Wednesday, July 01, 2026

Dr Ruth Report, 6-29-26

Here's more medical useful information by Dr Ruth Ann Crystal. The news about the lowest levels of COVID is very interesting. I will still keep my guard up anyway.

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Dr. Ruth Report, 6/29/26

First, I wanted to highlight an important article that affects us all.

How The OMB Rule Could Hurt You And Your Town | Dr. Judy Stone, Forbes 6/24/26

  • A proposed OMB rule (2 CFR Part 200) would extend Trump administration grant cuts beyond scientific research to all federal grants to states, cities, and nonprofits nationwide. Political appointees would replace peer review panels, DEI research would be effectively banned, agencies could terminate grants at any time for any reason, and all grant programs would have to “align with the President’s policy priorities” or be denied if an organization’s affiliations or views are deemed “un-American”.

What can you do? Please write a comment on the Federal website here before July 13. Here is a guide giving examples of how to write your comment regarding the OMB proposed rule change to 2 CFR Part 200.

COVID

COVID levels are very low across most of the United States now. Even the hotspots are not anywhere as high as they were in the past. For example, the highest level on WastewaterSCAN is in Pascagoula Moss Point, Mississippi at 160 PMMoV. While this is high, it is nowhere near what past COVID levels have been.

On June 23, 2026, the CDC estimated that COVID infections were growing in Louisiana, Mississippi, and parts of Texas. COVID infections were declining in 34 states, and were unchanged in 12 states according to the CDC.

According to JP Weiland, COVID wastewater levels are 5 to 8x lower than prior lulls, with roughly 40,000 new U.S. infections daily, though a small late summer wave is possible in the West and South. Mike Hoerger estimates are somewhat higher, putting active infections at about 1 in 310 Americans, with hot spots like Mississippi closer to 1 in every 40 people currently infected.

Acute COVID infections, General COVID info

Large-scale genomic surveillance reveals immunosuppression drives mutation dynamics in persistent SARS-CoV-2 infections | Nature 6/19/26

  • University of Copenhagen researchers screened 738,944 SARS-CoV-2 genomes from Denmark’s national surveillance system and identified 303 cases of persistent infection. Immunosuppressed patients faced nearly 6x the odds of prolonged COVID infection compared to others. These persistent infections also accumulated more nonsynonymous mutations, including variants associated with antiviral drug resistance, underscoring immunocompromised populations as a critical site of viral evolution.

Coevolving Mutations in Chronic SARS-CoV-2 Infections | BioRxiV 6/25/26

  • Researchers analyzed 3,332 SARS-CoV-2 sequences from chronic COVID infections and identified 14 recurring mutation patterns, including signatures associated with deep lung tissue and evasion of T cell immunity. These co-evolving mutations may help explain how prolonged viral persistence inside individual hosts shapes the evolution of the virus and potentially contributes to Long COVID pathology.

Plasma proteomics reveal SERPINA1 and CD59 as candidate biomarkers for COVID-19 severity stratification and prognosis prediction | Annals of Medicine 6/21/26

  • Chinese scientists found that plasma levels of proteins SERPINA1 and CD59 increased with acute COVID severity, reflecting disruptions in both complement activation and coagulation pathways. When evaluated together, the two proteins outperformed D-dimer in predicting mortality at 12 months, though the findings require validation in larger cohorts.

Type I unconventional protein secretion of the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein promotes inflammatory cytokine release | Cell 6/26/26 “July 2026”

  • A new study shows that the SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein (NP) can exit infected cells independently through an unconventional secretion pathway, releasing NP into the bloodstream, even in the absence of detectable viral RNA. The secreted NP was found to activate granulocytes which make inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and TNF-α.

COVID and Immunology

Persistent CD4+ T cell hyporesponsiveness during recovery from prolonged symptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection | Cellular Immunology 6/21/26 (August issue)

  • Researchers from the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation studied 17 COVID patients and found that 5 individuals with prolonged symptoms showed CD4 T cells that responded weakly to stimulation, producing more than 50% fewer gene activations and reduced interferon signaling compared to normal immune responses. Encouragingly, 4 of those 5 patients eventually showed improvement over time, suggesting the immune dysfunction was not necessarily permanent.

This is similar to the Columbia University preprint from last week that showed that dysfunctional T cells paradoxically suppressed antiviral interferon responses, permitting chronic viral persistence and recapitulating features of Long COVID.

