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May 3, 2024 4:10 PM CST
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Common diabetes drug lowers SARS-CoV-2 levels, clinical trial finds
Stephanie Soucheray, MA Today at 3:12 p.m.
COVID-19

Today, researchers from the University of Minnesota published evidence that the common diabetes drug metformin decreases the amount of SARS-CoV-2 in the body and helps reduce the risk of rebound symptoms if given early in the course of non-severe illness.

The study, published in Clinical Infectious Diseases, suggests metformin may also help prevent long COVID.

The researchers tested metformin against a placebo in 999 adults infected with COVID-19. More than 50% of the study enrollees were vaccinated, and treatment took place when the Omicron variant was the most dominant strain in the United States.

Study included those at standard-risk
Moreover, according to Carolyn Bramante, MD, principal investigator of the study and an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota, the study participants represented a standard- risk population, a group that currently lacks effective treatment options for the novel coronavirus.

"This is not a high-risk population," Bramante told CIDRAP News. Instead, participants were 30 years or older, had a body mass index of 25 or higher (overweight), and did not require hospitalization for their COVID-19 infection.

In several trials, Paxlovid has been shown to prevent deaths and hospitalization in high-risk, unvaccinated people, but standard-risk populations have not shown improvement in either time to resolution of symptoms or the incidence of hospitalization or death.

Bramante said that these patient population demographics suggest metformin may be a clinical tool in outpatient medication that could be widely used.

"The data would be justified in prescribing it outpatient medication that works," she said.

Four-fold reduction in viral load by day 10
Participants were given a 14-day course of metformin, and participants collected nasal swabs on days 1, 5, and 10. Bramante said early treatment was key: Participants were enrolled within 3 days of a positive test, and if symptomatic, reported having symptoms for 7 or fewer days.

The mean SARS-CoV-2 viral load was reduced 3.6-fold with metformin relative to placebo by day 10, the authors found, and those who received metformin were less likely to have a detectable viral load than placebo at days 5 or 10 (odds ratio [OR], 0.72; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.55 to 0.94).

Metformin reduced the odds of hospitalization or death through 28 days by 58%; emergency department visits, hospitalizations, and death through 14 days by 42%; and long COVID through 10 months by 42%.

Viral rebound, defined as a higher viral load at day 10 than day 5, was less frequent with metformin (3.28%) than placebo (5.95%; OR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.36 to 1.29).

While the mechanism of action is not known, Bramante said metformin likely lowers inflammation and inhibits translation of the virus.

This study makes a strong case for a potential effect of metformin on COVID-19 virologic decay.
In a commentary on the study, the authors write, "This study makes a strong case for a potential effect of metformin on COVID-19 virologic decay and prompts reevaluation of existing data in support of its use."
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 3, 2024 4:11 PM CST
Name: Rj
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Case report bolsters evidence for H5N1 avian flu spread from cow to Texas dairy worker
Lisa Schnirring Today at 12:48 p.m.
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)

Scientists from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and their collaborators in Texas today shared new details about an investigation into a recently reported H5N1 avian flu infection in a dairy worker— likely the first known transmission of the virus between mammals and a human.

The team detailed their clinical and genetic sequencing findings today in a letter to the New England Journal of Medicine. The man's infection, which was mild and consisted of conjunctivitis, was first reported on April 1, and the CDC shared its initial sequencing findings the following day.

Follow-up clinical probe stymied by lack of access
The man's right-eye conjunctivitis began in late March. He didn't have contact with sick or dead birds or other animals but did have direct contact with healthy dairy cows, as well as ones that had illness signs that were similar to those at nearby facilities where H5N1 was confirmed. He said he wore gloves while working, but not respiratory or eye protection.

Researchers said the man's eyes could have become infected by touching them with virus-contaminated hands, or from exposure to respiratory droplets or aerosols from sick cows or activities in the dairy setting.

Health workers collected nasopharyngeal and conjunctival swabs, which were positive for H5N1 in PCR testing. There was enough RNA in the conjunctival sample for full genome sequencing, and scientists were able to grow the virus from both specimens.

