Health

Home Health
Indoors, Outdoors, 6 Feet Apart? Transmission Risk of Airborne Viruses Can Be Quantified
Post

Indoors, Outdoors, 6 Feet Apart? Transmission Risk of Airborne Viruses Can Be Quantified

In the 1995 movie “Outbreak,” Dustin Hoffman’s character realizes, with appropriately dramatic horror, that an infectious virus is “airborne” because it’s found to be spreading through hospital vents. The issue of whether our real-life pandemic virus, SARS-CoV-2, is “airborne” is predictably more complex. The current body of evidence suggests that COVID-19 primarily spreads through respiratory...

SARS-CoV-2 Immunization Passports: a Ticket to Normal Life?
Post

SARS-CoV-2 Immunization Passports: A Ticket to Normal Life?

Proof of immunization against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) may soon be required in many parts of the globe. The authors discuss how immunization passports could work, what Canada needs to do, and potential barriers and limitations in a CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) commentary. “We expect that immunization passports may be imminently introduced for...

Rich Nations See Virus Rates Fall Quicker
Post

Rich Nations See Virus Rates Fall Quicker

Richer countries were more likely to see rates of COVID-19 fall faster during the first wave of the pandemic, according to new research published in the journal Frontiers in Public Health. The study by Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) professors Shahina Pardhan and Nick Drydakis examined economic indicators in 38 European countries, such as Gross Domestic Product...

Auto Draft
Post

USA Failing to Reach Populations Most in Need of Hiv Prevention and Treatment Services as Epidemic Grows in the South and Rural Areas

People who are racial, sexual, and gender minorities continue to be affected by HIV at significantly higher rates than white people, a disparity also reflected in the COVID-19 pandemic. The US HIV epidemic has shifted from coastal, urban settings to the South and rural areas. Despite its role as the largest funder for HIV research...

Schools Walk the Tightrope Between Ideal Safety and the Reality of Covid
Post

Schools Walk the Tightrope Between Ideal Safety and the Reality of Covid

California mom Megan Bacigalupi has had enough. She wants her kindergartner and second grader back in their Oakland classrooms. But the coronavirus is spreading too quickly to open schools in Alameda County, based on the current state standards. And the local teachers union hasn’t agreed to go back — even after teachers have been vaccinated....

Why the U.S. Is Underestimating Covid Reinfection
Post

Why the U.S. Is Underestimating Covid Reinfection

Kaitlyn Romoser first caught covid-19 in March, likely on a trip to Denmark and Sweden, just as the scope of the pandemic was becoming clear. Romoser, who is 23 and a laboratory researcher in College Station, Texas, tested positive and had a few days of mild, coldlike symptoms. In the weeks that followed, she bounced...

Community Health Workers, Often Overlooked, Bring Trust to the Pandemic Fight
Post

Community Health Workers, Often Overlooked, Bring Trust to the Pandemic Fight

For 11 months, Cheryl Garfield, a community health worker in West Philadelphia, has been a navigator of pandemic loss and hardship. She makes calls to people who are isolated in their homes, people who are sick and afraid and people who can’t afford their rent or can’t get an appointment with a doctor. The conversations...

If Healthy People Are Purposefully Infected with COVID-19 for the Sake of Science, They Should Be Paid
Post

If Healthy People Are Purposefully Infected with COVID-19 for the Sake of Science, They Should Be Paid

Multidisciplinary team of international experts suggests participants should receive a “substantial” amount, be paid ethically Healthy people volunteering to be infected with SARS-CoV-2, in order to help scientists better understand how to tackle the virus, should receive payment – if it is determined that these studies are otherwise ethical to proceed. Those are the findings...

Climate Change May Have Driven the Emergence of SARS-CoV-2
Post

Climate Change May Have Driven the Emergence of SARS-CoV-2

Global greenhouse gas emissions over the last century have made southern China a hotspot for bat-borne coronaviruses, by driving growth of forest habitat favoured by bats. A new study published today in the journal Science of the Total Environment provides the first evidence of a mechanism by which climate change could have played a direct role in...

Auto Draft
Post

Vegan Diet Better for Weight Loss and Cholesterol Control Than Mediterranean Diet

A vegan diet is more effective for weight loss than a Mediterranean diet, according to a groundbreaking new study that compared the diets head to head. The randomized crossover trial, which was published in the Journal of the American College of Nutrition, found that a low-fat vegan diet has better outcomes for weight, body composition, insulin sensitivity,...