Saturday 31 July 2021

Mass. businesses to require proof of COVID-19 vaccine to enter


Mass. businesses to require proof of COVID-19 vaccine to enter



PROOF OF VACCINATIONS TO ENTER IS EVEONERY NAVIGATES THE EVER-CHANGING PANDEMIC. MANISHA GADIKAR GETS HER COVID-19 VACCI.NE SHE GOT IT HERE AT “THE ANCH”OR IN CHARLESTOWN, A LOCAL BEERND A WINE GARDEN THAT HOSTED A VACCINATION CLINIC IN ORDER TO BRING THE SHOT CLOSER TO THOSE WHO HAVEN’T RECEIVED IYET T. >> IT IS REALLY EASY TO COME HERE AND IT’S VERY NICE. ,>> WE WANTED TO MAKE IT MORE ACCESSIBLE. THE DEMAND HAS GONE DOWN A LITTLE BIT BUT WE WANT TO KEEP IT TOP OF MIND. >> THE VIRUS, NOW BACK AT THE TOP OF MANY PEOPLE’S MI ANDS THE DELTA VARIANT CONTINUES TO SPREAD. TH E COMMONWEALTH NOW RECOMMENDING THOSE WHO HAVE A WEAKENED IMMUNE SYSTEM OR ARE INCREASED RISK FOR SEREVE DISEASE, TO WEAR A MASK INDOORS, EVEN IF YOU’RE FULLY VACCINATED. SAME GOES FOIFR YOU LIVE WITH SOMEONE WITH THO PSEREEXISTING CONDITIONS, OR SOMEONE WHO IS T VANOCCINATED. >> IT IS SO IMPORTANT AND ALSO FOR SOCIETY. >> MEANTIME, THE PRIVATE SECTOR ALSO MAKING CHANGES WITH MORE , REQUIRING PROOOFF VACCINATION. >> THE ONLY WAY TO GET BACK TO THEIR, IS GETTING EVERYONE VACCINATED. >> ROW REPUBLIC BOSTON USED TO ASK FOR PROOF OF VACCINATION FOR PERMISSION TO REMOVE THE MASK. BUT STARTING AUGUST 9, TY’HELL BE THE FIRST GYM IN THE AREAO T PROOF OF VACCINATION, IN OERRD TO WORK OUT AT ALL. >> WE FEEL IN THE PRIVATE SECTOR WE HAVE TO DO OUR PART, SOE W FEEL MORE INCENTIVE MORE WAYS TO , GET PEOPLE IN, MORE WAYSO T GET EVERYONE BEHIND THIS, BECAUSE IT REALLY IS OUR OYNL WAY OUT, THAT WE CAN DO .IT >> AGAIN, THE VACCINE REQUIREMENTS FOR THAT GYM

Mass. businesses to require proof of COVID-19 vaccine to enter

Row Republic Boston used to ask for proof of vaccination for permission to remove the mask, but starting on August 9, they’ll require COVID-19 vaccination to enter.

Row Republic Boston used to ask for proof of vaccination for permission to remove the mask, but starting on August 9, they’ll require COVID-19 vaccination to enter.



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Med school practice of ‘pimping’ can be ‘harmful and painful’



Dr. Sarita Verma says the teaching method has real value when done right, but can be destructive when used to humiliate rather than illuminate

The dean of the Northern Ontario Medical School says a common teaching method in medical school that is known by the strange term ‘pimping’ can be instructive if done right, but be just the opposite when done incorrectly.

As a teaching method, pimping puts medical students on the spot with tough and explicit questions. Its use, and misuse, was examined in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) this week.

The unusual form of teaching — which has nothing to do with prostitution — has created concerns about bullying and burnout for some medical students, the journal article states.

Dr. Sarita Verma, the dean and CEO of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, said the type of teaching described in the CMAJ article can be harmful and painful, and can even be destructive for some students, if not used correctly.

“The way that the article describes the high-stress, rapid-fire questioning is seen as, you know, ‘pimping’. I hate that term. If it’s done badly, … then [students] are going to feel that they’re humiliated, that it’s harmful, it’s painful. And I totally understand that” she said.

Verma also said, however, that the style of high-pressure questioning can be done right and can produce good results. She said the Socratic method, the method of teaching through a kind of cooperative argumentative process of asking and answering questions, is valuable to test knowledge and encourage critical thinking.

But, she continued, it must be done properly, adding in a lot of cases teachers and physicians are not taught the right way to put the Socratic method into practise.

“It’s a very valuable way of learning, but the right way to teach people how to do learning, using that method, is to connect their knowledge,” Verma said. “And then to help them understand by probing what they know, and what they don’t know, to help them actually find out how to learn.

“And although it is potentially supportive, and sometimes feels unsafe, it is intended to be a safe and respectful process, but it does make people feel uncomfortable.”

But that discomfort is part of the instruction, she said, because students “have to learn critical thinking, because if they don’t know what is going on and they don’t reflect on it, they will make mistakes. And patient safety is at the base of all of this, right?”

Verma said the Socratic process is done to engage the learner with appropriate questions, to challenge their knowledge and recall, but shouldn’t be used to humiliate anyone. 

The article, authored by CMAJ writer Diane Duong, examined both sides of the issue. The article quoted Drs. James Healy and Peter Yoo in the “Journal of Surgical Education”, that described the discomfort of pimping as a kind of inoculation.

“Although sometimes unpleasant, this type of education is truly a long-term kindness to the student, much like a vaccination creates temporary discomfort to achieve a durable gain,” they said in the article. 

But, Duong wrote that when the teaching style is done badly, it can “easily cross the line into teaching by humiliation, particularly when senior physicians question students in ways that shame them for their lack of knowledge.”

In the article, Duong references a study carried out in Australia that found almost 75 per cent of a student cohort across two medical schools were so intimidated by the practise that many did not take part in doing hospital rounds with teaching doctors.

