Vaping linked to COVID-19 risk in teens and young adults – Stanford Medical Center Report

Vaping is linked to a substantially increased risk of COVID-19 among teenagers and young adults, according to a new study led by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.

The study, which was published online Aug. 11 in the Journal of Adolescent Health, is the first to examine connections between youth vaping and COVID-19 using U.S. population-based data collected during the pandemic.

Among young people who were tested for the virus that causes COVID-19, the research found that those who vaped were five to seven times more likely to be infected than those who did not use e-cigarettes.

Teens and young adults need to know that if you use e-cigarettes, you are likely at immediate risk of COVID-19 because you are damaging your lungs, said the studys senior author, Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, PhD, professor of pediatrics.

Young people may believe their age protects them from contracting the virus or that they will not experience symptoms of COVID-19, but the data show this isnt true among those who vape, said the studys lead author, postdoctoral scholar Shivani Mathur Gaiha, PhD.

This study tells us pretty clearly that youth who are using vapes or are dual-using [e-cigarettes and cigarettes] are at elevated risk, and its not just a small increase in risk; its a big one, Gaiha said.

Data were collected via online surveys conducted in May. Surveys were completed by 4,351 participants ages 13 to 24 who lived in all 50 U.S. states, the District of Columbia and three U.S. territories. The researchers recruited a sample of participants that was evenly divided between those who had used e-cigarettes and those who had never used nicotine products. The sample also included approximately equal numbers of people in different age groups (adolescent, young adult and adult), races and genders.

Participants answered questions about whether they had ever used vaping devices or combustible cigarettes, as well as whether they had vaped or smoked in the past 30 days. They were asked if they had experienced COVID-19 symptoms, received a test for COVID-19 or received a positive diagnosis of COVID-19 after being tested.

The results were adjusted for confounding factors such as age, sex, LGBTQ status, race/ethnicity, mothers level of education, body mass index, compliance with shelter-in-place orders, rate of COVID-19 diagnosis in the states where the participants were residing, and state and regional trends in e-cigarette use.

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Vaping linked to COVID-19 risk in teens and young adults - Stanford Medical Center Report

‘The Future of Medicine’: Local Partnership Enhances Muncie as One of The State’s Leading Medical Hubs – Muncie Journal

By: Melissa Jones

MUNCIE, IN According to Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Delaware County has the fourth-highest number of primary care physicians per capita in the statea ranking that should mean the county is one of the healthiest. But its not.

Of Indianas 92 counties, Delaware County ranks 85th. So wheres the disconnect?

Even with Indianas fourth-highest primary care physicians per capita, the county has just one primary care physician per 1,030 patients. In fact, the United States as a whole is facing a shortage in physicians. So in an effort to boost local physician training programs and retention, a number of healthcare entities in Muncie have partnered to form a long-term initiative, with funding from Ball Brothers Foundation, called Optimus Primary.

Optimus Primary is about taking all of the best pieces that we have in healthcare assets in Muncie and assembling them together in a way to improve the health outcomes of our community, said Derron Bishop, associate dean and director of Indiana University School of MedicineMuncie.

Bishop was a founding member of Optimus Primary, which officially formed in 2016. He worked with Jud Fisher, president and chief operating officer of Ball Brothers Foundation, and Dr. Jeff Bird, president of the IU Health East Central Region, to bring the program to fruition.

The key to Optimus Primary, Bishop says, is the number of anchor institutions located in Muncie: IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital, IU School of MedicineMuncie, Ball State University, Meridian Health Services and more.

Were all basically co-located together, and thats extraordinarily powerful. Communities all across the country would love to have this, Bishop said.

By connecting each of these healthcare organizations in a strategic partnership, Optimus Primary positions Muncie as one of the leading physician training centers in the state.

Muncie is the only place outside of Indianapolis that you could take someone from high school, into college, into medical school, into residency, and ultimately become a board-certified position in multiple areasand youd never have to leave Muncie, Bishop said.

But the effects of Optimus Primary extend beyond training physicians. Theres a huge economic benefit too, Bishop said. He explained that every physician who establishes a practice generates, on average, six to seven jobs and approximately $300,000 in regional tax revenue.

On a larger scale, Optimus Primary initiatives have powerful potential to strengthen the broader pipeline of medical professionals being trained in Indiana, to make a significant economic development impact and to improve population health in East Central Indiana, Ball Brothers Foundations Jud Fisher said. To date, the foundation has committed $1.8 million to Optimus Primary efforts.

With Ball Brothers Foundation backing the initiative, Bishop said the partner organizations have been able to explore innovative solutions to affect positive change to Muncies medical landscape and health outcomes.

The way that Ball Brothers Foundation does their funding is that they give you a chance to try something, Bishop said. They really allowed all the different groups in Optimus Primary to innovate together with a common goal.

One of these innovative ideas was to partner with Muncie Threat Assessment Center in a Law Enforcement Operations 101 course for medical students. The course was designed to help the medical students bond and improve their communication skills.

A good team-building activity has to be fun, it has to be something theyve never experienced, and also it needs to be something where they make really difficult decisions together under stress, Bishop said. So we said, Whats the most difficult decision to make under stress? And what we came up with was probably when a law enforcement officer has to pull the trigger.

In Law Enforcement Operations 101, medical students learn firearm safety and how to shoot a gun (all guns in the course used non-lethal rounds). They even learn how to conduct traffic stops, how to negotiate domestic disputes and how to clear housesand theyre put to the test through life-like run-throughs of each scenario.

The innovative idea was a bit of a risk, as Bishop said he didnt exactly know if it would work as he had hoped. But in the end, it was a successsome of Bishops students told him they had bonded more in the three hours of the course than they had in the past three months of school.

Bilal Jawed, a former IU School of MedicineMuncie student, was one of the first students to participate in the course.

On the surface, it seems like shooting firearms and clearing houses is not a very applicable experience for medical professionals, but I would definitely argue against that, Jawed said. I learned a lot about working as a team in high-pressure situations and also how to communicate effectively and efficiently when time is of the essence. It was also very informative to actually interact with law enforcement officers, because medical professionals often work indirectly with them.

Jawed was part of several other Optimus Primary programs too, like a full-body assessment at Ball State Universitys Clinical Exercise Physiology Program.

Jawed and his classmates were put on treadmills and hooked up to machines to measure their own strength, pulmonary function, muscle composition, bone density and more.

It was neatalso very scaryto have the performance of my own body plotted on a graph and compared against averages, he said. Im seeing a lot of little ways and reasons to integrate these practices into care of future patients. Its all about the little interactions youre exposed to, and weve honestly been exposed to so many special, cutting-edge experiences.

And thats exactly the purpose of Optimus Primary: to train future physicians to think differently about medicine.

If we can get our physicians that we train to understand the benefits of exercise, theyre more likely to advocate for this for their patients, Bishop said. We want them to directly see the benefits of lifestyle modifications, because this is a way that we can fundamentally change the way we do medicineto really infuse that idea of lifestyle.

No program embodies this emphasis on lifestyle better than the Healthy Lifestyle Center, a student-run clinic formed in partnership between Ball State University, IU School of Medicine Muncie and Meridian Health Services. The HLC has two clinic locationsone in the new College of Health building at Ball State University and another on Meridian Health Services Tillotson Avenue campus. Jawed describes the HLC as the future of medicine.

Right now, in medicine in general, our system is a very reactive system, where people come in with illnesses, get those illnesses resolved, and then move on, he said. What the HLC is doing is very unique. Were actually dealing with issues proactivelyaddressing illnesses before they even become illnessesand thats how its going to be in the future.

