Wednesday, March 04, 2026

Thanks From Some Grateful Iranian People

It's disgraceful that while the Iranians are celebrating, the usual anti-American, anti-Israel agitators are protesting in our streets with their signs and flags. 

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From the Times of Israel 3-4-26:

‘Bless them:’ Iranians thank Netanyahu, Trump for Khamenei’s end, describe ‘regular’ explosions, in messages shared with ToI
By Nava Freiberg

"Some residents of Iran express gratitude to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump for assassinating Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, while describing uncertainty for what comes next in the ongoing US-Israeli bombing campaign in the country, in testimonies shared with The Times of Israel.

"Four residents provided written and recorded responses to questions from The Times of Israel. The Farsi-language replies have been collected by a London-based Iranian anti-regime activist and forwarded to the outlet. Their accounts cannot be independently verified.

“We kiss the hands of Mr. Trump and Netanyahu. Thank you to them. People really became happy,” says a man in his 40s from Shahrud in northern Iran. On the night of Saturday’s assassination, he says, “when we found out that this bastard had gone to hell, we poured into the streets. From Shahrbani Street to Azadi Square in Shahrud — people were celebrating and dancing.”

"A Tehran resident in his 30s describes similar scenes in the capital: “That same night, when this filthy animal went to hell, that’s when people poured into the streets… everyone had come out. It was dancing, celebration and cheering. Thanks to Mr. Trump and Netanyahu. Bless them. Good for them.”

"Residents also describe frequently hearing explosions amid the conflict.

"The Shahrud resident describes hearing many explosions, including on an ammunition depot, near where he lives: “It was quite far away… No civilian people were hurt.”

"A resident in northern Tehran says she “regularly” hears explosions, and that “almost everything is shut down” in the city. Many residents “are worried” about the situation and are trying to remain safe, she continues, “but they support it,” she adds, referring to the ongoing campaign. “We hope for victory.”

"Casualty figures from the ongoing campaign remain difficult to verify. Iranian authorities have reported several hundred deaths, without distinguishing between civilians, soldiers and regime personnel. An Israeli Air Force officer has said Israeli strikes in Iran have killed thousands of Iranian soldiers.

"A 23-year-old Tehran resident says: “The worry about war is much less than in the previous one,” referring to Israel’s June aerial assault on Iran, which the US eventually joined. “People are mentally much more prepared,” he continues.

“I want to say that the place of every person who was killed feels very empty today,” he adds, referring to civilians killed under the regime."

Greg Crosby on Gold Medalist Jack Hughes

You'll kvell with pride when you read this!

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'I Love the USA'
By Greg Crosby, Jewish World Review 3-4-26

"The Olympic overtime victories by the U.S. men's and women's hockey teams which won them Gold Medals, were spectacular and if Americans ever needed a greater reason to feel pride and patriotism in their country, I don't know what it would be. As far as the men's hockey team is concerned, this was their first Gold Medal since the 1980 Winter Olympics.

"Jack Hughes scored the winning goal in overtime, playing on despite being high-sticked in the mouth in the third period and losing multiple teeth. To make things even sweeter, the young man who made the winning goal, is a real mensch (A Yiddish word meaning a person of integrity and honor).

"In his after game interview on NBC Hughes paid tribute to the goalie, Connor Hellebuyck, who saved the game multiple times as Team Canada outplayed the US team for most of the third period. Then 24-year-old Jack Hughes said, "This is all about our country now. I love the USA. I love my teammates. It's unbelievable. The USA hockey brotherhood is so strong. I'm so proud to be American today."

"Never once did he use the word "I" in conjunction with winning the game. It was "we." It was always "the team." And he was so grateful and unapologetically patriotic in his statement. What refreshing words to hear from an American athlete for a change. I don't follow hockey and I don't usually watch the Olympics, but this young man made me so proud to call myself an American. And here's something else, it turns out he is Jewish.

"And Jack has a brother, Quinn, also on the USA hockey team, who earlier also delivered the decisive goal in the quarterfinal. Two clutch OT goals made by two Jewish brothers. The Hughes boys come from a family of ice hockey athletes. Jack plays professionally for the New Jersey Devils. His older brother, Quinn, was drafted seventh overall in the 2018 NHL entry draft by the Vancouver Canucks. His younger brother, Luke, was drafted fourth overall by the Devils in the 2021 NHL entry draft. Their father, Jim Hughes, is a former ice hockey player and team captain for Providence College, an assistant coach for the Boston Bruins, and the director of player development for the Toronto Maple Leafs.

"And that's not all. His mother, Ellen Weinberg-Hughes, played ice hockey, lacrosse, and soccer at the University of New Hampshire and, in 2012, was inducted into the University of New Hampshire Athletics Hall of Fame. She also played for the United States women's national ice hockey team, and won a silver medal at the 1992 World Championship.