And while pimping might be common in medical schools, at NOSM, Verma said the method of teaching during hospital rounds is not common.

“We tend not to have that kind of training because many of our learners are distributed across community settings,” said Verma.

She said another version of doing rounds is to gather the medical students together to study the charts of the hospital patients. And while this is valuable, bedside teaching is still important for the medical students to be able to see and experience what the patient is demonstrating, she said. 

To that end, Verma said many hospitals now use paid actors to achieve a similar effect. She said it works well for NOSM, which has learners working in hospitals and clinics across the North.

“Because we’re so distributed, we have what many medical schools have adopted, which is the standardized patient … actors, who have real medical diagnoses. But they you know, they’ve consented and they’re acting,” Verma said.

“Actually, a lot of schools do it. Now. It’s called ‘standardized patients’. And it’s a form of simulation, it’s what we call a ‘low-fidelity simulation’,” said Verma. 

This form of “low-fidelity simulation” is valuable, she added, but NOSM and other medical schools also use high-fidelity simulations.

“So you can do a lot of what happens in terms of teaching people from taking blood to doing cardiac arrest. Even surgery happens with robotics, or with digital medicine. And that’s actually a really good way to teach people, you can reduce the amount of patient error as a result of that, right? So people will have a chance to practice in, especially specialties where they require technical skills, so you can practice before you actually end up performing the procedure on a real patient,” said Verma.

She added that the medical learners need to prepare themselves for the unknown and unexpected situations that can arise.

“I think that at a certain point, people, especially learners, need to realize that they do need to develop some resilience to the high-stress environment that’s involved in medical education and medical practice.”

 





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Dean of PSG Institute of Medical Research Dr S Ramalingam succumbs to cardiac arrest at 61


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Delta variant rampant in Asia; Tokyo, Thailand, Malaysia post record COVID infections


July 31 (Reuters) – The Olympics host city Tokyo, as well as Thailand and Malaysia, announced a record number of COVID-19 infections on Saturday, mostly driven by the highly transmissible Delta variant of the disease.

Cases surged in Sydney as well, where police cordoned off the central business district to prevent a protest against a strict lockdown that will last until the end of August.

Police closed train stations, banned taxis from dropping passengers off downtown and deployed 1,000 officers to set up checkpoints and to disperse groups. The government of New South Wales reported 210 new infections in Sydney and surrounding areas from the Delta variant outbreak. read more

Tokyo’s metropolitan government announced a record number of 4,058 infections in the past 24 hours, topping 4,000 for the first time. Olympics organisers reported 21 new COVID-19 cases related to the Games, bringing the total to 241 since July 1.

The record comes a day after Japan extended its state of emergency for Tokyo to the end of August, expanding it to three prefectures near Tokyo and the western prefecture of Osaka in light of the recent spike in infections.

Olympics organisers said on Saturday they had revoked accreditation of a Games-related person or people for leaving the athletes’ village for sightseeing, a violation of measures imposed to hold the Olympics safely amid the pandemic.

The organisers did not disclose how many people had their accreditation revoked, if the person or people involved were athletes, or when the violation took place. read more

Malaysia, one of the hotspots of the disease, reported 17,786 coronavirus cases on Saturday, a record number of infections.

More than 100 people gathered in the centre of the capital Kuala Lumpur, expressing dissatisfaction with the government’s handling of the pandemic and calling on Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yassin to quit.

Protesters carried black flags and held up placards that read “Kerajaan Gagal” (failed government) – a hashtag that has been popular on social media for months.

Thailand reported a daily record of 18,912 new coronavirus infections, bringing the country’s total accumulated cases to 597,287. The country also reported 178 new deaths, also a daily record, taking total fatalities to 4,857.

The government said the Delta variant accounted for more than 60% of the cases in the country and 80% of the cases in Bangkok.

The Delta variant is not necessarily more lethal than other variants, but much more transmissible, Supakit Sirilak, the director-general of the Medical Science Department, told Reuters.

China is also battling an outbreak of the Delta variant in the eastern city of Nanjing, traced to airport cleaners who worked on a flight from Russia. read more

COVID-19 infections have increased by 80% over the past four weeks in most regions of the world, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said on Friday.

“Hard-won gains are in jeopardy or being lost, and health systems in many countries are being overwhelmed,” Tedros told a news conference. read more

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control said the variant, first detected in India and now dominant across the globe, is as contagious as chickenpox and far more contagious than the common cold or flu. It can be passed on even by vaccinated people, and may cause more serious disease than earlier coronavirus strains. read more

Reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat, Chayut Setboonsarng and Orathai Sriring in Bangkok, A. Ananthalakshmi in Kuala Lumpur, Lidia Kelly in Sydney, Makiko Yamazaki in Tokyo, Yew Lun Tian in Beijing; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan. Editing by Gerry Doyle

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.



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UTMC students participate in class of 2025 white coat ceremony



UTMC student Hunter Eby says putting on the white coat for the first time is a symbol of commitment to serving others. 176 students make up the class of 2025.

TOLEDO, Ohio — One hundred and seventy-six first-year medical students gathered in the Stranahan Theater’s Great Hall today for the “white coat ceremony;” the first step in their long but purposeful journey toward being a doctor.

“We’ve worked so hard; taking the MCAT, doing all the extracurriculars and maintaining that high standard of GPA. So to finally see it all come together has been amazing,” said Hunter Eby, one of the new first-year students.

For Eby, being a doctor is a long time coming. It’s a dream he’s had since he was 11 years old and was diagnosed with epilepsy.

“I was curious about my own condition, and seeing my physician help me work through that I knew I wanted a job where I didn’t serve myself but served others,” Eby explained.

Now, Eby and his fellow classmates are living that dream by officially entering a world where taking care of others is the entire job description. He says putting on the white coat for the first time is a symbol of that commitment.