Pediatrics

A parent’s story of Long COVID by Cartoonist Summer Pierre 6/24/26

SSRI/SNRI and long COVID in children and adolescents with neuropsychiatric conditions: a cohort study from the RECOVER Initiative | Nature Mental Health 6/29/26

  • University of Pennsylvania scientists examined data from 110,955 children and adolescents with neuropsychiatric conditions to evaluate whether antidepressant use affected Long COVID outcomes. SSRI and SNRI use showed no association with reduced Long COVID risk overall, but was linked to elevated rates of POTS, brain fog, and fatigue in this population.

Antiviral treatments

Dual engagement of Spike and ACE2 by annexin A5 contributes to pleiotropic SARS-CoV-2 inhibition | Nature preprint 6/20/26

  • Annexin A5 (or annexin V) is a cellular protein that can bind to phosphatidylserine, a marker of apoptosis. The function of the protein is unknown, but it has been shown to inhibit blood coagulation in vitro. Antibodies to annexin A5 are found in patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), which is a thrombophilic disease.

  • A new preprint shows that Annexin A5 (Anx5) can simultaneously bind both the SARS-CoV-2 Spike protein and the ACE2 receptor. This dual binding action reduced SARS-CoV-2 viral burden and increased survival rates of infected cells, suggesting that annexin A5 may work as a COVID antiviral.

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Long COVID

How to Apply For—and Receive—Your SSDI by Dr. Zeest Khan

  • Long COVID physician Dr. Zeest Khan, herself disabled by the condition, breaks down the SSDI application process with disability attorney Barbara Comerford. Only 32% of initial claims are approved, and Long COVID rarely qualifies for fast-track approval, but expert documentation of PEM, dysautonomia, and cognitive dysfunction can make the difference.

Blinded 2-Year Longitudinal Evaluation of SARS-CoV-2 Antigenemia in Long COVID | Clinical Microbiology and Infection 6/20/26

  • Spanish researchers studied 425 adults (167 with Long COVID, 148 COVID recovered, and 110 uninfected controls) and found that 31% of Long COVID patients, 20% of recovered individuals, and 5% of never infected controls had detectable SARS-CoV-2 antigens in the blood using the ultra-sensitive Simoa® assay at 6-12 months post infection. COVID antigen levels had largely disappeared by the two year mark. They concluded “SARS-CoV-2 antigens circulate in plasma up to one year after infection in a minority of individuals, regardless of whether they develop Long COVID or not, and become rarely detectable later on. Therefore, current evidence does not support its use to guide clinical monitoring or treatment decisions in Long COVID.”

A) Proportion of participants with detectable antigenemia on Simoa assay

Increased Mannosylation of Extracellular Vesicles in Long COVID Plasma as a Binding Target for Galanthus nivalis Agglutinin (GNA) Affinity Resin | Int J of Molecular Sciences 6/25/26

  • Researchers from UCSF and Aethlon Medical analyzed plasma samples from 45 individuals and found that Long COVID patients had 2x higher levels of extracellular vesicles coated with mannose, a sugar molecule that tags these microscopic cargo carriers. This pattern of mannose enrichment on the surface of extracellular vesicles may help explain aberrant immune signaling in Long COVID.

Aethlon Medical Announces Publication Demonstrating Novel Long COVID Biomarker and Potential Therapeutic Target for the Hemopurifier® | Aethlon Press Release 6/26/26

  • Mannose positive extracellular vesicles can be removed from the blood using GNA resin in the Hemopurifier from Aethlon. These vesicles may act as a measurable biomarker for Long COVID and are a potential therapeutic target for filtration based treatments like the Hemopurifier.

  • MicroRNAs (miRNAs) can also be removed with the GNA resin Hemopurifier.

Circulating micro RNAs in post-COVID-19 patients and its association with cognitive impairment | Nature 6/24/26

  • MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are tiny RNA molecules that regulate gene activity by binding to messenger RNAs (mRNAs), preventing those mRNAs from being translated into proteins. Spanish researchers studied 64 long COVID patients and identified a specific blood microRNA signature associated with measurable cognitive deficits. Reduced levels of miR-448 and miR-450a in the blood were linked to worse performance across memory, processing speed, and executive function assessments.