"Wait, I'm not through. His uncle Marty, and his cousin, Teddy Doherty, were also both involved in ice hockey. Marty last played in the British National League for the Dundee Stars, and Teddy last played for the Manchester Monarchs of the ECHL. His maternal uncle is sociologist Adam S. Weinberg, the president of Denison University (but I don't think he played hockey).

"Not only an ice hockey wiz, Jack Hughes is an avid reader. He has brought books such as Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand and Kane and Able by Jeffrey Archer on trips with his team and down time. Hughes and his younger brother Luke announced the launch of their reading program Hughes Brothers Pucks & Pages, a multi-year reading program partnered with JAG Physical Therapy and Hockey in New Jersey, with the goal to promote literacy among New Jersey youth.

"So, yes, it is nice to witness a young athlete who is patriotic, humble, honorable, literate, and doesn't spew out profanity in front of TV cameras. Jack with his toothless grin, smiled and said, "I love the USA."

"What a mensch!"

Tuesday, March 03, 2026

"Unaffordability" - Except When You Spend a Fortune on a Huge SUV You Don't Need

I wonder what the "affordability" kvetches are saying today. These are the same people here who, while talking about how they can't afford food or clothes, have just somehow afforded to buy gigantic $50,000 Nissan Armadas and huge Jeep Cherokees.

The price of gas went up here 30 cents overnight because of Iran. I wonder what, if anything, these people are thinking now. 

Your Local Epidemiologist - The Dose, 3-3-26

Here's the latest important update from Your Local Epidemiologist:

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Hep B vaccine rates declining, RSV is having a late surge, more disease=more economic cost, AI and triage, and the U.S. surgeon general. The Dose (March 3)

Katelyn Jetelina and Hannah Totte, MPH, Mar 03, 2026

Somehow, it’s already March! And there’s a lot unfolding right now at the intersection of society and health. I’ve been especially thinking about Iranians—including my own family—and hoping we can all take a moment to listen and learn. If you’re looking for a place to start, I highly recommend the book All the Shah’s Men.

In the health world, we have flu hanging on, RSV making a surprisingly late appearance, and falling vaccination rates that will cost us more than most people realize. Plus, a reader question worth unpacking: Does the surgeon general actually need an MD?

Here’s what’s going on and, most importantly, what it means for you.


She grew up unvaccinated, she’s an immunologist, and she’s our colleague.

YLE’s own Liz Marnick published an op-ed in the NYT on Friday. I know I’m biased, but it’s a must read. Liz shares her story of growing up unvaccinated, hard conversations with her mother, and going on to study the immune system. And yet, when it came time to vaccinate her own child, she paused:

“In that one exhausted moment, what was loudest in my head was not the science I knew well. It was the stories I had heard growing up.”

Her message: shame doesn’t work. Please read it; it’s a masterclass in approaching this moment with empathy.


Disease “weather” report

This respiratory season just won’t quit. Flu activity is holding steady. One strain (flu B) is rising while another (flu A) is falling, and together they’re canceling each other out. That kind of plateau is unusual; most seasons follow a smoother up-and-down curve. But the timing isn’t surprising. In bad flu years, activity has stayed above epidemic levels well into mid-March.

Source: NREVSS

What is unusual is that RSV infections and hospitalizations continue to climb. It’s incredibly late in the season for RSV to show its teeth. Babies are most at risk.

What this means for you: It’s not too late to get your vaccines!

For RSV: If your infant received monoclonal antibodies (like Nirsevimab) this season, they’re likely still protected. Most monoclonal antibodies fade quickly, but the RSV ones were specifically engineered to last longer. Nirsevimab has a half-life of about 70 days—meaning the amount in the body decreases by half roughly every 70 days. Even so, studies show protective levels can persist for more than a year. So even doses given early in the season should still be providing coverage.

RSV NAb GMC through day 361 by treatment and medically attended, diagnostic-confirmed RSV infection. Source: Nature. Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

AI tools aren’t ready to triage you… yet

People want more control over their own health. Health care is expensive, hard to access, and appointments aren’t always easy to get. There is a lot of promise for AI, and people are already using it for their health: 230 million people ask ChatGPT health questions every week. So if AI tools could reliably help people decide when to seek care, that would be a big deal.

But a new study suggests we’re not there yet.

Researchers published a study last week in Nature Medicine testing ChatGPT Health, a new consumer health AI tool, on a basic but critical task: triage. Given a set of symptoms, could it correctly tell you whether to stay home, schedule a routine appointment, get seen urgently, or go to the ED?

The results were mixed, and concerning at the extremes:

  • For people who didn’t need a doctor at all, it sent them to one 65% of the time. A waste of time and money.

