Thursday, March 19, 2026

Your Local Epidemiologist 3-19-26: COVID, 6 Years Later

Covid-19 six years later

Six years ago today, I put my baby in a camping carrier, strapped her on, opened my laptop on my dining room table, and started typing as fast as I could. I couldn’t believe how little communication existed that was timely, understandable, and actionable, with the humility and honesty the public deserved. So I tried to fill that gap, bringing my fellow faculty, staff, and students along for the Covid-19 journey in real time, signing every email the same way: Love, Your Local Epidemiologist. I told my husband I would only have to do this for six weeks. Surely someone would fill this gap… The rest is a blur (with many lessons learned along the way.)

March 22, 2020 during the lockdown. Strapped the baby in order to work from home. The start of YLE.

A lot has changed since then. I don’t do many deep dives on Covid-19 anymore because the landscape has dramatically changed for the better, but also because, honestly, it brings back some overwhelming emotions. But this anniversary matters not only so you can protect yourself from this virus that is still circulating, and not only to honor the 1.5 million people who died, but also because this moment deserves serious reflection.

So, six years later, this is where we stand.

A lot has changed, and continues to do so.

Covid-19 is no longer the third leading cause of death. In fact, it now carries roughly the same severity as the flu. While flu is nothing to brush off, this virus not being a top killer is genuine relief.

Data from CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

Even better news: Peaks are getting smaller and smaller. Each successive wave has been lower than the last, a pattern reflected in almost every metric, including hospitalizations (see below). This isn’t surprising: as our collective immunity builds, the virus has a harder time breaking through. SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve along the same narrow path, which is unusual but very helpful in reducing the number of people with the disease. The Covid-19 cousins we call coronaviruses are now responsible for the common cold, and there’s a hypothesis that this virus may eventually follow the same path. We are clearly not there yet, as hospitalization rates tell us, but the trajectory is meaningful.

Covid-19 Hospitalizations per 100,000. Source: CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

Interestingly, seasonality has recently shifted. We now reliably see two waves each year: one in winter, one in summer. But nationally over the past two years, the summer wave has been larger than the winter wave (see above). We don’t know why.

Unfortunately, vaccination rates continue to fall. Roughly 3.5 million fewer older Americans were vaccinated this year compared to last year. That means 3.5 million people in the highest-risk group are now less protected from a largely preventable disease. With all the federal vaccine confusion, I expect this to continue to decline.

Some patterns haven’t changed, though.

For example, those most at risk for severe disease remain the same:

  • Adults over 65 and infants under one year old continue to be the most likely to be hospitalized.

  • The vast majority (80%) of hospitalizations are still for Covid-19, not incidentally with it.

  • Risk increases with the number of chronic conditions a person has.

  • Long Covid (physical symptoms persisting weeks or months after infection) is also still a risk.

Also, the vaccines continue to provide additional protection—about 50% against emergency room visits and hospitalization. Protection does still wane, dropping to roughly 18% at around four months. The decline is slower than before, particularly for hospitalization among adults aged 65 and older.

Data: CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

There’s still a lot we don’t know.

It’s striking how much remains unknown about this virus six years in.

Long Covid is still poorly understood, with millions of people living with fatigue, cognitive impairment, and cardiovascular effects that medicine is only slowly grappling with. We know risk has decreased alongside the decline in severe acute disease, but we still lack reliable data on the extent of that decline, and we still have no effective treatments.

Vaccine dosing for older adults is another gap. Current guidance recommends two updated vaccine doses per year for older adults: one in the fall and one in the spring. But robust data on whether two annual doses offer better protection than one is still extremely limited. In fact, I couldn’t find any data that are actually useful for guiding people, like my grandfather, to make evidence-based decisions about getting a second dose and when. (I’m still telling him to get two doses because the benefits outweigh the risks, but man, we need evidence.)

We also still don’t have a clear, honest accounting of which interventions worked, which didn’t, and why during the biggest health emergency this country has faced in more than 100 years. For example, we still don’t know what works best to slow the spread of Covid-19. This is mind-boggling, given all we sacrificed as a society, let alone indicating how ill-prepared we are for next time.

Today, what worries me most is deeper than the science.

When researchers compared countries that fared well during Covid-19 to those that didn’t, they looked at health care infrastructure, population density, universal health care, age distribution, how many vaccines they got, and a ton of other factors. But the strongest predictors of Covid-19 infections weren’t any of these. It was trust: trust in government, trust in institutions, trust in each other. Countries where people broadly believed their neighbors and leaders were acting in good faith did measurably better. The United States ranked among the lowest among high-income countries.

Six years later, it’s getting worse.

Federal leadership has promised to restore trust. But the latest data show record-low levels of trust in government overall, and specifically in health agencies; trust is eroding further day by day. Lack of transparency, full-on destruction of systems and capabilities, partisan attacks, lack of accountability, performative acts without real change, and a failure to listen to the public are all contributing to it.

First graph source: Pew; Second graph source: Annenberg Public Policy Institute

Public health, on the outside, though, isn’t providing an alternative path forward either. Many institutions and leaders are stuck in defense mode, circling the wagons to preserve the status quo, or paralyzed, afraid to take even one step forward. Wishing we could return to 2019 is not a plan. Public health systems saved many people, but they also failed many.

I’m finally starting to see some appetite for change peppered here and there, and it’s giving me hope that things might improve, but not at the pace that meets the urgency of the moment.

The health of Americans and biosecurity depend on it.