The patient also developed redness in his left eye. He and his household contacts received oseltamivir, and over the following days, the man recovered, and no symptoms were reported in his contacts.

In the supplementary appendix, researchers said they weren't able to do a follow-up investigation on the sick worker or other exposures among workers at the farm. They also noted that they weren't able to collect follow-up specimens from the patient to track viral loads or shedding duration. "We were also unable to collect acute or convalescent sera to assess seroconversion in the dairy farm worker or household contacts," the group wrote.

A spokesperson for the Texas Department of State Health Services told CBS News that the Texas dairy worker came to a Texas field office for testing and did not disclose the name of their workplace.

Data gaps but strong evidence of cow-to-human spread
Initial sequencing found that the virus belonged to the same B3.13 genotype circulating in dairy cows, and virus isolation from both specimens yielded identical viruses. As reported earlier by the CDC, the virus in the man's specimen had a change, PB2 E67K, that has a known link to virus adaptation to mammalian hosts.

In the supplementary appendix, the group said when they compared the sequence from the patient with the available cattle sequences, they found that the human sequence lies just outside the larger cluster of cattle sequences from Texas, though it is closer to cattle than B3.13 genotype viruses from wild birds or wild mammals.

"Sequence data from the farm where the infected dairy farm worker was exposed to presumably infected was not available," they wrote, noting that the sequencing picture so far has gaps and suggests the virus may have been circulating undetected for some time.

They said it's possible that the patient was infected with an earlier slightly different virus or that there was more than one independent spillover of the B3.13 genotype from wild birds to cattle.

Taken together, though, they wrote the genetic and epidemiologic evidence provide strong evidence of transmission from a sick cow to a human.
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 3, 2024 4:13 PM CST
Name: Rj
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US respiratory virus levels tail off to low levels
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News brief Today at 3:19 p.m.
Lisa Schnirring
Topics Influenza, General COVID-19 Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)

US indicators for flu, COVID, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) declined further last week, with no states reporting moderate, high, or very high activity, down from one the week before, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said today in its weekly updates.

empty nurse's station
hxdbzxy / iStock
For flu, the percentage of outpatient visits for flulike illness remained below the national baseline for the fourth week in a row, and CDC saw declines in test positivity, hospitalizations, and overall deaths.

However, it received 10 more reports of pediatric flu deaths, raising the season's total to 158. The deaths occurred between early January and the middle of April. Six were due to influenza A, and of four subtyped viruses, three were 2009 H1N1 and one involved H3N2. Three kids died from influenza B infections and one death occurred in a child who was coinfected with influenza A and influenza B.

COVID hospitalization data tracking changes
Meanwhile, the CDC's latest COVID data updates show further declines in severity markers, which include hospitalizations and deaths, as well as its early indicators, which include emergency department visits and test positivity. Wastewater SARS-CoV-2 detections, another early indicator, remain at the minimal level.

The CDC recently announced that as of May 1, hospitals are no longer required to report COVID hospital admissions, hospital capacity, or hospital occupancy data to the Department of Health and Human Services through the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network, which will change how the data appear on the COVID data tracker going forward.

Instead of national admission counts, the data will show COVID hospitalization rates per 100,000 population though COVID-NET, which covers 300 hospitals across 13 states. The CDC said it encourages states to continue to report COVID hospitalizations voluntarily.

The HHS has proposed a new rule that would require hospitals to report weekly data apart from a public health emergency, according to a recent Federal Register notice. According to the rule, which if finalized would take effect on October 1, hospitals would have to electronically report information on COVID, flu, and RSV.

The rule is part of a broader group of rule changes, and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services is taking comments through June 10.
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 3, 2024 4:14 PM CST
Name: Rj
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Making an Impact: Results from an NIAID-funded Study of Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients

https://www.niaid.nih.gov/news...
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 3, 2024 6:58 PM CST
Name: Rj
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We still don't understand how one human apparently got bird flu from a cow

https://arstechnica.com/scienc...
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 5, 2024 7:38 PM CST
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WHO Overturns Dogma on Airborne Disease Spread. The CDC Might Not Act on It.
— The report "is a complete U-turn," according to one expert

https://www.medpagetoday.com/i...
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 5, 2024 8:40 PM CST
North Central Massachusetts (N (Zone 5b)
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crawgarden said: WHO Overturns Dogma on Airborne Disease Spread. The CDC Might Not Act on It.
— The report "is a complete U-turn," according to one expert

https://www.medpagetoday.com/i...