HLC is a free resource to the community, offering a range of services from dietetics, to audiology, to diabetes management and more. Students and professionals from various majors and fields come together to prepare comprehensive health and wellness plans for each patient, creating an inter-professional setup that is very rare.

Medicine really is a team sport, and Im learning how to be a team member by being in these roles, Jawed said. Its really incredible to be able to work alongside all these different professions to actually help the community at such an early phase in my medical education.

Bishop said Muncie has the best available infrastructure to help patients change their lifestyle and improve their health. By leveraging the communitys existing assets, Optimus Primary is changing the way physicians in Delaware County will provide care, ultimately improving overall health outcomes for the region.

And, just four years after first taking shape, the strategic initiative seems to be working.

Theres such a diverse group of experiences with Optimus Primary, both from the health providing side and from the health receiving, Jawed said. Its been nice to plant little seeds on how Im going to incorporate these lessons in my future practice.

Some of these other diverse programs supported through Optimus Primary include:

Ivy Tech Community Colleges newly renovated School of Nursing and School of Health Sciences in downtown Muncie with state-of-the-art simulation spaces that mirror the setup of operating and patient rooms at IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital. The new spaces allow for expanded program capacity and can be used as actual healthcare delivery rooms in the event of a major disaster.

IU Health Ball Memorial Hospitals partnership with Ivy Tech to match nursing students with mentor nurses for more hands-on patient care and customized learning in a groundbreaking program that re-imagines nursing rotations.

IU School of MedicineMuncies development of a new scholarly-concentration in community health promotion and disease prevention to recruit students to Muncie who are specifically interested in improving patient health through lifestyle modification and healthy behaviors.

IU School of MedicineMuncies new Bachelors to MD program, which launched in fall 2019, to allow eight Ball State University pre-med students per year to also be granted simultaneous, provisional admissions to the IU School of MedicineMuncie, working to attract high school students to commit to local universities and to encourage them to stay in the surrounding community to practice medicine when they graduate.

Maplewood Mansion Learning Laboratory, which provides short-term accommodations for IU School of MedicineMuncie students in one of the Ball mansions along Minnetrista Boulevard. A recent publication stated that it may be the finest medical student housing anywhere in the United States. Under the direction of Ball State University Professor Chris Flook, a team of BSU telecommunications students recently produced a video on Optimus Primary, showcasing Maplewood Mansion and some of the other unique aspects of IU School of MedicineMuncie.

IU Health Ball Memorial Hospitals hiring of a licensed psychologist to serve as inpatient behavioral health faculty, expanding its behavioral health services across thecontinuum of care.

Meridian Health Services exploration of creating an Integrated Care Institute that would train individuals and organizations in the model of integrating physical, mental and social health.

As Optimus Primary turns toward its next phase of operations and funding, Bishop said theyre looking to get the community involved more. One way they plan to do this is through standardized patients, which are community volunteer actors. Each actor is given an extensive backstory and symptoms to exhibit, and then they are placed in a mock clinical setting with medical students.

What happens in this is we have community members helping to train future healthcare workers in the community and they become better patients in the process, because theyre learning whats supposed to happen, Bishop said.

Bishop also said, now that Optimus Primary has a few programs under its belt, the next phase of the partnership is to begin quantifying data and, hopefully, spread the momentum to other communities.

Were looking now at how we can quantify the work that were doing and then we can begin seeking additional funding sources from outside entities, he said. Ball Brothers Foundation gave us the base to do this next level, which is going to be the large community-based research where we can say whether something is working. If we find out something is working, we can take it and we can export it to other communities.

In all, Bishop is confident about where Optimus Primary is headed.

The future is very bright, he said. I have dedicated our regional medical campus to doing this. This is our future.

About Ball Brothers Foundation

Ball Brothers Foundation is one of the states oldest and largest family foundations. Annually, the foundation makes approximately $8 million in grants to support arts and culture, education, the environment, health, human services, and public affairs. The Muncie-based private foundation gives priority to projects and programs that improve the quality of life in the foundations home city, county and state.

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'The Future of Medicine': Local Partnership Enhances Muncie as One of The State's Leading Medical Hubs - Muncie Journal

Governor Cooper Announces Genetic Medicine Company Will Create 201 Jobs in Durham County – NC Dept of Commerce

Governor Roy Cooper announced today that Beam Therapeutics (Nasdaq; BEAM), a biotechnology company developing precision medicines through DNA base editing, plans to build a manufacturing facility in North Carolinas Research Triangle Park, creating 201 jobs. Over a period of 5 years, the company expects to invest $83 million in the facility, which will support clinical and commercial manufacturing for the companys novel base editing programs.

"North Carolina is a leader in biotechnology, from the research in our labs to the states biomanufacturers, said Governor Cooper. Companies like Beam Therapeutics work in developing precision medicines will help keep North Carolina on the cutting edge of this industry.

Beam Therapeutics, with headquarters in Cambridge, Massachusetts, develops precision genetic medicines through base editing. The foundational level of genetic information is a single base letter in DNA, and an error to a single letter, known as a point mutation, can cause disease. Base editors have the ability to rewrite just a single letter, and thereby intervene at the most foundational level. Beams proprietary base editors create precise, predictable and efficient single base changes, at targeted genomic sequences, without making double-stranded breaks in the DNA. This enables a wide range of potential therapeutic editing strategies that Beam is using to advance a diversified portfolio of base editing programs.

We believe investment in strategic manufacturing capabilities is an important component of fully realizing the power of our base editing technology and achieving our vision to provide life-long cures to patients suffering from serious diseases, said John Evans, CEO of Beam Therapeutics. Research Triangle Park is a thriving biopharmaceutical hub, providing significant access to the broad range of talent we will need to make this vision a reality.

Although wages will vary depending on position, the average salary for the new positions will be $102,654. The average wage in Durham County is $71,756. The state and local area will see a yearly economic impact of more than $20.6 million from this companys new payroll.

"North Carolina has been a world leader in biotechnology for many years, but were not resting on our past accomplishments, said North Carolina Commerce Secretary Anthony M. Copeland. Beam Therapeutics joins a host of gene therapy companies that are keeping North Carolina at the forefront of this new frontier of medicine.

Beam Therapeutics project in North Carolina will be facilitated, in part, by a Job Development Investment Grant (JDIG) approved by the states Economic Investment Committee earlier today. Over the course of 12 years, the project is estimated to grow the states economy by $1.36 billion. Using a formula that takes into account the new tax revenues generated by the new jobs, the agreement authorizes the potential reimbursement to the company of up to $3,237,750, spread over 12 years. Payments for all JDIGs only occur following performance verification by the departments of Commerce and Revenue that the company has met its incremental job creation and investment targets. JDIG projects result in positive net tax revenue to the state treasury, even after taking into consideration the grants reimbursement payments to a given company.

Because Beam Therapeutics chose a site in Durham County, classified by the states economic tier system as Tier 3, the companys JDIG agreement also calls for moving as much as $1,079,250 into the states Industrial Development Fund Utility Account. The Utility Account helps rural communities finance necessary infrastructure upgrades to attract future business. Even when new jobs are created in a Tier 3 county such as Durham, the new tax revenue generated through JDIG grants helps more economically challenged communities elsewhere in the state. More information on the states economic tier designations is available here.

In addition to the North Carolina Department of Commerce and the Economic Development Partnership of N.C., other key partners on this project were the the North Carolina Community College System, the North Carolina Biotechnology Center, Durham County, and the Greater Durham Chamber of Commerce.