  • For routine visits, it correctly recommended seeing a doctor 95% of the time.

  • For people who needed emergency care, it only recommended the ED about half the time. It handled classic emergencies well, like allergic reactions or stroke, but struggled to recognize how sick someone was about to become, like the early stages of a diabetic complication.

  • More detailed medical data improved accuracy, but adding irrelevant information confused it. For example, when normal lab results were included alongside a note that a patient was suicidal, ChatGPT got it wrong. That’s obviously deeply concerning.

What this means for you: For straightforward health questions, AI tools can genuinely help and can certainly supplement a visit with a clinician. Add more details for more accuracy, but proceed with caution and certainly do not use it for emergency health issues.


And so it begins: Hep B birth vaccine rates are going off a cliff

One of the biggest open questions right now is how far vaccination rates will fall in the current climate before they level off and begin to climb again. Tracking vaccination rates in the United States is surprisingly difficult because we do not have a single, centralized, easily accessible system like countries such as Denmark do. Instead, data are fragmented across states and systems.

Still, early numbers are starting to come in, and the picture is not encouraging.

A group of researchers analyzed de-identified medical records from 2016–2025 to track hepatitis B vaccination trends. They asked: How far have we drifted from the expected path?

It turns out, quite a lot. For every 100 live births, 10 fewer newborns received the hepatitis B vaccine than models predicted. The decline began in late 2024 and now appears to be accelerating. (Note: The study period ended before RFK Jr. made the unilateral decision to stop recommending the hepatitis B vaccine for all newborns. That means the downward trend will continue.)

This is unsurprising in a way, but very concerning. I would love to see the findings repeated using other data sources. Unfortunately, this research is brief, and the methods aren’t described in great detail. But clearly, we aren’t going in the right direction in protecting babies’ health and wellness.

What this means for you: Continue to follow the AAP immunization schedule, which includes the hepatitis B birth dose. If you have questions, talk to your pediatrician.

  • If you’re navigating Hep B birth dose conversations with parents, what questions about routine immunizations are you getting? Do you believe this trend given what you’re seeing on the ground? Drop in the comments below.

  • Remember, YLE has this one-pager that includes the recent routine childhood immunization changes and reminders on why we vaccinate for these diseases, like Hepatitis B, in the first place. Feel free to print and distribute!

Vacunas Infantiles: Cambios de RFK
71.8KB ∙ PDF file
Download
Childhood Vaccines: RFK's Changes
67.2KB ∙ PDF file
Download


More measles = more economic cost

Infectious diseases mean people stay home sick and miss out on work, and health care bills are higher. They are also expensive for public health departments to combat. They’re not just a health problem. They’re an economic problem.

Thanks to a Common Health Coalition report, the U.S. now has economic numbers tied to declining MMR vaccination rates.

A 1% annual decline in MMR vaccination rates would lead to:

  • More suffering. Specifically, more than 17,000 measles cases, 4,000 hospitalizations, and 36 preventable deaths each year.

  • Major economic costs. On average, one measles case costs the U.S. health system $76,000. With the projected number of cases over 5 years, the estimated cost would be $1.5 billion. This breaks down to:

    • $41 million in medical costs (i.e., medical bills)

    • $947 million in outbreak responses (e.g., contact tracing, community outreach, surveillance)

    • $510.4 million in lost productivity and missed work costs

Childhood immunization is as essential to health system stability as it is to community health.

Source: Common Health Coalition

Importantly, this isn’t inevitable. It can be stopped. This report included solutions highlighting that everyone, from health insurers to health departments to clinicians, has a role to play.

What this means for you: As vaccine rates continue to decline, costs will be borne by you, your state, and your health insurance companies. Continue to urge your insurance company to cover routine childhood immunizations at no cost.

  • For those advocating for immunizations with local, state, or federal decision-makers, be sure to include economic costs. This can be compelling to those who prioritize budgets and resource allocation, since framing immunization as a cost-saving investment (rather than just a health measure) can be persuasive.


Question grab bag

“Serious question: Shouldn’t the surgeon general have a license to practice medicine?”

Short answer: Yes.

Most people know the surgeon general as “America’s doctor,” which is essentially a megaphone for public health. They have delivered landmark messages like those linking smoking to cancer. That role alone demands real expertise and credibility, but I would argue someone with a PhD in public health could do that as easily as an MD.

The lesser-known reason is that the surgeon general commands the Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service, a uniformed branch of 6,000 officers deployed into national emergencies, like hurricaines and disease outbreaks. The corps requires its own officers to hold an active, unrestricted medical license and complete residency training. This means that if Casey Means is confirmed as surgeon general (a big if right now), she would be responsible for enforcing standards she doesn’t meet.

Home | Commissioned Corps of the U.S. Public Health Service
Figure from the U.S. Public Health Service website

In case you missed it


Bottom line

Stay healthy, neighborly, and safe out there.

