Cumulative Confirmed COVID-19 Cases

Friday, January 17, 2025

Alan Dershowitz: It Wasn't a Deal – It Was a Crime

He's right, as usual:

It Wasn't a Deal – It Was a Crime

by Alan M. Dershowitz, January 17, 2025 at 5:00 am

"The decision by the Israeli government to make significant concessions to the Hamas kidnappers should never be called a "deal." It was an extortion. Would you call it a deal if somebody kidnapped your child and you "agreed" to pay ransom to get her back? Of course not. The kidnapping was a crime. And the extortionate demand was an additional crime.

"So the proper description of what occurred is that Israel, pressured by the United States, capitulated to the unlawful and extortionate demands of Hamas as the only way of saving the lives of kidnapped babies, mothers and other innocent, mostly civilian, hostages.

"This was not the result of a negotiation between equals. If an armed robber puts a gun to your head and says, "your money or your life," your decision to give him your money would not be described as a deal. Nor should the extorted arrangement agreed to by Israel be considered a deal. So let's stop using that term.

"When a terrorist group "negotiates" with a democracy, it always has the upper hand. The terrorists are not constrained by morality, law or truth. They can murder at will, rape at will, torture at will and threaten to do worse. The democracy, on the other hand, must comply with the rules of law and must listen to the pleas of the hostage families. The result of this exertion was bad for Israel's security, but good for the hostages who remain alive and their families. The heart rules the brain, as it often does in moral democracies that value the immediate saving of the lives of known people over the future deaths of hypothetical people whose identities we do not know. This tradeoff is understandable as compassionate, even if not compelling as policy.

"If every democratic nation adopted a policy of never negotiating with terrorists, it might discourage terrorism. But every nation submits to the demands of kidnappers and extortionists, so terrorism and hostage-taking have become a primary tactic of the worst people in the world. And the rest of us are complicit.

"Especially complicit, with blood on their hands, are supporters of Hamas on university campuses who chant for intifada and revolution. Also complicit are international organizations, such as the International Criminal Court, that treat Israel and Hamas as equals. These supporters of terrorism encouraged Hamas to hold out for many months in the belief that their support would pressure Israel into making more concessions.

"The students of terror – the university students who are encouraging Hamas into continuing their murderous ways – must be held accountable for their complicity in evil. Though they may have the same First Amendment rights as Jews do, they should be treated with the same contempt that Nazis, the KKK and racist supporters of violence are treated. The First Amendment does not give them the right to be hired by decent employers.

"The First Amendment gives employers the power to refuse to associate with supporters of Nazism, Hamas terrorism or other evil groups. American law criminalizes giving material support to designated terrorist groups, which include Hamas and Hezbollah. Morality, as distinguished from law, should deem immoral providing any support -- material, political, economic or demonstrative – to any terrorist group such as Hamas. Yet both the presidential and vice-presidential candidates of the Democrat Party urged people to listen to the messages of these protestors. They would never say that about demonstrators who favored lynching blacks or raping women. But Hamas does lynch Jews and rape Jewish women. There is no moral difference.

"Let us welcome the news that perhaps 33 of the 98 hostages may be released, some of them alive, with the realization that what Hamas extorted from Israel in return for these releases may well endanger Israel's security in the future and cost still more innocent lives.

"And let us put the blame for ALL the deaths in Gaza where it belongs: on Hamas and the useful idiots and useless bigots who support murderous terrorists."

Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus at Harvard Law School, and the author most recently of War Against the Jews: How to End Hamas Barbarism, and Get Trump: The Threat to Civil Liberties, Due Process, and Our Constitutional Rule of Law. He is the Jack Roth Charitable Foundation Fellow at Gatestone Institute, and is also the host of "The Dershow" podcast.

Quad-demic News 1/17/25

From ABC News 1/17/25:

What to know about 'quad-demic' of COVID, flu, RSV and norovirus in US; Norovirus levels are hitting highs not seen in six years, according to CDC data.

"Four viruses are currently circulating in the United States, which some have referred to as a "quad-demic."

"Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed an increase in three respiratory viruses—COVID-19, flu and RSV—and the gastrointestinal disease norovirus.

"Emergency department visits are "high" and "very high" for flu and RSV, respectively, and "elevated" for COVID-19 across the U.S., according to the CDC.

"As of the week ending Jan. 4, 18.6% of tests for influenza are returning positive, as are 11.6% of RSV tests and 6.9% of COVID tests.

"Meanwhile, for norovirus, 27.91% of weekly tests have come back positive during the same week, CDC data showed. This appears to be the highest levels seen since 2019.

"Doctors told ABC News that although they feel ready to handle the influx of patients in their respective hospitals, the increase has been concerning.

"All of these viruses, including norovirus, classically go up in the winter months," Dr. Scott Roberts, medical director of infection prevention at Yale New Haven Health, told ABC News. "Those numbers, at least for us locally, are pretty classic from what we've seen before, but the rate of increase has been especially concerning."

Tests Positive for COVID, Flu and RSV in the U.S. Week ending Aug. 3, 2024 – Week ending Jan. 4, 2025
ABC News, CDC
 
Hospitals, emergency departments at capacity
 
"Some doctors around the U.S. report hospitals are at or near capacity and patients often wait for hours before they are seen in emergency departments.

"Dr. Matthew Sims, director of infectious disease research for Corewell Health, a health care system located in Michigan, said he's seen several patients this week coming to the emergency room for influenza and COVID, and many of whom were admitted to the hospital.

"We are seeing patients who are having to wait before they can get transferred to a room," he told ABC News. "I have a patient who's in the ICU and was ready to come out and she just didn't have a room, so it took a little while. So, the hospital itself is pretty full."

"Roberts said the main hospital has about 1,500 beds and about 150 patients, or 10%, are admitted with COVID, flu and RSV.