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Governor Cooper Announces Genetic Medicine Company Will Create 201 Jobs in Durham County - NC Dept of Commerce

Silverthorne’s Axis Sports Medicine studies masks and oxygen saturation with varying results – Summit Daily News

SILVERTHORNE In the wake of Gov. Jared Polis mandate to wear face coverings during indoor recreation, Axis Sports Medicine in Silverthorne shared the results of a nonscientific evaluation of masked and non-masked exercise indoors and outdoors.

Terri Stashick, Axis physical therapist and owner, said the sports medicine company decided to conduct the study of a few patients after several said they were feeling short of breath while exercising indoors and wearing a mask.

After Axis monitored the patients oxygen saturation, heart rate and general feeling of well-being while exercising with a mask indoors as well as with and without a mask outdoors, Stashick said the general outcome was that oxygen saturation did drop with a mask but generally not below the critical level of 88%. In one reading, taken after a participant ran a quarter-mile, oxygen saturation dropped to 84%, she said.

I think its safe to say exercising with a mask on, theres no danger, Stashick said. Youre not in critical danger of your O2 saturation dropping too low. But you also want to use your symptoms as a guide. If you are starting to feel short of breath, you should probably either back down on the intensity or stop. Let your heart rate come back down. Let your body recover a little bit.

Stashick said the participants consisted of healthy, fit, post-operation surgical knee patients. They executed exercises like squats and lunges as well as dynamic strength training and some running while wearing homemade cotton masks.

Stashick said the normal percentage of oxygen carried in the blood at Summit Countys elevation is 96% to 98%. At rest with the mask off, Stashick said all of the clients were sitting at about 98%.

Summit County resident and participant Meredith Smith said she felt the mask did not inhibit her exercise as long as she was not spiking her heart rate too high.

But once the heart rate is high enough, its hard to get a second wind, and its hard to work out with a mask on, Smith said. The fabric of the mask is up against your mouth, and you cant breathe efficiently.

Smith said her oxygen was four points higher outside when exercising without a mask on: She and Stashick said her oxygen dipped to 84% after running a quarter-mile lap compared to 88% after the lap without a mask.

As a result, I dont plan to run inside the rec center until we can work out without a mask on, Smith said. I just dont think I can work out as hard as I want to, so I will be outside without a mask.

Participant Christina Moody said her resting oxygen without a mask was 98% while her pulse was 84 beats per minute. That compares to 97% and 92 beats per minutes outdoors with a mask. When exercising outdoors without a mask, her oxygen was 97% and pulse was 176. She said that after 40 minutes of exercise outdoors without a mask, she was able to breathe faster and deeper, with no negative effects and quick recovery.

When exercising indoors with a mask, she said her oxygen was 94% to 95% and pulse was 146. Then, 20 minutes into her exercise, she said she began to develop some chest pain, dizziness and nausea as her oxygen dropped to 90%, and she found it took longer to recover.

It was obvious my body was working a little harder to maintain its oxygen level, Moody said. But my pulse, I really could only get up to 146, and thats not an ideal cardio level for exercise.

With this little experiment, I determined definitely the mask dictates duration and intensity of exercise, Moody said. But everyones impacted differently. For me, wearing the mask indoors increased my inhalation of my own carbon dioxide. Breathing through the mask, I could not get a deep breath.

Smith said her and Stashicks exercise solution following the test was to opt for five-minute exercise intervals before a minute of recovery.

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Silverthorne's Axis Sports Medicine studies masks and oxygen saturation with varying results - Summit Daily News

Why I gave up my dream of leading diversity efforts in medicine – AAMC

After forcing myself out of bed, I made it to my rounds with less than a minute to spare. It had been only three months since I started seeing patients and teaching trainees at a major academic medical center, and already I was feeling overwhelmed.

I had discovered that my assigned 1 1/2 days of clinical duties in a psychiatric clinic actually required three days of work to oversee the care of more than 100 mostly poor Black and brown patients. Many had substance use disorders and very serious mental illnesses. As a woman of color, I wanted to serve them well because they seemed to trust me more than their prior providers. That meant I often found myself working far into the evening. In addition, as an attending at a major teaching hospital, I had numerous other obligations. On paper, I had my dream job. In reality, I often felt dragged down.

Not much earlier, while in residency, I dreamt of becoming a leader in the field of diversity education, hoping one day to be a dean of diversity or a dean of students. I had become the go-to person in my academic medical community for lectures on bias, consultation on diversity curricula, guidance on working with minority patients, and more. I also published research papers and narrative articles to educate my community about diversity. Though demanding, I loved this work. I truly believed that academia could support patients, providers, and communities of color with the help of engaged stakeholders like me.

Only things did not go as Id planned.

While working in the psychiatric clinic, where I was the fourth attending in almost as many years, I had two other jobs: I led efforts to develop a social justice curriculum for the Department of Psychiatrys residency program, and I served as the director of the standardized patient program for the School of Medicine, which involved recruiting and training laypeople to act as patients for students learning to become physicians. I often felt overworked and unsupported.

I had become the go-to person in my academic medical community for lectures on bias, consultation on diversity curricula, guidance on working with minority patients, and more. ... Though demanding, I loved this work.

Through all this, I also wanted to continue to serve as a mentor to Black and brown medical students, residents, and colleagues, sharing any professional guidance I could offer. Soon, they began to come with their personal, gut-wrenching stories of discrimination. I even found myself in a position of having to decide whether to report a former supervisor who was now a colleague.

I felt terribly alone. So few of my colleagues shared my identities: Im a Black, queer woman, and many of them were White men. As a new faculty member, I often felt unable to turn to my prior sources of social support given that they were now technically my subordinates. And I bore the stress of feeling other outside work as well. I was frequently the only African American when I went out to a restaurant, and the national sociopolitical climate felt increasingly hostile to people like me.

The stress was longer than a moment or moments it was endless. It started to affect my ability to function well. I lost track of emails, and I tossed and turned most nights. My immune system became weak from all the stress. I got the flu, twice.

So, I decided to leave.

As long as the culture discouraged asking for help, didnt fully value those who focus on innovative diversity education, and failed to provide sufficient support to minority faculty, I would never feel truly safe. I knew members of my medical community appreciated me and my work, but unless they intended to use their privilege to prevent Black and brown faculty from leaving, it was not worth it to stay.

Although it was the most difficult decision I have ever had to make, I know it was the right one.

I felt terribly alone. So few of my colleagues shared my identities: Im a Black, queer woman, and many of them were White men.

Yet I continue to feel like I abandoned my Black and brown patients, trainees, and colleagues. I cry when I learn of the distress of my friends and former colleagues. Often when we catch up, I cannot help but feel re-traumatized by their experiences and weighed down by a heavy sense of guilt for leaving. Im also terribly sad that nonminority allies dont speak up or provide them with support.

I have since found a relationship with an academic institution that feels safe, but I still struggle. I continue to see patients and handpick teaching opportunities. I cautiously choose diversity efforts that allow me to go beyond conversations about implicit bias and really get into the complicated nature of systemic racism. Meanwhile, I find myself hoping for progress in academic medicine, though Im not completely optimistic.

Senior physician-leaders of most academic communities continue to look the same, unlike the rest of the United States, which is becoming increasingly diverse. Senior leadership in many places also continue to express support for diversity without actually providing real support for diverse faculty, educational initiatives, or institution-wide policies that foster inclusivity and equity.

Often, academic medicine focuses on implementing effective medical education for trainees and thats important. But medical schools and teaching hospitals need to do much more to create a culture of inclusivity at every level across the entire institution.

They need to create clear, strong policies that support employees from racial and ethnic minority backgrounds. Then they need to train all staff in those policies, support reporting of breaches, and make sure to enforce the institutions rules and values.