Wow. I have to agree with the Nurse's Union. The last one was COVID, the next one will come, and it looks like the CDC will prevent proper preparation so it will be, yet again, healthcare professionals who will suffer for it.

I hope they'll change their recommendations.
You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
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May 6, 2024 4:12 PM CST
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Studies yield more clues about H5N1 avian flu susceptibility, spread in dairy cows
Lisa Schnirring Today at 4:04 p.m.
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)

Two new preprint studies shed more light on why high H5N1 avian flu viral loads have been seen in the milk of infected dairy cows and what the genetic sequences say about transmission among cattle and to other species, with one suggesting cows could be an influenza mixing vessel.

In other H5N1 developments, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) reported two more outbreaks in poultry, both of them on commercial farms—in Michigan and Minnesota.

Cows could be mixing vessel
In a bioRxiv preprint, researchers from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and St Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, analyzed what type of influenza A receptors are expressed in various cow tissues, including the respiratory tract, cerebrum, and respiratory tract.

Influenza A viruses can bind to host receptor cells by grabbing onto sialic acid and its adjoining sugar unit, which varies by shape and affects binding that can vary by virus type. Avian flu viruses usually prefer to bind to alpha 2-3 receptors, and human flu virus typically prefer to bind to alpha 2-6 receptors.

The team used archived tracheal samples from two beef calves and tissues collected from routine necropsy from different clinical cases at a veterinary pathology lab at the University of Copenhagen. The samples included tissues from the mammary glands of a 4-year-old disease-free lactating dairy cow.

The scientists found that duck and human-type influenza A receptors were widely expressed in the bovine mammary gland, with chicken-type influenza receptors common in the cow respiratory tract. They saw only low expression of influenza A receptors in the brain tissue samples.

Taken together, the authors wrote that the findings suggest a mechanism for high H5N1 loads in dairy cow milk and suggest that cattle have the potential to be a mixing vessel for novel influenza viruses.

Sam Scarpino, PhD, director of artificial intelligence and life sciences at Northeastern University, on X said, "The new pre-print shows convincingly that cows harbor both human-flu and avian-flu receptors in their mammary glands. As a result, dairy cattle *may* have similar potential as pigs to serve as evolutionary intermediaries between avian and human flus."

More clues, questions from experts on virus evolution
Also, a group of 22 international experts on virus evolution posted a preliminary two-part report on the genomic epidemiology of the H5N1 outbreak in US dairy cows, which seem to track with recent genomic findings from USDA-led researchers. They posted their report on Virological.org, a hub for prepublication data designed to assist with public health activities and research.

Tom Peacock, PhD, one of the contributors and a virologist at Imperial College London and the Pirbright Institute, said on X that the cattle outbreak, but perhaps not the human case, likely arose from a single introduction from wild birds. He said the human case could signal an early offshoot from the cattle branch, an independent spillover, or a jump from wild birds.

Genetic evidence still points to a Texas source for the B3.13 genotype, but he added that there may be a sampling bias, he said. He reiterated that the virus was likely circulating continuously for several months before it was detected.

"There is a lot we still only partially understand about this outbreak (and more data is always better!) but I feel we have much more of a grip than a few weeks ago," Peacock wrote. "I would confidently say there is now strong evidence of mammal-to-mammal transmission here as well."

New poultry outbreaks in 2 states
In other developments, the virus struck more poultry flocks in two states, the APHIS said in its latest updates.

Michigan reported another outbreak at a commercial turkey farm in Gratiot County in the central part of the state, its second over the past week. The facility affected in the newest outbreak has 26,400 birds.