Love, YLE

Monday, March 02, 2026

Daniel Greenfield on How Not To Get Bombed by the U.S.

Every Democrat and every liberal agitator should be given a copy of this column.
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How Not To Get Bombed by the United States

"Here are some tips for national leaders who are looking not to get bombed by the United States.

"This is not entirely comprehensive, but it does cover a lot of the key areas.

1. Don’t make ‘Death to America’ your slogan

2. Don’t attack the U.S. embassy in your country and take staffers as hostages.

3. Don’t truck bomb other U.S. embassies in other countries

4. Don’t repeatedly bomb U.S. military bases and facilities around the region

5. Don’t kidnap, torture to death and then videotape the murder of U.S. personnel and send the tape to the president.

6. Don’t have your proxies get into an extended shooting war with the U.S. Navy

7. Don’t bomb yet another U.S. base and kill three soldiers

8. Don’t put a reward on the heads of American soldiers

9. Don’t plot to assassinate the president of the United States and members of his staff.

10. Don’t do all this while developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles and chanting “Death to America”

“Why are we bombing another Middle Eastern country?” Democrats who pretend they don’t know Jeffrey Epstein was best friends with the Clintons, that ICE is deporting illegal alien criminals and that Iran is responsible for the deaths of over 1,000 Americans, including over 800 military personnel, ask.

"But for any country that’s worried we’re going to bomb it next, well there’s a reason we’re bombing Iran and not India or Lichtenstein. Much like there’s a reason that Jeffrey Dahmer was beaten to death in prison. (Proposed New York Times eulogy: ‘Famous Gourmand Senselessly Beaten to Death in Recreational Men’s Facility.)

"This has been nearly 50 years in coming. The only thing surprising about it is that it took this long. But in all fairness, Jimmy Carter was in bed with a Pakistani terror bank, Bill Clinton was too busy preying on women and lying about it, and the only things Barack Obama would drop on Iran were pallets of illegal cash.

"Still who knew that chanting “Death to America” for two generations and killing Americans would lead to America killing you?

"The Koran should really come with some kind of warning label. ‘Warning: Infidels May Fight Back.’"

Caitlin Rivers' Outbreak Outlook 3/1/26

To see the charts and graphs that accompanied the original article, click on the link below.

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Outbreak Outlook - National - March 1

Flu plateau, RSV hospitalizations rise, Covid low

Influenza-like illness

New month, same flu. Despite some slight decreases, we are still stuck on a plateau stretching back to mid-January. Outpatient visits are holding steady at 4.4%, and about half of the states continue to report high or very high activity. It’s not uncommon for the season to run this long, but it does feel unfortunate given how high this season’s January peak was. 

There were slight decreases in outpatient ILI for each age group. (Looking hard for a silver lining here.) The youngest kids continue to head to the doctor the most often for flu-like illness: 11.7% of those aged 0-4. For those 5-24, outpatient visits for fever and cough or sore throat were at 8.4%, and were <4% for all other groups.

Emergency department (ED) visits decreased slightly to 3.2% nationally from 3.5% the week prior. ED visits are about the same in the Midwest, West, and South at a little over 3%. The Northeast is doing a bit better, and ED visits there have declined to around 2%. Hospitalizations are still elevated at 3.0 hospitalizations per 100,000, but are slowly declining.

Flu B continues to account for a greater proportion of cases, and now accounts for a majority (55.1%) of clinical lab samples, and nearly a third (28.9%) of public health lab samples. Flu B often ramps up in the springtime, after flu A has faded.
 

COVID-19

Covid-19 activity remains fairly low nationally. ED visits held stable at 0.6% this past week. Wastewater activity has been moderate for the past couple months nationally.

The Midwest continues to see higher activity than anywhere else, but even there activity is declining. ED visits have declined to a little under 1% for the region. Both the Northeast and South have ED visits ~0.7%. The West is doing particularly well, with ED visits down to ~0.4%. More severe illness, i.e., hospitalizations, are also holding steady at a fairly low 1.4 hospitalizations per 100,000. All told, activity is fine but not fantastic.

RSV & Other Bugs

RSV: Activity continues to be fairly high and rising. ED visits for RSV held steady at 0.6%. RSV test positivity is still going up, now at 8.6%. This is higher than it has been all season, but still a bit below last year’s peak. Hospitalizations continue to rise, reaching 3.2 hospitalizations per 100,000 this past week.

Activity is slightly higher in the West and Midwest, where ED visits are around 0.7%. Hospitalizations, however, are highest in the Northeast, at about 3.4. Things are improving a bit in the South, which has the lowest ED visit rate and hospitalizations decreased this past week to under 2.0 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.