Medical schools and teaching hospitals need to do much more to create a culture of inclusivity at every level across the entire institution. Verbal support is not enough anymore.

Institutions also need to make long-term investments in hiring and promoting faculty of color, providing administrative support for faculty of color, and funding diversity education at levels comparable to that of other initiatives.

All this needs to happen not just during newsworthy moments of controversy, legal action, or protest. What happens when the public shifts its attention away? More importantly, what happens to those who need initiatives that never get implemented or that run out of funding in a few years?

We need real change with strong policies and programs backed by solid funding for them. Verbal support is not enough anymore. If we dont make these changes, minority members like me who once hoped to help educate trainees and support patients will leave as they find they cannot shoulder the burden alone.

Kali Cyrus, MD, MPH, is a practicing community psychiatrist in Washington, D.C., an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, a founding member of Time's Up Healthcare, and a diversity consultant.

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Why I gave up my dream of leading diversity efforts in medicine - AAMC

Active COVID-19 cases in Medicine Hat down to three – CHAT News Today

Dr. Deena Hinshaw said her next in-person update will be on Tuesday. The next update of online numbers will be Monday.

The South Zone has a total of 1,710 cases 1,644 recovered, an increase of six, and 45 active, a decrease of seven.

There are five people in the zone in hospital, three of which are in ICU, and there have been 21 deaths.

Cypress County has totalled 31 cases all recovered.

The County of Forty Mile has 20 total cases, six active cases and 14 recovered.

The MD of Taber has 38 total cases one active, 36 recovered and one death.

Special Areas No. 2 has 15 total cases, all of which are recovered.

Brooks has 1,125 total cases 1,114 are recovered and two active. Brooks has recorded nine deaths. The County of Newell has a total of 29 cases five active, 23 recovered and one death.

The County of Warner has 55 total cases. There are now 53 recovered cases, one new active case and one death in the county.

The City of Lethbridge has a total of 143 cases. Of those, 12 are listed as active and 129 recovered and there have been two deaths there. Lethbridge County has 30 cases, three active cases and 27 recovered.

The figures on alberta.ca are up-to-date as of end of day Aug. 13, 2020.

Saskatchewan reported 30 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, 29 in the South Zone.

A news release from the province says all of todays 30 new cases and 108 of 174 active cases are in communal living settings.

Saskatchewan has a total of 1,541 cases, 174 considered active. There are 1,347 recovered cases and there have been 20 COVID-19 deaths in the province.

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Active COVID-19 cases in Medicine Hat down to three - CHAT News Today

After nearly 50 years in medicine, Brandon doctor dies of COVID-19 – FOX 13 Tampa Bay

Doctor said he would never retire, dies of COVID-19

Josh Cascio reports

BRANDON, Fla - The medical community is mourning the loss of longtime-doctor at Brandon Regional Hospital, Sam Scolaro.

He said, 'I made a promise to God at 20 years old that Id serve my patients 'till the day I die, so Im never going to retire,' his daughter, Stephanie Scolaro told FOX 13.

At 75 years old, Dr. Scolaro passed away Friday from complications from COVID-19.

Since I was a little kid, I was so proud to tell people my dads a doctor because he helped everybody, she said.

Dr. Scolaro tested positive for COVID-19 on his 53rd wedding anniversary -- June 25.

When we went to the hospital, my mom told me she knew it would be the last time we saw him. He was very sick, Stephanie said.

But even in his final days, Dr. Scolaro never stopped thinking of others.

He told his nurses, 'We need to hurry and get me out of here, my patients need me,' Stephanie said.

It was just the doctor in him, honoring the promise he made all those years ago.

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After nearly 50 years in medicine, Brandon doctor dies of COVID-19 - FOX 13 Tampa Bay

Drugs.com | Prescription Drug Information, Interactions …

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Fewer than half of U.S. mental health treatment facilities providing care for children offer services for autism spectrum disorder (ASD), according to a report published in the June issue of Health Affairs.Jonathan Cantor, Ph.D., from RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California, and colleagues assessed the availability of behavioral health care services...

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Many children are eligible for type 2 diabetes screening, but few test positive for prediabetes or diabetes, according to a study published online Aug. 10 in Pediatrics.Amelia S. Wallace, from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, and colleagues conducted a cross-sectional analysis involving 14,119 youth aged 10 to 19 years...

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Most practices are complying with the American Academy of Ophthalmology guidelines for scheduling patients during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a study published online Aug. 5 in JAMA Ophthalmology.Matthew R. Starr, M.D., from the Wills Eye Hospital at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia, and colleagues surveyed 40 randomly selected...

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With the weather heating up across the U.S. it seems good timing that most states are easing their lockdown restrictions. Escaping into the sun is something we are all looking forward to, especially after a winter of confinement at home. But did you know that heat-related deaths are one of the deadliest weather-related outcomes in []

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Vitamin C has always been a controversial supplement. To some, it belongs firmly in the alternative medicine basket, with apparently no substantial evidence to support its use. To others, it holds promise, particularly if you are talking about certain groups of people who are likely to be low in vitamin C. Because we NEED vitamin []

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After more than 50 years in medicine, Brandon doctor dies of COVID-19 – FOX 13 Tampa Bay

Doctor said he would never retire, dies of COVID-19

Josh Cascio reports

BRANDON, Fla - The medical community is mourning the loss of longtime-doctor at Brandon Regional Hospital, Sam Scolaro.

He said, 'I made a promise to God at 20 years old that Id serve my patients 'till the day I die, so Im never going to retire,' his daughter, Stephanie Scolaro told FOX 13.

At 75 years old, Dr. Scolaro passed away Friday from complications from COVID-19.

Since I was a little kid, I was so proud to tell people my dads a doctor because he helped everybody, she said.

Dr. Scolaro tested positive for COVID-19 on his 53rd wedding anniversary -- June 25.

When we went to the hospital, my mom told me she knew it would be the last time we saw him. He was very sick, Stephanie said.

But even in his final days, Dr. Scolaro never stopped thinking of others.

He told his nurses, 'We need to hurry and get me out of here, my patients need me,' Stephanie said.

It was just the doctor in him, honoring the promise he made all those years ago.

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After more than 50 years in medicine, Brandon doctor dies of COVID-19 - FOX 13 Tampa Bay

Group applies to be recognized as national certifying board for oral medicine specialty – American Dental Association

August 10, 2020 The American Board of Oral Medicine submitted on Aug. 5 an application and request to the National Commission on Recognition of Dental Specialties and Certifying Boards to be recognized as the certifying board for the newly approved specialty of oral medicine. The application comes about four months after the National Commission recognized oral medicine as a dental specialty, based on the determination that the American Academy of Oral Medicines application met all the ADAs Requirements for Recognition of a Dental Specialty. If approved by the National Commission, the American Board of Oral Medicine would become recognized as the national certifying board that administers the board certification examination certifying qualified dentists as diplomats in the specialty of oral medicine. According to the Requirements for Recognition of National Certifying Boards for Dental Specialists, only one certifying board that has a close working relationship with the sponsoring organization will be recognized by the National Commission. According to the National Commission, the national certifying board for a dental specialty must go through an application process and meet several requirements as outlined in the ADAs Requirements for Recognition of National Certifying Boards for Dental Specialists.

All documentation in the application is confidential until the review committee has determined that the application is contains the required documentation. If the application contains the required documentation, the National Commission will invite public comment for a 60-day period on whether the applicant has demonstrated that it meets each of the Requirements for Recognition. Incomplete applications are returned to the certifying board for modifications. For more information on the National Commission on Recognition of Dental Specialties and Certifying Boards, visit ADA.org/en/ncrdscb or by calling 1-312-440-2697.