“It’s an oath that we’re going to serve the community, be life-long learners, and that we’re going to do our best to be there for our patients,” Eby said.

Despite starting their medical school educations in the midst of a pandemic, Eby explains it makes him want to do this more than ever.

“During the pandemic, I was fortunate enough as a master’s student to be there providing care for clinical trials and providing medications, and I knew from then on I wanted to be a physician. I wanted to know more, I wanted to do more.”

While it will be a few years before Eby and his classmates can help strengthen the healthcare world, they’re entering the program motivated to not only see their communities improve, but also to grow together.

“We have a great group here and we’re already making inroads- making friends. And we’re gonna need that support system because learning medicine, it’s going to be tough.”

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BioBonds Use Wall Street Tools to Fund Medical Research


In the development of disease treatments, the stage between basic research and advanced clinical trials is known as “the valley of death.”

While ample public grants fund early-stage research and pharmaceutical companies are willing to fund studies on proven solutions, research at the “translational” stage, when basic findings are applied to potential treatments, is notoriously difficult to finance. Some promising treatments are never pursued as a result.

The pandemic made this perilous valley “a whole lot deeper,” said Karen Petrou, the co-founder and managing partner of Federal Financial Analytics, a financial services consulting firm in Washington that created a new financial instrument designed to help solve this problem.

During the pandemic, clinical trials were halted, resources were diverted from labs, attention was focused on immediate needs, and much funding dried up. New research projects were difficult to kick-start.

At the same time, the value of funding scientific research became even clearer: Without the initial efforts of academic labs, it would have been impossible for big pharmaceutical companies to fast-track vaccine development.

Ms. Petrou’s proposed solution, known as BioBonds, gained traction.

The program would create low-interest, government-backed loans for translational research. These would be packaged into a bond, similarly to how mortgages are, and sold into the secondary market for risk-averse institutional investors like pension funds.

In May, Representative Bobby Rush, Democrat of Illinois, and Representative Brian Fitzpatrick, Republican of Pennsylvania, introduced legislation that, if passed, would create $30 billion worth of these loans over three years.

Ms. Petrou, who was diagnosed with retinal degeneration as a teen and went blind in her 40s, first stumbled upon the “valley of death” in 2013. She was raising funding for studies to speed up treatment for retinal degeneration, but potential investors told her translational projects were too speculative — they needed results that show a potential idea works, preferably involving a large population that will rely on pills.

She refused to accept that as a final answer. Many countries support private-sector funding for biomedical research and each does it differently, Ms. Petrou said: “We needed an American model.”

Ms. Petrou and her husband, Basil, had been advising Wall Street executives and regulators for decades. (She recently wrote a book on monetary policy driving inequality.) They had thought a lot about mixed public-private markets during the mortgage finance crisis. Inspired by green bonds — publicly-backed loans that since 2007 have created a $750 billion private market in sustainability projects — they started working on the idea that became BioBonds.

“It’s a lifeline,” Attila Seyhan, the director of translational oncology operations at Brown University and a former Pfizer scientist, said of the idea. He said his colleagues were similarly intrigued.

Unlike with grants, researchers would need to repay BioBonds loans. Still, getting no-strings funding is a “constant struggle,” Dr. Seyhan said, and “there is an enormous amount of frustration about lack of alternatives.”

He believes university business units will get “creative” to make BioBonds work. “There will be losses,” he said. “But if 1 percent succeeds, you pay off the losses. This is how drug development works.”

Many schools already encourage scientists to find money outside of grants with which to pursue their ideas. Increasingly, scientists say they have to think like venture capitalists, keeping commercialization in mind when they design clinical trials so that they are able to raise money from private companies to fund them.

“There’s a recognition now that even if we discover something, universities now have to help researchers transition to commercialization,” says Dr. Richard Burkhart, a surgeon and researcher at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Currently, his work is funded by the National Institutes of Health, but he is working with the Technology Ventures team at his institution on trying to commercialize his work.

While grants are preferable, they aren’t abundant. Dr. Burkhart believes BioBonds bonds may help scientists and institutions navigate the difficult translational space.

When the Petrous first came up with the BioBond concept, they proposed a modest pilot program targeting blindness research. The legislation was introduced in the House in 2018 session and again in a new session in 2019. Then everything changed. “Covid hit and U.S. biomedicine just shut down,” Ms. Petrou recalled.

Meanwhile, the couple’s understanding of the need for more translational research evolved, tragically. Mr. Petrou was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2018. After undergoing surgery in 2019 as part of a clinical trial run by Dr. Burkhart, Mr. Petrou was believed to be cancer-free. But in April of last year, a routine screening revealed the disease had reappeared.

The Petrous were determined to find another trial, but thousands of them were being halted because of the pandemic. Stuck at home in lockdown, they decided to revisit their BioBonds idea but think bigger. They repurposed their first proposal, expanding it to address added stress on the already ailing translational space.

“When we began to hear about devastation in the clinical trial context, I was quickly able to pivot,” said Valerie White, a recently retired financial services lobbyist, formerly at Akin Gump. She had helped shepherd the original bond concept and immediately began talking to contacts in Congress about BioBonds.

The legislation that Mr. Rush and Mr. Fitzpatrick introduced in May, called the “Long-term Opportunities for Advancing New Studies for Biomedical Research Act,” or LOANS for Biomedical Research, would require the secretary of health and human services to guarantee $10 billion a year for three years to fund loans for universities and other labs to conduct F.D.A.-approved clinical trials. The bill has 14 co-sponsors and support from about 20 organizations, including the Alliance for Aging Research, the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Association, the Blinded Veterans Association, and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

“This should, quite frankly, capture the attention of a lot of different sectors in Congress,” said Ms. White. From her perspective, more biomedical research won’t just save lives but will also lead to increased military readiness and economic viability, among other things.

