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Daily Archives: July 13, 2020
There is a strong genetic component to asthma, but it’s not the only risk factor – Insider – INSIDER
Posted: July 13, 2020 at 5:23 pm
Asthma is a chronic condition that causes your airways to become inflamed leading them to swell and narrow. This makes it harder for you to breathe and can cause dangerous asthma attacks.
Asthma is often linked to other health conditions like hay fever and environmental factors including air pollution. However, research also shows that carrying certain genes can put you at greater risk of developing asthma.
Here's what you need to know about what causes asthma and how it can be passed down through families.
Scientists have identified more than one hundred specific genes that may play a role in whether or not a person develops asthma. In fact, a person with at least one biological parent with asthma is 3 to 6 times more likely to develop the condition than someone whose parents don't have asthma.
However, even if you are born with asthma-related genes, you may not develop asthma unless those genes are "turned on," likely by something in your environment. "Multiple genes may be involved and they could be triggered by a number of factors, such as viral infections," says Stanley Szefler, MD, the Director of the Pediatric Asthma Research Program at Children's Hospital Colorado.
This means that if you have asthma-related genes and suffer a bad respiratory infection as a child, this could kickstart a lifelong asthma condition. However, experts say that more research is needed to fully understand how these genes interact with the environment to cause asthma in the first place.
Doctors have identified several different types of asthma including adult-onset asthma, allergic asthma, and exercise-induced asthma. Scientists have not linked any specific genes to a particular type of asthma, Szefler says. However, there is evidence that every type of asthma has a genetic component.
In a study, published in 2008 in Twin Research and Human Genetics, researchers compared the incidence of asthma in twins to determine how strongly genes affect the likelihood of developing asthma, compared with environmental factors. The results showed that genetics plays a very large role the genes account for about 70% of your risk of developing asthma.
It's important to remember that even though genes are an important risk factor for asthma:
About half of all asthma sufferers start having symptoms as children age 5 and younger. But for people who develop asthma later in life, genes are less likely to play a role. This may be because some older people develop asthma due to lifestyle choices like smoking.
In addition to genetics, asthma may be caused by:
In many cases, experts don't know why some people develop asthma while others don't. However, there are risk factors that can increase your risk. These include:
There is no way to prevent asthma, even if you start treatment early on after your symptoms develop, says Szefler. Researchers are starting to look at whether using biologic medications containing live bacteria could work to prevent asthma, Szelfer says, "but the results are several years off."
However, even if you can't prevent asthma, there are steps you can take to prevent asthma attacks:
Asthma is an ongoing condition and you should "maintain good medical follow-up to keep the disease under control," Szefler says. You will need to make an individual treatment plan with your doctor, designed to target your symptoms and help avoid your asthma triggers.
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There is a strong genetic component to asthma, but it's not the only risk factor - Insider - INSIDER
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How old is your dog? New equation shows how to calculate its age in human years – NBC News
Posted: at 5:23 pm
Common wisdom has long held that each dog year is equivalent to seven human years. But a new equation developed to measure how a dog ages finds the family pup may be a lot older than we realize.
Researchers studying chemical changes to canine DNA found that dogs age very quickly during their first five years and much more slowly later on.
The findings, published recently in the journal Cell Systems, calculate that a 5-year-old dog would be pushing 60 in human years.
Puppies age super quickly, said Trey Ideker, the studys senior author and a professor of genetics at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine. By the time a dog is a year old, at a molecular level, hes much more like a 30-year-old human. Retrospectively, we did know these things. It didnt make any sense that the equivalent to a 7-year-old human would be able to have puppies.
Ideker and colleagues noticed that dogs, just like humans, have chemical marks on their DNA, called methylation marks, that change with age.
The genome itself doesnt change with age, Ideker said. "What does change is marks on the genes that control a dog or human's growth pattern."
The methylation marks, or as Ideker calls them wrinkles on the genome, change in predictable ways as we and dogs age.
We are able to quantify this at the molecular level and tell how fast someone is aging, and we can align it across dogs and humans, Ideker said. But we dont know exactly what it all means.
To find the mathematical relationship connecting dog aging to human aging, Ideker and his colleagues studied 104 Labrador retrievers whose ages ranged from weeks-old puppies to 16-year-old dogs.
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When they compared the dog DNA data to information from humans, the researchers came up with a new equation to figure out the dog's comparable human age.
The equation: 16 ln(dog age) + 31 = human age.
For iPhone calculators that have the natural logarithm, or "ln," function, first type in the dog's age. Then hit the "ln" button. Multiply that result by 16; then add 31.
If you're using Googles scientific calculator: First, hit "ln," then type in the dogs age, then equal it out. Next, multiply by 16, and then add 31.
Using that equation:
By this time, dog aging has slowed down, so an 8-year-old dog is like a 64-year-old human.
According to this equation, the average 12-year Labrador lifespan is equivalent to a human living to about 70.
Ideker suspects there will be some variation based on dog breed but that they will all follow a similar pattern.
The new dog-age math has given Ideker some pause when he thinks about taking his own dogs on runs: He now realizes his 6-year-old dog is actually pushing 60 in human years.
Margret Casal, a specialist in veterinary genetics, said the new calculations match what shes observed in her dog patients.
It validates what a lot of other researchers have been saying, said Casal, a professor of medical genetics, pediatrics and reproduction at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine.
Researchers knew the 1-to-7 comparison was off, but they did not know what the specific relationship was, she added.
It will be interesting to look at different breeds," Casal said. "We know that some smaller breeds live longer and some larger ones dont live quite as long.
For owners hoping to help a beloved dog live as long as possible, Casal offered a few tips:
Lastly, take your dog for yearly wellness visits.
Thats really important, Casal said. I can say as an owner of a dog, sometimes you dont see something is wrong and your vet might be able to see it better.
Linda Carroll is a regular health contributor to NBC News and Reuters Health. She is coauthor of "The Concussion Crisis: Anatomy of a Silent Epidemic" and "Out of the Clouds: The Unlikely Horseman and the Unwanted Colt Who Conquered the Sport of Kings."