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Group applies to be recognized as national certifying board for oral medicine specialty - American Dental Association

Australia’s nuclear medicine agency chartered flights to deliver children’s cancer treatment – The Guardian

Australias nuclear medicine agency has spent more than $350,000 on chartered flights to deliver critical medicines to diagnose and treat childrens cancer, as the Covid-19 pandemic exposes worrying gaps in health supply chains.

As it prepares to give evidence to a parliamentary inquiry on Tuesday, the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation has revealed how widespread flight cancellations temporarily put at risk the supplies of certain nuclear medicines.

Ansto disclosed the charter flight costs in response to questions from Guardian Australia, saying that it was focused on doing everything we can to continue the supply of life-saving nuclear medicine for Australians around the country.

It said it had also needed to deliver medicines to Brisbane by truck since April, with this road freight costing $4,000 per week, split between Ansto and its customers.

Australia lost the capacity to make the radioactive isotope iodine-123 - used in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer in the nerve cells of children just over a decade ago with the closure of the National Medical Cyclotron in Camperdown, NSW.

But according to Ansto, iodine-123 is needed in clinical settings by about a dozen patients around Australia at any one time most of them children with neuroblastoma. This means Australia now relies on imports from Japan.

But with a half-life of just over 13 hours meaning the levels of radioactivity halve every 13 hours this isotope needs to be distributed to Australian hospitals and health centres very quickly. It expires within 33 hours of being manufactured in Japan.

The challenge with transporting nuclear medicine is the products have a short half-life, Ian Martin, the general manager of Ansto Health, told Guardian Australia.

We need to get the isotopes from point A to point B before they decay too much to be effective, a complex task when B is in another hemisphere.

In response to questions, Ansto said the chartered flights included one from Japan to Sydney, followed immediately by flights from Sydney to Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth and Melbourne illustrating the rush to get the isotope to where it was needed.

Given that Covid-19 is causing ongoing disruptions to normal supply chains, Ansto said it was continuing to work with clinicians to refine delivery logistics and ensure nuclear medicine reached Australian patients in need.

Martin thanked those who had helped Ansto deal with these difficult circumstances, including the airlines Qantas, Virgin and ANA.

His comments expanded on a submission to a parliamentary committee, in which Ansto said the international and domestic charter flights were needed to ensure that this essential product reaches patients, at not insignificant expense.

The submission also noted that the case highlights the potential for disruption to the import of nuclear medicines caused by pandemics.

Despite the difficulties with iodine-123, Ansto said it produced a number of other important nuclear medicines in Australia. These include molybdenum-99 (Mo-99) which is used to make a radioisotope commonly used for the diagnosis of conditions such as cancer, heart disease and neurological disorders.

The submission said the completion of the Ansto Nuclear Medicine Facility in 2019 meant that the organisation was able to meet domestic demand in Australia while also supplying up to 25% of the Mo-99 required globally.

It is pursuing contracts in existing markets, such as North America and Europe, and predicts an increase in use in growing markets especially in Asia. Ansto said the pandemic had underscored the importance of Australia having a domestic Mo-99 production capability.

The reduction in flights as a result of Covid-19 has meant that access to overseas supplies of this important isotope has become more difficult and more unreliable, it said.

If Australia did not have such a capability, there could have easily been major shortages in supply of this lifesaving product during the height of the pandemic, especially given our remoteness from the main producers in Europe.

Witnesses from Ansto are expected to expand on these issues when they appear before the joint standing committee on foreign affairs, defence and trade on Tuesday afternoon.

The committee is looking at supply chains as part of its inquiry into the effect of Covid-19 on Australias defence, trade and international relations.

The inquiry chair, Liberal senator David Fawcett, said the committee wanted to hear from Ansto because it was a leading producer and exporter of some of the most important nuclear medicines used in diagnosing and treating cancers, heart disease and neurological disorders.

Ansto has worked hard to ensure Australians have ongoing access to vital nuclear medicines during the Covid-19 pandemic, but it is also doing important work in the processing of rare earth metals, an area that has great potential to enhance Australias sovereign capabilities, Fawcett said.

In earlier hearings, the committee was told that Australian companies had experienced shocking price gouging and had trouble accessing critical supplies to make medicines and personal protective equipment at the height of the pandemic.

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Australia's nuclear medicine agency chartered flights to deliver children's cancer treatment - The Guardian

Town halls at Penn State College of Medicine reveal the same racial tensions that plague the nation | Opinion – pennlive.com

On May 29th, 2020, four days after the killing of George Floyd, we received a message from a Black medical student at the Penn State College of Medicine on the Hershey campus. She said she was scared. The administration, she told us, hadnt offered her any support. She was finding it hard to focus.

Her message prompted a long overdue conversation. After years of practicing medicine at the Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center campus, we were embarrassed to discover how little we knew about just how different the experience of medical school was for Black students.

Our friend told us she constantly felt invisible because white attending physicians routinely address white students. She said white students in class would consistently talk over her. As two white medical professionals, we were appalled.

Many of these concerns were echoed through a series of town hall meetings that were eventually called for Hershey campus students and faculty to address tensions that grew as our campus, like the rest of the country, grappled with the ugly revelations that followed George Floyds killing.

Some of the things we heard at these meetings were shocking. One Black medical student said she had been insulted by a physician during hospital rounds.

Some of the things we heard at these meetings were shocking. One Black medical student recalled being deeply offended by a physician who, intentionally or not, used a blatant racial slur in asking her a question during hospital rounds. Another asked why there are so few Black students and faculty on campus, as well as for specific plans and goal to move towards racial equity.

Curious to know just how big a racial disparity there was, we looked for statistics on the makeup of the medical student classes at Hershey.

National data shows that Black medical students comprised 6.2 percent of the student body in medical schools across the U.S. in 2015, 6.4 percent in 2016, 6.8 percent in 2017, 7.1 percent in 2018, and 7.3 percent in 2019 admission years.

Penn States Hershey campus says that it values diversity and that it is committed to educating students, from all backgrounds, who also reflect our nations demographics.

But proof of this commitment turned out to be impossible to find.

While there appears to be a demonstrable lack of Black students on campus, no statistics were publicly available for the Penn State College of Medicine.

Statistics show an inexcusable disparity in the medical profession nationally.

While Blacks comprise 13.4 percent of the general population (US official Census for July of 2019) only 5 percent of practicing US physicians are Black (Association of American Medical Colleges, 2018 report).

Projecting from the current slow growth in the percentage of Black medical students, it will take over 40 years to reach an equitable representation. And since an equitable representation is a matter of justice, it will take 40 years for Black medical professionals to attain justice.

Consequences of this painfully slow track to justice are enormous.

Equitable representation has shown to lead to better health outcomes in Black patients. Causes behind African American distrust of white physicians have been well documented by the rich history of medical mistreatment.

The most frequently cited example is the Tuskegee experiment where Black men with syphilis were observed untreated starting in 1932 and were finally told about their condition when this unethical experimentation was exposed in 1979.

More recent investigations demonstrated that disproportionately more Black patients are enrolled in risky no-consent studies that lack personal benefits for the enrolled subjects. At the same time, Black patients are under-represented in studies of new promising drugs. This robs them of an opportunity to experience effective new medication for cancers and other conditions that would not be available outside the study protocols.

Increasing the percentage of Black doctors in the United States is important for the sake of restoring a sense of trust in the healthcare system among African Americans and for the future of the country as a whole. The evidence supports the conclusion that this increase will be followed by an improvement in health outcomes.