The virus was also detected at a commercial breeder farm in Minnesota's Dodge County that houses 8,500 birds.
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 6, 2024 4:14 PM CST
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Quick takes: Long Beach TB outbreak
News brief Today at 12:54 p.m.
Lisa Schnirring
Topics Tuberculosis

City officials in Long Beach, California, have declared a public health emergency to better allow the city to respond to a tuberculosis (TB) outbreak at a private facility housing at-risk populations, which has sickened 14 people so far, one fatally. Nine people have been hospitalized. The outbreak is occurring in a people who have barriers to healthcare, including those experiencing homelessness, housing insecurity, mental illness, substance use, and underlying health conditions. Officials said the risk to the general public is low. The investigation revealed that 170 people may have been exposed to TB, a number expected to grow, and health department staff are currently screening contacts.
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 6, 2024 5:54 PM CST
North Central Massachusetts (N (Zone 5b)
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crawgarden said: https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/tub...

Quick takes: Long Beach TB outbreak
News brief Today at 12:54 p.m.
Lisa Schnirring
Topics Tuberculosis

City officials in Long Beach, California, have declared a public health emergency to better allow the city to respond to a tuberculosis (TB) outbreak at a private facility housing at-risk populations, which has sickened 14 people so far, one fatally. Nine people have been hospitalized. The outbreak is occurring in a people who have barriers to healthcare, including those experiencing homelessness, housing insecurity, mental illness, substance use, and underlying health conditions. Officials said the risk to the general public is low. The investigation revealed that 170 people may have been exposed to TB, a number expected to grow, and health department staff are currently screening contacts.


Oh no!
You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
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May 6, 2024 10:42 PM CST
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crawgarden said: WHO Overturns Dogma on Airborne Disease Spread. The CDC Might Not Act on It.
— The report "is a complete U-turn," according to one expert

https://www.medpagetoday.com/i...


It is absurd that it took four years for the WHO to finally agree with what experts were saying in the first half of 2020 - COVID is airborne and air quality is crucial. The amount of damage done by this misstep is incalculable.

https://www.wired.com/story/th...
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May 6, 2024 10:43 PM CST
Plants SuperMod
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Also:

What are the most reliable rapid antigen tests? A new study has analysed 26 RATs from Australia and Canada, finding only six could effectively detect the lowest concentrations of COVID-19.

https://www1.racgp.org.au/news...
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May 7, 2024 4:42 PM CST
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With H5N1 avian flu silently spreading in US cattle, wastewater testing could be key
Mary Van Beusekom, MS Today at 1:25 p.m.
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)

Over a year ago, Marc Johnson, PhD, of the University of Missouri, developed a probe to detect H5 avian influenza A virus (IAV) genetic material in city wastewater because he expected it to start popping up in routine surveillance—just not from cattle.

"This cattle thing, that snuck up on us," he told CIDRAP News. "If this [probe] had been implemented nationally, we would've known about this in wastewater back in February, and they would have maybe gotten a lid on it sooner. It's really surprising that it became so widespread without anybody knowing."

But the probe wasn't operationalized at that time because H5N1 wasn't recognized until some cattle started showing symptoms in late March.

A low-cost, real-time option
Wastewater surveillance begins at municipal wastewater treatment plants, which serve the vast majority of cities with populations above 10,000, Johnson said. In Missouri, for example, wastewater treatment plants serve roughly 60% of the population.

Treatment plant operators collect composite samples from the water every 15 to 30 minutes and send them to a lab, where they are concentrated and the viral RNA or DNA extracted for testing. The low-cost tests tell how much virus or viral fragments are present and identify the strains.

Influenza A virus, which infects both animals and people, has been responsible for all global flu epidemics. The highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) strain of H5N1 emerged in the late 1990s, it began spreading widely in wild birds and poultry and also infected people.

Particularly important for potentially zoonotic diseases
Wastewater treatment facility
Bilanol / iStock
In late March, the 2.3.4.4b H5N1 clade was discovered in cows with flulike symptoms. It had already been detected in wild birds, poultry, and some wild mammals in widespread outbreaks in the United States and other countries starting in 2022. In April, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) released 239 genetic sequences involved in the cow outbreaks.