Integrated miRNAome-transcriptome analyses identify an immuno-hematopoietic

subcluster in patients with long COVID | J of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 5/31/26

  • University of Helsinki scientists analyzed blood microRNA and messenger RNA (miRNA and mRNA) from 107 adults (50 Long COVID, 57 recovered controls) following COVID infection and identified two distinct Long COVID subgroups. Subgroup LC1 was distinguishable by 9 miRNAs and LRRFIP2 with an AUROC of 0.91 and showed elevated D-dimer levels, activated platelet pathways, and immune and blood cell signaling patterns which was linked to worse symptoms, disability and reduced quality of life.

From: https://www.jacionline.org/article/S0091-6749(26)00439-2/pdf

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Increased anti-nucleocapsid secretory IgA and consumption of complement component 3 in post-COVID syndrome patients | Frontiers in Immunology 5/13/26

  • Researchers from Madrid compared 104 post-COVID syndrome (PCS or Long COVID) patients to 34 COVID-recovered controls and found significantly elevated salivary anti-nucleocapsid secretory IgA and reduced serum C3 levels in Long COVID patients, with 17.3% of Long COVID samples falling below the normal C3 range compared to none among controls. A combined biomarker model using salivary anti-nucleocapsid IgA and C3 achieved an AUC of 0.93, suggesting these paired mucosal and systemic immune markers may offer clinically useful discrimination of Long COVID.

Cellular Metabolic Signatures of Long COVID-19 | Infectious Disease Reports 5/26/26

  • Clemson University researchers generated Lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) from 10 Long COVID patients, 10 COVID-recovered controls, and 50 pre-pandemic healthy controls, finding distinct metabolic signatures in each group. Long COVID cells showed depleted energy production across glycolytic, TCA cycle, and mitochondrial pathways. They also responded poorly to hormones and cellular signaling molecules, with greater metabolic dysfunction seen in those Long COVID patients with higher symptom burden, providing a potential biological explanation for hallmark Long COVID symptoms including fatigue and muscle weakness.

Donepezil ameliorates fatigue and depression in PASC patients with HHV-6B SITH-1-induced acetylcholine deficiency | Frontiers in Pharmacology 6/3/26

  • Donepezil (Aricept) treats memory loss and confusion in people with Alzheimer’s disease. It works by boosting acetylcholine in the brain to help improve attention, memory, and daily functioning. Japanese researchers found that nearly 63% of 156 Long COVID patients carried antibodies to the HHV-6B protein SITH-1, which animal models suggest suppresses acetylcholine production in the brain. Among 73 trial participants, the Alzheimer’s drug donepezil (Aricept) reduced fatigue and depression exclusively in those Long COVID patients who tested positive for the antibody.

Functional and structural olfactory changes in post-COVID-19 patients detected by 7 Tesla MRI | Nature 6/26/26

  • In 30 adults with persistent COVID related smell loss, researchers from the University of São Paulo used 7 Tesla MRI brain scans and found thinning of the orbitofrontal cortex, and disrupted activity in the insula, thalamus, and memory-linked smell circuits of the brain. These findings show a distinct brain signature for long-term impaired smell function (dysosmia) after COVID infection.

Transcranial direct current stimulation in affecting neuropsychiatric symptoms of post-COVID syndrome: No change in microstates and functional connectivity | PLOS One 6/26/26

  • A Czech study of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in 35 people with Long COVID showed that this tDCS protocol did not improve neurocognitive symptoms nor EEG measures of brain network activity.

Algorithm dependence of patient phenotypes in Long COVID: a patient-led, multi-method clustering of 6031 patients using 162 self-reported symptoms | Oxford Open Immunology 6/13/26

  • The Patient-Led Research Collaborative analyzed 162 self-reported symptoms from 6,031 Long COVID adults and found that subgroup clusters shifted substantially depending on the algorithm used, with no clear natural boundaries in the symptoms. All methods used identified a high-burden group enriched for post-exertional malaise. Patient “types” may be gradients, and not fixed categories.

Pilot longitudinal integrated transcriptomic–metabolomic study reveals immune and metabolic signatures in non-hospitalized healthcare workers with long COVID | Frontiers Cellular and Infection Microbiology 6/3/26

  • In a small study, University of British Columbia scientists studied transcriptomics and metabolomics in 47 healthcare workers (12 with Long COVID and 35 recovered controls) and found that Long COVID was associated with neutrophil driven inflammation alongside elevated levels of oxoglutarate, an energy related metabolite that signals metabolic disruption. The authors postulate that there may be “potential links between persistent innate immune activation, metabolic reprogramming, and neurocognitive or systemic symptoms in Long COVID.”