The Penn State Health websites diversity section banner shows three happy diverse faces: Our goal is to be best in class in increasing the diversity of our students and workforce, it reads.

But we found a different reality. We, as white allies, are in the best position to persuade the institution to be transparent on race statistics, act deliberately, and get on the fast track to justice.

Pamela Tulchinsky is a medical technologist. Her husband, Mark Tulchinsky, MD, is Asst. Director of Nuclear Medicine at the Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center where he practices and teaches radiology and medicine. He is current Vice President of the American College of Nuclear Medicine.

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Town halls at Penn State College of Medicine reveal the same racial tensions that plague the nation | Opinion - pennlive.com

Why is Precision Medicine Gaining Popularity in Healthcare? – Healthcare Tech Outlook

The idea behind precision medicine has always been the aim of healthcare providers, and its becoming truly achievable with recent technological advancements.

FREMONT, CA: The healthcare environment is in the turmoil of disruptive changes, with new technologies promising revolutionary advances in medicine and life-extending therapies. As a result, continuing to accelerate innovation in health while reducing the cost curve is a vital pain point for the years to come. Technology solutions have arisen with the development and evolution of the principles of precision medicine, where innovations are making breakthroughs possible on a patient-specific basis.

The quest for personalized care means offering the right drug to the right patient at the right time. Achieving a personally tailored therapy is not a simple process, but breakthroughs in developing precision medicines are making huge in-roads. The growth of mobile and wearable technology has created new markets in healthy living and also changed patient expectations for more holistic care approaches with a personalized experience beyond the pill. For healthcare providers, this makes enhancing the patient experience at the hospital and home care with telemedicine, telehealth, and teleconsultation critical.

For years, healthcare models have revolved around the curative care process. Healthcare innovation brings a revolutionary promise, a move towards prescriptive care. This will require changes in healthcare value chains. Challenges are not merely the rollout of value-based care models tied to patient outcomes to favor economy but the development of outcome-based payment models, enabling care to be rewarded with proactive support for their patients health, with economic incentives, and precision medicine makes this possible.

Faced with the demand to care better for less, it is essential that healthcare providers develop more effective clinical pathways. This requires a reduction of clinical and administrative redundancies and a transformation to low-cost, standardized clinical processes, like a better use of generics, shared service centers, and many more. To succeed, healthcare players can improve treatment coordination by developing electronic health records (EHR). They can help caregivers in diagnostic, monitoring, and process management tasks in precision medicine. And they increase collaborative productivity and faster communication between medical teams, administrative staff, patients, and other stakeholders.

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Why is Precision Medicine Gaining Popularity in Healthcare? - Healthcare Tech Outlook

The pandemic has propelled military medicine into another dimension | TheHill – The Hill

When the nation calls, the military answers. So it is with COVID-19. In this case the military responded by sending two Navy hospital ships, medical supplies, equipment, field hospitals, and scores of medical personnel to assist numerous communities in the fight against this invisible enemy. While our military has appropriately supported pandemic demands, the complexities of a pandemic such as COVID-19 highlight the need to review our military medical force structure and rebalance it to adequately meet needs in a rapidly and constantly changing health security environment.

The U.S. death toll from COVID-19 has exceeded 160,000, more than twice the total killed in action from the Vietnam War and far above the losses from Iraq and Afghanistan. By June this year, the unemployment rate was 11 percent, from a high of 14.7 percent in April, including cutbacks across the defense industries supporting the fighting force. The Brookings Institution adds: How will we keep our military combat-ready, and thus fully capable of deterrence globally, until a vaccine is available to our troops?

All in all, the coronavirus has degraded the readiness of the military, even if only temporarily. We are fortunate that the virus likely has degraded the capabilities of the nations that compete with our national interests and threaten national security. Plagues, and wars, are disorienting events that have biological as well as political and social consequences. The coronavirus has alerted us that warfare in the 21st century has changed and catapulted military medicine into another dimension. The battle against the virus presents an opportunity to recalibrate as well as advance our practices and policies.

Traditionally, the militarys primary role has been to deter war and protect the security of our country, overseas as well as domestically. While not primary, the military also has a role in supporting crises and disasters when the nation calls. One reason the militarys medical assets were called to respond to the pandemic is that the military has what the civilian sector lacks a readily deployable, integrated health care system. This health care system has unique expertise in three areas that are useful in response to this pandemic: rapid deployment of treatment structures, a supply chain and logistics expertise, and a complement of personnel, trained and ready, to man large and small complex health care organizations.

However, U.S military medical assets are primarily funded and organized to support the fighting force. Medical structure typically is embedded and arrayed around and in support of the combat force. As such, the stuff (supplies and equipment), staff (personnel) and structure (facilities) are primarily designed for battlefield conditions and care of combat casualties.

Confounding the medical response to COVID-19 is the recent direction by Congress to reduce the militarys medical force by 18,000 providers, reduce the capacity to care for the enrolled population, and to streamline service lines to focus on combat casualty care, e.g., trauma care. Clearly this is not the type of medical expertise required in a viral pandemic.

The militarys medical force must balance this domestic response with the requirement to stay ready to deploy globally in response to a state or a non-state actor who threatens our national security interests. Additionally, Americas military medical force serves as a force-multiplier in diplomatic efforts as a soft power to win the hearts and minds of individuals around the world. They must stay ready. The Reserve Components are an integral part of the militarys medical assets, with over 50 percent of the Armys medical deployable capability residing in the Army Reserve.

Those reservists also provide medical care in their local communities. Mobilizing them to help care for Americans requires a careful balancing act to ensure local health care delivery is not jeopardized. Concurrently we learned that many civilian health care providers were furloughed because of a lack of personal protection equipment and a patient population demanding care. In hindsight, did the military need to be called to respond? And although our military can respond, should they be called?

A fresh look by the Pentagon and Congress is required to enable our medical force to support our national and health security and to be able to respond in a two-war scenario to meet both combat and domestic needs. Money cut from budgets must be reinstated, force structure must be reorganized and training must be expanded to allow for readiness to support health security, infectious disease scenarios and combat trauma with the caveat that there may be future scenarios where the combat force may need to be arrayed in such a way to support the medical force.

Peggy Wilmoth, Ph.D., R.N., a retired U.S. Army major general and former Deputy Surgeon General, U.S. Army Reserve, is executive vice dean and associate dean for academic affairs The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Nursing. She was inducted into the Army Womens Foundation Hall of Fame in March 2020. The views expressed here are hers alone. Follow her on Twitter @mcwilmot.

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The pandemic has propelled military medicine into another dimension | TheHill - The Hill

School of Medicine faculty receive grants to study opioid use and COVID-19 testing – UC Riverside

Assistant professors Andrew Subica and Ann Cheney of the UC Riverside School of Medicines Department of Social Medicine, Population, and Public Health have received grants to support research on opioid use, COVID-19 testing, and public health education.

Subica was awarded a three-year, $727,000 grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse for a project titled Engaging Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders in opioid use disorder treatment.

Next to COVID-19, the opioid overdose epidemic is the biggest public health crisis affecting the U.S. since HIV/AIDS, with 48,000 people dying per year from opioid overdose, Subica said. No research has sought to understand or address opioid use disorders in Pacific Islander populations a research and clinical gap this three-year intervention development grant will seek to address.

Subica said he decided to pursue this research because Pacific Islanders have nearly every major risk factor for opioid use disorders compared to other U.S. racial groups, including extremely high rates of mental health and substance use disorders the strongest predictor of opioid use disorders.