She has volunteered four years to the project and said she would keep going for as long as it takes for the BioBonds bill to become law.

Mr. Petrou will not be there to celebrate if that day comes. He died in March. Ms. Petrou believes that the surgery he underwent as part of the clinical trial would have saved his life but for other complications.

Ms. Petrou is determined to see the LOANS Act passed, to pay tribute to her partner of more than a quarter-century. She thinks a lot about all the pain people go through now, anguish that might be avoided in the future if there were more work being done on cures of all kinds, including for cancer and for blindness.

“This was their baby from inception,” said Ms. White, who was present at the couple’s wedding and remained friends with them over the years. “It’s almost ironic that this whole project started with eye bonds that could have helped Karen, but in the end, it was Basil who could have benefited if this idea had existed before.”



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Friday 30 July 2021

COVID vaccine clinic will open at Fox River Mall in Appleton


APPLETON – Anyone 12 and older will soon be able to be vaccinated at the Fox River Mall. 

The vaccine clinic is a collaboration between Outagamie County’s public health department and the Wisconsin National Guard. It will run on select dates from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Aug. 2 through Sept. 2 near Scheels inside the mall, according to a news release on Friday. 

Those dates include: 

  • Aug. 2-4
  • Aug. 10-12, 14
  • Aug. 16-18, 21
  • Aug. 23-25, 28
  • Aug. 30-Sept. 2

No appointment or ID is necessary to receive the vaccine at the clinic, and there’s no cost. 

RELATED: Here’s a running list of COVID-19 vaccination sites in Appleton, Fox Cities

RELATED: The delta variant is on the rise in Wisconsin, and the average of new COVID-19 cases has increased

“With the more contagious delta variant, choosing to receive the COVID-19 vaccine is an action one can take to stop the further spread here in our communities,” Outagamie County health officer Natalie Vandeveld said in the release. 

About 48% of residents living in the eight counties in and around the Fox Valley have gotten at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, according to data from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Forty-six percent have completed the vaccine series. 

Contact reporter Madeline Heim at 920-996-7266 or mheim@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter at @madeline_heim





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Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine welcomes new class with 50% hike in applications


BLACKSBURG, Va. – Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine sees a record number of applications for the class of 2025.

More than 6,400 people applied for the medical school but only 49 were selected.

This year the school saw a 50% hike in applications compared to last year.

It’s a drastic increase when also compared to the national average of an 18% increase in applications.

“Hearing about the PBL cases they do here where they bring in actual patients at the end of every week for us to talk to was no question in mind,” Ryan Morse, a student who came from Houston, Texas said. “I had to come here to get my education.”

These students are also the first group to undergo virtual interviews due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Copyright 2021 by WSLS 10 – All rights reserved.



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ECU’s Brody School of Medicine welcomes its most diverse class in school history



GREENVILLE, N.C. — The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University officially welcomed 89 new medical students — the most diverse class in the school’s history — during its annual White Coat Ceremony on Friday morning.

In front of a gymnasium full of approximately 700 family, friends and Brody faculty, the students were presented with the white coats they will wear in patient care areas throughout their time at ECU.

In his first White Coat Ceremony in his joint role as dean of the Brody School of Medicine and CEO of Vidant Health, Dr. Michael Waldrum congratulated the students for joining a medical school actively improving health in eastern North Carolina, that embraces diversity to increase opportunity and decrease disparities, and is training physicians who stay in North Carolina and serve people in the state, particularly in primary care and rural and underserved communities.

“It’s for North Carolina, by North Carolina. That’s the secret sauce,” Waldrum said. “We know that you’re committed to that mission and to carry the Brody tradition forward. It starts today with receiving your Brody School of Medicine white coat and extends into the future of your lifetime. That future is full of incredibly hard work, and it should be, because nothing of meaning comes easy. But also know that you can do it. We chose you because we know you can do it.”

All of the first-year medical students are North Carolina residents, who hail from 32 counties, and were chosen from a field of 1,220 applicants — also a record number for the school.

The class is 56% female and 35% of the class are from groups the Association of American Medical Colleges considers to be underrepresented in medicine — Black, Hispanic and Native American. Nearly 30% of the students reported being from disadvantaged backgrounds and 16% are first-generation college students. Class of 2025 members also speak 19 languages, in addition to English.

Obumneke Umerah, a Fayetteville native whose parents are Nigerian immigrants, said Brody’s commitment to diversity is not only important to him, but is also important to the patients he will one day serve.

“There are patients and people from all different backgrounds in medicine. And if we make up a greater portion of health care, we’ll be able to better reflect the patients that we serve, so there is no disconnect and the patient-physician relationship gets stronger,” Umerah said. “So it is great to be part of a class that is helping to close that gap.”

While the class is historically diverse, a desire to serve — particularly people in rural and underserved communities — is a cause that bonds them.

Cary resident Dana Shefet said that she has been drawn to the Brody School of Medicine and its mission since she first arrived at ECU as a 17-year-old undergraduate. Four years later, Shefet was one of four Brody Scholars to receive their white coat on Friday. The Brody Scholars Program is North Carolina’s most distinguished medical scholarship. It provides full tuition and fees and most living expenses for four years of medical school, allowing scholars to choose a medical specialty without the worry of debt after graduation.

“I really believe that ECU’s mission goes beyond the two lines on their website. They really believe in who they serve and what they do. I was able to see that through my undergrad work and my undergrad experiences serving the Greenville community. I am very excited to continue that and immerse myself into this community as a Brody Scholar,” Shefet said.

As is the case for all of the first-year medical students, it is too soon to tell what specialty Shefet will choose to practice. However, she is starting her medical education with a strong interest in family medicine and a desire to serve people in the East.