"While this is below the number of patients admitted to the hospital with respiratory disease during the first COVID wave in 2020, Roberts said finding beds for patients can still be challenging.

"What we're seeing now is that the hospitals near 100% capacity almost all the time, and when you add an extra 100 patients with respiratory viral disease who otherwise would not be there if this wasn't respiratory viral season, you really tax the system," he said. "And so, we are seeing that at Yale. We're seeing a very full hospital near 100% capacity. We're seeing very full emergency rooms with waits to get into the hospital because of that."

"Because of the long wait times and the full capacity, doctors are urging patients who may be sick with COVID, flu, RSV or norovirus to consider a virtual visit with a health care professional or to visit an urgent care center before considering going to a hospital.

An 'atypical' norovirus season

"A rapid increase in norovirus cases occurring while respiratory virus season is peaking is "atypical" even though norovirus cases rise in winter, doctors told ABC News.

"During the week ending Dec. 5, 2024, the latest date for which data is available, 91 norovirus outbreaks were reported.

"This year, the number of reported norovirus outbreaks have exceeded the numbers that we've seen recently and in the years before the pandemic," a spokesperson for the CDC told ABC News in a statement.

Norovirus Weekly Tests and Percent Positive in the U.S. Week ending Aug. 3, 2024 – Week ending Jan. 4, 2025
ABC News, CDC NREVSS

"A new norovirus strain becomes predominant every few years and exposure to one strain does not necessarily protect against all strains, the CDC said.

"Getting hit with norovirus at the same time that we're hitting the peak of respiratory viruses -- that's the part that's a little bit atypical," Dr. Katie Passaretti, enterprise chief epidemiologist at Atrium Health, a health system based in Charlotte, North Carolina, told ABC News.

"With norovirus, it is a different strain than what we've seen in past years," she continued. "So, some supposition that our usual baseline level of protection in the community might be a little bit lower, and that's adding to the higher number of cases."

"Sims said he's not sure why the number of norovirus cases is higher this season, but some of the increase in outbreaks may be attributed to increased testing availability for norovirus.

New masking, visitor guidelines

"Hospitals are starting to restrict visitors and require masks in certain settings to prevent the spread of viruses.

"Atrium Health said it asked its staff and visitors to wear masks in areas where direct patient care is being provided.

"Novant Health, another health care system in North Carolina, began restricting visitors under the age of 13 on Tuesday.

"Children can also often carry viruses and not be as symptomatic as adults, and so we want to be careful about bringing those viral infections into our facilities," Dr. David Priest, chief safety and quality officer at Novant Health, told ABC News.

"Priest said Novant Health staff is also increasing the level of masking with recommendations that masks be worn in emergency departments and around vulnerable patients, including those with cancer or in skilled nursing units.

"At Yale New Haven Health, the recommendation is that staff implement masking when taking direct care of patients.

"The fact that we've seen almost exponential increases at our hospital over the past few weeks, we are recommending that staff mask when seeing patients," Roberts said. "There's many metrics we monitor and information that goes into this decision, such as staff callouts, staff shortages, community respiratory viral test positivity rates, overall hospital census. These are just a few of the data points that go into that decision."

Low vaccination coverage

"There is no vaccine available to protect against norovirus, so the CDC recommends washing hands thoroughly with soap and water and staying away from others when sick.

"However, flu and COVID-19 vaccines are available for both children and adults, and RSV vaccines are available for certain groups of adults. Despite vaccine availability, CDC data shows vaccination coverage remains low.

"As of Jan. 4, only 43.4% of adults were vaccinated against the flu and 22.8% were vaccinated with the updated 2024-25 COVID-19 vaccine. Additionally, just 44.5% of adults ages 75 and older have received the RSV vaccine, according to CDC data.

"Nearly half of all children are vaccinated against the flu at 42.9%, but just 11% have received the updated COVID-19 vaccine.

"Doctors worry that the lack of vaccination will impact the health care system's ability to treat patients because many adults are not protected against these viruses.

"I worry we are not as ready as we should be, or were, going into this season…because our vaccination rates for many of these diseases are very low for really the big three respiratory viruses, COVID, flu and now RSV, vaccination rates are well below what we would hope," Roberts said.

"We really need to help with messaging the importance of these vaccines, because really the best method of prevention is vaccination, and it's always easier to prevent an infection from occurring to begin with than to treat it once it's already occurred, with antivirals, for example," he added."

Melanie Phillips: Dealing With The Devil

Here's Melanie Phillips' latest column, and you can see by its title that it's about the terrible "deal" with Hamas. I had been hoping that Trump would wait till he was actually President on Monday to state that the deal was unacceptable to Israel and to America, and to repeal the damage done by the Destructive Duo of Biden and Blinken.

-------------------------

Dealing with the devil: Why is any negotiation with Qatar taking place at all? 

Melanie Phillips, 1/17/25 

"There was one immediate and very public effect of the hostage deal that was prematurely reported to have been agreed between Israel and Hamas. No sooner had this news filtered through on Wednesday than thousands of jubilant Arabs poured onto the streets of Gaza brandishing weapons, uniforms and insignia, and chanting that they had won the war.

"These men were demonstrably well-fed, well-clothed and equipped with smartphones.

"So much for the libel — the ludicrous calumny that has been amplified from Gaza throughout the length and breadth of the west—that Israel has been conducting a genocide against the Palestinian Arabs. As was bitterly observed by some of those watching the euphoria in Gaza, this must be the first genocide in history where the victims have emerged to declare victory.

"Those Arabs were ecstatic because they believed that the deal would enable them now, finally, to destroy Israel and the Jews. “Jews remember Khaybar, where Muhammad massacred the Jews,” they chanted, a reference to the seventh-century onslaught by Islam’s founder that remains the Muslim battle cry to slaughter the Jews today.