Risk of new-onset obstructive sleep apnea up to 4.5 years after COVID-19 in the urban population | Nature 6/23/26

  • Researchers from Einstein Med and Montefiore analyzed more than 910,000 adults and found that COVID infection was associated with a significantly elevated risk of developing obstructive sleep apnea for up to 4.5 years afterward, even after mild infection. The authors caution that this large observational study establishes a statistical association rather than a confirmed cause.

Viruses and Neurodegeneration

Viral Infections and Neurodegenerative Diseases: Reinterpreting the Crosstalk Through a Dual-Role Lens | Current Microbiology 6/24/26

  • A review from Golestan University, Iran shows that viral infections can accelerate neurodegenerative diseases through at least four overlapping biological mechanisms: persistent brain inflammation, abnormal protein folding, mitochondrial dysfunction, and breakdown of the blood brain barrier. Engineered viruses may paradoxically be used as targeted therapeutic delivery systems.

Measles

CDC Measles Update

  • As of June 25, 2026, 2,134 confirmed measles cases have been reported in the United States in 2026.

CIDRAP Op-Ed: Call it what it is—the US has lost its hold on measles elimination | CIDRAP 6/24/26

  • Public health scientist Jess Steier, DrPH (Unbiased Science) states that the US has already lost measles elimination status by any objective measure. With 2,104 cases by June 18, 2026, 48 outbreaks in 2025, and genomic sequencing tracing continuous transmission across multiple states since January 2025, only 6% of current cases are imported. PAHO’s review is now delayed until November after the midterm elections.

Utah tops 500 cases for the year | CIDRAP 6/26/26

  • Active measles outbreaks now in Utah (507 for the year, 9 new cases this week), Virginia (129 cases), Pennsylvania (83 measles cases). South Carolina’s measles outbreak was 670 cases. Texas has had 182 measles cases, and Florida 155 measles cases through June 20.

Ebola in DR Congo (DRC)

As Ebola deaths top 300, African officials meet to boost regional readiness | CIDRAP 6/26/26

  • “The Ebola outbreak, which is now the second largest in DRC [history], shows no signs of slowing and currently stands at 1,155 confirmed cases and 304 deaths. Neighboring Uganda has 20 confirmed cases and two deaths. In a press conference yesterday, Africa CDC Director-General Jean Kaseya, MD, MPH, warned that if contact tracing efforts don’t pick up, “for sure it will be the largest Ebola outbreak ever.”

Government News

How The OMB Rule Could Hurt You And Your Town | Dr. Judy Stone, Forbes 6/24/26

Flu cases at Texas base hit 275 as services again require recruits to get shots | The Hill 6/25/26

  • At least 275 military training recruits at Lackland Air Force Base in Texas have contracted the flu, up from 160 last week. Four trainees have been hospitalized with influenza, and one recruit’s death is under investigation. Defense Secretary Hegseth’s April 2026 decision to make flu vaccination optional for all U.S. troops led to 60% of trainees being unvaccinated. The Army, Navy and Air Force are reportedly now requiring flu shots once again for basic trainees.

A look at the science that’s been lost on long COVID | NPR 6/22/26

  • The Trump administration has dismissed hundreds of scientific advisory committee members since taking office, including a dedicated Long COVID panel. Clinicians managing Long COVID patients are now without formal federal guidance on the underlying mechanisms, diagnostic criteria, and treatments for Long COVID.

A Terrible Thing Happened to My Family | Pete Buttigieg 6/26/26

  • Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg revealed that his 4-year-old twins were temporarily removed from their home after an anonymous caller made a false CPS report accusing him of violent crimes. Michigan State Police confirmed the report was fabricated. Buttigieg called it a politically motivated hoax and said he is exploring civil and criminal legal options.

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Other news

An ECG biomarker for sudden cardiac death discovered with deep learning | Nature 6/24/26

  • Wow! Researchers from the University of Gothenburg applied deep learning to a dataset linking all ECGs recorded in Sweden, identifying a new biomarker on ECG for sudden cardiac death risk. The marker in lead aVL was validated in 3 different cohorts and was linked to the benefit of using a defibrillator.

  • An explainer article can be found here.