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How old is your dog? New equation shows how to calculate its age in human years - NBC News
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Alzheimer’s disease: protective gene uncovered in human cell model bringing promise for new drug discoveries – The Conversation UK
Posted: at 5:23 pm
Every three seconds, someone in the world develops dementia. The most common form of dementia is Alzheimers disease. While researchers have identified a number of risk factors that are linked to dementia including genetics, smoking, and high blood pressure there is currently still no cure.
Part of the reason for this is because of how complicated it is to test potential Alzheimers drugs. In order to conduct clinical trials participants need to have symptoms. But by the time symptoms appear, its usually too late for treatments to have a large effect as many of their brain cells have already died.
But our latest research developed a new human cell model that is able to rapidly simulate the development of Alzheimers disease in the lab. This allowed us to identify a gene, called BACE2, that is naturally able to suppress the signs of Alzheimers disease in human brain cells. Our research is the result of around five years work, and was the collaborative effort of teams based in London, Singapore, Sweden and Croatia.
Researchers already know a lot about which genes cause Alzheimers disease or make someone more likely to develop it. These genes contribute to certain toxic proteins accumulating in the human brain. So our team thought that the opposite must also be true: our brain cells must also have proteins that can naturally slow down the development of Alzheimers.
One gene that can definitely cause Alzheimers disease is a gene found on the 21st pair of human chromosomes that is responsible for making the amyloid precursor protein (APP). Research shows that 100% of people born with just one extra copy of the APP gene (called DupAPP) will develop dementia by age 60.
People with Downs syndrome are born with three copies of APP because they have a third 21st chromosome. But by age 60, only 60% of them will develop clinical dementia. We wanted to know why some people with Downs syndrome have delayed development of or never develop Alzheimers dementia compared to those who have one extra DupAPP gene.
The simple answer for this is because they have an extra dose of all other genes located in chromosome 21. We believed that there could be some dose-sensitive genes on chromosome 21 that, when triplicated, protect against Alzheimers disease by counteracting the effects of the third APP gene.
These genes must then appear to delay the onset of clinical dementia in some people with Downs syndrome by approximately 20 years. Studies have even shown that any future drug able to delay dementia onset by just five years would reduce the prevalence of Alzheimers in the general population by half.
To study the potential of the extra genes, we took hair follicle cells from people with Downs syndrome and re-programmed the cells to become like stem cells. This allowed us to turn them into brain cells in a Petri dish.
We then grew them into 3D balls of cells that imitated the tissue of the grey matter (cortex) of the human brain. The 3D nature of the culturing allowed misfolded and toxic proteins to accumulate, which are crucial changes that lead to Alzheimers disease in the brain.
We found all three major signs of Alzheimers disease (plaque build-up in the brain, misfolded tau proteins and dying brain neurons) in cell cultures from 71% of people with Downs syndrome who donated samples. This proportion was similar to the percentage of clinical dementia among adults with Downs syndrome.
We were also able to use CRISPR a technology that allows researchers to alter DNA sequences and modify a genes function to reduce the number of BACE2 genes from three copies to two copies on chromosome 21. This was only done in cases where there were no indications of Alzheimers disease in our cellular model. Surprisingly, reducing the number of BACE2 genes on chromosome 21 provoked signs of the disease. This strongly suggest that having extra copies of a normal BACE2 gene could prevent Alzheimers.
The protective action of BACE2 reduces the levels of toxic amyloid proteins. This was verified in our cellular models, as well as in cerebrospinal fluid and post-mortem brain tissue from people with Downs syndrome.
Our study provides proof that natural Alzheimers-preventing genes exist, and now we have a system to detect new potential protective genes. Importantly, recent research showed the protective action of BACE2 might also be relevant to people who dont have Downs syndrome.
Our results also show that all three signs of Alzheimers disease can be potentially detected in cells from live donors. Though this requires a lot more research, it means we may be able to develop tests that identify which people are at higher risk of Alzheimers disease by looking at their cells.
This would allow us to detect the disease before it starts developing in a persons brain, and could make it possible to design personalised preventative treatments. However, we are still a long way from reaching this goal.
Most importantly, our work shows that all three signs of Alzheimers disease detected using our model could be prevented by drugs known to inhibit the production of the toxic amyloid protein and this can be detected in as little as six weeks in the lab. We hope our discovery could lead to the development of new drugs aimed at delaying or preventing Alzheimers disease, before it causes brain cell death.
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How Could Human Nature Have Become This Politicized? – The New York Times
Posted: at 5:23 pm
The formulation of what has come to be known as moral foundations theory has been crucial to a deeper understanding of this process. The theory
proposes that the human mind is organized in advance of experience so that it is prepared to learn values, norms, and behaviors related to a diverse set of recurrent adaptive social problems.
Leading proponents argue that there are
five foundations of intuitive ethics: care/harm; fairness/cheating; loyalty/betrayal; authority/subversion; and sanctity/degradation.
The theory is described in detail in Moral Foundations Theory: The Pragmatic Validity of Moral Pluralism, a 2013 paper by Jesse Graham of the University of Utah; Jonathan Haidt of N.Y.U.; Sena Koleva, a research consultant; Matt Motyl of the University of Illinois at Chicago; Ravi Iyer, chief data scientist for Ranker, a consumer internet platform; Sean P. Wojcik, a senior data scientist at the news site Axios; and Peter H. Ditto, of the University of California-Irvine.
What makes moral foundations theory especially relevant now is that in recent decades liberal and conservative partisans have divided over the importance they place on these five moral foundations:
Liberals valued Care and Fairness more than did conservatives, whereas conservatives valued Loyalty, Authority and Sanctity more than did liberals.
These differences mattered little for politics when both parties included liberals and conservatives, but beginning around 1964, this disagreement between left and right on moral values began to coincide more strongly with party affiliation.
A number of scholars have put forth ideas in an effort to understand these developments.
Kevin Smith, a political scientist at the University of Nebraska whose research explores the biology and psychology of individual-level differences in political attitudes and behavior, emailed in response to my inquiry:
Fights about abortion, gay rights, gun rights etc. are less about policy than about underlying core values, values that for many are not up for discussion or compromise because they are deeply held indeed, given the genetic influences on such attitudes, its probably fair to say they are at least partly biologically instantiated.