“One of the things I learned through shadowing ECU physicians as an undergraduate is that patients are more than just their current illness. They put into consideration a lot of different factors, such as geographical barriers to access to care,” she said. “This is something that I’ve been able to see, that the power of the white coat in these communities is immense because sometimes that is the only physician in the area around them. So I think being able to see the appreciation and need for physicians in this area, compared to my hometown of Cary, really solidified that this is where I hope to be.”





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ICMR-NIV, PMC likely to conduct serosurvey in city

Sen. Wicker says Sam Kendricks should compete in Olympics despite positive Covid test


Olympics officials on Friday defended rules that forced a United States medal hope out of the Tokyo Games after a GOP senator suggested without evidence that the pole vaulter’s Covid-19 test was a “false positive.”

Pole vaulter Sam Kendricks, a Mississippi native, was forced out of the Games Thursday after testing positive for Covid-19 on the eve of track and field events getting underway.

But Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss, suggested the test that knocked him out of the competition was “almost certainly a false positive.”

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“This is an injustice that can still be rectified if the Olympic Committee will be fair,” Wicker declared on the Senate floor later Thursday.

Kendricks, Wicker said, was disqualified “with no consideration for the fact that his test, one among thousands of tests administered daily, may very well have been a fluke!”

“I am outraged, outraged that a young athlete is unfairly missing out on his chance to show his talent to the world and win a gold medal on behalf of his country,” Wicker added.

International Olympics Committee spokesman Mark Adams said at a press conference Friday that every athlete competing at the games is treated the same. That includes being immediately retested if their saliva test comes up positive for Covid-19.

“I can’t talk about the individual case, but that’s what happens in all cases,” Adams said.

“He and everyone else will be subject to the same strict protocols because it’s important to give everyone confidence. And for obvious reasons, we can’t make exceptions for individuals. Everyone has to follow the rules, I’m afraid.”

Kendricks, 28, is the two-time reigning world pole vault champion and was one of the top U.S. hopes for a gold medal in the track and field competition, which got underway Friday at the Tokyo Olympic stadium.

Wicker said Kendricks had Covid-19 before “and should be immune.” But it wasn’t clear if Kendricks was vaccinated and during a June 14 zoom call with reporters he didn’t directly answer the question, The Wall Street Journal reported.

Sam Kendricks was due to take part in the men’s pole vault, which begins at 8:40 p.m. ET Friday with qualifying.Hendrik Schmidt / dpa – AP file

A Mississippi native and a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army reserve, Kendricks created one of the most memorable moments at the Rio games when he stopped in mid-sprint, set down his pole, and stood at attention when he heard the U.S. national anthem being played during a medal ceremony on the other side of the stadium.

The Team USA vaccination rate is 83 percent, suggesting as many as 100 American athletes in Tokyo are unvaccinated.

By contrast, just 27 percent of the Japanese population is fully vaccinated, according to the latest figures.

And in recent days, record numbers of new Covid cases have been reported in Tokyo, which has been under a state of emergency resulting in all fans being banned from watching the athletes compete at the Olympic venues.

The Tokyo Metropolitan Government reported 3,300 new positive Covid-19 cases on Friday, a slight decline from Thursday’s record 3,865 new cases.

The Japanese government also declared fresh states of emergency in three prefectures around Tokyo and in the city of Osaka.



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Colorado State welcomes its first class of medical students through CU


Colorado State University welcomed its inaugural group of first-year medical students from the University of Colorado School of Medicine to Fort Collins on Wednesday. 

The class of 12 students opted to attend CSU’s new branch campus rather than the main Anschutz campus in Aurora for a number of reasons, though many stressed community, class sizes and the unique opportunities that come with being on CSU’s campus. 

The partnership with CU’s School of Medicine began last year when 11 third-year students came to CSU to complete the clinical rotations that make up the third year of their four-year program. Another group of third-year students will do their clinical rotations through the CSU campus this year.

Priya Wolff, one of the first-year students, said the idea of being a guinea pig for the program is part of why she wanted to come to the Fort Collins campus. 

“It just really makes me excited that my feedback and my classmates’ feedback will lay the groundwork for an incredible program that can really contribute to such a wonderful community,” she said. 

Wolff also felt the community will benefit from having medical students in its clinics and hospitals; as of late July more than 250 local clinicians had agreed to work with the branch campus to help teach the students. 

“When people are in the position of having to teach others, they’re going to take a closer look at how they’re practicing,” said Wolff. “It just creates an environment for optimal, gold-standard health care. And this community deserves that.”  

Though the program is in its early phases, Dr. Suzanne Brandenburg, associate dean of the Fort Collins branch, said a Fort Collins school had been in the works for no small amount of time, with conversations about the collaboration starting around 10 years ago. 

“These are both really strong institutions,” said Brandenburg. “CSU is excited about having a medical school on its campus and CU is excited about the collaboration. … It’s great for our students to get to see such a high functioning medical community and see how medicine is practiced.” 

CSU news:University receives $2 million gift to research preventing future pandemics

Greg Amberg, a professor at the branch campus and director of basic science curriculum, said having the expertise of people at CU was integral to getting the CSU branch up and running. 

“The culture and the attitude is definitely different, so having those people to rely on (helped),” he said. “And we helped them a lot as well. So it’s a really nice, mutual relationship.”

Students will spend their four years of schooling on the fourth floor of the CSU Health and Medical Center, which was under construction until 2020. It is now equipped with classrooms, meeting rooms and rooms to simulate doctors offices and hospital rooms. Brandenburg said there will be some occasions when the students have to attend things at the Aurora campus, but most of their time will be spent in Fort Collins. 

The opening of the campus coincides with the implementation of a new curriculum for all students in the CU School of Medicine, which Amberg and other professors based in Fort Collins helped create. 

Nicole Kelp, a CSU branch professor and interim chair of the Medical Science Content Directors at CU, said the new curriculum integrates field and classroom work more than the previous — which she said is traditionally more divided — meaning students will have a more clear understanding of how to use what they’re learning in the classroom. 

