well-being and beauty, she added.

“When society says things like ‘she’s too skinny, because she has TB, she’s unworthy of marriage because she has or had TB, or she continues to have TB because she’s irresponsible,’ we as a society are bullying TB patients one step closer to death – a death that is fully preventable. And this has to stop,” she said.

Source: https://news.un.org/en/story/2023/09/1141307

Surge in HIV Cases In Maharashtra: Govt Ponders Strategies

According to the statistics, in the year 2022-2023, around 14,347 people were identified with HIV in Maharashtra, of which 5-6% (674) were in the 17-22 age group.

Surge in HIV Cases In Maharashtra: Govt Ponders Strategies | Representational Pic

Mumbai: The increase in the HIV cases among the vulnerable risk groups has forced the Maharashtra State AIDS Control Society (MSACS) to re-think on effective strategies to step up the awareness about the deadly disease among youth.

According to the statistics, in the year 2022-2023, around 14,347 people were identified with HIV in Maharashtra, of which 5-6% (674) were in the 17-22 age group.

Surge in HIV cases among adolescents

A senior official said that considering the surge in the case among adolescents, they have listed 14,000 colleges across the state where Red Ribbon Clubs (RRC) will be organised. According to MSACS data, there are approximately 2.36 lakh people living with HIV in Maharashtra and in Mumbai there are more than 4,000 HIV-positive persons.

Meanwhile, according to the data provided by the Mumbai Districts Aids Control Society (MDACS), this year from April to August, the city has recorded 1,432 HIV cases, which means around 12 people are identified with HIV per day.

Dr Ishwar Gilada, consultant in HIV, STDs, and Infectious Diseases and President-Emeritus, AIDS Society of India, has said that there has been a slow rise in HIV cases among adolescents which is not good for society. There is a need for conducting RCC to promote awareness about HIV and sexually transmitted infections.

Scientific sex education- need of the hour

“Plenty of sex material is available on the net or on campus and young people surely explore. But scientific sex education is opposed or at best shied away. A third of young people, especially males, visiting our clinic had their first sex experience as ‘abuse’. And it is common that an abused person becomes an abuser in due course,” said Dr Gilada.

The RRC is a movement started by the Government of India in schools and colleges through which students will spread awareness of HIV / AIDS as well as promote voluntary blood donation among youth between the age of 17-25 years.

A senior health official from the state health department said, “There is no watch on adolescents of what they are doing or watching on social media. Moreover, there are several dating apps and indulging with strangers online without knowing the risk factors. The current generation is way ahead of everything due to conducting awareness camps to promote HIV which has taken a backseat.”

Source: https://www.freepressjournal.in/mumbai/surge-in-hiv-cases-in-maharashtra-govt-ponders-strategies

US government restarts delivery of free COVID tests

People walk next to coronavirus disease (COVID-19) testing sites in New York City, New York, U.S., December 12, 2022. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File photo Acquire Licensing Rights

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said on Wednesday it will deliver COVID-19 tests for free to households across the country.

Beginning Sept. 25, households will again be able to order four free tests through COVIDTests.gov, the health agency said, adding that the tests can detect currently circulating COVID-19 variants and are intended for use through the end of 2023.

HHS also announced an investment of $600 million in 12 domestic COVID-19 test manufacturers.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/us-government-restarts-delivery-free-covid-tests-2023-09-20

Sepsis accounts for 1 in five deaths globally: WHO chief

World Health Organisation (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (File Photo/ANI)

On World Sepsis Day, Director General of World Health Organisation (WHO), Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said that WHO is committed to addressing Sepsis as a global threat.

To observe World Sepsis Day, Tedros shared a video on X, captioned, “#Sepsis accounts for nearly 1 in 5 deaths globally, including children. We know these deaths can be avoided, through vaccines, rapid diagnostics and timely access to appropriate and effective treatments. We call on all countries to take serious action. #HealthForAll.”

“Sepsis accounts for nearly one in five deaths globally, and 85 per cent of Sepsis cases and deaths are in low and middle-income countries,” said Tedros in a short video message.

He added that children under five years of age are among the most affected, but these deaths can be avoided through vaccines, rapid diagnostics, and timely access to appropriate and effective treatment.

“WHO is committed to addressing Sepsis as a global threat. Six years ago, our member states adopted the first global resolution on Sepsis. This year’s, World Health Assembly adopted a resolution on emergency, critical and operative care, as well as a global strategy on infection prevention and control,” Tedros said.

The WHO chief also said that next year, “WHO will launch new guidelines on Sepsis prevention and management, including prevention of bloodstream infections.”

Source: https://theprint.in/world/sepsis-accounts-for-1-in-five-deaths-globally-who-chief/1761049/

Nipah Virus In Kerala: 2 Dead, 9-Yr-Old Among 2 Others Infected In Kozhikode. Epicentres Identified

Nipah Virus Deaths: Two people in Kerala’s Kozhikode district died after being infected by the Nipah virus while two out of four suspected have been found to be positive for the infection.

Photo of a medical college after the Nipah virus alert, in Kozhikode, Tuesday, Sept. 12, 2023. ( Image Source : PTI )

Nipah Virus Deaths: The Kerala government confirmed on Tuesday that two unnatural fatalities in Kozhikode district were caused by the Nipah virus infection amid concerns about the resurgence of the deadly pathogen. The southern state is on alert as two cases of Nipah virus have been confirmed among four individuals whose saliva was sent for testing at the National Institute of Virology (NIV) in Pune. Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan confirmed the cases via a Facebook post.

He revealed that two individuals tested positive for Nipah, while the other two received negative results.

In response, he urged the public to remain calm and focus on precautionary measures.

“Everyone should strictly follow the instructions of the health department and the police and fully cooperate with the restrictions,” said Chief Minister Vijayan, emphasising the importance of adherence to health guidelines.

Source: https://news.abplive.com/kerala/union-health-minister-mansukh-mandaviya-confirms-two-nipah-virus-deaths-kerala-know-details-1629286

US approves updated COVID vaccines to rev up protection this fall

The U.S. approved updated COVID-19 vaccines Monday, hoping to rev up protection against the latest coronavirus strains and blunt any surge this fall and winter.

The Food and Drug Administration decision opens the newest shots from Moderna and Pfizer and its partner BioNTech to most Americans even if they’ve never had a coronavirus vaccination. It’s part of a shift to treat fall updates of the COVID-19 vaccine much like getting a yearly flu shot.

There’s still another step: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention must sign off. A CDC advisory panel is set to issue recommendations Tuesday on who most needs the updated shots. Vaccinations could begin later this week, and both the COVID-19 and flu shot can be given at the same visit.

A third vaccine maker, Novavax, said its updated shot is still being reviewed by the FDA.

COVID-19 hospitalizations have been rising since late summer although –- thanks to lasting immunity from prior vaccinations and infections –- not nearly as much as this time last year.