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WHO warns Europe is world’s fastest-warming continent as heat heave shatters records | CBC News 6/28/26

  • France reported an extra 1,000 deaths in 3 days from a severe heat wave this week. WHO Director Dr. Tedros warns that Europe is the world’s fastest warming continent now and European workplaces, hospitals, and homes were not built for these high temps.

Hospitals in England declare critical incidents as machines and IT fail in heat | Guardian 6/25/26

  • At least three NHS England hospital trusts declared critical incidents as record June heat exceeding 36°C (96.8°F) knocked out chiller units, MRI scanners, operating theatres, cancer radiotherapy machines, and IT servers. Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals had no working MRI scanners; Portsmouth and Southampton also suspended planned surgeries and appointments. A prior report found 90% of NHS buildings ill-equipped for prolonged extreme heat.

Imperial Valley data center developer files lawsuit seeking access to Colorado River water | KPBS 6/15/26

  • “For months, Sebastian Rucci said his massive data center project would not take water from the drought-stricken Colorado River.” He is now suing for 260 million gallons of Colorado River water annually to cool a proposed AI data center. The Colorado River supplies water to roughly 40 million people across seven states, and Imperial Valley farmers hold some of the river’s oldest and largest water rights.

Phase 3 Trial of Oral Infigratinib in Children with Achondroplasia | NEJM 6/28/26

  • Achondroplasia is a genetic disorder that is the most common cause of dwarfism. A new study shows that “In children with achondroplasia, treatment with once-daily oral infigratinib for 52 weeks resulted in a significantly greater increase from baseline in the annualized height velocity than placebo.”

Global competition on Influenza and COVID-19 prevention and control | WHO

  • Students and young professionals ages 18 to 35 are invited by the WHO to submit short videos (90 seconds maximum) addressing Influenza and COVID prevention, myths, and protection strategies. Submissions open August 3 and close September 13, 2026.

Ending respiratory infections | Intercept 6/24/26

  • Intercept is a new $500 million philanthropic initiative aimed at catalyzing the development and deployment of technologies to drastically reduce the burden of respiratory infections, with an eventual goal of eliminating them altogether.

Kate, Princess of Wales, climbs Britain’s three highest peaks in 24 hours to raise money for cancer hospital | CNN 6/29/26

  • “ Catherine, Princess of Wales, completed Britain’s arduous Three Peaks Challenge over the weekend to support the hospital where she underwent cancer treatment two years ago.”

AI helps read papyrus scroll burnt to crisp during Vesuvius eruption | Guardian 6/24/26

  • Using AI trained to detect ink from X-ray scans, researchers virtually unwrapped a carbonized scroll charred in the 79 AD Vesuvius volcano eruption, revealing 20 columns of previously hidden text. The content, discussing stoic ethics and impulse regulation, may be an unpublished work by Greek philosopher Chrysippus.

I will be taking off next week for the holiday. Have a wonderful 4th of July!

Ruth Ann Crystal MD

Your Local Epidemiologist: The Dose, 6-30-26

Here's another very timely and informative column by Your Local Epidemiologist:

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Heat illnesses, flu outbreak in the military, a new mRNA flu vaccine, and more

The Dose (June 30)

Somehow it’s already July. And with it comes the heat, along with the health consequences that follow. We’re also seeing a rise in the virus behind many sore throats, plus some possible early Covid-19 signals in the South.

A military flu outbreak continues to increase after the removal of a vaccine requirement. A summer flu outbreak? Yes, it’s possible, and yes, it sure feels like we’re spending an awful lot of energy undoing lessons earlier generations learned the hard way, only to reinstate them once we've relearned why they existed.

We’ll close with some good news and a question from the YLE community: Does DEET attract mosquitoes?

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


Disease weather report

Heat risk rises

Large swaths of the U.S. will be dangerously hot this week, on the heels of an extreme heat wave in France that led to 1,000 excess deaths across 5 days. The risk in the U.S. peaks Thursday, when more than 170 million people will be in areas at “high” or “extreme” health risk from heat.

Highlighting Impactful Heat in the Seven Day Forecast. Source: NOAA

What this means for you: If you live in the red or purple patches above, everyone needs to take action, not just those who are high-risk. Enter your zip code for guidance. YLE will be back tomorrow with more tips and tricks.

Very small signs of Covid-19?