"And in the Qatari capital Doha, the Hamas leader Khalil al-Hayya responded to the deal by expressing pride in the October 7 pogrom, which he pledged to repeat.

"As soon as Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani announced that a deal had been reached between Israel and Hamas, both those who have been demonstrating on Israeli streets to “bring the hostages home now” and those who want the war to continue until Hamas is destroyed jumped to the conclusion that the war in Gaza was over.

"With reports swirling that the deal involved a staged release of hostages in exchange for a far larger number of Arab terrorists to be released from Israeli prisons, as well as a staged withdrawal of the Israel Defense Forces from Gaza, there was panic in some Israeli quarters. There were fears that Israel was being forced to snatch defeat out of the jaws of victory and would continue to face a genocidal enemy that would be enabled to regroup, rule Gaza again, and repeat its slaughter of Jews.

"And there was distraught disbelief that President-elect Donald Trump — upon whom so many were relying to enable Israel to defend itself against genocide — could have betrayed the Jewish state by forcing Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, to accept the disastrous terms promoted by the Biden administration.

"Other voices, however, counselled that such despair was unrealistic and inappropriate. Hamas had been decimated, Hezbollah in Lebanon was finished, and Iran was weaker. Crucially, Israel had given no undertakings to end the war in Gaza and would return to destroy Hamas as it had always promised. Everything rested on the belief that Trump would support Israel as it did so. And the ultimate goal was the destruction of Iran’s nuclear programme for which his support was essential.

"The deeper question, however, is why any negotiation was taking place at all — and why Qatar, the sponsor, patron and protector of Hamas, was still being used as an honest broker.

"As Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) said: “The only ‘deal’ should be unconditional surrender by Hamas, which is already nearly destroyed, and return of ALL hostages. … Here’s the ‘deal’ to offer Hamas and its patron, Iran: You have five days to release ALL the hostages or we ‘unleash hell.’”

"That seemed to be precisely what Trump had publicly threatened — that unless Hamas released the hostages by his inauguration on January 20, “all hell would break out in the Middle East”.

"It was famously said of Trump that people should “take him seriously but not literally”. Israel’s desperate defenders made the mistake of taking his “all hell” threat literally. They thought that Trump meant precisely what Cotton said should happen — that unless Hamas handed over all the hostages unconditionally, there would be condign consequences.

"Hamas, however, took Trump seriously but not literally, and understood him correctly to mean he would unleash hell unless they agreed to a deal. Which they did — even though they then tried to resile from it.

"Of course, the release of any of the hostages is to be welcomed. Their terrible fate is uppermost in every Israeli mind. Everyone desperately wants them to be returned, but not if the price to be paid is the certainty of yet more Jewish hostages being taken and more murderous attacks.

"Taking the Israeli hostages was an evil masterstroke by Hamas. However, America is largely responsible for abandoning them to their fate and allowing Hamas to continue to deploy these innocents as an infernal weapon of blackmail and extortion.

"The “hell” of which both Trump and Cotton have spoken should have been threatened on Ocober 8, 2023, against Hamas’s sponsor and protector, Qatar. If the Biden administration had told Qatar that unless the hostages were released within five days the United States would end every arrangement with it on which the Gulf state depends, the hostages would have been freed.

"Not only did the Biden administration not do this, but it has continued to this day to treat Qatar as a legitimate interlocutor — while undermining Israel’s desperate attempt to defend itself.

"The United States threatened and blackmailed Israel into admitting into Gaza aid supplies most of which were stolen by Hamas, enabling it to make millions of dollars to reinforce its own genocidal war machine. The Bidenites repeatedly instructed Israel to reduce attacks on Iran or its proxies, forcing it to fight its war of survival with its hands tied behind its back in a way that America wouldn’t have dreamed of behaving had it been targeted itself in this way for annihilation.

"In part, the Bidenites’ attitude toward Israel — in many respects a continuation of former President Barack Obama’s profound animus against the Jewish state — has been driven by malice. But it’s also infused with the belief that Israel can never win its battle against the Palestinian Arabs and therefore must compromise with them.

"That, in turn, is rooted in the liberal belief that all conflict is soluble through negotiation and compromise. But when the conflict is between those committed to genocide and their intended victims — as is the case between the Iran/Palestinian Arab axis and Israel’s Jews — any compromise by Israel is tantamount to offering its throat to be slit.

"Trump doesn’t subscribe to this liberal delusion. And his commitment to Israel is genuine and deep. However, Trump is famously transactional. He appears to believe that all conflict is soluble through a deal — provided that he, the supreme practitioner of “the art of the deal,” is directing it.

"And so, alarmingly, he has apparently reached out to Iran to begin negotiations over its nuclear programme and other nefarious activities. But any negotiation with people who have a non-negotiable agenda strengthens them and weakens their victims.

"Trump doesn’t want a war on his watch. He has virtually promised the American people that he will bring an end to war. But sometimes an enemy arises with whom any agreement is a deal with the devil.

"If Netanyahu is seen to have been forced to agree to Israel’s defeat in Gaza, he will be finished. As for Trump, the fear is that his transactionalism will mean he ends up playing the same role as the Biden administration in empowering evil.

"We can only hold our breath."

Thursday, January 16, 2025

Immunocompromised Americans Still Guard Against COVID

I was happy to see a rare article about those of us who are immunocompromised and still take precautions against COVID and other viruses.  Still, I couldn't help but laugh at this headline. It makes it sound like we're an extinct species!

----------------------------------------

From Associated Press 1/16/2025:

Meet the Americans who still take COVID-19 precautions seriously

"Susan Scarbro stares down a bowling lane at the distant pins.

"She hears a sound that breaks her focus. Was that a cough? Will her mask protect her?