But protection wanes over time and the coronavirus continually churns out new variants that can dodge prior immunity. It’s been a year since the last time the vaccines were tweaked, and only about 20% of adults ever received that earlier update.

“Vaccination remains critical to public health and continued protection against serious consequences of COVID-19, including hospitalization and death,” FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks said in a statement. “We very much encourage those who are eligible to consider getting vaccinated.”

Just like earlier vaccinations, the fall round is cleared for adults and children as young as age 6 months. FDA said starting at age 5, most people can get a single dose even if they’ve never had a prior COVID-19 shot. Younger children might need additional doses depending on their history of COVID-19 infections and vaccinations.

Source: https://apnews.com/article/covid-vaccines-coronavirus-234f27c74438fb4812a014dbd98ddbde

Uttarakhand: Dengue outbreak sweeps through Dehradun, prompting urgent action

Uttarakhand: Dengue outbreak sweeps through Dehradun, prompting urgent action

The Raipur area of Dehradun has been engulfed by a concerning dengue fever outbreak, with reports indicating that it has become a major hotspot for the disease.
An alarming number of residents in every household within the Raipur area are grappling with dengue-related symptoms, and the situation has escalated to over 500 confirmed dengue cases in this locality alone.

This outbreak has already claimed the lives of 13 individuals in Dehradun.
According to the Health Department and Municipal Corporations, Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami has taken action by issuing stern directives to both departments.
Source: https://www.aninews.in/news/national/general-news/uttarakhand-dengue-outbreak-sweeps-through-dehradun-prompting-urgent-action20230910130433/

 

Dengue cases remain stubbornly high in Bengaluru, say doctors

Pediatricians report that 10% to 20% of dengue patients are now requiring hospitalization. Dr. Rajath Athreya, a pediatrician and member of the state’s Covid Technical Advisory Committee, notes that this includes admissions to the ICU.

In the South zone, which saw the highest number of cases in August, the BBMP (Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike) has implemented a schedule to ensure source reduction activities are carried out in all types of localities, not just slums.

Dengue cases, which reached their peak in July, have not shown a significant decrease in Bengaluru, according to doctors.

Pediatricians report that 10 per cent to 20 per cent of dengue patients are now requiring hospitalization. Dr. Rajath Athreya, a pediatrician and member of the state’s Covid Technical Advisory Committee, notes that this includes admissions to the ICU.

Source: https://www.deccanherald.com/india/karnataka/bengaluru/dengue-cases-remain-stubbornly-high-in-bengaluru-say-doctors-2680118

As Dengue Cases Rise, Bengaluru Launches Surveillance Dashboard, Mobile App

On Thursday, Karnataka Health Minister Gundu Rao reviewed the measures taken by Bengaluru’s civic body to contain the spread of dengue.

Over 3,200 dengue cases have been reported in Bengaluru in the past two months (Representational)

Bengaluru: Amid a surge in dengue cases in Bengaluru, Karnataka Minister of Health and Family Welfare Dinesh Gundu Rao Friday launched a disease surveillance dashboard and a mobile application for effective monitoring and curbing of the vector-borne disease.
The dashboard, a disease forecasting software, has been developed in partnership with the Department of Health, Bengaluru municipal corporation — Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) — and the Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Robotics Technology Park (ARTPARK ) at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) to assist policymakers and public health officials in preparing for outbreaks and managing disease control activities.

According to officials, the dashboard uses Artificial Intelligence, or AI, to predict a surge in infections four weeks in advance. It provides a map of outbreaks across Karnataka at the district and sub-district levels along with case trends across years.

A four-week predictive risk map of outbreaks will also be made available to state and district officers. In addition to predictions, data from multiple sources is being standardised and streamlined for improved analysis.

Both the dashboard and mobile app are focused on dengue, to begin with, and the aim is to expand to additional diseases in the future, the officials said.

On Thursday, the health minister along with officials reviewed the measures taken by the BBMP to contain the spread of dengue.

More than 3,200 dengue cases have been reported in Bengaluru in the past two months, said the minister who has directed the civic body to intensify their efforts to control the spread of the virus.

According to him, 1,649 and 1,590 dengue cases were detected in July and August, respectively. As many as 416 cases have come to light in September so far.

The cases are on the rise because of stagnant rain waters, Mr Rao said on Thursday. He added that pesticides are being sprayed in Bengaluru to get rid of mosquitoes, which carry the virus.

Source: https://www.ndtv.com/bangalore-news/as-dengue-cases-rise-bengaluru-launches-surveillance-dashboard-mobile-app-4371221

WHO sounds major alarm over ‘concerning’ Covid wave coming this winter as deaths soar

It comes as schools across America bring back mandated face masks, recalling the darkest days of the pandemic.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has warned of “concerning trends” for COVID-19 ahead of winter as a dangerous new strain runs rampant across the Northern Hemisphere.

The UN health agency estimates that hundreds of thousands of people around the world are currently hospitalized with the virus. However, the true number could be much higher because many countries have stopped reporting Covid data.

“We continue to see concerning trends for COVID-19 ahead of the winter season in the Northern Hemisphere,” WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told an online press conference.

He added: “Deaths are increasing in some parts of the Middle East and Asia, intensive care unit admissions are increasing in Europe and hospitalizations are increasing in several regions.”

America has also seen a surge in cases as a new variant, designated BA.2.86, gains a foothold in the country as winter approaches.

Covid: WHO is pushing for increased vaccinations as Covid cases rise across Northern Hemisphere (Image: Getty Images)

According to a recent bulletin in Yale Medicine, the new variant has more than 30 mutations to its spike protein – located on the outer surface of a coronavirus – which helps it enter and infect human cells.

“Such a high number of mutations is notable,” infectious disease specialist Dr Scott Roberts said.

“When we went from [Omicron variant] XBB.1.5 to [Eris] EG.5, that was maybe one or two mutations.

“But these massive shifts, which we also saw from Delta to Omicron, are worrisome.”

Schools across America are reinstating mask mandates in response to the surge in cases.

Kinterbish Junior High School in Alabama has asked all students, staff and visitors to start wearing face masks in classrooms and hallways “due to the slow rise of Covid cases in the area” in recent weeks.

Alabama’s Talladega City School district which is home to more than 1,700 students has also urged children and staff to wear masks, but stressed they are “encouraged but not required”.

And Maryland elementary school became embroiled in controversy this week after saying students must don tightly fitted N95 masks for 10 days, despite a smattering of cases.

Source: https://www.the-express.com/news/science/111089/who-covid-19-new-coronavirus-winter-symptoms-vaccine

Ghaziabad boy dies of rabies, hid dog bite from parents for over a month

A woman in Ghaziabad has five to six dogs and even fed stray dogs in her locality. The teenager was allegedly bitten by one of her dogs.