Other bugs:

These are less-common causes of cold- and flu- symptoms. Surveillance for these pathogens is not very comprehensive, so we have only broad trends to analyze.

  • If you have a cold right now, you may very well have a human coronavirus to blame. Activity is very high and peaking.

  • Human metapneumovirus is also spiking.

  • Adenovirus has dropped to moderate levels

  • Parainfluenza and rhinoviruses/enteroviruses are very low right now.


Norovirus

Norovirus activity is very high. This is about the time of year when I expect rates to slowly start declining, and we did see a slight dip this past week in test positivity, to 14% nationally.

Hang in there!

Food recalls

The following foods are being recalled because they are contaminated. Please check your cupboards and throw out any of these items:

New:

  • Great Value (sold at Walmart) Cottage Cheese (more info)

  • Elite Treats Chicken Chips (for dogs). These may be contaminated with salmonella, which poses a health risk not only for dogs, but also for humans who handle the product or contaminated surfaces (more info).

  • Bremer Family Size Italian Meatballs (frozen, ready-to-eat) (more info)

Previously Reported:

  • Multiple flavors of cream cheese under the Made Fresh Salads, Inc. label (more info)

  • Frozen chicken fried rice products, sold under Trader Joe’s and Ajinomoto labels due to possible glass shards (more info)

  • Gerber Arrowroot biscuits (more info)

  • Organic chia seeds sold by Navitas Organics (more info)


In other news

  • ByHeart Infant formula botulism outbreak declared over. The CDC has closed the investigation into the ByHeart infant formula, which resulted in 48 confirmed and probable cases across 17 states, all 48 of which involved hospitalizations. Fortunately, no deaths were reported in this outbreak. Infants were sickened between December 2023 and November 2025. I find it troubling that the outbreak went on for so long, unrecognized. The FDA’s investigation into what caused the outbreak is ongoing.

  • Measles outbreak grows. In just eight weeks, the country has already recorded nearly half as many cases as all of last year, according to CDC data (1,136 so far this year compared to 2,281 in 2025). Cases have been reported in 28 states so far this year, and 90% of these are outbreak-associated (that is, the vast majority of cases are acquired via domestic, community spread). The most affected states so far this year are South Carolina (653), Florida (107), and Utah (149).

  • Reportable disease reports. If you are curious about FOI Clinical, a deep dive on seasonal vaccine effectiveness for the 2025-2026 season is now free to read. FOI Clinical is an outbreak report for clinicians (though all are welcome), with a focus on reportable diseases. Recent coverage has included measles, mumps, chicken pox, tularemia, mpox, and more. Subscribers also get real-time health alerts, recently on extensively drug resistant salmonella and flu B; 96% of readers have found the content helpful.

"No Imminent Threat"?

Can't the Democrats ever keep their mouths shut?  Their severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome is endangering us as a country. The latest lie is that Iran never posed an imminent threat to us here in America.  This after 2 weeks of Trump attempting to have constructive talks with them, getting nowhere, and deciding to act before Iran attacked us.

Iran has been an imminent threat to us since 1979. Anyone alive who remembers the nightly news countdown totalling 444 days that our countrymen were held hostage there knows better. Iran is a death cult, calling for "Death to America", "Death to Israel", indoctrinating their children to kill us, and recently slaughtering 30,000+ of its own people. Yet the Democrats conveniently overlook all that while Iran prepares weapons to use against us.

Israel  has lived under constant threat and missile bombardment from Iran.  Compare the huge size of Iran to the tiny state of Israel and think of what they've had to live with for half a century.  

And now even the Gulf States are being attacked,

The real imminent threat now is from the treasonous, despicable Democrats. I don't trust them at all, and the reason that the Trump Administration doesn't tell them about things like Operation Midnight Hammer and now Operation Epic Fury is because, in my opinion, the Dems would either tell Iran directly, or blab to the media. The Democrats have forgotten the old WW2 slogan, "Loose lips sink ships".

Dr Ruth's COVID, Flu & Health News, 3/1/26

There's a lot of important information you should know about thanks to Dr  Ruth Ann Crystal's latest newsletter.

Also, after Dr. Ruth's sign-off, continue  to scroll down at the link for lots more notes, charts, graphs, and references! 

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COVID, Flu & Health News, 3/1/26

By Ruth Ann Crystal MD, Mar 02, 2026 

Regarding winter respiratory illnesses:

  • Flu A has decreased, but Flu B is increasing in most parts of the country.

  • RSV is HIGH in wastewater across most of the nation and is causing emergency department visits and hospitalizations for infants and children 4 years and younger.

  • COVID is decreasing nationally, but remains elevated in some parts of the midwest and northeast.