"COVID-19 remains a very present threat for the 55-year-old. Scarbro has multiple immune disorders, making her vulnerable to infection.

“Any minute anybody could cough, just incidentally,” said Scarbro, who lives in Sunset Beach, North Carolina. “And that cough could be the one thing that could make me sick.”

"This month marks the fifth anniversary of the first confirmed case of COVID-19 in the U.S. The virus would go on to kill 1.2 million Americans and disrupt countless lives.

"While the pandemic’s emergency phase ended in May 2023, the threat of infection remains a governing force in the lives of people like Scarbro. They protect themselves from the virus with masks and isolate themselves in small family bubbles. Some grasp for unproven strategies — gargling with antiseptic mouthwash, carrying a personal carbon dioxide monitor to check the ventilation of indoor spaces. 

"In online support groups, they trade research about the danger of repeat infections and cognitive impairment. They miss the empathy they felt during the early days of the pandemic. Some have lost friendships, but they strive to maintain the social ties that are important to mental health.  

"Scarbro’s bowling league helps her feel connected to her neighbors. But recently, she’s detected more stares and skeptical looks from strangers when she bowls in a mask.

“There was more respect and understanding, but now they’re over it,” she said. “They expect me to be over it, but they don’t understand that even before COVID-19, these were the precautions I needed to take.”

"Most Americans have developed some level of protection against severe disease from previous COVID-19 infections, vaccinations or both. But immunocompromised people like Scarbro, who has common variable immune deficiency, must be constantly vigilant. Unlike the flu, COVID has not settled into a seasonal pattern.

“There’s never a time when they can relax a little bit,” said Andrew Pekosz, a virologist at Johns Hopkins University. “That’s a really challenging and exhausting thing to ask someone to do.”

"Who are the people still cautious about COVID-19? They include young caregivers of vulnerable relatives, people with chronic health conditions and families rallying around a loved one. In interviews with The Associated Press, they talked about how they manage the trade-offs and the toll of isolation on their mental health.

How hard is it to put a mask on?’

"Before the pandemic, Bazia Zebrowski, 61, of Newbury, Ohio, dined out, shopped for groceries and took her dog, Shadoh, to the park. When she felt well, she occasionally could get together with friends despite having myalgic encephalomyelitis, a condition formerly known as chronic fatigue syndrome that causes inflammation, immune system problems, fatigue and pain.

"Now she keeps close to home, venturing out only for medical appointments. Her husband does the shopping and wears a mask at his workplace.

"They have not had COVID-19 and hope their luck holds. Getting sick would be a disaster, she said, potentially triggering a relapse or superimposing long COVID-19 onto her illness.

I don’t consider myself COVID cautious. I consider myself COVID competent,” Zebrowski said. “Cautious would imply that I have an unreasonable fear of something. I do not have an unreasonable fear of this disease.”

"What does Zebrowski miss about pre-pandemic times? “I miss the illusion that people are willing to care for each other,” she said. “How hard is it to put a mask on? It rattles your faith in humankind … (you learn) how little the people in your life understood how sick you were to begin with.”

"Trauma is part of the experience of having a chronic illness, said DePaul University psychologist Leonard Jason, who has studied myalgic encephalomyelitis for more than three decades.

“Then you’re traumatized by the societal reaction to the illness,” he said.

Protecting a partner

"Some people aren’t sick themselves but are taking precautions to protect a family member. Steve Alejandro, 42, of Wentzville, Missouri, calls himself a COVID shielder.

"His wife, Ashley Alejandro, 44, also has myalgic encephalomyelitis. “She’s got maybe four good hours a day,” Alejandro said. “There’s not a thing in the world I wouldn’t do to protect those four hours.”

"Alejandro changed careers during the pandemic, leaving behind “my whole support system” so he could sell vintage books online from home. His three children — now 20, 18 and 12 — never went back to in-person school after lockdowns ended and are continuing their learning at home.

“We’ve really come together,” Alejandro said. “This is a choice that can be made and you can win at it.”

"In Miami, Kira Levin is the primary caregiver for her 98-year-old grandmother. She said the thought of getting COVID-19 and risking her grandmother’s health is terrifying.

"So, at a July wedding, the 29-year-old was the only bridesmaid and attendee in a mask — an N95 layered with a pretty mask to match the bride’s green color scheme.

“I didn’t take off the mask for pictures and nobody asked me to,” Levin said. “And I felt incredibly grateful for that.”

‘COVID Cautious’ dating

"Denver-based sisters Jacqueline and Alexa Child stay masked while going to concerts and dining outdoors with friends who don’t share the same level of COVID-19 caution.

“We have done everything we possibly could to maintain our mental health and our social life,” said Jacqueline, who has an immune disease that makes her vulnerable to infections. “There’s nothing worse than being disabled and isolated. As someone who has been disabled and isolated, I don’t want that isolation part.”

"Jacqueline, 30, and her sister Alexa, 34, launched a dating app called Dateability in 2022 for people who are disabled or chronically ill, though all are welcomed. Users can add a “COVID Cautious” tag to their profiles to signal they’re interested in meeting others who take precautions. The Child sisters say 10% of their 30,000 users add “COVID Cautious” to their dating profiles.

“It’s a market that we didn’t expect to target but we happily accept,” Jacqueline said.

"Alexa said the precautions started as a way to protect Jacqueline, “but they’re no longer about that.” She’s trying to avoid long COVID, a long-term disability.

"Tossing aside the threat of long COVID is hard to imagine for Yale University immunologist Akiko Iwasaki. Though people have been studying the virus since its emergence, she said scientists still don’t know how pieces of the virus can stick around in the blood of some people for more than a year after they’ve recovered from the illness.

"Iwasaki still wears masks indoors and stays up to date with vaccines.

“I just can’t afford to get sick and become chronically ill,” she said. “I feel that we really are in a position to be able to better understand the disease, to help millions of people.”

A new normal

"While Scarbro understands that others are ready to return to “normal,” it’s not that easy for her or her family. It’s true for many others with chronic immune illnesses, said Jorey Berry, CEO of Immune Deficiency Foundation.

“While the rest of the world is able to kind of go back to their regular lives, our community doesn’t have that luxury,” she said.

"Scarbro, her husband and children are constantly taking into account other people’s COVID-19 safety practices.

"And as the world turns back to pre-COVID life, Scarbro’s family is doing what they can to keep her healthy — but not in complete isolation.

“I feel very scared about the future,” she said. “I know that people are done, and I respect that, but it’s only going to make it harder for me and my family to keep me safe.”

Donald Trump's Official Presidential Portrait

This man is a master when it comes to the media.  This portrait shows strength and determination, and it says the following:

"You tried to kill me, you tried to jail me, you went after me for eight years. Look at me now. I'm President of the United States for the second time.

"Don't mess with me, and don't mess with America."

See What Israel Has To Contend With?

See what it's like every day for Israel? You're not dealing with a rational country or a state.  You're dealing with a terrorist group whose sole mission in life is killing Jews! And I have no doubt this killer means it. Israel is only caving in under pressure.

------------------------------------------------

From the Daily Caller, 1/15/25:

Hamas Leader Promises Another October 7 Attack Despite Ceasefire Negotiations

"Hamas Leader Khalil al-Haya allegedly promised another October 7 style attack during a press conference Wednesday just after a tentative ceasefire was announced, according to an announcement aired Wednesday. Al-Haya said that the Oct. 7 attacks on Israel “will forever be a source of pride for our people” and expressed no regret for the destruction caused by the terrorist group, according to the announcement. As of Wednesday afternoon, a six-week ceasefire is set to begin on Sunday, with both sides set to exchange hostages and Israeli troops withdrawing from Gaza 

“This EPIC ceasefire agreement could have only happened as a result of our Historic Victory in November, as it signaled to the entire World that my Administration would seek Peace and negotiate deals to ensure the safety of all Americans, and our Allies,” President-elect Donald Trump said on Truth Social Wednesday. “I am thrilled American and Israeli hostages will be returning home to be reunited with their families and loved ones.” 

"Al-Haya revealed himself to be the leader of Hamas publicly for the first time as well, after the previous leader, Yahya Sinwar, was killed by Israeli forces in October 2024. Hamas killed around 1,200 civilians while taking over 240 people hostage on the Oct. 7 attacks which started the war."

Wednesday, January 15, 2025

Bad Deal For Israel, Good Deal For Hamas

I am studiously avoiding watching the network news after hearing today that:

33 hostages released in 6 weeks, women and children first: These are the details of the deal. At least 3 hostages will be released each week during the 42-day cease-fire as the IDF gradually withdraws from central Gaza and displaced persons return to the north; For each kidnapped civilian, 30 terrorists will be released, and for each female soldier 50; Negotiations on the second phase of the deal will begin by the 16th day

and that Hamas will remain in power

If you listen to the news, you'd swear Israel and Hamas are 2 equal states, rather than 1 Jewish state and 1 Islamic terrorist organization that committed the Oct.7 atrocities and is dedicated to eradicating Israel.

In an ideal world, Hamas would release all the hostages immediately -- and then Israel would destroy the rest of Hamas. 

Instead, the vicious cycle started by Hamas will continue.

Dr Ruth's COVID & Other Viruses to Know About, 1/13/25

Here is the latest informative newsletter from Dr Ruth Ann Crystal.

---------------------

COVID & Other Viruses to Know About, 1/13/25

According to the CDC, as of January 13, 2025, the amount of acute respiratory illnesses causing people to seek healthcare is HIGH.

From: https://www.cdc.gov/respiratory-viruses/data/index.html

SARS-CoV-2

Data through January 8, 2025 shows that most states are at least HIGH for COVID on Sara Anne Willette’s scale, including Arizona which has “Dizzying” levels of SARS-CoV-2

From Sara Anne Willette: https://iowacovid19tracker.org/

The good news is that it appears that emergency department visits for COVID have peaked and are starting to decline. Michigan, Maine, New Hampshire and South Dakota had slightly higher peaks for COVID emergency department visits in December as compared to their summer 2024 wave. For most other states, COVID peaks were significantly lower this winter per JP Weiland.

Vaccines

When you get a tattoo, the ink does not only stay in the skin. A new article shows that the tattoo ink also accumulates in macrophages in the lymph nodes causing systemic and local inflammation that kills some of the macrophages and makes others not work properly. The inflammation from the tattoo pigments weakens the immune response to the COVID vaccine for months leading to lower antibody production. The increased macrophage cell death can also cause the person (or mouse) to become more susceptible to infections. Effects vary by ink color and can persist for months.

Long COVID

A study of 1,300 consecutive Long COVID patients at Northwestern looked at whether vaccination prior to contracting COVID infection impacts neurological symptoms of Long COVID. They found that vaccination prior to infection did not appear to change cognitive and neurological symptoms of Long COVID, though pre-existing vulnerabilities may influence development​ of neurologic symptoms. Logically though, people can only get Long COVID if they have had a COVID infection. So, by reducing COVID infections, vaccination reduces Long COVID overall.

A case series report from Patient-Led Research Collaborative looked at 13 individuals with Long COVID who used extended courses of Paxlovid (nirmatrelvir/ritonavir), ranging from 7.5 to 30 days. Results were mixed- 5 people reported lasting improvement, 4 people with Long COVID had temporary improvement, and 4 people had no improvement. Extended antiviral therapy appears to benefit some people with Long COVID, but further research is needed to understand the optimal duration of treatment.