Sabez, a Ghaziabad teen, died of rabies while being brought from Bulandshahr. (Source: Twitter)

A 14-year-old boy died in Ghaziabad on Monday due to rabies. The boy was bitten by a dog over a month ago but he allegedly did not tell his parents about it.

A woman in Sabez’s neighbourhood rears and feeds stray dogs, and five to six dogs stay in the locality. The boy, Sabez, was allegedly bitten by one of those dogs. The dogs have allegedly bitten other people in the past.

Out of fear, Sabez did not tell his family about the incident, and began feeling symptoms of rabies four days later, his grandfather Matlub Ahmed said.

As per his family, Sabez developed a fear of wind and water and started living in the dark. He was scared and made loud noises, his family said.

Following this, Sabez was taken to several hospitals in Ghaziabad, Meerut and Delhi’s AIIMS.

He was also taken to Bulandshahr for treatment. Sabez died when he was returning from Bulandshahr with his father, Yakub.

Sabez’s family has sought action over the incident, and has urged the administration and authorities to ensure such incidents do not take place.

Following the incident, the Ghaziabad Municipal Corporation issued a notice to the woman, saying she had kept the dogs in an “unauthorised” manner, and that they kept barking.

Source: https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/ghaziabad-teen-dies-rabies-dog-bite-police-2431376-2023-09-05

New Yorkers told to mask up for Labor Day as new Covid variant sparks superspread fears

Health experts have warned Americans to be cautious this Labor Day Weekend as a new Covid variant is sparking concerns and has the potential to cause an explosion in cases.

With summer coming to an end and a new Covid variant on the loose, some health experts are recommending people begin taking precautions again – starting with mask-wearing.

There is potential for a major spike in Covid cases following Labor Day weekend, when socializing will be at its peak with people going to parties, parades, and celebrations.

Patrick Gallahue of the New York City Department of Health exclusively told Daily Express US: “As cases rise, precautions become increasingly important, especially for our most vulnerable New Yorkers who are older, disabled, or have underlying health conditions.

“Staying up to date with Covid vaccines, along with other proven prevention tools – like masking, testing, and staying home when sick – continue to be our best defense against Covid and other respiratory viruses.”

CDC spokesperson Scott Pauley told Daily Express US the CDC recommends that all people are up to date on their vaccines before they travel.

New Yorkers flock to beach for Labor Day weekend (Image: Getty)

Pauley said: “Anyone may choose to wear a mask in crowded or poorly ventilated indoor areas, including on public transportation and in transportation hubs at any time.”

Labor Day weekend may bring an increase in Covid cases as people flock to beaches to celebrate the end of summer with friends and family.

Mercedes Carnethon, a professor of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University, told Daily Express US that she expects the new Covid BA.2.86 variant – dubbed ‘Pirola’ – will “spread rapidly through travel this Labor Day weekend.”

Some New Yorkers’ Labor Day plans were dampened when a few Long Island beaches closed due to rough surf and strong rip tides from hurricanes Franklin and Idalia, but those beaches seem to have reopened just in time for the holiday.

Source: https://www.the-express.com/news/health/110540/new-york-ncovid-variant-Pirola-masks-labor-day

Number of dengue cases in Kolkata has doubled in about a fortnight

Representational image
File picture

The number of dengue cases in Kolkata has doubled in about a fortnight, figures shared by some officials of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation over the last month have shown.

There has been a corresponding rise in hospital admissions too, senior officials and doctors of private healthcare units in Kolkata said.

A KMC official said on Saturday that till the last count, about 1,400 dengue infections have been reported since January. KMC updates the number of dengue infections in the city every Thursday.

The Telegraph had reported earlier that about 700 dengue cases were reported till the second week of August.

Neither the KMC nor the state health department released any official data on the number of dengue infections, but some officials shared with The Telegraph the number of dengue infections on condition of anonymity. There is no official data on the number of people who have died of dengue, but several deaths from dengue have come to light.

KMC officials admitted on Saturday and Sunday that the numbers have seen a sharp rise in the last two weeks.

“We are going door-to-door telling people that they should not allow water to accumulate anywhere in their house. We are also detecting and destroying sites for mosquito breeding. We are also cleaning abandoned vacant plots as they turn into sites for mosquito breeding,” said a KMC official.

Source: https://www.telegraphindia.com/my-kolkata/news/number-of-dengue-cases-in-kolkata-has-doubled-in-about-a-fortnight/cid/1963583

RAAC crisis: Return of pandemic-style home learning for unsafe concrete schools should last ‘days, not weeks’

Labour has also ramped up its calls for the government to reveal the “full extent” of the impact of RAAC on schools and says it could force a vote in parliament next week.

A taped-off section inside a school affected with reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC)

A return to pandemic-style home learning for school pupils impacted by the unsafe concrete crisis should only last “days, not weeks”, the government has said.

More than 100 schools and colleges have been told by the Department for Education (DfE) to partially or fully shut buildings – just days before the start of the new school year – over fears about the safety of facilities built with reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (RAAC).

However, the department says a move to remote education should only be considered as a “last resort” and only for a “short period”.

Schools impacted by the crisis have instead been advised by the government to find space in nearby schools, community centres or even “empty local office buildings”.

They say such spaces should be utilised for the “first few weeks” while structural supports are installed to mitigate the risk of collapse of structures built with RAAC.

Meanwhile, Labour has ramped up its calls for the government to reveal the “full extent” of the impact of RAAC, including by publicly listing the schools which have had to close or partially shut.

Schools Minister Nick Gibb has pledged to publish the list in “in due course”, while it is understood a full list will only be released by the DfE when all parents are informed and mitigations are in place.

Labour says it will call for a vote next week in the House of Commons with the aim of forcing the government to publish all official documents about their handling of the RAAC crisis.

The party’s shadow education secretary, Bridget Phillipson MP, said: “Parents and the public have the right to know where public buildings affected by this dangerous concrete are, what ministers knew about the risk that this concrete posed to life and why they acted to intervene only days before the start of the school term.

“An urgent, full audit is required to reveal the extent that Conservative ministers failed to replace this dangerous concrete across the public sector estate.

“It’s time ministers were transparent about their handling of this debacle: if they still refuse to publish these documents and give parents the reassurances they deserve about the risks to their children’s safety, then we will force a vote in parliament next week.”

The Liberal Democrats, meanwhile, have called on the prime minister to hold an emergency Cobra meeting over the problem.

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/raac-crisis-return-of-pandemic-style-home-learning-for-unsafe-concrete-schools-should-last-days-not-weeks-12953794

Himachal Pradesh reports five deaths from 732 scrub typhus cases

As many as 732 persons tested positive for scrub typhus while five deaths due to disease have been reported in Himachal Pradesh so far this year.

The Health Department has braced up tackle scrub typhus a rickettsial disease effectively.

National Health Mission, Mission Director Sudesh Mokta informed that till now 5218 tests have been conducted in the state, out of which 723 people were found positive and 5 people died due to the disease.