Regional wastewater levels for COVID, RSV, Flu A, Flu B on 2/27/26:

Flu

Influenza A is declining, while influenza B is increasing across most regions. Children as a group have HIGH Flu severity at this point in the season, with adult and older adult age groups classified as having moderate Flu severity.

There were 8 more pediatric influenza deaths reported this week, bringing the 2025 to 2026 season total to 79. About 90% of children’s flu deaths occurred in kids who were not fully vaccinated.

Influenza-like illness Outpatient Visits through 2/21/26:

In California, Influenza test positivity is high, but hospital admission rates are currently low.

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RSV

RSV is HIGH in wastewater across most of the nation causing significant emergency department visits and hospitalizations for infants and children 4 years and younger.

COVID

As of 2/28/26, WastewaterSCAN reports HIGH levels of COVID especially in the Midwest and Northeast, although some places are starting to decline. COVID levels in wastewater are LOW in California.

As of a week earlier on 2/21/26, the CDC reported VERY HIGH levels of COVID in wastewater in Illinois, Mississippi, South Dakota and West Virginia.

From: https://www.cdc.gov/nwss/rv/COVID19-national-data.html

According to the CDC data through 2/24/26, COVID levels are trending upwards in Maryland and South Carolina, with increases probably starting in Kentucky, Virginia, North Carolina and Georgia as well.

At this time, there are no new COVID variants of note with the exception of BA.3.2 which has not gained momentum.

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General COVID Info

Extracellular Vesicles

Almost all cells release extracellular vesicles that carry proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids to communicate with other cells. In a study from Italy, researchers found that extracellular vesicles marked by CD169 and HLA-DR were elevated during acute SARS-CoV-2 infection (n = 48) and remained high in people with Long COVID (n = 25). These persistent signals suggest ongoing immune activation and position extracellular vesicles as potential biomarkers of disease severity and long term sequelae.

In a U.S. trial of 103 patients hospitalized with severe COVID respiratory failure, stem cell-derived extracellular vesicles from bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs) were tested for safety. Stem cell extracellular vesicle therapy was safe and well tolerated, with signals suggesting potential clinical improvement that will be tested in larger studies.

From: https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-8890163/v1

In a large U.S. real-world study including over 3 million adults at Penn State, researchers found that COVID infection significantly increased risks of kidney disease with 2.3x acute kidney injury, 1.4x chronic kidney disease, and 4.7x more end-stage renal disease compared with influenza. The findings suggest kidney monitoring after COVID infection may be important even in working-age adults.

Patients with both severe and non-severe COVID infections are at higher risk for both new-onset obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) for up to 4.5 years. “The association between non-hospitalized COVID-19 patients and new-onset OSA was stronger in women than in men, Hispanic versus non-Hispanic patients, and those with major underlying illnesses. Vaccinated and unvaccinated hospitalized and nonhospitalized patients were at similar risk for new-onset OSA.”

A pilot quality improvement study tested multilevel mitigation strategies with a COVID-19 risk-reduction toolkit for adults with cancer. The toolkit was found to be practical and acceptable for this vulnerable group.

Pregnancy

In a prospective trial in China, pregnant individuals infected with SARS-CoV-2 in the first trimester of pregnancy were found to have a higher risk of birth defects (9.2%) compared to uninfected people (4.7%). Heart defects were seen most commonly. The findings underscore the importance of infection prevention during early pregnancy.

Pediatrics

Two new articles show that children may have long term subtle heart effects after COVID. An Italian study of 67 children who had COVID and recovered showed that some kids had subclinical cardiac dysfunction and impaired regulatory T-cell (Treg) immune responses months later, even if their initial COVID infection was mild or asymptomatic. The findings highlight that silent heart effects and immune dysregulation may be under-recognized sequelae in pediatric post-COVID populations.

A systematic review evaluated cardiovascular outcomes from 19 studies comprising a total of 4,778 children with MIS-C after COVID infection. Most children showed improvement over time, but a subset had persistent cardiac abnormalities lasting up to 24 months seen on advanced scans. The review highlights the need for ongoing cardiac follow-up after MIS-C.

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Antivirals

A meta-analysis of 19 studies found that outpatients treated with nirmatrelvir/ritonavir (Paxlovid) had a 15% lower risk of Long COVID. Benefits were seen for heart, lung, brain, and metabolic symptoms, though not all symptom types were reduced. Other studies have shown that Metformin taken during COVID infection decreases SARS-CoV-2 viral load and also reduces Long COVID by 40 to 60%.

Long COVID

New research suggests SARS-CoV-2 may persist in the gastrointestinal tract long after acute COVID and that this persistent viral presence is associated with chronic inflammation and gut microbiota imbalance, which may contribute to Long COVID symptoms. A new review highlights how disrupted gut microbial composition can weaken antiviral defenses and promote ongoing tissue inflammation. It also discusses links between persistent gut infection and conditions like irritable bowel syndrome and inflammatory bowel disease as potential Long COVID features.