Since then, viral H5N1 RNA (not infectious virus) has been detected in one in five US pasteurized milk samples (but not sour cream, cottage cheese, or ground beef) in supermarkets. One case of human infection (the second documented US case) was reported in a man who worked on a dairy farm. The man developed conjunctivitis but experienced no other symptoms and has since recovered. The previous human case involved a poultry worker in Colorado in April 2022.

Last month, Emory University researchers used a hydrolysis probe-based reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to measure H5 concentrations in wastewater dating back to February 4 at three sentinel Texas treatment plants near the H5N1 2.3.4.4b outbreak epicenter.

The plants (two in Amarillo and one in Dallas) were chosen from 15 facilities that showed a secondary onset of IAV in March and April, after the typical flu season. Industrial discharges containing animal waste, including milk byproducts, had been released into wastewater at the Amarillo facilities.

"If dairy industry activities in these sewersheds are a primary source of H5 in wastewater, this suggests that there are [sic] may be additional, unidentified outbreaks among cattle with milk sent to these facilities since milk from infected animals is required to be diverted from food supply," the study authors wrote.

H5 wasn't detectable before mid-March but then quickly reached similar concentrations as IAV M genes—an indicator of influenza virus transmissibility—which were among the highest ever recorded in wastewater. At the same time, flu-related emergency department visits in the associated Texas public health regions were declining.

"These results suggest that wastewater monitoring is a viable method of monitoring certain animal pathogens, and can provide a leading edge of detection that is of particular importance for diseases with zoonotic potential like HPAI," the study authors wrote.

Michael Osterholm, PhD, MPH, director of the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP), publisher of CIDRAP News, said testing wastewater systems that have no intake of animal-related sewage could serve as sentinels for human disease.

"There are those systems that have no animal input, so if they showed a spike, it could show evidence of human transmission," he said. He added that some systems like this may be testing for this now but that he hasn't seen the data yet.

Tracking mutations over time
Richard Webby, PhD, director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Studies on the Ecology of Influenza in Animals and Birds and a researcher at St. Jude's Children's Research Hospital, in Nashville, Tennessee, said surveillance of both wastewater and supermarket milk samples is valuable. "It gives us a bit of a handle on whether the virus is changing as well without having to go into the contaminated environment of the farm," he said.

Surveillance at wastewater treatment plants serving meat-processing plants could also be useful, Johnson said. "We've seen this before, where we'll see viruses from animals being slaughtered showing up in the municipal wastewater," he said, adding that it could look for spillover to pigs or other animals. "The nice thing about that—it's kind of gross—but it doesn't matter which compartment the virus is in, it will end up in the wastewater."

Most respiratory viruses, such as SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19, unlike enteric (intestinal) viruses, aren't infectious once they traverse the gastrointestinal tract because they are sensitive to changes in the level of acidity, Johnson said, adding that he has been unable to culture infective SARS-CoV-2 viruses from wastewater (see sidebar below).

It seems that the same is true for H5N1, which is also a respiratory virus.

Wastewater surveillance lessons from COVID

Marc Johnson, PhD, of the University of Missouri, who has conducted wastewater surveillance for Missouri since SARS-CoV-2 emerged in the United States in 2020, said monitoring and genomic sequencing can give public health officials an early warning of a coming surge.

"For pretty much every lineage that came through, we detected it long before they knew about it in patients," he said, giving as much as 3 weeks' lead time in the case of the JN.1 sublineage in fall 2023.

In those cases, public health officials have time to relay the risk to the public and decide how to allocate resources to enhance, say, vaccine availability.

A couple of months into their wastewater surveillance, Johnson's team started seeing so-called cryptic SARS-CoV-2 lineages, or strains that didn't match any known strains—some of them from a single watershed that would linger for 2 months before disappearing.

"There are people who get infected with SARS-CoV-2 who are infected for as long as 4 years," Johnson said. "Some of them shed enormous amounts of viral materials, and we think this is because [the virus is] adapting to infect the gut. There's this one town in Ohio that had the highest COVID levels of the entire pandemic—and it was from one person," but no one has managed to culture it.