“Keeping in mind the current situation, all the Chief Medical Officers and Senior Medical Superintendents of the state have been asked to ensure proper storage of medicines,” he said, adding that it has also been asked to conduct comprehensive information, education and communication activities along with appropriate management for prevention and treatment of scrub typhus.

A spokesperson of the Health Department said that scrub typhus is a seasonal zoonotic (animal borne disease), generally the number of patients with high fever increases during the rainy season.

Most cases of which occur during the rainy season, which coincides with hay cutting and apple season.

“This disease is spread by the bite of a flea (mite) infected with a special bacteria (Rickettsia). This bacteria enters the body through the skin and causes scrub typhus fever. If a person is suffering from fever along with pain and shivering in the joints or there are cramps, stiffness in the body or the body feels as if it is broken and also has lumps in the neck, under the arms and above the hips due to excessive infection, then immediately the person needs to consult the nearest doctor,” said the spokesperson.

The spokesperson urged the general public to cover their entire body, especially their legs, feet and arms while working in the fields and bushes.

Source: https://www.thestatesman.com/india/himachal-pradesh-reports-five-deaths-from-732-scrub-typhus-cases-1503217402.html

Pirola Variant Mutating Rapidly, UK Put On Alert After Country Confirms First Case Of New COVID-19 Strain BA.2.86

Pirola Variant Mutating Rapidly, UK Put On Alert After Country Confirms First Case of New COVID-19 Strain BA.2.86

The National Health Service (NHS) on Thursday warned the people of Britain to be on the lookout for the new Pirola Covid variant amid concerns it might unleash a new wave of illnesses. According to a new World Health Organisation (WHO) risk assessment, a new COVID-19 strain BA.2.86, nicknamed Pirola, is getting more people infected in several parts of the world. As per reports, the first case of BA.2.86 aka Pirola variant was detected through PCR testing from a sample that was collected on August 16.

The virus hasn’t officially been confirmed as a ‘variant of concern’ by the UK’s health watchdog, but it’s caused concern among scientists over its high number of mutations. As per studies, the new variant BA.2.86 has as many changes as Omicron had from the Delta variant of coronavirus.

Source: https://www.thehealthsite.com/news/pirola-variant-mutating-rapidly-uk-put-on-alert-after-country-confirms-first-case-of-new-covid-19-strain-ba-2-86-fourth-wave-new-covid-wave-1005720/

 

Scores of sea lions die from bird flu in Argentina

Hundreds of sea lions were reported dead in Peru earlier in 2023, as the virus ravaged bird populations across South America. PHOTO: REUTERS

Scores of sea lions have died from bird flu in Argentina, officials said on Tuesday, as an unprecedented global outbreak continues to infect mammals, raising fears it could spread more easily among humans.

Animal health authorities have recently reported dead sea lions in several locations along Argentina’s extensive Atlantic coast, from just south of the capital Buenos Aires to Santa Cruz near the southern tip of the continent.

Another “50 dead specimens have been counted… with symptoms compatible with avian influenza”, read a statement from a Patagonian environmental authority.

“The number of dead is rising. There is no veterinary treatment for these cases,” a local official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The authorities have asked Argentinians to avoid beaches along the country’s roughly 5,000km coastline where cases have been reported.

Sea lions are marine mammals, like seals and walruses. Adult males can weigh about 300kg.

The H5N1 bird flu has typically been confined to seasonal outbreaks, but since 2021 cases have emerged year-round and across the globe and led to what experts say is the largest outbreak ever seen.

Hundreds of sea lions were reported dead in Peru earlier in 2023, as the virus ravaged bird populations across South America.

There is no treatment for bird flu, which spreads naturally between wild birds and can also infect domestic poultry.

Source: https://www.straitstimes.com/world/scores-of-sea-lions-die-from-bird-flu-in-argentina

COVID-19 and flu autumn vaccination drive brought forward as new variant emerges in UK

NHS officials say the variant, known as BA.2.86, represents the most concerning new variant since Omicron first emerged. And while It is not classified as a “variant of concern”, scientists say it carries a high number of mutations.

Scientists also say it has mutated, but has not been classed as a “variant of concern”.

Vaccination efforts aimed at care home residents and those who are immunocompromised will now start on 11 September rather than the initial October date.

This group will be followed by carers, pregnant women, social care personnel, and individuals aged 65 and above, all of whom will receive booster shots this upcoming winter.

Dame Jenny Harries, UK Health Security Agency chief executive, said: “As we continue to live with COVID-19, we expect to see new variants emerge.

“Thanks to the success of our vaccine programme, we have built strong, broad immune defences against new variants throughout the population. However, some people remain more vulnerable to severe illness from COVID-19.”

Dame Jenny acknowledged the complexity of estimating the potential impact of BA.2.86, citing limited available data.

“As is the case with all emerging and circulating COVID-19 variants, both within the UK and on a global scale, we will continue to closely monitor BA.2.86 and provide guidance to the government and the public as our understanding grows,” she asserted.

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-and-flu-autumn-vaccination-drive-brought-forward-as-new-variant-emerges-in-uk-12950935

Air Pollution in the World’s Most Polluted City ‘Delhi’ is Reducing Life Expectancy by Nearly 12 Years, Finds Study

Representational Image (Piyal Bhattacharjee/BCCL Delhi)

Delhi, the most polluted city in the world, is grappling with a severe air pollution crisis that is resulting in a staggering reduction of life expectancy by 11.9 years, as revealed by a recent study.

The findings based on PM2.5 data for 2021 derived from satellites showed that pollution in India has increased from 56.2 µg/m3 of air in 2020 to 58.7 µg/m3 of air in 2021. This exceeds the World Health Organization’s (WHO) guideline of 5 micrograms per cubic metre of air by more than 10 times.

As a result, all of India’s 1.3 billion people live in areas where the annual average particulate pollution level.

About 67.4 per cent of the Indian population live in areas that exceed the country’s own national air quality standard of 40 µg/m3 of air.

In 2021, Delhi’s annual average PM2.5 level was found to be 126.5 µg/m3 air, which is more than 25 times the WHO guideline of 5 µg/m3 of air, according to the report. In 2020, this figure was found to be a little lower at 107 µg/m3 of air.

“If India were to reduce particulate pollution to meet the WHO guideline, residents in Delhi would gain 11.9 years of life expectancy. In North 24 Parganas — the country’s second most populous district — residents would gain 5.6 years of life expectancy,” the study said.

Further, their findings showed that particulate pollution has increased over time. From 1998 to 2021, average annual particulate pollution increased by 67.7 per cent, further reducing average life expectancy by 2.3 years. From 2013 to 2021, 59.1 per cent of the world’s increase in pollution has come from India.