“This new curriculum is really exciting because it integrates the basic medical sciences and the clinical sciences, as well as health system sciences all throughout the three years,” she said, adding that during the fourth-year students are largely out in the field.

CSU news:Before he was ‘Dr. Death,’ disgraced surgeon was a CSU football hopeful

Coursework, fieldwork and assessments will largely look the same for students at all CU campuses, but students at CSU’s branch will have CSU’s One Health approach woven into their education in later years. Amberg said they’re still figuring out the details, but it may involve electives with the College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences to understand how the two fields can influence each other. 

Rachel Henderson, a first-year student, opted for the CSU campus in large part because of the One Health focus.

“I found that there are a lot of opportunities here that I maybe wouldn’t have had, especially in terms of research, on the other campus,” she said. 

Henderson also said she was drawn to the smaller class sizes. Students in Fort Collins, at least for the first few years, will be in classes of 12 while students in Denver may have more than 100 classmates. 

Though the class size is small at the new branch, it’s not for a lack of interest. Mark Couch, director of communications for CU’s medical school, said that more than 800 students indicated interest in Fort Collins on their applications to CU. 

CSU’s campus will be the second branch for CU’s medical school, which is based in Aurora and has another branch campus in Colorado Springs that opened in 2016. 

For subscribers:White men still dominate leadership in college athletics, change lags at CSU and in NCAA

Molly Bohannon covers education for the Coloradoan. Follow her on Twitter @molboha or contact her at mbohannon@coloradoan.com. Support her work and that of other Coloradoan journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today.



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Thursday 29 July 2021

World-first mental health medical research launches in Melbourne


World-first research that aims to create pharmaceutical-grade psychedelic medicine to treat mental health disorders has launched in Melbourne.

An American biotech company is funding the program.

Associate Professor Daniel Perkins, from the Psychae Institue, told Ross and Russel it could be a game-changer.

“This could be a really exciting new class of medicine, particularly for people with mental health conditions,” he said.

Press PLAY below to hear him explain how it works



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Biden requiring federal workers to prove Covid vaccine status or submit to strict safety rules


U.S. President Joe Biden speaks about the pace of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccinations in the United States during remarks in the East Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., July 29, 2021.

Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

“This is not about red states and blue states. It’s literally about life and death,” he said. “With freedom comes responsibility. Your decision to be unvaccinated impacts someone else.”

The new rules and perks come as officials at all levels of government struggle to bolster Covid vaccination rates that have flattened out in recent weeks, even as the highly transmissible delta variant spreads nationwide.

CNBC Politics

Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

Some state and regional leaders have already put new vaccine protocols in place. California and New York announced earlier this week that they will require most state employees to either get vaccinated or face mandatory weekly Covid testing.

Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser earlier Thursday reimposed a requirement that masks be worn indoors, a measure that had been lifted months earlier, when new cases and deaths from Covid were on the decline.

Some major private corporations, such as Facebook and Google, are also making vaccination mandatory in order for employees in the U.S. to return to work.

In its own buildings, the federal government is requiring that every employee and on-site contractor “attest,” or confirm, their vaccination status, according to a White House fact sheet.

Those who do not will be required to wear a mask on the job, regardless of their location, and must comply with Covid testing once or twice per week, the White House said.

They will also have to be physically distanced from all other employees and visitors, and they may face restrictions on official travel, according to the fact sheet.

“It’s an American blessing that we have vaccines for each and every American,” Biden said Thursday afternoon. “It’s such a shame to squander that blessing.”

Biden also announced that a Covid reimbursement program, which paid back small- and medium-sized businesses that offered paid leave for their employees to get vaccinated, would be expanded to include workers’ family members and kids, as well.

And Biden called on school districts across the country to host pop-up vaccination clinics in the coming weeks, while directing federal pharmacy program partners to work with schools.

In his speech, Biden repeatedly stressed that despite the rise in cases, the vaccines remain highly effective at saving lives and preventing severe illness from Covid, including the delta variant. He noted that the overwhelming majority of people hospitalized and killed from the virus have not been inoculated, describing the current crisis as a “pandemic of the unvaccinated.”

Biden also attempted to assuage fears about so-called breakthrough infections among vaccinated people, saying that such cases are rare. He added that as of now, medical officials say there is no need for fully vaccinated people to seek out a booster shot — though he suggested that could change in the future.

“The vaccines are safe, highly effective. There’s nothing political about them,” Biden said, underscoring the point by praising Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky for consistently supporting vaccinations.

“And his state’s in pretty good shape,” Biden added.

The Biden administration had previously discouraged federal agencies from requiring vaccination for on-site work.

The president in May had also proclaimed that, “If you’ve been vaccinated, you don’t have to wear your mask.”

But after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reversed its guidance on wearing masks indoors, Biden, who is fully vaccinated, said he would follow the agency’s recommendations.



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Doctors Call for Queer Curriculum in Medical Schools



When a British Columbian recently sought support for depression, a doctor misunderstood and told them their sexuality seemed to be the larger issue.

“I’m asexual, but this one doctor I had just kept thinking I had a low libido, and when I wanted something to help my depression, he wouldn’t prescribe me anything because a common side effect was low libido,” wrote a participant in a recent report on queer and transgender health care in B.C.

“It just seems like he got to say that was a worse issue — even though my sexuality isn’t an issue — than my depression.” They left without a prescription or future care plan.

Access to competent and inclusive health care makes a huge difference in the lives of queer and transgender people, not to mention all marginalized communities in Canada.

But as the 2020 report found, respectful care is sorely lacking in British Columbia, particularly in rural areas and for those who are Indigenous, Black and people of colour.

Now a group of medical residents and researchers has launched a campaign to make queer and trans-specific training mandatory in medical schools and residencies across the country.

It’s just one part of sweeping transformative change they say medicine needs to undergo in order to help end health inequities created by homophobia and transphobia.

“If we don’t formalize these competencies specific to queer and trans health, they’re going to continue to be neglected at a systemic level,” said Miranda Schreiber, a researcher at the University of Toronto’s faculty of medicine.

Schreiber recently co-wrote an article published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal calling for Canadian medical schools — supported by colleges and the Association of Faculties of Medicine — to implement a national curriculum standard to include queer and trans health training in the licensing and assessment process.

Currently, “bodies such as the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, and the College of Family Physicians of Canada have no explicit assessment objectives mandating that graduating residents and medical trainees must show knowledge or management skills specifically related to health care for 2SLGBTQIA+ patients,” the article states.

A petition addressed to the association and national regulatory colleges that Schreiber helped launch currently has more than 3,700 signatories expressing their support for the change.

Integrating queer and trans health skills into assessments is key to signal how important so-called “soft skills” are in health care, because they impact the care and health outcomes of a patient, says Dr. Elise Jackson.

“There’s this disparity between what is seen as sort of hard medical science knowledge and the more kind of social and human-oriented aspects of medicine that are often not taken quite as seriously,” said Jackson, a third-year internal medicine resident at the University of British Columbia who founded the Social Justice in Medical Education club during medical school at the University of Toronto.

The club challenges instructors to examine whether their course materials are sufficiently diverse, asking them to consider the nuances used to describe various identities, if they inadvertently reinforce prejudices around marginalized people, whether they place blame on patients for their health status, and other systemic biases that perpetuate health inequities.

A 2019 report to the House of Commons found that 2SLGBTQIA+ people are more likely to live with chronic health conditions but less likely to have a family doctor or be able to afford basic and gender-affirming health care.

Being judged, misgendered or poorly treated by health-care providers is a barrier that makes these issues worse, discouraging people from seeking care when they need it or preventative care to stay well, the report adds.

Simple shifts, such as training focused on using correct pronouns and gender-inclusive language, gives physicians the skills and awareness to build trust with patients, Jackson said.

“We know how damaging that can be coming from a health-care provider, and someone who should be treating you with respect and empathy and compassion,” said Jackson, who as the chief internal medicine resident at Vancouver General Hospital leads resident education.

But it’s not just a doctor’s bedside manner and attentiveness that matters. Physicians — and all health-care providers for that matter — should be familiar with queer and trans-specific health needs so they can provide the best medical advice possible in a judgment-free way, Jackson said.

In a 2016 survey of medical students, just 10 per cent felt they were knowledgeable enough to provide queer and trans-specific health care at all. Many queer and trans patients report educating doctors about their specific health needs when seeking gender-affirming care such as hormone therapies or surgery.

Cervical cancer screenings, for example, are important for trans men and some non-binary people, but many doctors haven’t been trained on how to perform a risk assessment for someone who is not a cis woman.

“That’s actually one of the driving causes of the increased risk for cervical cancer in trans communities,” said Schreiber, adding that education therefore needs to not just be additive to the status quo, but used as a way to reinterpret common practices and assumptions in medicine that exclude the needs and realities of queer and trans people.

Developing a standard for national medical curricula is complicated by a lack of consistent and reliable data on the specific health concerns of queer and trans communities. However, those working for change say there is a lot that can be done as data collection improves.

In her internal medicine residency, Jackson has worked with administrators and fellow students to create a practical examination scenario in which the patient is trans. Residents were graded based on their ability to take a medical history, respect the person’s gender identity and provide trans-specific care recommendations.

Embedding trans and queer-specific care skills in assessments is an important signal that these skills aren’t optional for physicians caring for a diverse population.

“That’s such an interesting way to really incorporate and make queer and trans health a benchmark for medical knowledge,” said Jackson.

Jackson also hopes to see anti-oppression training embedded in the pre-residency “bootcamp” residents take, as well as the lecture series they attend throughout their residencies.

Seeing changes in her residency has been rewarding, Jackson says, but the onus shouldn’t fall on passionate residents and professors to make changes. A national standard would make comprehensive education for queer and trans health care the standard, not the exception.

Both Schreiber and Jackson agree that better training isn’t the only solution to medical discrimination, as other social determinants of health — such as housing and income inequality, racism and colonialism — persist.

“Training and education is part of it, but I think the provision of concrete services, like funding more gender-affirming surgeries and shortening the waitlist, is also really important,” said Jackson.

Schreiber believes doctors can be a formidable force in making medicine a safer place for marginalized communities — one patient at a time.

Poverty, colonialism, racism, homophobia and transphobia “are ultimately creating health gaps, like the one we’re trying to address, so this will be very much a partial solution,” said Schreiber of improving medical training. “But it’s still part of a series of actions we can take right now.”





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FG approves N8.5bn for medical research, others


The President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari(retd.), has approved N8.5 billion naira for the conduct of ground-breaking research in medicine and other areas in 2021, under the National Research Fund, a scheme funded by the Tertiary Education Trust.

Executive Secretary of TETFund, Prof Suleiman Bogoro, disclosed this on Wednesday, at a three-day workshop for Directors of Research and Development of public universities in Nigeria, held at the Central Bank of Nigeria Training Institute, Maitama, Abuja.

Bogoro said, “With your support, I made a case to the board of trustees to increase the NRF research grants. Initially, we had seed money of N3b, it got exhausted and N1b was added between 2016 and 2019.

“But when I came, I decided to revolutionise it and I said it is not a question of seed money, let it be annual funding. And that is why I made a case for N5b in 2019 alone. In 2020, we raised it to N7.5bn.

“This year, Mr President has approved another N7.5b but guess what? with additional N1b that we intend to do ground-breaking research around medicine even in respect of the Covid-19 challenge.”

The TETFund boss said the agency intended to fund the Nigerian Institute of Medical Research to resuscitate their vaccine production.