"We see mutations in these cases that are turning it back into an enteric virus," he added. "They are starting to have these mutations that look more like the coronaviruses that affect the GI [gastrointestinal] tract," and those types of coronaviruses are more stable and may be able to weather the GI tract and still be infectious in feces.
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 7, 2024 4:44 PM CST
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USDA reports more H5N1 detections in poultry, wild birds
Lisa Schnirring Today at 3:42 p.m.
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)

In its latest updates, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) reported more H5N1 avian flu detections in poultry and wild birds, including several pigeons in Michigan's Ionia County, an area where the virus has been reported in dairy cows.

In other US developments, a top official from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday urged state health and veterinary officials to ensure that personal protective equipment (PPE) is available to workers on dairy farms, poultry farms, and slaughterhouses.

Pigeons test positive in a Michigan dairy outbreak area
APHIS yesterday reported 16 more H5N1 detections in wild birds, half of them rock pigeons that the agency harvested from Michigan's Ionia County, one of the state's five counties that has reported the virus in dairy herds.

In some instances, the B3.13 genotype circulating in dairy cows has jumped to wild birds and poultry. APHIS data so far, however, indicates that the Ionia County samples belong to the Eurasian H5N1 lineage.

The agency also reported the virus in birds found dead in three other states—New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. All are linked to the Eurasian H5N1 strain.

Samples for the latest batch of wild bird samples were collected in mid to late April.

In other developments, APHIS reported one more outbreak in poultry, which involves a flock of 600 birds in Idaho's Cassia County, which last month reported H5N1 in a dairy herd. Idaho's State Department of Agriculture said the location had backyard birds.

CDC urges PPE for at-risk farm workers
Yesterday the CDC's principal deputy director, Nirav Shah, JD, MD, had a call with state health officials and veterinarians, as well as leaders from public health partners, to discuss PPE for farm workers, according to CDC's readout of the meeting. Along with a request to make PPE available to farm workers, Shah recommended that PPE be prioritized to farms where H5N1 has been detected in dairy cows.

He asked states to use their existing PPE stockpiles and told them how to request more PPE, if needed, from the federal government's Strategic National Stockpile.

The CDC reiterated that the general risk to the US public remains low, but it noted that people with work exposures may be at higher risk.

Shah also said the CDC remains ready to support state health officials who are conducting outbreak response operations.
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May 7, 2024 4:46 PM CST
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Study: HHS's COVID vaccine campaign saved $732 billion in averted infections, costs
Mary Van Beusekom, MS Today at 2:40 p.m.
COVID-19

The US Department of Health and Human Services' (HHS's) COVID-19 vaccination campaign saved $732 billion by averting illness and related costs during the Delta and Omicron variant waves, with a return of nearly $90 for every dollar spent, estimates a study by HHS and the research firm Fors Marsh.

The study was published yesterday in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

In April 2021, HHS launched its "We Can Do This" public education campaign to boost US COVID-19 vaccine uptake, especially among high-risk populations and those reluctant to receive the vaccine. The push, one of the largest of its kind in US history, aimed to reach 90% of adults at least once per quarter, with more than 7,000 television, digital, print, and radio ads in 14 languages.

The study authors used weekly media market data, information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and survey data on the drive's effects on vaccination from launch up to March 2022.

Nearly 52,000 American lives saved
The researchers estimated that the campaign encouraged 22.3 million Americans to complete their primary COVID-19 vaccine series, preventing nearly 2.6 million infections, including nearly 244,000 hospitalizations.

Findings underscore the utility of public health education campaigns in promoting behavior change and in corresponding health and fiscal benefits.
"Preventing these outcomes resulted in societal benefits to the U.S. of $740.2 billion, accounting for such factors as medical expenses, wages, and other costs that people and institutions would have incurred in the absence of the Campaign," the authors wrote. "In comparison, the Campaign cost $377 million, with an additional $7.9 billion spent to vaccinate 22.3 million people in that time period," for an estimated return on investment of $89.54 on every dollar spent.