Smith, who is a co-author of Predisposed: Liberals, Conservatives and the Biology of Political Differences, argues that as political parties have coalesced along ideologically consistent lines, especially on issues related to race, they have
created a political environment where genetically influenced predispositions, what most people would experience as gut feelings that one side or the other is right or wrong on a given set of issues of the day, made partisanship something that was much more likely to become a central part of someones identity.
Smith is quite explicit that he does not posit that there is biological determinism of political views or anything else, but he does contend that
theres little doubt that ideological orientations are genetically influenced, and to a surprisingly high degree studies consistently estimate roughly 40-60 percent of the population level variance in ideology is under genetic influence.
The ideological realignment of the parties that has pushed many liberal Republicans into the Democratic camp and conservative Democrats in the opposite direction, Smith writes, has created a political environment in which
those with strong predispositions to lean one way or the other can readily mate those instinctual feelings to a political party that espouses and affirms those predispositions.
At that point, he continues,
Youve got a recipe for deeply polarized politics that is going to feed on its own dynamics and be hard to change. And that sounds awfully like the political environment we have right now.
In Predisposed, Smith and John Hibbing and John Alford, his co-authors, stress that we are not making a nature versus nurture argument.
Instead, they write, innate forces combine with early development and later powerful environmental events to create attitudinal and behavioral tendencies. A predisposition can be altered. Nonetheless,
predispositions nudge us in one direction or another, often without our knowledge, increasing the odds that we will behave in a certain way, but leaving plenty of room for predispositions to be contravened.
Kevin Arceneaux, a political scientist at Temple, stressed in an email that
It is important to resist the tendency to see heritability of eye color, for example, as the same thing as the heritability of an attitude. I cannot change my eye color, but I can change my attitudes.
Some of the most interesting work in the field of behavioral genetics, Arceneaux continues, shows how
context interacts with genetic influences. If you change the context, the heritability of behavioral constructs changes. So, I would caution against drawing a straight line from heritability to unchanging/intractable.
Along the same lines, Yuan Chang Leong, a postdoctoral fellow in the psychology department at Berkeley, emailed me that
What is heritable is unlikely to be ideology per se, but something more akin to personality traits or a predisposition to respond to certain information in a particular way.
The relationship between these factors and policy positions, Leong continued,
are not set in stone. There is evidence that partisans can be persuaded by political messages, especially when the messages are framed in a manner that appeals to them, so efforts at persuasion are not futile.
Ariel Malka, a professor of psychology at Yeshiva University, believes that religiosity, authoritarianism, and conservative cultural attitudes are rooted in personality traits that have some heritable components.
In an email, Malka noted that
Increased partisan polarization in the U.S. has coincided with the parties placing greater (and opposing) emphases on racial and culture war positions. So its certainly plausible that American polarization stems from partisan conflict having expanded into the racial and cultural areas, aligning this heritable attitude syndrome with partisanship.
Malka cited the work of Amanda Friesen and Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz, political scientists at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and the University of Illinois-Urbana, who are the authors of Do Political Attitudes and Religiosity Share a Genetic Path?
Friesen and Ksiazkiewicz are persuaded that
certain religious, political, and first principle beliefs on social organization can be explained by genetic and unique environmental components, and that the correlation between these three trait structures is primarily due to a common genetic path.
Malka also points to the work of Steven Ludeke, Wendy Johnson and Thomas J. Bouchard Jr., psychologists at the University of Southern Denmark, the University of Edinburgh and the University of Minnesota, whose findings are described in the title of their 2014 paper, Obedience to traditional authority: A heritable factor underlying authoritarianism, conservatism and religiousness.
In Malkas view, the strength of these predispositions to authoritarianism, religiousness and conservatism has been crucial to the success of Republicans in winning support from white middle-class and working-class voters, many of whom hold strongly liberal views on economic policy.
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Predictive Genetic Testing and Consumer/Wellness Genomics Market Analysis On Trends & Need 2025 – Daily Research Chronicles
Posted: at 5:23 pm
Genetic testing comprises examination of ones DNA. The term DNA refers to the chemical database that is responsible for conveying the instructions for functions that need to be performed by the body. Genetic testing is capable of revealing changes or mutations in the genes of living beings, which might result in any kind of disease or illness in the body.
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Predictive genetic testingrefers to the utilization of genetic testing methods in an asymptomatic individual to make a prediction about risk of contacting particular disease in future. These tests are regarded as representation of emerging class of medical tests, which differ in fundamental ways from the usual diagnostic tests.
The global predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics marketis likely to gather momentum owing to the benefits offered by predictive genetic testing.
The benefits of predictive genetic testing are
The global predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics marketis influenced by reducing cost of genetic sequencing and technological advancement in the field of genetics. North America is expected to emerge as a prominent region for the global predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics market in years to come due to high adoption rates of latest technologies in all fields.
Over centauries human DNA has undergone tremendous alteration due to evolutionary and lifestyle changes. They have led to both, advantages and disadvantages over the years. Some have given the mankind a deserving edge over other creatures while the others have led to disorders and diseases. Predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics market thrives on the growing demand for understanding the lineage of a certain gene pool to identify disorders that could manifest in the later or early stage of a human life. The surging demand for understanding the family history or studying the nature of certain diseases has given the global market for predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics market adequate fodder for growth in the past few years.
This new class of medical tests are aimed at reducing the risk of morbidity and mortality amongst consumers. The thorough surveillance and screening of a certain gene pool can allow an individual to avoid conditions that disrupt normal existence through preventive measures. The clinical utility of these tests remains unassessed. Therefore, increasing research and development by pharmaceutical companies to develop new drugs by understanding diseases and disorders is expected to favor market growth.
Unlike conventional diagnostic testing, predictive genetic testing identifies the risk associated with potential conditions. In certain cases it is also capable of stating when the disease may appear and the how severe will it be. Thus, this form of testing is expected to allow consumers to take up wellness measurements well in time to lead a life of normalcy, characterized by good health.
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Global Predictive Genetic Testing and Consumer/Wellness Genomics Market: Overview
Predictive genetic testing are used to identify gene mutations pertaining to the disorders that surface at a considerably later stage in life after birth. These tests are particularly beneficial for people from a family with a history of genetic disorder, although they themselves show no symptoms of the disorder at the time of testing. Genetic testing promises to revolutionize the healthcare sector, providing crucial diagnostic details related to diverse verticals such as heart disease, autism, and cancer. As the healthcare sector touches new peaks, the global predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics market is projected to expand at a healthy growth rate during the forecast period of 2017 to 2025.
This report on the global market for predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics analyzes all the important factors that may influence the demand in the near future and forecasts the condition of the market until 2025. It has been created using proven research methodologies such as SWOT analysis and Porters five forces. One of the key aspect of the report is the section on company profiles, wherein several leading players have been estimated for their market share and analyzed for their geographical presence, product portfolio, and recent strategic developments such as mergers, acquisitions, and collaborations.
The global predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics market, on the basis of test type, can be segmented into predictive testing, consumer genomics, and wellness genetics. The segment of predictive testing can be sub-segmented into genetic susceptibility test, predictive diagnostics, and population screening programs, whereas the segment of wellness genetics can be further divided into nutria genetics, skin and metabolism genetics, and others.
By application, the market can be segmented into breast and ovarian cancer screening, cardiovascular screening, diabetic screening and monitoring, colon cancer screening, Parkinsons or Alzheimers disease, urologic screening or prostate cancer screening, orthopedic and musculoskeletal screening, and other cancer screening. Geographically, the report studies the opportunities available in regions such as Asia Pacific, Europe, North America, and the Middle East and Africa.
Global Predictive Genetic Testing and Consumer/Wellness Genomics Market: Trends and Opportunities
Increasing number of novel partnership models, rapidly decreasing cost of genetic sequencing, and introduction of fragmented point-solutions across the genomics value chain as well as technological advancements in cloud computing and data integration are some of the key factors driving the market. On the other hand, the absence of well-defined regulatory framework, low adoption rate, and ethical concerns regarding the implementation, are expected to hinder the growth rate during the forecast period. Each of these factors have been analyzed in the report and their respective impacts have been anticipated.
Currently, the segment of predictive genetic cardiovascular screening accounts for the maximum demand, and increased investments in the field is expected to maintain it as most lucrative segment. On the other hand, more than 70 companies are currently engaged in nutrigenomics, which is expected to further expand the market.
Global Predictive Genetic Testing and Consumer/Wellness Genomics Market: Regional Outlook
Owing to robust healthcare infrastructure, prevalence of cardiovascular diseases, and high adoptability rate of new technology makes North America the most lucrative region, with most of the demand coming from the country of the U.S. and Canada. Several U.S. companies hold patents, which further extends the outreach of the market in the region of North America.
Companies mentioned in the research report
23andMe, Inc, BGI, Genesis Genetics, Illumina, Inc, Myriad Genetics, Inc, Pathway Genomics, Color Genomics Inc., and ARUP Laboratories are some of the key companies currently operating in global predictive genetic testing and consumer/wellness genomics market. Various forms of strategic partnerships with operating company and smaller vendors with novel ideas helps these leading players maintain their position in the market.
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TMR Research is a premier provider of customized market research and consulting services to busi-ness entities keen on succeeding in todays supercharged economic climate. Armed with an experi-enced, dedicated, and dynamic team of analysts, we are redefining the way our clients conduct business by providing them with authoritative and trusted research studies in tune with the latest methodologies and market trends.
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Covid-19: what treatments are being investigated? – BusinessGhana
Posted: at 5:23 pm
Since the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and its virus SARS-CoV-2 (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2) emerged in Wuhan in the Hubei Province of China, global attention has focused on itscontrol and containment.
Its rapid spread and the absence of an effective treatment or vaccine has caused COVID-19 to overwhelm even the most robust health systems in the world.
From January 2020 to date, the cumulative number of cases is over 8.
5 million with more than 450,000 deaths globally.
Conceivably, therefore COVID-19 has the potential to decimate large populations especially those of low and middle-income countries with limited health infrastructure, personnel and resources, and thus a reason for the unrelenting efforts to control and prevent its spread.
Among those who have died from the condition are senior government officials, policy makers and key front line health workers who are critical in the fight against the disease.
The virus, as has been well established, spreads through contaminated surfaces, droplets from saliva, sneezes and coughs and through aerosols (micro droplets) in breath.
Public health measures adopted so far to contain COVID-19 have thus focused mainly on preventing the virus from entering the nasal and oral cavities.
These include the isolation and quarantining of confirmed and suspected individuals, physical distancing, staying at home, regular hand washing with soap under running water, rubbing hands withalcohol-based sanitizers and the use of face masks.
The provision of personal protective equipment for frontline staff has been key, considering their increased risk of contracting the disease.
MOUTH AND THROAT EXPOSUREWith growing numbers of asymptomatic individuals increasing the spread of the virus in communities as well as increasing concerns among dentists about its potential spread especially during aerosol generating procedures , it is extremely difficult to restrict the virus from entering the oral and nasal cavities, even with the available protective measures for clinicians especially surgeons (Dental, Oropharyngeal, ENT) not to mention anesthetists, physicians, nurses and support staff in critical care.
In that regard, attention should therefore focus also on interventions that prevent viruses that have gained access to these cavities from invading host cells to cause disease.
Such a measure, which is our present focus, could protect especially contacts of infected persons and at the same time, reduce viable viral load shed in saliva by asymptomatic carriers and cases.
Notably, the virus attaches to the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptors in the most superficial cells in the non-keratinized epithelium of the oral cavity and oropharynx.
It then uses its signaling and trafficking pathways to gain further access to infect the body.
These ACE2 receptors are also found in several other areas including the epithelial cells of the respiratory tract down to the alveoli.
The incubation period of COVID-19 is 14 days with an average of 6.
4 days.
How long the virus takes on entering the oral cavity and oropharynx to invade host cells is uncertain.
If it is assumed that the whole of the infective process in the upper respiratory and the oropharynx regions takes 2-5 days, there is very little time, albeit a day or two, to intervene to prevent the virus from infecting an individual who has been exposed to it through the oral cavity.
This demonstrates how speedily action should be taken to prevent a contact of COVID-19 from being infected.
Therapeutic mouthwashes that inactivate microbes in the oral cavity, the palatine fossa and the oropharynx include hydrogen peroxide.
This communication is advocating its use to limit the infectivity and spread of SARS-CoV-2 especially in countries and communities with inadequate healthcare delivery systems.
HYDROGEN PEROXIDEHydrogen peroxide has been used in dental practice for nearly 100 years and has been considered safe when used in low concentrations.
[13] In a review on its safety, it had been noted that 3% hydrogen peroxide daily use for up to six years, showed only occasional or transient irritations in a minimal number of subjects who also had pre-existing lesions.
Even though this solution has mutagenic potential through its reactive oxygen species that could induce DNA damage, there has been no substantive evidence in the literature to support assertions that it causes cancer in humans.
It has been stated that there is strong evidence for the safety of low concentrations of hydrogen peroxide products when used on daily basis and over an extended period Earlier, the International Agency for Research on Cancer also concluded after reviewing animal and human studies that hydrogen peroxide is not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity in humans.
In a recent study assessing carcinogenicity associated with exposure to hydrogen peroxide neither tissue irritation nor tumor promotion was observed in animal models.
The efficacy of hydrogen peroxide has not been in doubt, especially about its capacity to inactivate corona and influenza viruses.
A recent review of studies on human coronaviruses has suggested that 0.
5% hydrogen peroxide will inactivate SARS-CoV-2 on surfaces.
Furthermore, a suggestion has been made quite recently to buttress the view that 1% hydrogen peroxide may serve to prevent entry of the virus into susceptible cells and reduce the possibility of severe disease.
We are proposing, therefore, that use of 1% hydrogen peroxide mouthwash and gargle, at least twice a day be added to the established WHO preventive protocols for SARS-CoV-2.
This could augment protection of frontline health personnel, contacts of COVID-19 cases, and the highly vulnerable individuals such as the aged, security personnel, media staff, persons with underlying health issues and individuals in communities where the burden of COVID-19 is high.
Furthermore, since there is evidence that even 0.
5% hydrogen peroxide could inactivate the SARS-CoV-2 on surfaces, this lower concentration could be used by individuals who may be more susceptible to tissue irritation, considering that its prophylactic use might be required over a long period.
To further limit the risk of infecting others, asymptomatic individuals and mild to moderate cases could use hydrogen peroxide mouthwash and gargle to inactivate SARS-CoV-2 shed.
In conclusion, Hydrogen Peroxide that has been in use in dental practice with proven safety and efficacy could be employed in limiting the infectivity and spread of SARS-CoV-2 whilst awaiting the emergence of fail-proof prophylactic and therapeutic measures.
We have planned a clinical trial of mouthwash and gargle with hydrogen peroxide compared with mouthwash or gargle with water only, in asymptomatic cases ofCOVID-19.
Rev.
Emeritus Professor Andrews Seth Ayettey MB.
ChB.
PhD.
Retired Professor, University of Ghana Medical School, College of Health Sciences.
University of Ghana, Legon.
Ghana.
Email: seth.
ayettey@gmail.
com Twitter@ayettey_sethEmerita Professor, Isabella A.
Quakyi.
PhD.
FGA.
School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana, Legon.
Ghana.
Hannah N.
G.
Ayettey-Anie.
BSc (Med Sc) MB ChB FGCP, Senior Specialist, National Radiotherapy Oncology and Nuclear Medicine Centre, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra, Ghana.
Kwamena W.
Sagoe.
MSc PhD.
Associate Professor, Department of Medical Microbiology, University of Ghana Medical School, College of Health Sciences.
University of Ghana, Legon.
Ghana.
Mary N.
B.
Ayettey-Adamafio.
BSc (Med Sc) BDS FGCS FWACS.
Senior Specialist, Department of Dentistry, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Korle Bu, Accra.
Ghana.
Merley Newman-Nartey BDS MClD FGCS.
Senior Lecturer, University of Ghana Dental School, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana.
Ruth N.
A.
Ayettey Brew BSc (Med Sc), MB.
ChB.
Resident, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra.
Ghana.
Nii Otu Nartey BDS MSc FAAOP MRCD FWACS FGCS Retired Associate Professor, University of Ghana Dental School, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana.
Albert G.
B.
Amoah MB ChB, PhD, FWACP, FGCP, FGA.
Retired Professor, University of Ghana Medical School, College of Health Sciences, University of Ghana.
Felix I D Konotey-Ahulu MD (Lond) FRCP(Lond & Glasg) DTMH(L'pool) Distinguished Professor of Human Genetics University of Cape Coast, Honorary Consultant Physician Specialist to Ghana Ministry of Health through Commissioner of Health Brigadier Odartey-Wellington 1976, and Former Consultant Physician, Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, Accra, and Phoenix Hospital Group 9 Harley St, London W1G 9AL.
*Corresponding Author Professor Seth Ayettey: Twitter@ayettey_sethAcknowledgement: The authors acknowledge Mr.
Benjamin Yankah of Accra, Ghana, for encouragement.
References1.
Preparedness, prevention and control of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) for refugees and migrants in non-camp settings.
2020.
who.
int/publications-detail/preparedness-prevention-and-cont.
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(covid-19)-for-refugees-and-migrants-in-non-camp-settings (accessed January 12 2020).
2.
Thompson Adrian.
OBITUARY of Amged El-Hawrani.
Consultant ear, nose, and throat surgeon.
(Born 1964; Qualified 1993), died from COVID-19 on 28 March 2020.
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Covid-19: what treatments are being investigated? - BusinessGhana
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Nearly 30% of men say progress toward gender equality has come at their expense, according to new report – CNBC
Posted: at 5:18 pm
A century after the 19th amendment was passed granting women the right to vote, nearly three in 10 men (28%) say that women's gains toward equality have come at their expense,according to a report released by Pew Research Center.
The report, which surveyed more than 3,000 U.S. men and women from March 18-April, 1, 2020, found that this difference in opinion about gender equality varies across party lines with 38% of Republican men saying that women's equality has come at the expense of men, compared to 19% of Democratic men. A quarter of Republican women also agree with this sentiment, while just 12% of Democratic women agree with this view.
Though a significant portion of men think women's progress is negatively impacting them, the overall report found that the majority of Americans, 57%, think the U.S. has not gone far enough with granting women equal rights. When asked about the major obstacles that are preventing women from achieving full equality today, 77% said sexual harassment, 67% said women not having the same legal rights as men, 66% said different societal expectations for men and women and 64% said not enough women in positions of power. Women overall were more likely than men to see each of these issues as major obstacles.
For the majority of Americans who say it's important for men and women to have equal rights, many point to disparities in the workplace as clear signs of gender inequality. In the U.S., women make upnearly halfof the entry-level workforce, but comprise only a fifth of the C-suite and just 7.4% of Fortune 500 CEO seats. This is despite the fact that women earn nearly60% of bachelor'sand master's degrees, meaning there is no shortage of qualified women in the pipeline.
"It's disappointing," former finance executive and chair of Newmont Mining Corporation Noreen Doyle toldCNBC Make Itin March. When looking at the lack of diversity in leadership, she says it's clear that "there are a lot of subtle ways where men have been advantaged over women."
When asked what a gender equal society would look like, 45% of the Pew survey respondents said that men and women would have equal pay and an additional 19% said that there would be no discrimination in hiring, promoting or providing educational opportunities for women.
Right now, women earn roughly 82 cents for every dollar earned by men, with women of color earning even less. Over the course of a 40-year career, this adds up to $407,760 in lost wages, according to the National Women's Law Center.For Black, Latina and Native women, this wage disparity adds up to a loss of nearly $1 million or more over the course of one's career.
In addition to this ongoing pay gap, a 2019 report fromLean In and McKinsey & Company, found that for every 100 men promoted and hired to a manager position, only 72 women are promoted and hired for the same role, signaling major obstacles around gender bias in the workplace.
"Men are typically hired based on potential and what we believe they can do," says Lean In co-founder and CEO Rachel Thomas. "While women are typically hired and promoted based on what they've already accomplished."
Thomas adds that if companies don't pay attention to this bias, then the leadership pipeline will continue to be filled with a disproportionate number of men.
Aside from sharing their views about gender equality in the workplace, Pew also asked U.S. adults to share their opinions about what groups and institutions have been beneficial in helping to advance women's rights.According to survey results, 59% of Americans believe the Democratic Party has done at least a fair amount to advance gender parity, while 37% say the same about the Republican Party.
In terms of the feminist movement, 64% of adults say it's helped the lives of White women, 61% say it has helped the lives of Black women and 58% say it has helped the lives of Hispanic women at least a little bit. Overall, the respondents say feminism has helped White women a lot more than it has helped women of color and they say feminism has helped wealthy women a lot more than poor women.
Additionally, as lawmakers push to include the Equal Rights Amendment in the U.S. Constitution, the report found that while 78% of Americans are at least somewhat in favor of this move, just44% believe that it would actually make a difference in advancing women's rights.
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Copernicus Sentinel-1 tracks progress of giant iceberg over three years – Optics.org
Posted: at 5:18 pm
13Jul2020
The 100km-long "A-68" iceberg, which calved from Antarctica in 2017, is now 1000km away from birthplace and shrinking.
When it calved, A-68 was about twice the size of Luxembourg and one of the largest icebergs on record, changing the outline of the Antarctic Peninsula forever. Despite its size, however, it is remarkably thin, just a couple of hundred metres thick.
Over the last three years, satellite missions such as the European Space Agency's Copernicus Sentinel-1 have been used to track the berg as it drifted in the Southern Ocean. For the first two years, it remained close to its parent ice sheet, impeded by sea ice.
However, it lost a chunk of ice almost immediately after being calved, resulting in it being renamed A-68A, and its offspring became A-68B. More recently, in April 2020, A-68A lost another chunk: A-68C.
Antarctic icebergs are named from the Antarctic quadrant in which they were originally sighted, then a sequential number, then, if the iceberg breaks, a sequential letter. Although A-68A is a relatively thin iceberg, it has held together reasonably well, but satellites will be key to monitoring how it changes in open waters.
Pace of drift increasing
Captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-1 radar mission, the image above shows the berg on 5 July 2020, a few days before its third birthday. Satellites carrying radar continue to deliver images regardless of the dark and bad weather, which is indispensable when monitoring the remote polar regions which are shrouded in darkness during the winter months.
Other maps available from ESA show the different positions of A-68A during its three-year journey. The map not only highlights how long it remained close to the Larsen C ice sheet, but how, over the past year or so, its pace of drift has increased considerably. The map also includes historic iceberg tracks, based on data from a number of satellites including ESAs ERS-1 and ERS-2, and shows that A-68A is following this well-trodden path.
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Katie Swan favourite for Progress Tour hit by Watson and Dart withdrawals – The Guardian
Posted: at 5:18 pm
Katie Swan, sixth in the country and 254 in the world when the WTA list was frozen in March, is the topranked player in the Progress Tour championship intended to kickstart the disrupted season for British women in south-west London on Tuesday.
The world No 50, Heather Watson, was the No 1 seed but pulled out on Monday afternoon with an ankle injury, joining the third seed and world No 146 Harriet Dart, who has a groin strain, the world No 14 Johanna Konta, who showed no interest in the 30,000 event, the improving veteran Samantha Murray Sharan (WTA 180th) and the promising Naiktha Bains (223) as absentees from a noble venture. Even in a seriously shredded draw the one-time star of British womens tennis, Laura Robson, who had a second hip operation last year, was not tempted to enter.
Instead of matching the efforts of the successful mens Battle of the Brits two weeks ago, the tournament, bedevilled by a flurry of late withdrawals and high-calibre no-shows, takes on the look of a county event with only coaches and the LTA staff watching at the National Tennis Centre in Roehampton. Watson had been added as a late wildcard so her withdrawal compounded the absence of Konta, by a distance Britains most successful woman of the past decade.
Watson said: I have a foot injury. It happened last week and has been getting worse. I have pain simply walking, so I wont be playing at all for at least three days. Its such a shame. I was playing really well and was excited to compete again.
Dart was similarly disappointed. I was looking forward to competing again but, after training today, I realised that Im not quite ready, due to a groin issue. Ill definitely be watching on TV.
Swan, mentored by Andy Murray, has spent much of the closed season in her home-away-from-home, Wichita, Kansas, staying fit and delivering food to households doubly disadvantaged by the coronavirus, but returned to the UK recently.
By default, she will be favourite to win an event that will be shown on the LTAs YouTube page, and on the BBCs digital platforms from Tuesday until Saturday.
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After 6 months and little progress controlling the pandemic, return to normal remains out of sight – The Spokesman-Review
Posted: at 5:18 pm
Its been nearly half a year since the first case of COVID-19 was identified in the United States, in the Puget Sound area, on Jan. 21.
While the state eventually shut down in late March in an effort to slow the diseases spread, Washington began the gradual process of reopening after little more than a month.
But as counties began moving through the stages of the states phased reopening plan, the coronavirus was just beginning its wider spread outside the Seattle area and into other parts of the state, including to Yakima, the Tri-Cities and, eventually, Spokane.
Since April, after a particularly bad first wave in Western Washington, Central and Eastern Washington have been hit with their own first waves of the virus, leading to newly reopened restaurants shutting down all over again, to outbreaks in prison units and food processing plants, and to community spread, even in rural counties.
Case rates statewide are higher now, with half the counties partially reopened, than they were in April, and state public health officials have paused any further reopening for now.
In Spokane, hospitalizations have doubled in a month, and intensive care capacity remains a concern due to questions about staffing levels.
In Yakima, where Gov. Jay Inslees masking orders first went into effect , patients were sent to hospitals outside the area when staff needs hit capacity.
Franklin County has the highest percent-positive rate in the state, with 32% of individuals tested in the last two weeks returning positive results.
Six months into the pandemic, it feels like not a lot has changed.
Test results are backed up again, with people having to wait a week to 10 days in isolation to see if they are positive or negative. Community spread, when the virus is contracted without known connections to other cases, is back on the rise, as it was in March and April.
The rising number of cases has put increased challenges and pressure on contact tracing efforts, which began with reopening and are now incredibly strained and overwhelmed.
Despite the state training hundreds of workers and National Guard members to do contact tracing, counties like Spokane have opted to hire outside companies to conduct contact tracing. With more than 460 cases confirmed this week alone, the work has eclipsed what local epidemiologists can handle.
Washington was on lockdown from late March to early May, giving public health officials and state leaders an opportunity to prepare outbreaks underway and on the way, predominantly in long-term care facilities across the state and more broadly in the Puget Sound area.
By May, residents were antsy, and reopening lurched forward, with Ins-lees phased plan taking effect.
Despite state leaders efforts to ensure counties were ready to move ahead, its apparent now they miscalculated in some cases. Some counties hadnt had their first wave yet.
According to Eric Lofgren, an epidemiologist at Washington State University, some took the absence of cases in some areas as evidence the virus had been safely contained. In reality, he said, the first wave hadnt fully reached parts of Eastern Washington, including Spokane and the Tri-Cities.
If you dont have cases, that means either your epidemic hasnt started yet or youve successfully controlled it, Lofgren said. So I think everyone said we successfully controlled it, and what we discovered was that in several states we discovered that your epidemic was a little slower in coming.
The same story played out across the country in states that reopened this summer after seeing relatively low case counts but are now seeing hospitalizations and case counts surge.
Washington is now seeing higher daily case counts in July than April.
Testing capacity is back to waits of 10 days to two weeks for results , largely due to rising demand and growing backlogs at national laboratories, where the majority of the countrys testing capacity lies.
We are truly back to where we were in March, Spokane County Health Officer Bob Lutz said Friday, noting the challenges felt in Spokane are felt statewide and nationally .
Long wait times make it challenging for public health officials asking people to isolate at home until they get test results.
Delays are harmful because they dont allow us to quickly contain a case, Secretary of Health John Wiesman told reporters Thursday. We know people are most infectious early on and thats why we say to anybody getting a test that if you have any reason to get a test, we want you to stay home until you get your results.
With more testing, came more cases, but that doesnt paint the full picture of the disease burden.
The statewide percent-positive rate has also steadily increased this summer, as has the rate of people testing positive in counties per 100,000 people. Only 16 counties statewide are meeting case rate goals set by the governors Safe Start plan.
Could more have been done during the states lockdown to prevent the COVID-19 resurgence? Lofgren thinks so.
I think at both a national and local level, what happened is we did sort of waste the opportunities we had to get things in place for people to start taking this seriously, to put testing strategies in place, he said.
The states positive rate is back up to nearly 6%, and modelers are now confident the epidemic was growing in both Eastern and Western Washington in mid- to late June.
While the resurgence in cases was originally limited to a few hot spots, upward trends are now prominent in most counties, the most recent state modeling report says.
Summer is nearly half over, and schools are set to open in less than two months. With so much of the response feeling like dj vu, health officials lament the lost time.
We had breathing room, and weve largely used it on politicizing the epidemic, Lofgren said.
In half a year, treatment options for COVID-19 have improved, but doctors and researchers are still far from a treatment that works even half the time on patients who are hospitalized with the virus.
Two standout treatments, remdesivir and dexamethasone, appear to have some positive results, although the studies are ongoing and results are still preliminary in both clinical trials.
A study from a large drug trial led by Oxford University researchers found that dexamethasone, a common steroid, was helpful in treating patients with COVID-19 who were on oxygen or ventilated. While their study has not yet been peer-reviewed or published, their early results look somewhat promising. The steroid kept one person in a group of 20 with severe symptoms from dying .
These results are impressive in the drug trial world, but they have a long way to go before proving entirely useful.
Both MultiCare and Providence hospitals have enrolled in the clinical trials for remdesivir guided by the National Institutes of Health, and Dr. Henry Arguinchona, an infectious disease practitioner at Sacred Heart Medical Center, said initial trials of the drug also look promising.
Patients receiving remdesivir in the trial are faring better than those who get the placebo. The trial will soon move into its third phase; second phase results are forthcoming.
Early in the pandemic, ventilators were an in-demand lifesaving tool . While they are still being used for some patients, physicians are not immediately putting patients on them anymore. The National Institutes of Health now recommends a less invasive intervention a high-flow nasal cannula over a ventilator in some instances.
Some patients are doing well and able to get more oxygen to their lungs when they are simply flipped onto their stomachs, Arguinchona said, another technique doctors, nurses and intensivists are using.
I feel that we know better now how to take care of these patients, but I am hopeful that one or two or three or four months now, we know even more, Arguinchona said.
Recovering from COVID-19 is far from a linear process, and some people have experienced ongoing symptoms or side effects of their bodys fight with the virus for months. As The Atlantics Ed Yong notes, some people with COVID-19 and ongoing illness call themselves long-haulers. Yong writes that they are navigating a landscape of uncertainty and fear with a map whose landmarks dont reflect their surroundings.
Arguinchona said the phenomenon of patients not getting better is being seen more and more in COVID patients, but he noted that lingering health conditions are not necessarily indicative of persisting virus in the person.
There are many infections a person can get, and afterwards they can get a postinfectious syndrome, Arguinchona said. They can be left with lingering symptoms. With regards to post-COVID-19 symptoms, its not known what the causes or etymology of those is.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers a patient who is not admitted to the hospital with the virus as having a mild case, but Lofgren notes that mild doesnt really give weight to potential symptoms and conditions patients experience.
There are a lot of people who had supposedly mild cases of COVID who are still struggling with lung function and struggling with cardiovascular issues, Lofgren said.
The virus has exposed the inequities that already run rampant throughout the American health care system, including here in Washington.
When adjusted for population size, Hispanics and Pacific Islanders have nine times the number of COVID-19 cases than white people in Washington. The disproportionate rates of the virus trickle into hospitalizations and deaths from the virus , and nonwhite communities are hit hard by the virus statewide.
In Spokane County, the Marshallese community has experienced devastating effects of the virus.
The pandemic has exacerbated the underlying and persistent inequities among historically marginalized communities and those disproportionately impacted due to structural racism and other forms of systemic oppression, a July 8 report from the Department of Health says.
The department allotted a half-million dollars to get community organizations funding to bolster virus prevention and response efforts in a large swath of communities statewide. DOH awarded dozens of community organizations contracts that ranged from $5,000 to $20,000 to fund communication and emergency outreach services for communities that are disproportionately impacted by the virus.
Some pregnant women are also not faring well if they contract COVID-19. A CDC report found that pregnant women with COVID-19 are more likely to be hospitalized and are at increased risk for ICU admission than nonpregnant women. Nationwide, 11,312 pregnant women have contracted the virus, and 31 of them have died.
Arguinchona said some pregnant women have become very ill with COVID.
Young people, who were not as impacted at the beginning of the pandemic, are now driving case counts locally, statewide and nationally.
Twenty- and 30-somethings make up 38% of confirmed COVID-19 cases statewide and 45% of cases in Spokane County.
In recent weeks, health officials have pleaded with young people to stop gathering in large groups and to wear masks when around one another. Most young people might experience mild symptoms with the virus, but the fear is that they will bring the virus to their older parents or grandparents, or spread the virus when they are at work.
We have a lot of work to do with younger folks here in Washington limiting their social interactions and make sure theyre wearing masks, State Health Officer Kathy Lofy told reporters on July 8.
With the start of the school year less than two months away, community members and public health officials remain skeptical that kids will be back in their classrooms.
Dr. David Line, the public health program director at Eastern Washington University, says the county will pay for our actions, including July 4 gatherings with case counts and hospitalizations.
At the end of the first wave, if enough of the community has started wearing masks and adhering to small gathering requirements, it should be doing well, he said.
If we arent doing well at the end of (the next) seven weeks, if we dont have a low caseload, we are in really big trouble because thats when school starts, Line said. If we miss that window that occurs right now through the rest of the summer, we will not be able to contain that wildfire at least through all next school year.
Wearing masks and face coverings could determine what school districts do when school begins.
Lofgren has studied how schools can stay open and avoid transmission of infectious disease.
Its possible we can have school, but its not as fun as it used to be, he said. Its possible we cant get a 5-year-old to wear a mask, but we can get an 8-year-old to wear a mask.
Measures such as not allowing group activities such as band and choir, having teachers instead of students move from classroom to classroom, and having students eat in the classroom, could help minimize widespread interaction of students in schools.
Schools might use hybrid models of partial reopening , depending on the district and the countys phase of reopening . The Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction wants schools to reopen in-person but officials acknowledge districts in Phase 1 or modified Phase 1 counties might have to implement additional safety measures.
DOH guidance for schools requires universal masking but leaves additional measures at the discretion of school districts.
As for colleges, research indicates congregate living settings like dorms are perfect breeding grounds for virus transmission.
A group of college students from the University of Texas who went to Cabo San Lucas for spring break in March ended up in a perfect COVID environment. Three symptomatic students were tested when they returned, and the contact tracing investigation revealed 64 total people had contracted the virus.
Shared housing both on-campus and during their spring break trip led researchers to believe that patterns of living and interacting in close settings could lead to propagated spread, similar to the continued person-to-person transmission observed in long-term care facilities.
As Washington and other states experience a surge in cases this month, health officials insist widespread mask use is key to bringing down transmission rates in the near future.
For EWUs Line, it comes down to community buy-in on masking and cooperation with contact tracing efforts.
We could do nothing and let the whole thing burn up. We could do this fake open-close thing and suffer the whole way through. Or we can do some pretty simple things and get full support by everybody and not have to suffer and be fine in seven to eight weeks, he said.
The Department of Health and the CDC recommended the use of face coverings in early April, but mandates took longer. Leaders hoped residents would take the advice and wear face coverings, in place of hunkering down at home. That didnt work.
In mid-May, some local jurisdictions, including King and Spokane counties, mandated masks, though the mandates werent always enforced.
Statewide, however, masks were not required for all residents until late June. That requirement is likely to remain in place for a long time.
Wear a mask, social distance, try to take responsibility for your own part of this outbreak, and that means things arent going to be fun for a while and thats hard, but those sacrifices mean maybe kids can go to school, maybe those stressed households are less stressed, Lofgren said.
The notion that we will be done with COVID-19 soon is not realistic, Lofgren said.
We need to start engaging with the idea that this isnt a couple months, he said. Its the better part of the year.
Researchers and health care providers are working overtime around the country and the world to find out just how effective and long-lasting antibodies are, and how effective a vaccine could be as a result.
Were not promised a treatment or a vaccine, Lofgren said.
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