Source : https://weather.com/en-IN/india/pollution/news/2023-08-29-air-pollution-in-delhi-is-reducing-life-expectancy-by-nearly-12

Highly mutated COVID variant BA.2.86 detected in 2 more countries, but ‘pandemic in a different phase’, says WHO

Highly mutated COVID variant BA.2.86 detected in Switzerland and South Africa, in addition to other countries but pandemic in ‘a different phase’

Highly mutated COVID variant BA.2.86 detected in Switzerland, South Africa, in addition to other countries. Experts say it is unlikely to cause severe disease and death.

A highly mutated COVID variant named BA.2.86 has been identified in Switzerland and South Africa, along with Israel, Denmark, the US, and the UK, according to a leading official from the World Health Organization (WHO), Reuters reported.

“We are in a very different phase (of the pandemic) than if this popped up in the first year,” said Dutch virologist and WHO adviser, Marion Koopmans.

This offshoot of Omicron carries over 35 mutations in crucial parts of the virus when compared to XBB.1.5, which was the predominant variant in most of 2023. This mutation count is roughly similar to the original Omicron variant that caused a surge in infections compared to its predecessor.

BA.2.86 was first detected in Denmark on July 24 when it infected a patient at risk of severe illness. Subsequently, it has been found in symptomatic patients, routine airport screenings, and wastewater samples in a few countries.

A group of international scientists suggests that while monitoring BA.2.86 is essential, it’s unlikely to trigger a devastating wave of severe disease and fatalities, considering the global immunity built up through vaccinations and previous infections.

Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s COVID-19 technical lead, stated that the number of cases is still relatively low. The fact that known cases aren’t linked suggests that it is already circulating more widely, especially given reduced global surveillance.

Source : https://www.livemint.com/science/highly-mutated-covid-variant-ba-2-86-detected-in-2-more-countries-but-pandemic-in-a-different-phase-says-who-11692924807621.html

Dengue cases cross 600 mark in Uttarakhand, Dehradun worst affected

According to the information received from the Health Department, Dehradun has the maximum number of four-hundred and eighteen (418) dengue patients while the toll in the entire state stands at six hundred (600)

Haridwar, Udham Singh Nagar and Dehradun districts of the state are the most affected by dengue. File (For Representational purpose only) | Photo Credit: ANI

After nature’s havoc in Uttarakhand, dengue cases are now creating fear among the people as the state has crossed six hundred cases of the mosquito-borne viral disease.

According to the information received from the Health Department, Dehradun has the maximum number of four-hundred and eighteen (418) dengue patients while the toll in the entire state stands at six hundred (600).

Haridwar, Udham Singh Nagar and Dehradun districts of the state are the most affected by dengue. In the aftermath of recent heavy monsoon floods that inundated parts of Uttarakhand, health officials are grappling with a significant surge in dengue cases.

Dengue (break-bone fever) is a viral infection that spreads from mosquitoes to people.Waterlogging in areas due to incessant rains has caused a preferable environment for Aedes mosquitoes to breed. These mosquitoes are responsible for transmitting dengue, chikungunya, and Zika viruses.

Source : https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/dengue-cases-cross-600-mark-in-uttarakhand-dehradun-worst-affected/article67247352.ece

Dengue outbreak in Bangladesh: Over 60,000 cases recorded in August

August has proved to be the worst-ever month in the history of dengue in Bangladesh, with 60,352 cases of the vector-borne disease recorded, Dhaka Tribune reported.

August has proved to be the worst-ever month in the history of dengue in Bangladesh, with 60,352 cases of the vector-borne disease recorded, Dhaka Tribune reported.

Dengue cases are not likely to ebb anytime soon, the report noted, adding that in August alone, the country witnessed more deaths than the overall toll recorded last year.

This month, Bangladesh has seen 286 dengue deaths, the Tribune reported, adding that the toll translates to 10 deaths and 2,321 cases on an average daily in the last 26 days.

The grim figures come as nine more dengue deaths – five of them in Dhaka alone – were reported in a span of 24 hours till Saturday morning, raising the number of fatalities from the mosquito-borne disease to 537 this year, according to Dhaka Tribune.

During the same period, 1,960 more patients were hospitalised with viral fever, according to the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS).

Of the new patients, 833 were admitted to hospitals in Dhaka and the rest outside the capital, indicating a worsening situation across the country, said the DGHS.

A total of 8,232 dengue patients, including 3,846 in the capital, are now receiving treatment at hospitals across the country.

Source: https://health.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/industry/dengue-outbreak-in-bangladesh-over-60000-cases-recorded-in-august/103113627

Higher environmental temperature increases virulence of dengue virus

Pic: https://theindianpractitioner.com

A team of scientists at the Rajiv Gandhi Centre for Biotechnology who studied the effect of temperature in altering the virulence of dengue virus (DENV) using mice models has found that environmental temperature can play a key role in enhancing the virulence of DENV.

The factors that drive dengue virus evolution and selection of virulent variants are yet not clear. Dengue being a mosquito-transmitted disease, the ability of the causative virus to grow in the cells of mosquito as well as in humans is a critical factor determining viral virulence. Higher environmental temperature shortens DENV extrinsic incubation period in mosquitoes, increases human transmission, and plays a critical role in outbreak dynamics.

Source: https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/kerala/higher-environmental-temperature-increases-virulence-of-dengue-virus/article67228374.ece

Biden’s alcohol czar warns new guidance could be only 2 beers a week

What the ale?

Americans could soon be advised to limit themselves to just two drinks a week, a top health official warned Thursday.

President Biden’s alcohol czar, Dr. George Koob, told the Daily Mail that the USDA could revise its alcohol recommendations to match Canada’s guidelines.

In January, the Great White North began urging residents to limit their alcohol consumption to two drinks per week.

Since the 1990s, the US has recommended women limit themselves to one drink per day and men to two drinks per day.

The USDA recommends no more than one alcoholic drink or shot a day for women and two for men.
Stephen Yang
The US government may tighten its alcohol guidance to match Canada’s recommendations.
Stephen Yang

However, this guidance is up for review in 2025.

“If there’s health benefits, I think people will start to re-evaluate where we’re at [in the US],” Koob told the Daily Mail of Canada’s “big experiment” with its alcohol guidance.

“So, if [alcohol consumption guidelines] go in any direction, it would be toward Canada.”

Koob, the director of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, noted there are “no benefits” to physical health from drinking alcohol.

“Most of the benefits people attribute to alcohol, we feel they really have more to do with what someone’s eating rather than what they’re drinking,” he explained.

“So it really has to do with the Mediterranean diet, socio-economic status, that makes you able to afford that kind of diet and make your own fresh food and so forth.”

President Biden’s alcohol czar, Dr. George Koob, said the US may recommend that Americans consume no more than two drinks a week.
AFP via Getty Images

A Mediterranean diet — which is high in fats and proteins, but low in carbohydrates — is touted as an overall healthy diet.

The lifestyle has been said to protect against inflammation and heart disease.

Socio-economic status has also been linked to health.

Poverty is the nation’s fourth-leading cause of death, killing an estimated 183,000 Americans 15 and older in 2019, according to findings published in April in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Source: https://nypost.com/2023/08/24/bidens-alcohol-czar-warns-new-guidance-could-be-2-beers-a-week/

Centre Reviews Covid-19 Situation, Asks States To Keep Eye On New Variants Like Pirola, Eris

As of Monday, India has 1,475 active coronavirus cases. The maximum number of active cases is in Kerala (1,010), followed by West Bengal (182) and Maharashtra (116).

New Delhi: The Centre on Monday reviewed the Covid-19 situation in the country and asked all states to maintain a close watch on the new global variants. PK Mishra, the Principal Secretary to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, chaired a high-level meeting with NITI Aayog member Vinod Paul, Cabinet Secretary Rajiv Gauba, and other top officials, and called for ramping up the whole genome sequencing.

In the meeting that was also attended by PMO Advisor Amit Khare, and DG ICMR Rajiv Bahl, an overview of the global Covid-19 situation was given by Secretary (Health) including certain newer variants of coronavirus like BA.2.86 (Pirola) and EG.5 (Eris), which have been reported globally. He underlined that as per World Health Organization (WHO), while Eris has been reported from over 50 countries, the Pirola variant is in four countries.

Source: https://zeenews.india.com/india/centre-reviews-covid-19-situation-asks-states-to-keep-eye-on-new-variants-like-pirola-eris-2651933.html

China Grapples With Rapid Surge In Monkeypox Cases As WHO Urges Swift Action

The most recent data from WHO highlights China’s emergence as a major concern. In the last three months alone, China has documented 315 confirmed mpox cases.

Image: AP

In recent months, China has been grappling with a surge in cases of mpox, a disease previously known as monkeypox, earning the unenviable title of the world’s fastest-growing outbreak, according to a recent report by the World Health Organization (WHO). The agency is urging swift action from China to curb the spread of the disease.

While parts of the Americas and Europe have managed to rein in the mpox outbreak, Asia has become a new hotspot for the disease. The origins of this outbreak can be traced back to mid-2022. Countries such as Japan, South Korea, and Thailand experienced sporadic cases last year. However, this year has witnessed a notable upswing, with these nations reporting double-digit cases on a weekly basis.

WHO suggests China is a major concern

The most recent data from WHO highlights China’s emergence as a major concern. In the last three months alone, China has documented 315 confirmed mpox cases. The accuracy of these numbers is challenged by inconsistencies in reporting from the Chinese government, making it challenging to fully comprehend the true scale of the outbreak within the country.

In efforts to contain mpox, various nations have employed different strategies. While the disease is less contagious than Covid-19, its impact has been felt globally, affecting thousands. One key factor in controlling mpox has been proactive measures like vaccination. However, in China, questions have arisen about the efficacy of the government’s actions in tackling the outbreak, as some experts argue that more could be done.

According to a report from South China Morning Post, Hong Kong, too, has witnessed a surge in mpox cases, believed to be a delayed result of the relaxation of Covid-19 travel restrictions. Experts caution that this trend might lead to more infections spilling over from mainland China, which has recently seen a significant rise in cases. While the overall threat to the general population remains relatively low, concerns are arising over the necessity of hospital isolation for mpox patients, especially those with mild symptoms.

Source: https://www.republicworld.com/world-news/rest-of-the-world-news/china-grapples-with-rapid-surge-in-monkeypox-cases-as-who-urges-swift-action-articleshow.html

NYC drug crisis reaches new low with addicts standing around with needles hanging out of their arms

The Big Apple’s spiraling drug crisis has reached a new low, with depravity across the city so commonplace, a glass-eyed junkie can stand in the middle of a Midtown sidewalk on a weekday morning for five long minutes — with a needle jutting out of his scab-covered arm.

The horrific example played out Wednesday around 11 a.m. on West 37th Street, where the man stood motionless with a needle jabbed into his vein, as passersby so numb to it all blithely maneuvered around him.

“That’s what I used to see when I was a kid, people all overdosed in the middle of the street — and dead,” Angel Figueroa, 55, who works in Midtown and grew up surrounded by the ills of addiction in the Lower East Side, told The Post.

“This world went backward, not forward.”

Even junkies such as Abraham Hwang, 32, can clearly see how grim the drug crisis has become in New York City, which he said is “at the climax” of the epidemic.

A zonked-out man stood in Midtown for 5 long minutes with a needle jutting out of his arm. Helayne Seidman

“I thought Long Island was bad,” said Hwang — who recently moved to the Big Apple with the hope of getting clean.

“My addiction definitely got worse here,” he said, plunging a needle into his neck to get his fix in front of a vacant storefront in the middle of West 36th Street.

On Wednesday, junkies later were spotted across the street from where the man with the needle in his arm stood, in front of a health center run by the nonprofit Housing Works, which provides clean syringes to addicts as part of its controversial “harm reduction” services.

Pamela Flamini, a 45-year-old cashier at the Italian restaurant Non Solo Piada, located across the street from the Housing Works center, ripped the nonprofit and the city’s open, growing embrace of harm reduction policies and services as the reason why her workplace is burglarized multiple times a week.

Abraham Hwang, who fled Long Island to get clean in New York City, said his addiction has gotten worse since.
Helayne Seidman

“All drug addicts, they come here, [make a] long line in the morning,” Flamini said, adding that drug dealers also lurk in the area like vultures, and have threatened her.

“The people afterward [are] like a zombie. They come and steal things.”

Housing Works has raked in at least $80 million in taxpayer funding since 2018 for its housing programs and services, including substance abuse treatment. The group refused to comment.

The sight of junkies with used syringes at their feet and arms covered in blood has been a regular sighting for bespoke embroidery designer Ryan Abrams, 39, who works just a few dozen feet down from where the needle man stood.

Housing Works provides clean needles to junkies, many of whom locals say shoot up on the block.
Helayne Seidman

“I see someone shoot up here every day,” Abrams said.

“I started bringing a Taser to work because people were throwing garbage cans and lunging at you with bloody arms.”

Tourists en route to Macy’s or Broadway matinees are shocked by the Big Apple’s theater of the absurd.

“On Madison Avenue, they were injecting themselves…the blokes were out in the open. They’re not bothered,” sighed Charlie Callow, 59, who was visiting with his wife and their two kids from Northampton, England.

“The last time I came [to the city] was a long time ago but it’s changed a hell of a lot.”

Workers, meanwhile, are terrified to come into the office these days, fearful of being randomly attacked by addicts getting high outside their buildings.

“These people, they can go crazy, they can stick you with the dirty needles for nothing,” said maintenance worker Andro Macapinlac, 46, standing not five feet away from a group of junkies sucking on crack pipes out along his office building on West 36th Street.

“You don’t want to come to work like this, risking your life,” he added.

Source: https://nypost.com/2023/08/19/nyc-drug-crisis-reaches-new-low-with-addicts-standing-around-with-needles-hanging-out-of-their-arms/

Florida officials report five deaths from ‘flesh-eating’ bacteria in Tampa Bay since January

Vibrio vulnificus infections are rare but can cause severe skin breakdown and ulcers

Five people are confirmed dead in the Tampa Bay area because of a flesh-eating bacterium known to lurk at beaches, Florida officials reported.

According to Florida Health, the vibrio vulnificus bacterium’s natural habitat is in warm, brackish seawater because it requires salt to live. The bacteria typically grow more quickly in warmer months.

Infections are rare, but health officials say those with open wounds, cuts or scrapes should stay out of the water.

Five people have died this year from reported bacterial infections, including two in Hilsborough County and one each in Pasco, Polk and Sarasota counties. There have been 26 reported cases of vibrio vulnificus infections in Florida since January, officials said.

Vibriosis causes an estimated 80,000 illnesses and 100 deaths in the United States every year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (BSIP/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

In 2022, there were 74 total cases and 17 deaths. Those numbers were abnormally high that year because Hurricane Ian spilled sewage into the ocean, increasing bacteria levels.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), some Vibrio vulnificus infections lead to necrotizing fasciitis, a severe infection in which the flesh around an open wound dies. Necrotizing fasciitis can be caused by more than one type of bacteria.

People with open wounds, cuts or scratches can be exposed to the bacterium through direct contact with the mixture of fresh and seawater.

Vibrio vulnificus can cause an infection of the skin which may lead to skin breakdown and ulcers.

Five people in the Tampa Bay area have died from confirmed vibrio vulnificus infections since January, Florida health officials said. (DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images)

While anyone can get a Vibrio vulnificus infection, the infections can be more severe for people with weakened immune systems.

The bacterium can invade the bloodstream, causing a severe life-threatening illness with symptoms including fever, chills, decreased blood pressure and blistering skin lesions.

It has the potential to cause severe illness or death; the CDC says about one in five people die sometimes within a day or two of becoming ill.

Vibrio vulnificus can also cause disease in people who eat raw or undercooked oysters and shellfish.

Source: https://www.foxnews.com/us/florida-officials-report-5-deaths-flesh-eating-bacteria-tampa-bay-january

COVID cases up 55% in New York, doctors warn of new variants

Despite the availability of vaccines and boosters, COVID-19 cases are rising nationwide this summer.
Christopher Sadowski

In May, the COVID-19 emergency was officially declared over — but the coronavirus is still a significant concern, according to some in the medical community.

The latest data from the New York state Department of Health, released Aug. 2, shows that COVID cases spiked by 55% since the prior week, with an average of 824 reported cases per day across the state.

And hospital admissions for the disease increased by 22% compared to the previous week, which translates to more than 100 admissions a day.

Meanwhile, a new variant — dubbed EG.5, or eris — has arisen as the dominant strain, causing about 17% of COVID cases nationwide, according to a new alert from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

However, Dr. Ashwin Vasan, the NYC health commissioner, has said “the good news is that we’re not seeing anything in the virus that suggests it’s getting more transmissible or more lethal. What this really is, is just waning immunity … This is part of living with COVID and these fluctuations are to be expected.”

The latest data from the New York state Department of Health.
NY Post
Despite the availability of vaccines and boosters, COVID-19 cases are rising nationwide this summer.
Christopher Sadowski

The rise in COVID-19 cases isn’t limited to New York: The CDC recorded 8,000 US hospital admissions for COVID-19 in the week ending July 22, a 12% increase from the week before.

CDC data also shows that each year since the pandemic began in 2020, an annual winter spike in cases — such as when the omicron variant caused a leap in infections in the winter of 2021-22 — is followed by a smaller increase in the middle of the summer.

“The most frightening thing to me is, we don’t know where that [omicron] variant came from,” Bershteyn said, adding that an even deadlier variant could arise without warning.

“That event could happen anytime,” she added. “That thought sends chills down my spine.”

As new variants continue to appear, health experts are concerned that we’re not prepared — especially for a worst-case scenario.

“The most frightening thing is if the virus was more deadly,” Anna Bershteyn, assistant professor in the Department of Population Health at NYU’s medical school, told The Post.

“That’s really scary,” Bershteyn added, “if a virus had the transmissibility of COVID and was as deadly as the MERS coronavirus,” referring to Middle East respiratory syndrome, a disease with a fatality rate of over 30%.

Lack of testing frustrates health experts

Even as cases increase and people gather for summer travel, popular movies and other events, tests for COVID-19 aren’t as readily available as they once were.

Despite a rise in COVID-19 cases, testing and test kits are in short supply.
REUTERS

In June, the Biden administration stopped mailing out free test kits, and the ones people stockpiled over the past year or two are either expired or will be soon.

Without testing, “it will be hard for people to know if what they have is COVID,” Bershteyn said.

Because of the availability of the antiviral Paxlovid, “we actually have no supply problems” when it comes to treating cases of COVID-19, Bershteyn added. “Testing is really the key way to take advantage of these medications.”

And even though the number of COVID-19 deaths has dropped, “1 out of every 100 deaths is still something,” Bershteyn noted, referring to the CDC’s estimate that 1% of US deaths are due to the disease.

Moreover, many health insurance plans stopped paying for over-the-counter test kits once the requirement to do so ended when the emergency declaration was lifted.

The lack of available test kits could add to a rise in COVID hospitalizations and deaths, say health experts.

“We are going to continue to see people hospitalized for COVID … that could have been prevented had testing been freely and widely available,” Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious diseases specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, told the Washington Post.

Source: https://nypost.com/2023/08/08/covid-19-cases-jump-in-new-york-free-tests-are-hard-to-find/

Mushroom poisoning deaths: Family lunch mystery grips Australia

Two Saturdays ago, five people sat down for a family meal in a tiny Australian town.

Within a week, three would be dead, a fourth fighting for life, and the fifth under investigation for potentially poisoning her guests with wild mushrooms.

But the 48-year-old woman who cooked the lunch says she has no idea what happened, and that she loved her family and wouldn’t hurt them.

The peculiar case has captured national attention, puzzled police, and left a tight-knit community reeling.

‘Nefarious’ or ‘accidental’?
The unusual tale began when Gail and Don Patterson stopped for lunch at their daughter-in-law Erin Patterson’s home in Leongatha – a two-hour drive south-east of Melbourne.

With them were the Wilkinsons – Heather, Gail’s sister, and her husband Ian.

All four were much-loved members of the nearby town of Korumburra, where Ian was the local Baptist church pastor.

But it was no ordinary lunch. Hours after the meal, all four guests took themselves to the local hospital with what they first believed was severe gastro.

It quickly became clear it was something far worse, and they were transferred to a hospital in Melbourne to receive the best medical care the state had to offer.