Every summer, the U.S. sees a Covid-19 wave, and this year should be no different, though the big question is how large it will get. Each year’s summer wave has been smaller than the last, and I hope it eventually becomes a blip.

Nationally, wastewater levels are extremely low, among the lowest we’ve seen in a very long time. But movement is starting in Southern states, and emergency department visits there, while still low, are beginning to climb. This is typically where the summer waves begin.

Healthy Cup

We’re in week 3 of the World Cup, and no major outbreaks are tied to the games other than heat-related illnesses.

The YLE team detected increased chatter on social media about unidentified cold-like illnesses, including reports of a sharp sore throat, body aches, cough, headache, and fever. Some viruses do peak at this time of year, such as parainfluenza. (See the yellow line below.)

Source: CDC; Annotated by Hannah at Your Local Epidemiologist

When the Health Security Operations Center looked into it using a more advanced wastewater technique, another virus—called parechovirus—also showed a rapid increase. This doesn’t have a common test in clinical or wastewater settings, so it usually flies under the radar. Most people catch this virus in childhood, and it is spread through close contact. It’s often mild, with few or no symptoms, though it can cause cold-like symptoms. It’s most severe for infants, where it can rarely cause meningitis.

What this means for you: If you’re feeling crappy, it may be one of these viruses, and the normal tests at a doctor’s office will come up negative. For most healthy people, both are mild and clear up on their own. Rest and drink plenty of fluids. And, as always, call your physician with questions.

—Julia Tellerman, YLE epidemiologist at the Health Security Operations Center.


Spotlight: Military flu outbreak follows a vaccine requirement policy change

You’ll notice the flu didn’t appear in the disease weather report above. Yet a flu outbreak has hit the military just weeks after a policy change made vaccination optional for active-duty service members. Nearly 300 at a boot camp are now sick.

How is a flu outbreak during summer possible? And is it truly because of the policy change?

What is unfolding at these training camps is essentially a combination of bad luck after a risky policy:

  1. Flu never disappears. A big June outbreak is unusual, but flu doesn't vanish in summer; it just drops to very low levels. Wastewater for Flu A is essentially zero right now, with only sporadic Flu B. But a spark is possible.

  2. Once it sparks, the environment plays a big role. And this is a unique environment. Spread comes down to a few things: environment (human behavior), weather (cold, dry air), and the usual unknowns. Recruits live, eat, sleep, and train in tight quarters around the clock, so even with summer weather working against it, the virus has room to move. Epidemiologists have watched flu burn through summer-camp dorms for exactly this reason. Wider community spread is unlikely, though: the weather is wrong, school is out (students are a major driver of transmission), and recruits confined to base have little outside contact.

  3. Policy impacts behavior. The general public doesn’t get vaccinated this time of year, since there’s generally not much flu to vaccinate against. But basic training is the exception: according to veterans, recruits are vaccinated on arrival, regardless of the month. After the requirement was dropped, only about 40% of new recruits chose the shot, down from near-universal coverage before (roughly 99% in the Navy, Air Force, and Marines, and about 98% in the Army). We don’t know whether this outbreak was caused by the same flu strains the vaccine covers.

Dropping the flu vaccination requirements is a scientifically and economically risky decision. The requirement had been in place since the 1950s for one simple reason: military readiness depends on keeping troops healthy and in the field. Remember, the Spanish flu took as many American lives in the barracks as battle did in WWI.

So, did this outbreak dent readiness? This is important because it’s one of the rationales for a requirement. This is where a denominator would help, and I haven’t found one reported publicly. Three hundred sick out of 400 means basically the whole base went down, which is bad for preparedness. The same 300 out of 6,000 is under 3%, which seems more manageable.

The vaccine requirement was quietly reinstated last week. This is the right call, as this outbreak foreshadows the possibility of an outbreak affecting all troops during the actual flu season. That certainly would impact military readiness.

As epidemiologists say: Bugs have ears.


Good news

  • Medicare gets access to reduced-price GLP-1s. Starting Wednesday, some Medicare recipients will be able to get the drugs for a $50-a-month co-payment. Here are the criteria. The coverage is only for a temporary trial period, set to expire at the end of 2027.

  • Naloxone options expand. The FDA approved another over-the-counter nasal naloxone. More options on the shelf mean more competition, lower prices, and easier access to a medication that can reverse an opioid overdose in minutes. Wider availability saves lives.