From: http://mdpi.com/1999-4915/18/2/247

In a study of 949 healthy blood donors (pre-pandemic and pandemic-era) and 212 patients hospitalized for severe COVID-19, IL-32 was elevated and remained high for at least a year in both severe COVID cases and also across the general population. Elevated IL-32 levels paralleled an increase in antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 even in people who felt healthy. In hospitalized patients, persistent IL-32 elevation did not correlate with IL-6, ICU admission, or mortality, but instead tracked with clinical signs of hyperinflammation such as steroid use. Persistent IL-32 elevation was also seen in people with Long COVID symptoms. SARS-CoV-2 may leave a lasting population imprint through a low grade inflammatory state marked by elevated IL-32.

This week, the Boston Globe featured an article on 28 year-old Samantha Crausman who has been largely bedbound for 4 years after COVID left her with severe Long COVID and ME/CFS. Her physician father and nurse mother search for answers while detailing the daily toll of chronic symptoms and uncertainty. The article also underscored the need for research, validation, and sustained clinical support for Long COVID patients.

As someone with a daughter who also has Long COVID, ME/CFS-type, I unfortunately know too well the personal and medical challenges families face when navigating a condition with limited treatment options. Part of the reason why I summarize the latest research articles on COVID and Long COVID each week is that I hope that the information may trigger new ideas for treatments from readers.

The RECOVER-TLC trial will be testing 4 treatments for Long COVID: GLP-1 RAs, LDN, Baricitinib, and Stellate Ganglion Block (SGB). Please submit any feedback that you may have regarding the SGB protocol for Long COVID here.

The NIH has also launched a randomized clinical trial called RECOVER-AUTONOMIC which will test treatments for postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) in people with Long COVID and will include trials of IVIG, Ivabradine and coordinated care.

Jon Douglas recently shared two places to find research articles on COVID and Long COVID:

  1. LitCOVID from the NIH

  2. his own Long COVID article aggregator: https://github.com/JonDouglas/lc-research.

🧠 COVID and the Brain

Why do post-COVID (Long COVID) patients often have neurological symptoms such as brain fog, fatigue and mood changes, while respiratory complications are more common after Influenza? A new Tulane study in mice shows that while both SARS-CoV-2 and influenza can leave lasting lung damage, SARS-CoV-2 can lead to persistent brain inflammation and small blood vessel injury in the nervous system, even long after the virus was no longer detectable.

Using human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived (iPSC) neural models, researchers from Bangkok found that SARS-CoV-2 preferentially infected astrocytes rather than neurons. Astrocytes expressing viral entry factors, including CD147 (BSG gene), showed the highest susceptibility to infection. These findings help explain how SARS-CoV-2 may contribute to neurological symptoms through selective disruption of brain support cells.

A new review explores how SARS-CoV-2 infection may disrupt Golgi apparatus structure, leading to Golgi fragmentation in cells. The authors propose that this may contribute to neurodegenerative pathways similar to those seen in Alzheimer’s disease. The paper offers a detailed mechanistic hypothesis linking viral infection, cellular stress, and long-term neurological risk.

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POTS

In a single-patient case report from the Dysautonomia Clinic, a person with treatment-refractory POTS for 8 years experienced marked symptom improvement after starting semaglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist typically used for diabetes and weight management. The authors describe autonomic symptom relief and improved daily function with semaglutide, though mechanisms remain unclear and may relate to metabolic or neurovascular effects of GLP-1 modulation. This observation is preliminary and hypothesis-generating, highlighting the need for controlled studies to assess semaglutide’s role in POTS.

H5N1

“The H5N1 bird flu virus that devastated South American elephant seal populations has been confirmed in seals at California’s Año Nuevo State Park, researchers from UC Davis and UC Santa Cruz announced Wednesday.”

Measles

As of February 26, 2026, 1,136 confirmed measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026. A total of 6 measles cases were reported among international visitors to the United States and the rest were from outbreaks.

As of Feb. 27, 2026, the South Carolina Department of Public Health is reporting a total of 985 cases of measles centered around Spartanburg County.

As of Feb 24, 2026, the Utah Department of Public Health reports that 319 Utahns have been diagnosed with measles in this outbreak, with 62 cases reported to public health in the last 3 weeks.

US Measles cases in the last 2 weeks (Feb 6 to Feb 20, 2026):

From: https://publichealth.jhu.edu/ivac/resources/us-measles-tracker

“A new non–peer-reviewed study estimates that measles outbreaks in the United States cost more than $244 million in 2025 alone and warns that even modest declines in childhood measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination could trigger billions of dollars in additional losses over the next five years. MMR vaccine coverage among US kindergarteners has fallen steadily since the 2019–20 school year, alongside a national resurgence of measles.” If measles vaccination rates continue to drop just 1% annually for the next five years, the cost to the United States could reach $1.5 billion a year, according to the Yale School of Public Health.