Long COVID Labs is crowdfunding to do clinical trials to find treatments for Long COVID by selling a crypto coin called $COVID. The auction is live through January 17, 8am PT here. The first trial planned will study combination treatment for Long COVID using an antiviral medication (Paxlovid) and monoclonal antibodies (Pemgarda) to try to get rid of SARS-CoV-2 viral reservoirs in the body. A similar combination cured founder Rohan Dixit of Long COVID, which he explains in this 2 minute video. Here is a clip of me from last week talking about my daughter who has Long COVID and the Long COVID Labs project.

H5N1 Bird Flu

The person in Louisiana who was hospitalized with H5N1 Avian Flu died this week. According to the WHO, about 50% of H5N1 human cases will die from the disease, but that is probably an overestimate since many human cases that are mild and are not factored into the calculation. Still, the mortality rate for humans who get a severe case of H5N1 is significant.

As infectious disease specialist Dr BK Titanji posted about the death of the H5N1 patient from Louisiana, “This is sad news. It is also a reminder that influenza virus infections can be severe and even lethal. The more H5N1 spreads unchecked the higher the likelihood of human infections. Some of these cases will not be mild.”

According to the CDC, more than 2,700 Americans including 11 children have died from seasonal influenza so far this year. The CDC recommends that everyone ages 6 months and older get an annual influenza (flu) vaccine. It is not too late.

The CDC randomly tests samples that are positive for Influenza A to see if they are the H5 type. A child from San Francisco tested positive for H5N1 avian flu this week. The child had symptoms of fever and conjunctivitis and has since fully recovered. The source of H5N1 for the child is unknown.

HMPV

I have seen on social media that some people are concerned about a surge of human metapneumovirus (HMPV) cases in China. Experts say that the HMPV surge can be attributed to the regular seasonal spike of this virus that affects almost all children at least once by age 5. Respiratory viruses like HMPV are known to circulate widely in the winter. Wearing a mask and washing hands can help reduce the spread of this common virus.

Wastewater HMPV levels in the United States now are not as high as they were last spring.

From: https://data.wastewaterscan.org/

Herpes Viruses and Dementia

Years of epidemiological data have shown that herpes infections raise the risk of Alzheimer’s disease in some people. Using a 3D human brain tissue model, researchers found that repeat mild brain injuries such as concussions can reactivate latent herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), leading to neurodegeneration and Alzeheimer’s dementia, especially in individuals carrying the APOE4 gene.

I find this fascinating given the article last week showing that incubating inactivated herpes simplex 1 virus (HSV-1) or SARS-CoV-2 virus with human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) caused proteins in the CSF to make amyloid because of surface properties related to a process called heterogeneous nucleation (HEN). Amyloid proteins are implicated in both Alzheimer’s disease and in Parkinson’s disease.

A vaccine against another virus from the herpes family, Varicella Zoster virus (VZV), has been shown to reduce the risk of dementia. VZV causes the chicken pox and shingles which is a painful rash often seen in older adults. Getting the recombinant shingles vaccine significantly reduced the risk of dementia for at least 6 years after vaccination. As of now, there are no vaccines yet against HSV-1.

Other news:

My heart goes out to people affected by the wildfires in Southern California which have been hard to contain because of dry conditions and the Santa Ana winds. Firefighters from California, Mexico, Canada and other countries are working together to try to extinguish the blazes. If you would like to donate to help wildfire victims and firefighters, here are some links: Red Cross, World Central Kitchen, Los Angeles Fire Department Foundation and others. Also, N95 masks are available at Los Angeles public libraries.

The crazy U.S. health system

Primary care fields including Pediatrics, Family Practice and Internal Medicine are having trouble filling their residency slots. Low pay, high administrative burdens such as prior authorizations and little administrative support make these fields less desirable leaving many communities with a shortage of primary care providers.

This week, The Lown Institute's Shkreli Awards announced their annual “winners” for the most egregious US healthcare profiteering. The top 10 included Cigna refusing to pay for a baby who had to be flown to a medical center and sending the mother a $97,599 bill and United Healthcare pressuring doctors to spend less time with patients, but charge more.

Private equity firms have been buying up US hospitals over the last 10 years as investments. Not surprisingly, an article in JAMA shows that when private equity firms acquire hospitals, patient care experiences are worse.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) finalized a rule last week removing an estimated $49 billion in medical debt from credit reports. Debt due to unpaid medical bills have made it hard for many Americans to get mortgages, car loans or small business loans. The rule aims to prevent coercive debt collection practices and should raise credit scores for many Americans.

The Brain

Eric Topol MD wrote a very interesting article this week reviewing new data on how the brain gets rid of chemical waste during sleep via the glymphatic system and from brain blood vessel oscillations. He discusses, “How sleep prevents "dirty" brains that age faster.”

Other news

The world’s oldest known wild bird, Wisdom, has laid an egg at the age of 74. Typically, Laysan albatross birds live to about age 68 and lay about 1 egg per year as adults. The new egg is estimated to be Wisdom’s 60th egg laid during her lifetime.

Photo by Dan Rapp, USFWS

I’ll be taking off next week from the newsletter.

Have a great week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD

Tuesday, January 14, 2025

A Ceasefire is a Bad Deal For Israel

They're saying a hostage deal is close. I'm reading that Hamas might release a few hostages at a time if Israel promises to end the war.  What kind of a deal is that? It's more psychological warfare, for one thing.  ALL the hostages must be released at once. You know they'll expect Israel to release thousands of terrorists in return. How is that good for Israel?