Our study will explore the scope of the opioid issue among Native Hawaiians in Hawaii and Tongans in Utah to design a culturally tailored intervention to engage Pacific Islanders with opioid use disorders in treatment, Subica said. People with opioid use disorders are at very high risk for death from overdose. It is thus a public health priority to intervene before Pacific Islanders overdose on opioids. We will create the intervention and pilot-test it, our goal being randomized controlled trials of this intervention in future studies.

Subica and his team will also seek to gain new data on methamphetamine use in Pacific Islander communities.

Methamphetamine abuse, which is extremely high among Pacific Islanders, is the leading cause of drug overdose deaths in nearly all states where substantial Pacific Islander populations reside, Subica said. This study will ideally gain information about the drugs most closely linked to the risk of overdose and death in Pacific Islanders.

Subicas research partners include Dr. Li-Tzy Wu at Duke University School of Medicine; Dr. Scott Okamoto at Hawaii Pacific University; Dr. Nia Aitaoto at University of Utah; and Drs. Howard Moss and Esra Kurum at UCR.

Cheney received a $150,000 award from the Desert Healthcare District for COVID-19 testing and public health education for farmworking communities in Californias eastern Coachella Valley. The five-month grant involves a partnership with Riverside County Public Health, which will provide coronavirus testing kits and conduct contact tracing and case investigations.

UCR clinical faculty, medical students, pre-med students, and promotoras will be involved in engaging Latinx farm-working communities in testing and will disseminate public health material, Cheney said.

She explained that rates of new COVID-19 infection are high in the eastern Coachella Valley, especially in the communities bordering the Salton Sea, such as Mecca, Thermal, North Shore, and Oasis. Her work will be conducted in farmworking communities in these towns.

We have heard there isnt sufficient access to testing, she said. Factors like mistrust, stigma, and limited understanding of virus spread shape decisions to get tested. We have also heard some are hesitant to get tested because of the implications it could have for their employment; they may not be able to take time off or could lose their jobs as they wait for the results. We hope to reduce the spread of the virus in these vulnerable communities.

Cheney will be joined in the research by Dr. Marc Debay, director of the UCR family medicine residency program, who will lead UCR medical residents in the testing.

We are both working closely with Riverside County Public Health to get tests and be involved in contact tracing and case investigations, Cheney said. Promotoras will be trained to do the contact tracing. We also have a team of medical students who are monitoring Riverside County Public Health to assess any changes over time in new infections, confirmed cases, and deaths. And we have a team of pre-med students developing and implementing a public health campaign.Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R34DA049989. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Header image by Stan Lim.

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School of Medicine faculty receive grants to study opioid use and COVID-19 testing - UC Riverside

Coverage of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) virtual meeting featured on AuntMinnie.com – PR Web

We're pleased to once again be offering coverage of the ISMRM annual meeting. This year's virtual format for ISMRM 2020 is a perfect complement to our exclusively online coverage.

ARLINGTON, Va. (PRWEB) August 10, 2020

For the second straight year, radiology portal AuntMinnie.com, part of Science and Medicine Group, has launched a new special section dedicated exclusively to the proceedings of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) annual meeting.

AuntMinnie's RADCast@ISMRM is available at radcast.auntminnie.com and features wall-to-wall editorial coverage of the premier medical conference dedicated exclusively to MRI. Important topics at the 2020 conference include the following:

"We're pleased to once again be offering coverage of the ISMRM annual meeting," said Brian Casey, editor in chief of AuntMinnie.com. "This year's virtual format for ISMRM 2020 is a perfect complement to our exclusively online coverage."

ISMRM's mission to educate the MRI community continues with this year's virtual meeting, even in an era of social distancing, according to Lawrence L. Wald, PhD, 2019-2020 ISMRM president.

"Sharing research, networking, precipitating new thinking, and inspiring thought that does not come easily in isolation -- that is the goal of our annual meeting," Wald said. "Its been a challenging year for all of us, with plenty of isolation, but I am confident that the virtual meeting can achieve these goals. I look forward to participating in it with you. It has been an honor serving the society as the 2019-2020 ISMRM president."

AuntMinnie's daily editorial coverage of ISMRM 2020 will run from August 8 to August 14.

About AuntMinnie.com

AuntMinnie.com is the premier online destination for radiologists, radiation therapists, interventional radiologists, and related professionals in the medical imaging industry, while AuntMinnieEurope.com serves the European radiology community. AuntMinnie.com and AuntMinnieEurope.com feature the latest news, communities, continuing medical education, and board review education for medical imaging physicians, clinicians, residents, and medical students across the world. AuntMinnie.com and AuntMinnieEurope.com are part of Science and Medicine Group.

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Coverage of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine (ISMRM) virtual meeting featured on AuntMinnie.com - PR Web

Pierre doctor of internal medicine: COVID is ‘definitely not the flu’ – The Capital Journal

South Dakota health officials confirmed 98 new COVID-19 cases on Friday, bringing the statewide total since the pandemic began to 9,371 infections, with the disease causing 144 deaths.

And if you ask Dr. Philip Meyer of Avera St. Marys Hospital in Pierre, who has been practicing internal medicine for 26 years, Americans need to get used to masking up and social distancing.

In fact, Meyer doesnt even like the term social distancing because he said it does not fully convey the need to maintain physical separation.

I dont believe we are going to be out of the woods with COVID-19 until the fall of next year, at the soonest, in my opinion, Meyer told the Capital Journal during a Thursday interview.

Social distance should be called physical distance. Maintaining a physical distance of 6 feet is more helpful than we thought, Meyer added.

Speaking as a health professional, Meyer said he sees the politicization of COVID-19 as unfortunate.

I have seen some grotesque overreaction and some grotesque underreaction, Meyer said, though not citing any specific examples.

This is real. It is definitely not the flu. There really is no sense in trying to draw comparisons between this and the flu, Meyer added.

One major difference between COVID-19 and influenza, according to Meyer, is the average time in the hospital for someone who becomes severely ill from the disease. He said the average hospital stay for a COVID-19 patient is 15 days, compared to just two or three for the typical person who requires hospitalization for the flu.

Meyer also encourages people to wear masks in public, particularly during instances when maintaining a 6-foot physical distance is impractical.

It is not about politics, Meyer said. What the masks do is they prevent each of us from spreading it to each other.

At The Hospital

Earlier this year, South Dakota officials expressed concern about not having enough hospital beds in the event of a surge of COVID-19 cases. Mitigation efforts have reduced the possibility of this, but Meyer said Avera is ready for a large influx of COVID patients, should this occur.

We are very prepared, he said, noting the hospital normally houses 25-35 patients. Meyer said officials made extensive preparations to increase capacity so that as many as 150 patients can be hospitalized at the Pierre facility.

Prepare for the worst and pray for the best, he said of this philosophy.

While Meyer said the hospital stopped allowing patients to have visitors for some time, each patient is now permitted two visitors.

In terms of working to stop the spread of COVID-19 within the hospital, Meyer said staff members are required to cover not only their mouths and noses, but also their eyes. He also said everyone must enter through one of two entrances at the facility now, while those coming into the hospital must pass a temperature check.

When asked about the effectiveness of the somewhat controversial antimalarial drug, hydroxychloroquine, against COVID-19.

We dont have enough evidence that it is helpful, Meyer said. It is still open for debate.

Moving forward, Meyer said businesses, schools, governments, hospitals, and society in general have to get used to physical distancing until the virus dissipates.

Learning how to live with this threat is what people need to do, he added.