He added that he has scheduled a meeting with the Director-General of NIMR, Prof Babatunde Salako, to be joined by brilliant professors of medicine from some universities across the country to achieve specific research objectives.

Bogoro, however, decried the failure of research institutes to establish a good relationship with universities to promote research and development, state that universities are also guilty of disregarding them.

He stressed the need for collaboration between the universities and research institutes.

While urging participants at the workshop to take the initiative of looking at why kidnapping has become so lucrative, the TETFund boss lamented that young engineers and technology experts were rather deploying their expertise to aid the growing wave of abductions across the country.

He challenged university professors not to only parade themselves with titles but to engage in problem-solving research that will change things for the good of the nation.

Earlier, TETfund Director of Research and Development, Dr Salisu Bakare, noted that universities are by nature problem-solvers, adding that when universities are not solving problems of the society, the question remains whether they are achieving their mandate.



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‘Not clear’ if Covid-19 vaccine boosters necessary


Ontario Premier Doug Ford receives the Astrazeneca-Oxford coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine from pharmacist Anmol Soor at Shoppers Drug Mart in Toronto, Ontario, Canada April 9, 2021.

Nathan Denette | Pool | via Reuters

AstraZeneca is not yet sure whether a third dose of its Covid-19 vaccine will be necessary for continued protection against the virus, the company’s CEO told CNBC Thursday.

Speaking to CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe,” Pascal Soriot said the company did not have a “precise answer” on whether booster shots would be needed.

“There are two dimensions to this immunity — antibodies [which] decline over time, but the second, very important dimension of vaccination is the so-called T-cells. They tend to protect people against severe disease, but they also provide durability,” Soriot explained.

“With the technology we use, we have very high production of T-cells. We’re hoping we can have a durable vaccine that protects for a long period of time. So whether we will need a third booster or not is not clear yet, only time will tell.”

T-cells are a kind of white blood cell that play different roles in defending the body against an invading virus. For instance, they may attack the pathogen or support different white blood cells in the production of antibodies.

Antibodies prevent viruses from invading cells, but don’t last as long as T-cells.

Soriot added that the only way to be sure whether booster shots would really be needed was to watch whether the vaccine’s efficacy declined over time.

“We know that [our vaccine] has a decline of antibodies [over time] — we haven’t seen yet a decline of efficacy but it’s a bit early to judge, only time will tell, and I hope the T-cells will provide this durable, long-term protection.”

On Wednesday, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CNBC’s “The Exchange” the company was “very, very confident” that a third dose of its vaccine would provide enough immunity to protect against the faster spreading delta variant of Covid.

Bourla’s comments came after a study found the effectiveness of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine declined by an average of 6% every two months, and that the vaccine was most effective between one week and two months after receiving the second dose of the shot.

Bourla also told CNBC on Wednesday that efficacy of the vaccine dropped to around 84% four to six months after the second dose.

Vaccine earnings boost

AstraZeneca’s revenue from its Covid-19 vaccine reached almost $1.2 billion in the first half of the year, the company announced on Thursday.

The income from the vaccine sales helped the Anglo-Swedish pharmaceutical giant increase its total revenue for the first half by 23% year-on-year to $15.5 billion, AstraZeneca announced in its earnings report.

Its earnings from the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine in the second quarter more than tripled from the previous three months.

Without vaccine revenues, the company’s half-year income rose 14% from the first half of 2020.

Following its acquisition of U.S. pharmaceutical company Alexion, AstraZeneca updated its full-year guidance, predicting total revenue to increase by a low twenties percentage. Income from its Covid-19 vaccine were not factored into the guidance, given “heightened risks and uncertainties from the effects of Covid-19, including the impact from potential new medicines for Covid-19 in clinical development.”

The company also noted that variations in its financial performance could be expected to continue between quarters.

Almost 4 billion shots of Covid-19 vaccines have been given worldwide, data collected by Bloomberg shows.

According to Our World in Data, vaccination programs have now started in 214 countries and territories, most of which have approved the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine for use.



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OSF hosting kids’ “mini-med school” at Promise Academy



PEORIA, Ill. (WMBD) — Peoria’s Promise Academy is teaming up with OSF Saint Francis Medical Center to host a free “mini-medical school” Friday, July 30, motivating young minds to get excited about health care.

The Christian school is inviting doctors, nurses, and interns from 32 entities within OSF to the school, helping kids ages six to 16 explore health education and career opportunities in the medical field.

Promise Academy’s President, Bishop Tim Criss, said children will also have the opportunity to use interactive learning stations, using medical tools and 3D printers.

Criss said statistics from OSF show that the communities in Peoria’s 61605 zip code more frequently experience occurrences of many illnesses and diseases than in other neighborhoods.

“I’m grateful that they not only see it, but they are moving in the direction of action and making themselves available,” said Criss.

He said he hopes the event brings more awareness to health care, as well as inspires kids and parents to look into medical careers within their community.

“There’s not enough health care, ample health care, to reach the people that probably need it the most..” Criss said. “I think it’s important that they understand that there are opportunities out there that they can be a part of that not only pay well, but…make their lives more full.”

The event opens its doors at 12:30 p.m. and will end at 4:30 p.m. A school open house will follow the event.

To learn more about Promise Academy and the event, visit their website.



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Wednesday 28 July 2021

It’s time to rethink medical research | Opinion – South Florida Sun Sentinel


In many cases, taxpayers are footing the bill for these pointless experiments. In the 1960s, Congress instituted the NIH Primate Research Centers program, charged with importing and breeding monkeys and other primates for experimenters and developing supposed primate “models” for human disease. The primate centers receive tens of millions of taxpayer dollars via NIH every single year. But 60 years and tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of monkeys later, they have failed to produce the promised cures and treatments for human illnesses.



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What is an Anesthesiologist

The field of anesthesiology is a medical specialty that focuses on the relief of pain and total care of the surgical patient as ...