How anyone can trust Hamas to do the right thing is beyond me. Biden and Blinken have done the wrong things so far, and I don't trust them to do anything to benefit either Israel or the United States in the last gasp of the Biden Administration. Plus, look at all the deliberate last-minute sabotage Biden's been engaging in to thwart Donald Trump's Presidency, so I wouldn't put it past him to sabotage Israel as well as he's leaving.

So excuse me if I'm not ready to celebrate.

Nightmare for Long COVID Patients

I can remember,, at the start of COVID, how people suffering from Long COVID had their symptoms ignored by friends, families, and doctors, but they found support from other "long haulers" on social media.

It's hard to believe that after five years, Long COVID sufferers are still being mistreated like this!

-----------------------------------

Dismissed and Disbelieved, Some Long COVID Patients Are Pushed Into Psychiatric Wards

By Jamie Ducharme, TIME Magazine, January 14, 2025 

"In late 2022, Erin, a 43-year-old from Pennsylvania, agreed to spend six weeks in a psychiatric ward, getting intensive treatment for an illness she knew she didn’t have.

"That decision was a last resort for Erin, who asked to be identified only by her first name for privacy. Her health had deteriorated after she caught COVID-19 nearly a year earlier; the virus left her with pain, fatigue, rapid weight loss, digestive problems, and vertigo. After another bout with a virus months later, Erin only got sicker, developing heart palpitations, muscle spasms, hoarseness, and pain in her neck, throat, and chest. 

"Erin was no stranger to chronic illness, having coped with a connective-tissue disorder her whole life. This was different. She became unable to work and rarely left her home. Her usual doctors were stumped; others said her litany of symptoms could be manifestations of anxiety.

"When it became too painful to eat and swallow, Erin grew severely malnourished and was hospitalized at a large academic medical center. “I felt at the time like this was my last hope,” says Erin, who has since been diagnosed with Long COVID. “If I didn’t get any answers there, I didn’t know where to go afterward.”

"Once again, however, she was disappointed. The only physical diagnosis her doctors landed on was vocal-cord dysfunction, which Erin felt did not explain her wide range of symptoms. When her doctors began to discuss discharging her, Erin panicked and said she could not manage her excruciating symptoms at home—a sentiment that she says contributed to concerns of self-harm among her doctors and kicked off conversations about a stay in the psychiatric ward. Eventually, seeing no other way forward, Erin agreed to go. “I just got increasingly defeated over time,” she says. “I didn’t know what to do.”

"She was admitted for a six-week stay and given diagnoses she knew were wrong: an eating disorder and anxiety.

"The vast majority of Long COVID patients will not land in psychiatric wards, but Erin is far from the only one who has. “Emergency rooms are dangerous places for people with Long COVID,” says David Putrino, who studies and treats the condition as director of rehabilitation innovation for the Mount Sinai Health System in New York.

"Numerous patients, he says, are told that inpatient mental-health care is their best or only option. He has worked with at least five patients who were ultimately admitted—and says some of his patients’ stories sound a lot like Erin’s. “Imagine you go to an emergency department, you wait 13 or 14 hours, your condition actually deteriorates, and then you’re told, ‘Hey, good news, everything is normal and we’re sending you home,’” Putrino says. “Going home doesn’t sound like a survivable outcome. So at that point you might break down...and often that gets reinterpreted as ‘Let’s put this person on a psych hold.’”

"Such experiences fit into a long, troubling tradition in medicine. Because there often aren’t conclusive tests for these types of complex chronic conditions, and because many patients do not outwardly appear unwell, they’re frequently told that they aren’t physically sick at all—that symptoms are all in their heads. “Mainstream medicine really isn’t geared toward treating conditions and diseases that it cannot see under a microscope,” says Larry Au, an assistant professor of sociology at the City College of New York who has studied one of the consequences of that disconnect: medical gaslighting of Long COVID patients

"The chronic illnesses that make doctors doubt their patients often start after what “should” be a short-lived sickness. And it’s not just COVID-19; many diseases, from Lyme to mono to the flu, can lead to mysterious, lingering symptoms that are often ruinous but difficult to explain.

"Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), for example, can follow a variety of viral or bacterial infections, leading to cognitive problems and extreme fatigue made worse by physical or mental exertion. (There is so much overlap between the symptoms of Long COVID and ME/CFS that many people now meet diagnostic criteria for both.) Today, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) calls ME/CFS a “serious, debilitating” biological illness—but for decades, it was written off as psychosomatic. A 1988 paper by researchers from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) suggested that it could be related to “unachievable ambition” and “poor coping skills.” And in 1996, a CDC researcher told a journalist that the condition has no viral cause, results in no immune abnormalities, and could be summed up as “hysteria.”

"Because the disease was for so long dismissed as psychological, many clinicians to this day try treatments like cognitive behavioral therapy that, at best, do nothing to address the condition’s physical symptoms—and, at worst, exacerbate them. Elizabeth Knights, who is 40 and lives in Massachusetts, went through even more intensive mental-health treatment. She spent several weeks in a psychiatric ward in 2006 before finally being diagnosed with ME/CFS and finding care that dramatically improved her health.

"During her senior year of high school, Knights caught a mono-like illness that never fully went away. Once at the top of her academic class and an avid skier and rock climber, Knights eventually had to withdraw from college and move in with her parents because she couldn’t function under the strain of persistent fatigue, flulike symptoms, and cognitive dysfunction—all of which her doctors chalked up to depression.

“I kept insisting, ‘There’s something else going on here,’” Knights remembers. But she didn’t know about ME/CFS at that time, and her doctors were adamant that her problems were psychological. So when physicians recommended she try inpatient psychiatric care, she went along with it. “That was the only path that was presented to me,” Knights remembers, and she took it.

"The experience made things worse. She was given numerous medications to which she had bad reactions and went through electroconvulsive therapy, which she says damaged her memory to the point that she had to relearn how to talk and navigate her hometown. “Nobody was listening to me, and people were not informed enough to make a correct diagnosis,” she says. “I was being misdiagnosed and treated for something that I didn’t have.”