  • A new mRNA flu vaccine. Remember that flu vaccine that RFK Jr.’s FDA said they wouldn’t review and then, after immense backlash, reviewed again? Well, we got exciting news: the external FDA advisory panel voted 9-0 to back Moderna’s mFlusiva (mRNA-1010), set to be the first mRNA-based seasonal flu vaccine in the U.S. In a trial of over 40,000 adults aged 50 and older, it cut symptomatic flu by about 27% compared with a standard shot, with a bigger effect on hospitalizations and immune responses than even the high-dose senior vaccine. With a final FDA decision expected by August 5, it could be available for the 2026–2027 season.

    • But there’s a major wrinkle. The U.S. has no functioning ACIP, due to ongoing legal battles between the American Academy of Pediatrics and RFK Jr. So while the FDA may call it safe and effective, no one is in place to set policy on who gets it and when. That likely means Americans won’t have access to this vaccine this fall, but it’s worth following closely.


Question grab bag

Any truth to the study that DEET might attract mosquitoes?

There is no evidence DEET intrinsically attracts mosquitoes. A recent 2026 lab study showed that they can be conditioned to associate fading DEET with food, prompting many headlines. This associative learning from mosquitoes is fascinating, but the number of times a mosquito feeds over its natural lifespan is in the single digits (3-5ish, depending on species). There has also been some research suggesting that a single mosquito species may become somewhat desensitized to it over time.

The practical takeaway remains the same, though: keep using DEET and reapply regularly. It remains one of the most effective preventive measures we have against mosquitoes, and we are enterinig mosquito-borne illness season.

—Dr. Marisa Donnelly, YLE NY correspondent, trained in mosquito-borne illnesses.


Bottom line

Heat is the immediate health threat this week, so start there (check your zip code). But the bigger takeaway is that the public’s health suffers when systems quietly stop doing the boring things that keep us safe.

Love, YLE


Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) comprises a team of experts, ranging from physicians to immunologists to epidemiologists to nutritionists, working together with one goal: to “translate” ever-evolving public health science so that people are well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. The YLE suite of newsletters reaches over 475,000 people across more than 132 countries.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

A Reminder About The Risk of COVID

COVID has fallen out of the news lately, and people aren't paying much attention. Here's a reminder from Mayo Clinic about who is at higher risk for serious COVID.

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Advanced age and some health conditions can raise the risk of serious COVID-19 illness.

Many people with COVID-19, also called coronavirus disease 2019, recover at home. But for some, the illness can lead to hospital care, treatment in the intensive care unit or death.

Not every risk factor for serious COVID-19 illness is known, but some are clear. Age and having chronic health conditions both raise your risk, for example. Other factors may include where you live, work or learn. Access to medical care also may affect risk. Having more than one risk factor makes the risk of serious illness even higher.

If any of these risk factors apply to you, and you have symptoms of COVID-19, act quickly and talk with your healthcare team about treatment options. Medicine to treat the illness works best if started right away.

Age and COVID-19 risk

People age 65 and older and babies younger than 6 months have a higher than average risk of serious COVID-19 illness. Those age groups have the highest risk of needing hospital care for COVID-19.

Babies younger than 6 months aren't eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, which adds to their risk. Older people may be more at risk because the immune system may be less able to clear out germs. Medical conditions that raise the risk of serious COVID-19 also become more likely with age.

How age and health conditions affect COVID-19 risk

Serious COVID-19 illness is more likely for people who have other health issues.

Some common health conditions linked to aging are:

  • Heart disease. Examples are heart failure or coronary artery disease.
  • Diabetes. The risk is higher for both type 1 and type 2.
  • Chronic lung diseases. This includes conditions that damage lung tissue.
  • Overweight or obesity. The risk goes up with overweight or obesity measured by body mass index, also called BMI.
  • Chronic kidney disease. This is especially true if you are on dialysis.

These conditions become more common as people age. But they can affect people of any age. The risk of serious COVID-19 illness is linked to having one or more underlying medical conditions.

Lung diseases and COVID-19 risk

The risk of serious COVID-19 illness is higher if you have lung disease. Examples include tuberculosis, cystic fibrosis, interstitial lung disease, bronchiectasis and COPD, which stands for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Other lung conditions, such as a history of pulmonary hypertension, affect a person's risk of serious illness after COVID-19.

Cancer and COVID-19 risk

In general, having cancer can raise the risk of serious COVID-19 illness. People who have blood cancer may have a higher risk of being sick for longer, or getting sicker, with COVID-19 than people with solid tumors. This also is true of people who had blood cancer in the past.

Cancer treatment also may affect how well your COVID-19 vaccine works. Ask your care team about getting vaccinated after treatments that affect some immune cells.

Other conditions that raise the risk of severe COVID-19

If an organ or body system is already weakened by disease, infection with the COVID-19 virus can cause further damage. In other cases, medicine for another condition can lower the immune system's response to the virus that causes COVID-19.

Many different diseases can raise the risk of severe COVID-19 illness.

  • Brain and nervous system diseases, such as stroke.
  • Chronic liver disease, specifically cirrhosis, metabolic dysfunction-associated liver disease (MASLD) and autoimmune hepatitis.
  • HIV that is not well managed with medicine.
  • Heart disease, including congenital heart disease and cardiomyopathies.
  • Mood disorders or schizophrenia.
  • An organ or stem cell transplant.
  • Blood disorders such as sickle cell anemia and thalassemia.

Other risk factors for severe COVID-19 are:

  • Smoking.
  • Pregnancy or having recently given birth.
  • Use of medicines that lower the immune system's ability to respond to germs.

Also, as a general group, people with complex medical needs may be at higher risk. Examples include people with cerebral palsy and people with genetic or metabolic syndromes.

These are not the only conditions that increase the risk of severe COVID-19. Talk with your care team if you have questions about your risk.

COVID-19 vaccines and serious illness

The COVID-19 vaccine can lower the risk of death or serious illness caused by COVID-19. Your healthcare team may suggest added doses of COVID-19 vaccine if you have a moderately or seriously weakened immune system.

How else can you lower the risk of severe COVID-19?

Besides vaccination, there are other ways to stop the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19.

In addition to COVID-19 vaccination, make it a habit to:

  • Test for COVID-19, especially if you have symptoms. Also, test five days after coming into contact with the virus even if you do not have symptoms.
  • Try to spread out in crowded public areas. This is especially important in places with poor airflow and if you have a higher risk of serious illness. If possible, try to keep air flowing when you're inside.
  • Wear a mask when you're inside a crowded place with poor airflow. This is most important when many people in the area are sick with COVID-19. Masks are most effective if they fit the face closely.
  • Stay apart from people who have symptoms or who are sick. Avoid close contact with anyone who is sick or has symptoms, if possible.
  • Wash your hands often and wash them well with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. Or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer with at least 60% alcohol.
  • Cover your coughs and sneezes. Cough or sneeze into a tissue or your elbow. Then wash your hands.
  • Clean and disinfect high-touch surfaces. For example, clean doorknobs, light switches, electronics and counters regularly.

These basic actions are even more important for people who have weakened immune systems and their caregivers.

There is one medicine that may be used to prevent COVID-19 in people with weakened immune systems. It is a monoclonal antibody called pemivibart (Pemgarda). But this medicine does not treat an active infection.

People can take other actions based on their risk factors.

  • If you're at a higher risk of serious illness, ask your care team about ways to protect yourself. Know what to do if you get sick so you can quickly start treatment.
  • Lower your risk of COVID-19 complications by making sure that any health issues are well managed. This includes staying on track with managing medical conditions, going to all medical appointments and planning ahead to avoid running out of medicine. Keep taking medicines as suggested by your healthcare team.
  • Stay up to date on vaccines. This includes vaccines for flu, pneumonia and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). These vaccines won't prevent COVID-19. But becoming ill with a respiratory illness may worsen your outcome if you also catch COVID-19.

Also, consider making a care plan. Write down your medical conditions, medicines, special food or diet needs, care team members, and emergency contacts.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Two Columns By Melanie Phillips

Here are two columns by the great Melanie Philllips. One is on blatant Democrat & DSA antisemitism; the other is on Mamdani making it easier for Islamic enemies to destroy New York like they've destroyed London. And meanwhile, the moderate-by-comparison Democrats remain silent. 

It will soon be the 25th anniversary of Al Qaeda's  September 11 terrorist attacks. Like these Dem Socialists, they also hated Jews, capitalism, and America.  Let's hope that the Republican Party takes full advantage of this to talk about what America will turn into if these despicable Jew-hating Socialists somehow take over our country and destroy it the way the Twin Towers were destroyed.

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Alarm bells go off in New York