"Findings underscore the utility of public health education campaigns in promoting behavior change and in corresponding health and fiscal benefits," the researchers wrote. "Furthermore, findings may guide the implementation of public health education campaigns to combat future public health crises."

In an HHS press release, May Malik, MA, HHS senior advisor for public education campaigns, said, "This research confirms the benefits of public health campaigns as part of a multi-layered response to a public health crisis and to the effort to provide accurate information to the American public."
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 7, 2024 4:48 PM CST
Name: Rj
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White House unveils revised dual-use and pandemic pathogen research oversight policy
News brief Today at 3:40 p.m.
Lisa Schnirring
Topics Dual-Use Research

The White House yesterday announced the release of the administration's Office of Science Technology Policy (OSTP) revised policy on oversight of dual-use research of concern (DURC) and pathogens with enhanced pandemic potential (PEPPs). It also released an implementation guidance document to accompany the updated policy.

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In January 2022, the National Institutes of Health asked its federal advisory group, the National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity (NSABB), to review government policies on work with potentially dangerous pathogens. The NSABB formed two working groups to revise the research oversight policies, a process that included listening sessions with stakeholders.

The advisers issued draft recommendations in January 2023, which said current PEPP definitions were too narrow and focused too much on "highly transmissible" and "highly virulent."

More specific list of pathogens
Thomas Inglesby, MD, who directs the Center for Health Security at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, today on a LinkedIn blog post commended the OSTP on the release of its revised oversight policy and said it represents a significant stride forward in safeguarding public health and establishing common sense and strong biosafety and biosecurity surrounding pathogens that pose the greatest risk in the event of accidents or misuse.

He said some of the valuable new elements include defined roles, clear levels of oversight, and a more appropriate list of pathogens covered. Inglesby also listed several areas that need further clarification, such as whether category 2 should cover animal and plant global threats and issues around transparency in reporting.
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 7, 2024 4:53 PM CST
Name: Rj
Just S of the twin cities of M (Zone 4b)
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Long-COVID symptoms in kids appear to differ by age
News brief Today at 3:09 p.m.
Stephanie Soucheray, MA
Topics COVID-19

Symptoms associated with long COVID in children differ based on the child's age, according to a nationwide, multisite study presented at the Pediatric Academic Societies 2024 Meeting late last week in Toronto.

Researchers grouped infants, toddlers, and preschool-age children (birth to 5 years), school-age children (6 to 11 years), adolescents (12 to 17 years), and young adults (18 to 25 years) to compare symptoms and long-COVID trends. The participants included 7,229 caregivers and children enrolled in the National Institutes of Health's Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER)-Pediatrics study, 75% of whom had reported having had a COVID-19 infection.

Preschoolers more likely to report general symptoms
School-age children, adolescents, and young adults all reported more fatigue, headaches, and trouble concentrating and focusing. Change in smell or taste was more commonly described by adolescents and young adults.

Chest pain and palpitations were more common in young adults, but not in the younger age groups, the authors said.

In general, children 5 and younger with a history of COVID-19 infection were more likely to report general symptoms, including poor appetite, trouble sleeping, and fussiness compared to peers with no history of COVID infection.

These findings underscore the importance of characterizing Long COVID in children while researchers are still discovering the long-term effects of COVID-19 infection in this age group.
"These findings underscore the importance of characterizing Long COVID in children while researchers are still discovering the long-term effects of COVID-19 infection in this age group, " said Rachel Gross, MD, associate professor of pediatrics and population health at New York University Grossman School of Medicine and a presenting author. "This research is important because clinicians can appropriately diagnose and treat Long COVID when they better understand how different age groups are affected by the condition."
As Yogi Berra said, “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.”
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May 7, 2024 6:20 PM CST
Name: Rj
Just S of the twin cities of M (Zone 4b)
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Doc who claimed COVID shots cause magnetism gets medical license back

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May 7, 2024 7:04 PM CST
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crawgarden said: Doc who claimed COVID shots cause magnetism gets medical license back

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Wonders never cease. Thumbs down
You don't kick walls down, you pull the nails out and let them fall.
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