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HLA and Immunity

Autoimmune diseases are known to be associated with specific HLA II genotypes- Celiac disease (HLA-DQ2/DQ8), Rheumatoid Arthritis (HLA-DRB1), Type I diabetes (HLA-DQB1*03:02 (DQ8)), and others. In a new study, UCSF researchers analyzed autoantibody profiles in 741 healthy individuals and found that autoantibody repertoires varied according to HLA class II genotype. In fact, they found that autoantibody panels in the blood of healthy people could predict their HLA type with at least 90% accuracy.

In a study involving 822,438 participants, researchers at the University of Bonn showed that tiny traces of Epstein–Barr virus DNA detectable in blood genomic data reflect differences in viral load. Host genetic factors, particularly HLA variants, strongly influenced lifelong viral control. These genetic patterns were also linked to increased risk of Multiple Sclerosis, Rheumatoid Arthritis, and Type I Diabetes.

Government Health News

This week, the Lancet featured this quote on its front cover:

“The destruction that Kennedy has wrought in 1 year might take generations to repair, and there is little hope for US health and science while he remains at the helm.”

and featured an article entitled Robert F Kennedy Jr: 1 year of failure.

From: 2/24/26 https://x.com/CAgovernor/status/2026415448091394165

Here are some more headlines from this week:

NY Times: 15 States Sue the Trump Administration Over Vaccine Schedule Revisions

Trump administration to withhold $259M in Minnesota Medicaid funds, citing fraud

Birth-dose Hepatitis B vaccination rates plunged more than 10 percentage points in past 2 years [in the U.S.], study suggests

Cervical cancer rates higher in states with low HPV vaccination rates

Guinea-Bissau officials stop ethically flawed CDC-funded Hepatitis B vaccine trial

ACOG Withdraws From ACIP, Citing Scientific Integrity Concerns

Other News

A nasal spray that works against diverse respiratory threats

Giving mice a nasal spray vaccination with 3 liposomal adjuvants- TLR4, TLR7/8, and ovalbumin- revved up both the innate and adaptive immune systems to protect the mice against a variety of insults including viral infections (SARS-CoV-2, SARS, SCH014 coronavirus), bacteria (Staphylococcus aureus, Acinetobacter baumannii), and allergens. The nasal spray provided broad, durable and non-specific protection in mice for at least 3 months. Congrats to the Pulendran lab at Stanford on this work!

In an open-label pilot study at Johns Hopkins involving 20 adults with post-treatment Lyme disease, two supervised psilocybin sessions were safe and well tolerated. Participants showed sustained improvements in fatigue, pain, sleep, mood, and overall quality of life that lasted up to six months. Although uncontrolled and preliminary, the results suggest psilocybin-assisted therapy may warrant further study for chronic infection-associated syndromes.

Women often experience longer-lasting pain than men and are more likely to have chronic pain. A new study shows that in male mice and humans, androgens signal monocytes to make more IL-10 which then shuts down pain faster in sensory nerves.

For IVF, an embryologist manually searches follicular fluid under the microscope to find eggs. A company called AutoIVF has made a microfluidic device called FIND-Chip that automates the isolation of eggs from follicular fluid in IVF. In a clinical study involving 582 patients from four IVF centers, in >50% of cases, FIND-Chip recovered mature oocytes (eggs) that would have been inadvertently thrown out.

A new study of 460,000 teens in the Kaiser Permanente Health System found that those teenagers who used cannabis were more likely to develop serious mental illnesses such as bipolar disorder, psychosis, depression, and anxiety by their mid-20s, with younger users at especially high risk. The findings suggest that early cannabis use may be more harmful to developing brains than many teens expect.

A study in Nature Medicine evaluated ChatGPT Health, a consumer-facing AI health triage tool that launched to millions of users in January 2026. The AI did reasonably well in moderate cases, but struggled at the extremes. “Among gold-standard emergencies, the system under-triaged 52% of cases, directing patients with diabetic ketoacidosis and impending respiratory failure to 24-48-hour evaluation rather than the emergency department.”

A new AI approach described in Lancet Digital Medicine uses sleep physiology data as a rich source of information to predict future health outcomes, effectively “decoding” sleep patterns to infer disease risk.

In 2019, 9-year-old Kade Lovell was supposed to run a 5K, but a volunteer accidentally sent him onto the 10K course instead. He ran the full 10K (6.2 miles) in 48 minutes and 17 seconds, crossing the finish line first and beating the second-place finisher (a 40-year-old man) by nearly a minute.

From CNN

Have a great week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD