Health
Second COVID booster shot: What to know
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On Tuesday, U.S. regulators moved to approve a second COVID-19 vaccine booster for adults aged 50 years and older.
The Meals and Drug Administration (FDA) first made the announcement, authorizing an additional dose of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines for emergency use in that age group and for sure youthful folks with severely weakened immune techniques.
Later that very same day, the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention (CDC) advisable the additional shot as an possibility, stopping in need of urging that these eligible rush out and get it instantly.
BIDEN TO RECEIVE SECOND COVID-19 BOOSTER SHOT ON CAMERA
“Boosters are secure, and other people over the age of fifty can now get a further booster 4 months after their prior dose to extend their safety additional. That is particularly essential for these 65 and older and people 50 and older with underlying medical situations that improve their danger for extreme illness from COVID-19 as they’re the most certainly to profit from receiving a further booster dose right now,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky stated in an announcement. “CDC, in collaboration with FDA and our public well being companions, will proceed to guage the necessity for added booster doses for all Individuals.”
FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks stated there’s proof that vaccine safety can wane over time, notably in higher-risk teams, and that one other booster will assist improve safety for higher-risk people.
In response to CDC information, 97.4 million Individuals have obtained a booster dose of a coronavirus vaccine and 217.5 million have been absolutely vaccinated.
The Biden administration has urged folks to be “updated” with their vaccines – particularly amid the winter’s surge of the omicron variant – and two photographs and a booster nonetheless supply robust safety towards extreme sickness and demise.
With instances markedly decrease since January, state and native leaders have moved to reverse or ease pandemic restrictions, hoping to return to “regular.”
The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Useful resource Middle recorded 23,643 new instances and 961 new deaths up to now day – even with vaccinations reported on the lowest ranges since 2020.
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Nevertheless, with the unfold of the much more transmissible BA.2 omicron sub-variant and White Home reporting an absence of funding for fourth vaccine photographs, the way forward for the pandemic within the U.S. stays unsure.
Scientists have predicted that new variants would unfold, although specialists have questioned the necessity for added boosters.
Dr. Anthony Fauci informed the BBC final weekend that Individuals must be ready for brand spanking new COVID-19 restrictions, cautioning that well being officers are witnessing comparable situations within the U.S. as these in Europe.
He had beforehand stated this month that he doesn’t count on one other surge.
As well as, two vaccine doses have been almost 80% efficient towards needing a ventilator or demise in the course of the omicron surge. The CDC just lately stated a booster pushed that safety to 94%.
Vaccine effectiveness was lowest in immune-compromised folks.
Whereas the FDA cited Israel information for its motion, it isn’t but clear how lengthy any further profit from one other booster would final, with Marks saying higher-risk Individuals might have one other dose within the fall if the vaccine is tailor-made to present viral threats.
Notably, President Biden is about to obtain his second booster shot on digital camera Wednesday.
On April 6, an FDA panel will maintain a gathering to debate vaccines in America.
The Related Press contributed to this report.
Health
Woman who received experimental pig kidney transplant back on dialysis after new organ failed
- Doctors say Lisa Pisano, who received a pig kidney transplant, is back on dialysis after surgeons removed the gradually failing organ.
- Pisano was the second person to receive a kidney from a gene-edited pig after Richard “Rick” Slayman at Massachusetts General Hospital. Slayman died in early May, about two months after his transplant. Doctors said there was no indication he died as a result of the transplant.
- NYU will further study the explanted kidney for further insight on how it reacted inside a living person.
A woman who received a pig kidney transplant is back on dialysis just 47 days later after surgeons removed the gradually failing organ.
Lisa Pisano was the second person to receive a kidney from a gene-edited pig, and NYU Langone Health announced that she is stable after an operation to remove the organ earlier this week.
The first patient to receive a pig kidney transplant, Richard “Rick” Slayman at Massachusetts General Hospital, died in early May, nearly two months after his transplant. Doctors there said there was no indication he died as a result of the experimental transplant.
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Pisano’s heart and kidneys were failing when, in a dramatic pair of surgeries in April, doctors implanted a mechanical pump to keep her heart beating and then the pig kidney.
At first she seemed to be recovering well. But Dr. Robert Montgomery, who led the transplant, said there were “unique challenges” to managing both the heart pump and new kidney. Her blood pressure dropped too low multiple times for optimal blood flow to the kidney.
The kidney lost function until doctors no longer could justify keeping her on immune-suppressing medications, Montgomery said in a statement Friday.
A recent kidney biopsy showed no signs of rejection – the biggest concern in highly experimental animal-to-human transplants – but there was “significant injury” from insufficient blood flow, he said. NYU will further study the explanted kidney for further insight on how it reacted inside a living person.
Montgomery noted Pisano wasn’t a candidate for the life-prolonging heart pump while on dialysis, and her heart disease in turn barred a traditional kidney transplant.
“We are hoping to get Lisa back home to her family soon,” he said. “Her strength and bravery in the face of adversity inspires and drives us as we continue pursuing the hope and promise of xenotransplantation.”
Pisano told the Associated Press in April that she knew the pig kidney might not work but “I just took a chance. And you know, worst case scenario, if it didn’t work for me, it might have worked for someone else.”
More than 100,000 people are on the U.S. transplant waiting list, most who need a kidney, and thousands die waiting. In hopes of filling the shortage of donated organs, several biotech companies are genetically modifying pigs so their organs are more humanlike, less likely to be destroyed by people’s immune system.
Formal studies of such organs are expected to begin next year. Meanwhile, NYU and other research teams have temporarily transplanted pig kidneys and hearts into brain-dead bodies, with promising results. In addition to the Mass General pig kidney transplant, the University of Maryland transplanted pig hearts into two men who were out of other options, and both died within months.
Health
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Health
Mental health and stress issues in America get new attention from National Geographic
This month of May, National Geographic has been giving a nod to Mental Health Awareness Month in the U.S. — with a new campaign unveiling a series of mental health check-ups in the form of articles, videos, photography and more.
The material includes downloadable phone backgrounds, ASMR nature YouTube videos, sense-soothing Spotify playlists and a “How Stressed Are You?” questionnaire first developed by psychologists in 1983.
The organization also released a series of think pieces about a culture of urgency in America that is apparently leading to burnout; the efficiency and effectiveness of meditation; and multiple takes on experiencing stress.
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“In our ‘always-on’ world, people are more stressed than ever, and the science is clear that chronic stress has a negative impact on our health,” National Geographic editor-in-chief Nathan Lump said in a media release.
“We aim to help people better understand the effects of stress and encourage them to slow down and take the time to prioritize their mental health,” Lump also said.
He added that he hoped “these resources will encourage and facilitate that behavior.”
The initiative for NatGeo sprouted from a deep dive into how scientists have been attempting to solve stress for generations due to signs that stress can have life-altering consequences, from heart disease to a weakened immune system.
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In an interview with Fox News Digital, NatGeo contributor Yudhijit Bhattacharjee shared details about his research — noting that “stress is all around us.”
“Stress permeates our lives,” he said. “Stress has some serious impacts on our health, our well-being, even how our brains function, how our immune systems function and so on.”
Since the coronavirus pandemic, Bhattacharjee, who’s based in Takoma Park, Maryland, said it’s become “clear” that social isolation is a “big contributor to stress.”
“When we’re significantly stressed, we’re more susceptible to viruses and germs.”
“In the last 10 to 15 years, there’s been a lot more research on precisely how stress affects us,” he said. “We didn’t know, for example, as clearly as we do now, that stress often plays havoc with our immune system.”
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“When we’re significantly stressed, we’re more susceptible to viruses and germs … and in this post-COVID world, this is definitely very relevant.”
Bhattacharjee’s research also examined how stress can affect adolescents and children.
Aniko Korosi, a researcher at the University of Amsterdam, told NatGeo, “Chronic stress in early life has more serious and lasting effects, because that’s when a lot of connections are being laid down in the brain.”
Experts have discovered, according to Bhattacharjee, that high stress can impede the development of a child’s brain.
“Not much attention has been paid to the impact of stress on babies,” he said. “The stress that parents experience in trying to earn a livelihood, keep a roof over their heads — all of that stress ends up kind of transmitting to their children.”
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“And while the adults can probably cope with the stress and their brains are already fully formed, it’s the children who are going to end up paying a price that lasts their entire lives.”
Bhattacharjee said NatGeo’s campaign is “drawing attention” to what stress is doing to our bodies and our children, as well as advocating for people to “try out their preferred ways of de-stressing.”
Meditation — a well-known method of de-stressing — has been embraced more openly by the public and is even being introduced to children in schools, NatGeo reported.
Bhattacharjee assumed that programs like these could make a “big contribution” to society by changing “how humanity responds to day-to-day stress.”
“Scientists are learning exactly how meditation ends up helping to reduce stress and thereby helps to control some of the ill effects of stress,” he said.
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Bhattacharjee considered other activities to be “meditative” in their ability to control stress, such as playing a sport, singing karaoke, spending time with a pet or going for a walk.
“Meditation is kind of a catchall word for a number of contemplative practices and many of them focus on paying attention to one’s breath and one’s thoughts,” he said.
The NatGeo contributor said many people today are living in a “frenetic social media environment” while surrounded by issues ranging from environmental to political — making it an opportune time to pay attention to our stress levels and learn how to calm them.
“This constant seeking of stimulation, this addiction to stimulation, is contributing to the stress,” he said.
“[Scrolling is] probably not helping … even if you think that it will entertain you. Maybe that’s just adding to our stress load.”
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He added, “I think we need to spend some time just with ourselves feeling bored in order to increase our well-being.”
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