"Rivka Solomon, a longtime ME/CFS patient advocate, says she hears this story a couple times a year: a patient, like Knights, has been wrongly admitted to or threatened with inpatient psychiatric care. And those are just the instances she learns about. “I worry about who is, right now, lying in a bed in a psych ward, too sick to function, left with no one to properly care for them, left with no one to advocate for them,” she says.

"The problem is larger than individual doctors, says Mount Sinai’s Putrino. People with conditions like Long COVID and ME/CFS may benefit from inpatient rehabilitative care, for example—but if they don’t meet admission criteria set by hospitals, state regulatory boards, or insurance plans, even well-meaning clinicians may be stuck. Sometimes, “there’s no administrative way to admit these people,” Putrino says. A psychiatric diagnosis is, in some cases, the simplest way to get a patient in. 

"Another complicating factor: there is no validated medical test for detecting Long COVID, ME/CFS, or similar conditions like chronic Lyme disease, another post-infection illness that remains controversial. Although studies have identified biological signs of these illnesses, researchers have not yet found clear biomarkers that lead to definitive diagnoses. “The medical profession loves cold, hard diagnostic tools and evidence-based medicine. They want randomized controlled trials and an easy test that tells you yes or no,” says Dr. Monica Verduzco-Gutierrez, who runs a Long COVID clinic and is chair of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. When those tools aren’t available, clinicians sometimes deem patients’ symptoms psychological.

"Ruth, a 32-year-old who asked to use only her first name for privacy, recently had that experience, even though she is a mental-health professional herself and already knew she had Long COVID. One morning in 2024, she woke up in pain, struggling to breathe and unable to control her bladder. When she visited an emergency room, hoping for medication that might help, she says she was told by a doctor that she was experiencing anxiety. “I was like, ‘I am fading away here. I am slowly dying. I need help,’” she says. But despite her repeated requests for care and her own psychological training, she says she was turned away.

"These dismissals can also be damaging, Solomon says. “The extreme examples of patients being admitted to psych hospitals are just the tragic tip of the iceberg,” she says. Patients who aren’t believed may struggle to get any medical care at all, or get pushed toward therapies that don’t work. They may also face an uphill battle when trying to secure insurance coverage for treatments, disability benefits, or workplace accommodations

"Without the backing of a doctor or diagnosis, patients often find that other people in their lives don’t believe them, either. Doug Gross, chair of the department of physical therapy at the University of Alberta, has studied how hard it is for Long COVID patients to find medical care. He says patients often talk about “disbelief from not only the health care system...but more broadly in their social sphere: family members, employers, supervisors at work.”

"Psychiatric care is not always inappropriate for patients with Long COVID or similar conditions, Verduzco-Gutierrez says. Some do develop depression, anxiety, and other mental-health symptoms, potentially including severe neuropsychiatric complications related to inflammation in their brains or other physiological issues, Putrino says. “Some folks can really benefit from skilled psychological care, even if it’s not their primary or underlying, driving cause of their illness,” he says.

"Some clinicians, however, fail to differentiate between side effects and root causes, or use screening techniques that aren’t well suited for people with chronic conditions, Verduzco-Gutierrez says. For example, asking someone whether they struggle to get out of bed in the morning—a common question when screening for depression—isn’t all that useful if the clinician doesn’t differentiate between physical and mental exhaustion. “The only way to solve this is more education,” Putrino says, “so the next generation of clinicians are not looking at these patients and saying, ‘A couple of antidepressants and a day off will fix you.’”

"Katiana Mekka, a 26-year-old Long COVID patient from Greece, says education is especially needed outside the U.S. Last fall, she says, she was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric ward and held for three days, until she passed a thorough screening test for mental-health disorders. The ordeal worsened her already severe illness, leaving her virtually unable to eat, move, or talk for days after. 

“These illnesses are so mistreated and misdiagnosed,” Mekka says, adding that so few doctors in Greece know about Long COVID that she has been forced to seek virtual support from specialists in other countries. “The patients that I know, we all have so much will to live and so many dreams. This is not a mental issue. We have severe symptoms.

"There are signs that the medical community might be getting better at treating people with Long COVID and diseases like it. The sheer volume of Long COVID patients who have emerged in the wake of the pandemic—nearly 20% of U.S. adults have experienced symptoms at some point—has forced a reckoning with the medical system’s history and sparked new research interest in these conditions. The federal government now has an office dedicated to Long COVID research, and the NIH earmarked an estimated $110 million for Long COVID research in 2024. (Federal research funding for ME/CFS is still paltry in comparison: an estimated $13 million in 2024.) Solomon says more research on not just Long COVID but all infection-associated illnesses is critical, so scientists can develop reliable tests and effective treatments. 

"There’s a long way to go. Putrino says he’s been advocating for systemic changes that would make it easier for hospitals to admit patients with complex conditions and for patients to secure reimbursement for in-home care, but progress is slow. Stigma and denial also still persist. And to this day, most U.S. medical schools do not teach trainee doctors about conditions like ME/CFS. 

"Despite all she’s been through, Erin, the Long COVID patient who spent time in a U.S. mental hospital, considers herself lucky. She found a silver lining to her stay: in the psychiatric ward, she met a clinician—a speech pathologist she saw because of her vocal dysfunction—who knew about Long COVID and referred her to a specialist. She met with that specialist after leaving inpatient care and in 2023 was diagnosed with both Long COVID and ME/CFS. Under proper care, and after plenty of rest, she’s been able to manage her symptoms well enough to return to work and a mostly normal life.

“That took me a long time, but I was lucky and found someone who actually helped,” Erin says. “Some people never figure it out.”