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Pierre doctor of internal medicine: COVID is 'definitely not the flu' - The Capital Journal

Second COVID-19 death in Medicine Hat – CHAT News Today

There is some irony in the fact that my cautious optimism last week was followed by three days with new cases counts over 100. It is a reminder that COVID continues to be with us, and we cannot turn our backs on this virus, said Dr. Deena Hinshaw. We all need to make wise decisions every day that make life safer, regardless of whether case numbers are rising or falling at any given time.

Hinshaw addressed some of the most common questions she hears, including size of cohorts as school begins.

She said there is no single answer to that question.

We do know that the more people you come in contact with, the greater your risk of exposure, she said. Parents, guardians and family members should look at their cohorts and assess if they are comfortable with the current size or if they need to shrink it as school begins.

She recommended anyone in doubt should shrink their cohort for the first few weeks, then reassessing once the routines of school have been established.

As for COVIDs impact on pets, Hinshaw said theres limited research but that there have been very few reports of domestic animals testing positive for COVID-19.

She said those have occurred in pets who have been in contact with people who tested positive for the virus.

At this time, there is no evidence that domestic animals can transmit the disease to humans, she said.

For masks, Hinshaw recommended clean cloth masks be stored in a sealed and clean storage bag in a dry area.

If the mask becomes damp or soiled, it should be put into a separate breathable bag and taken home for washing, she said. When it comes time to clean them, empty the bags into the washing machine. Consider using a bag that can also be washed at the same time. Generally speaking, warm water is better but follow whatever directions are recommended for washing your masks material.

Another common concern, said Hinshaw, is how long it takes for notification of positive test results. She said that is currently two days.

This too long. We have put some measures in place and are working on more to reduce this wait time and speed up other components of the testing process in the coming weeks, said the chief medical officer of health, urging anyone who is feeling ill and has been tested to stay home, away from family and cohort members until test results return.

There are 66 Albertans currently in hospital due to COVID-19, 14 of which are in ICU. There are a total of 213 deaths, an increase of five.

The province conducted 26,357 tests over the weekend.

The South Zone has a total of 1,695 cases 1,614 recovered, an increase of 37, and 61 active, a decrease of 29.

There are seven people in the zone in hospital, four of which are in ICU, and there have been 20 deaths.

Cypress County has totalled 31 cases all recovered.

The County of Forty Mile has 19 total cases, seven active cases and 12 recovered.

The MD of Taber has 37 total cases three active and 34 recovered.

Special Areas No. 2 has one active case and 14 recovered.

Brooks has 1,123 total cases 1,114 are recovered and there are none considered active. Brooks has recorded nine deaths. The County of Newell has a total of 28 cases five active, 22 recovered one death. Its the first death reported in the county.

The County of Warner has 54 total cases. There are now 53 recovered cases in addition to one previously reported death in the county.

The City of Lethbridge has a total of 141 cases. Of those, 23 are listed as active and 116 recovered and there have been two deaths there. Lethbridge County has 28 cases, two active cases and 26 recovered.

The figures on alberta.ca are up-to-date as of end of day Aug. 9, 2020.

Saskatchewan reported five new cases of COVID-19 on Monday, one in the South Zone.

Saskatchewan has a total of 1,450 cases, 165 considered active. There are 1,265 recovered cases and there have been 20 COVID-19 deaths in the province.

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Second COVID-19 death in Medicine Hat - CHAT News Today

The best types of medicine for nausea and which is right for you – Insider – INSIDER

There are many different reasons why you may experience nausea. Sometimes it is due to an underlying medical condition. Other times, nausea may occur as a result of motion sickness or eating too much.

In many of these cases, taking anti-nausea medication can help relieve your symptoms quickly. But which medicine you should take depends on what's causing your nausea.

The most common causes of nausea include:

If you know you're going to be nauseous in advance, you can prevent it by taking medication beforehand. So, for example, if you know you're prone to get nausea on airplanes, you should take medication approximately half an hour before your flight takes off.

Here are the most common types of anti-nausea medicine for motion sickness:

Motion sickness medications work best when taken before the activity that may cause motion sickness, Devine says, so it won't help as much to take it after you feel nauseous.

Nausea caused by acid reflux is best resolved by treating the acid reflux itself, Devine says. The two major classes of medication to treat acid reflux are:

These are prescription medications, but some of them are available over-the-counter at lower strength doses. You should contact your doctor if you experience symptoms of acid reflux, like heartburn and nausea, that persist for seven days even with over-the-counter treatment.

Nausea during pregnancy typically subsides in the second trimester, though there are some people who experience it for longer, or who may have an extreme version, known as hyperemesis gravidarum.

Pyridoxine (Vitamin B6) is a common over-the-counter anti-nausea medication deemed safe during pregnancy, Devine says. However, the kind of anti-nausea medication or treatment best suited for a pregnant person depends on the severity of their nausea and other individual factors.

Some anti-nausea medications may impact fetal development, so if you think you may need anti-nausea medication, it's important to discuss options with your obstetrician first.

If you experience severe, recurrent episodes of nausea without a clear underlying cause your doctor may prescribe medications that act on histamine, dopamine, or serotonin receptors in the brain.

These prescription medications can help treat acute episodes of nausea or prevent future episodes. Examples include:

Common side effects of anti-nausea medication include:

Most medications to treat nausea are safe, Devine says, but there are cases where anti-nausea medication may not be a good idea. Some common anti-nausea medications, like those acting on dopamine and serotonin receptors, can affect electrical rhythms of the heart.

These medications are typically not recommended for people with a history of heart conditions or those on other medications with potential side effects of heart rhythm abnormalities.

Talk with your doctor about the best anti-nausea medication for your symptoms. Together, you can develop a treatment plan to prevent and treat your nausea.

"No one should have to suffer with frequent nausea and vomiting," Devine says. "In the overwhelming majority of cases, nausea can be well managed with a combination of lifestyle, dietary, and medication therapies."

For more information, learn about the best home remedies for nausea.

Originally posted here:

The best types of medicine for nausea and which is right for you - Insider - INSIDER

Receipt of psychological counseling and integrative medicine services among breast cancer survivors with anxiety – DocWire News

This article was originally published here

Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2020 Aug 9. doi: 10.1007/s10549-020-05859-0. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To define the prevalence and risk factors of anxiety and examine rates and predictors of psychotherapy and integrative medicine service use in breast cancer survivors on aromatase inhibitors (AIs).

METHODS: Observational study of patients with histologically confirmed stage 0-III hormone receptor-positive breast cancer taking a third-generation AI at the time of enrollment. Patients completed self-report measures of anxiety and utilization of psychotherapy and integrative medicine services at a single time-point. We used multivariate logistic regression analyses to identify factors associated with anxiety and receipt of anxiety treatment services.

RESULTS: Among the 1085 participants, the majority were younger than 65 years of age (n = 673, 62.0%) and white (n = 899, 82.9%). Approximately one-third (30.8%) reported elevated anxiety ( 8 on the anxiety subscale of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale). Of patients with elevated anxiety, only 24.6% reported receiving psychological counseling, 25.3% used integrative medicine services, and 39.8% received either type of treatment since their diagnosis. Patients with an education level of high school or less were less likely to receive psychological counseling (AOR, 0.43, 95% CI 0.19-0.95) and integrative medicine services (OR 0.30, 95% CI 0.12-0.72) than patients with higher levels of education.

CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety is common in breast cancer patients treated with AIs yet the majority of anxious patients do not receive evidence-based treatment, even when these treatments are available. Better systematic anxiety screening and treatment initiation are needed to reduce disparities in care by education level.

PMID:32772224 | DOI:10.1007/s10549-020-05859-0

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Receipt of psychological counseling and integrative medicine services among breast cancer survivors with anxiety - DocWire News