Despite that, Heather, 66, and Gail, 70, died on Friday, and Don, 70, on Saturday. Ian, 68, remains in a critical condition in hospital, awaiting a liver transplant.

Ian and Heather Wilkinson are among those who became sick

Police say they believe the four ate death cap mushrooms – which are highly lethal if ingested. Oddly, Erin is fine.

But beyond that, little is clear.

Investigators say they are unsure if Erin ate the same food as her guests, or even if the mushrooms were in the dish that she served.

They also pointed out that she was separated from her husband – who is the Pattersons’ son – but described it as an “amicable” split.

“Nefarious activity” has not yet been ruled out though.

“At this point in time, the deaths are unexplained,” the homicide squad’s Dean Thomas told reporters on Monday.

“It could be very innocent, but we just don’t know.”

Ms Patterson says she “can’t fathom what has happened”.

Crying as she spoke to reporters outside of her home, she declined to answer questions about what meals were served to which guests or where the mushrooms had come from.

But she did profess her innocence.

“I didn’t do anything; I loved them.”

Community shaken
As news of the incident spread through the local area, so did horror.

“No-one would ever expect that to happen here,” the regional mayor Nathan Hersey told the BBC.

“Who in their right mind would expect that they would lose… people who contribute and give so much… in such a way?

“People are grieving and extremely sad.”

In a statement, the victims’ families paid tribute to them as “pillars of faith” within the community.

“Their love, steadfast faith, and selfless service have left an indelible mark on our families, the Korumburra Baptist Church, the local community, and indeed, people around the globe,” the statement published in the South Gippsland Sentinel Times said.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-66391325

Doctors shifted to Aam Aadmi Clinics, 16 rural dispensaries shut in Ludhiana

Phullanwal Subsidiary Health Centre shut as the staff have been shifted to Aam Aadmi Clinics.

Though the government has claimed that it is making healthcare easily accessible to the public by opening Aam Aadmi Clinics, medical facilities have become inaccessible to the rural population as doctors from subsidiary health centres (commonly known as rural dispensaries) have been shifted to these clinics.

Rural dispensaries are under the Department of Rural Development and Panchayat and doctors have been shifted to these clinics, which are under the Health Department.

In Ludhiana district, 16 doctors from rural dispensaries have been shifted. Not only doctors, even pharmacists and Class IV staff have been shifted. As a result, 16 dispensaries in rural areas are lying shut. One dispensary caters to six villages and there are 62 rural dispensaries in Ludhiana district. There are apprehensions that with no doctors nearby, it could also lead to an increase in medical ‘quackery’ in villagers.

Eight new clinics were recently opened in the district, which resulted in shutting down of one rural dispensary. The entire staff from Khakhat has been shifted to the newly opened Sunet clinic.

Rural Dispensaries in Ludhiana district from where the entire staff, including doctors, pharmacists and Class IV employees, has been shifted are Sidhwan Kalan, Khatra Chumar, Leela Megh Singh, Aloona Miana, Bija, Maksudra, Ikolaha, Bhaini Dared, Jatana, Pandori, Ayali Kalan, Saholi, Phullanwal, Hissowal, Pamal and Khakhat. Apart from this, pharmacists and Class IV employees from Chaunta and Class IV employees from Gagra have also been shifted.

People have been blocking the traffic in protest against the shifting of the staff, after which the staff was sent back to some dispensaries.

A villager from Bija said that the urban population already had access to healthcare facilities and shifting doctors from rural dispensaries would mean the end of healthcare facilities in rural areas. “Government should encourage young doctors to serve in rural areas and not shift them from here,” said he.

Source: https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/punjab/doctors-shifted-to-aam-aadmi-clinics-16-rural-dispensaries-shut-in-ludhiana-505738

Nationwide Drill From Today To Check Covid Preparedness As Cases Rise

Covid Mock Drill: Mansukh Mandaviya will oversee the mock drills at AIIMS in Haryana’s Jhajjar. (File)

Union health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya, had, last week held a review meeting and asked states to stay alert and review the preparedness of health facilities.

New Delhi: A nationwide drill is planned today and tomorrow to review emergency preparedness of both public and private hospitals amid a spike in Covid-19 cases.

Union Health Minister Mansukh Mandaviya will oversee the drill at All India Institute Of Medical Science (AIIMS) in Haryana’s Jhajjar.
Mansukh Mandaviya in last week’s review meeting had asked state health ministers to stay alert and check the preparedness of health facilities.

He had said that irrespective of the new variants, the five-fold strategy of ‘Test-Track-Treat-Vaccinate and adherence to Covid-Appropriate Behaviour’ remains the tested strategy for Covid management.

In an exclusive interview with NDTV, the health minister assured that the government is prepared to deal with the recent spike in infections. ICU beds, oxygen supply, and other critical care arrangements are in place, he said, adding that there’s a weekly review of preparedness.

On a possible fourth wave of the covid pandemic, the health minister said there’s a need to be alert. The last Covid mutation was BF.7 sub-variant of Omicron, and now XBB1.16 sub-variant is causing the surge in infections, he said, adding that in the ministry’s experience, sub-variants are not too dangerous.

With most parts of the country witnessing a rise in COVID-19 cases over the last few days, several states have made masks mandatory again, while others advised to observe caution.

Haryana and Puducherry have made wearing face masks mandatory in public places as a precautionary measure. Masks have been made mandatory in Haryana’s schools too.

Source: https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/covid-19-coronavirus-nationwide-mock-drill-from-today-to-check-covid-preparedness-as-cases-rise-3934334

China CDC urges WHO to take ‘scientific, fair’ position on COVID origins

Airline staff wear personal protective equipment (PPE) to protect against coronavirus disease (COVID-19) disease as they work at Beijing Capital International airport in Beijing, China March 13, 2022. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun

The head of China’s Center For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Saturday urged the World Health Organization (WHO) to return to a “scientific, fair” position in tracing the origin of COVID-19.

At a news conference, Shen Hongbing warned the WHO against politicising the source of the virus, which was first detected in central China in late 2019, or becoming a tool of another country.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/world/china/china-cdc-urges-who-take-scientific-fair-position-covid-origins-2023-04-08/

Govt cautions on antibiotics use as Covid cases rise

Amid a spike in cases across the country, the health ministry has shared an updated guideline on Covid-management which says that antibiotics should not be used unless there is ‘clinical suspicion’ of bacterial infection.
The guideline advises physicians should explore possibility of co-infection of Covid with other endemic infections and to avoid using steroids in mild disease incidence.

Though hospitalisations due to Covid are lower compared to the previous waves of the pandemic, the number of infections have surged significantly across the country. According to the latest data shared by the government on Saturday, 2,994 new Covid cases were recorded in the country on Saturday and nine fatalities in the past 24 hours were confirmed – two each from Kerala, Karnataka, Delhi and Punjab and one from Gujarat.

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