Bottom line

Six years! Six years with a complicated data story of real progress alongside real stubbornness. This anniversary is striking to me for two reasons. The first is the virus itself: it continues to surprise us, and we remain humbled by how much we still don’t understand. The second is what has happened to us in its wake.

Six years ago, I sat down at my dining room table because I deeply believed things needed to be done differently. I still believe that today. The question now is whether this country has the wherewithal to do it. I think we do (we need to), but it’s going to take all of us.

Love, YLE

P.S. A lot of you have Covid-19-related questions. My team pulled the top 7. Here are some answers for you!

  1. What do we know about long Covid in 2026? The risk of developing long Covid has decreased significantly compared to early pandemic years, but it’s not zero. Millions are still living with it, and we still have no proven treatments. Here is YLE’s last dive into long Covid.

  2. Will we still be able to get updated vaccines this fall? This is uncertain in a way it has never been before. The federal government’s vaccine policy is highly unstable.

  3. Are home rapid tests still reliable? Yes, but timing still matters. Tests are most accurate a few days into symptoms, not at the first sign of illness. So, a negative on day one is not a green light. Test again 24 to 48 hours later for a clearer picture. There are no longer free Covid-19 tests through the government, but you can get one at a pharmacy or online.

  4. Where do I find trustworthy data now? I still trust the CDC data (for these reasons), and they have a great respiratory dashboard that is updated weekly here. I don’t trust CDC’s guidance around vaccines from the past year.

  5. How much damage does Covid do to the heart, brain, and vascular system? Covid infection is associated with an elevated risk of heart attack, stroke, blood clots, and cognitive decline, even after mild cases. The elevated risk appears to diminish over time for most people, and vaccination reduces the likelihood of these outcomes.

  6. Who should take Paxlovid, and is it still effective? Paxlovid remains effective at reducing the risk of severe disease, particularly for people over 65 and those with underlying conditions. (It may also reduce the risk of long Covid, though if it does, the effect is probably small.) The $800 out-of-pocket cost for Medicare patients is a serious, largely unaddressed barrier that keeps it from those who need it most. Metformin has shown some promise in preventing long Covid, but the benefit for vaccinated people is less clear, probably because the vaccines already reduce the risk so much that it’s hard to see additional benefit on top of them.

  7. When are we getting a vaccine that prevents infection, not just severity? This is a complicated question, and scientists are still working on it. Right now, many researchers are excited about nasal spray vaccines. The idea is that if you can build up immunity right in your nose and throat (where the virus first enters), your body might be able to stop the infection before it even starts. But there are a few catches. If you’ve already had Covid-19, getting a regular vaccine already sends immune cells to your nose anyway, so a nasal vaccine might be less of a leap forward than we hope. On top of that, it likely wouldn’t protect you for long and would still require regular boosters as the virus mutates. The good news is that nasal and mucosal vaccines are being developed right now, and early results look promising. Scientists are also working on a universal coronavirus vaccine that could protect against many variants at once, but that’s a longer-term goal. The bottom line: better vaccines are coming, but a widely available next-generation option is probably still a few years away.


Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is founded and operated by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife, and mom of two little girls. YLE reaches over 320,000 people in over 132 countries with one goal: “Translate” the ever-evolving public health science so that people will be well-equipped to make evidence-based decisions. This newsletter is free to everyone, thanks to the generous support of fellow YLE community members. To support the effort, subscribe or upgrade below:

Melanie Phillips on The Self-Destruction of Great Britain

It's maddening and sad to see this once great country destroy itself because of political correctness, illegal immigration, and weak leaders.

Read this column and see how familiar it sounds. Thank goodness America's not quite this bad...yet. But if the Democrats win the White House in 2028, things will get very bad very quickly.

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

Why the nation of Churchill is no more.  A former diplomat blows the whistle on anti-Israel bias and Islamist entryism
Melanie Phillips, Mar 18, 2026

"The “special relationship” between Britain and America is currently on life support. US President Donald Trump is furious with the British Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, for refusing to join the US and Israel in the war against Iran.

"He is furious with others in the west too for similarly refusing even to help defend the Straits of Hormuz, the “chokehold” waterway which the Iranian regime is currently threatening to attack. As a result, traffic through the Straits has dwindled to a handful of tankers and the price of oil has soared.

"As Trump has pointed out, the refusal of Britain, Europe and others to help defend the Straits is particularly egregious since they are vastly more dependent on the oil coming through there than is America.

"They are refusing not just because they are pusillanimous appeasers who will never themselves lift a finger to confront tyranny and are all too happy to rely parasitically on the US to defend their interests.

"That behaviour is disgraceful enough. Far worse is their objection to the war itself, taking refuge behind a perverse denial of the 47-year war waged by Iran against America, Israel and the west to declare falsely that the current war is an illegal act of aggression under international law.

"And behind that bubbles an unsavoury stew of disgust and fear of Trump’s moral clarity over Iran (yes, you read that right); venomous hostility to Israel founded in the destruction of their own moral compass; and the disintegration of their sense of national identity and purpose and ability to acknowledge, let alone defend themselves against, predatory foes both from within and without and who need to be fought.

"This is the context within which to understand the pathetic spectacle of Starmer shaming and betraying his country. He has totally collapsed the Labour party’s last vestige of its historic claim — which Starmer himself made, when he was purporting to fight the party’s exploding Jew-hatred under the previous leadership of Jeremy Corbyn — that “the Labour party is a moral project or it is nothing”.

"Well, now we can see it is indeed nothing. Starmer and his party have refused to take part in the heroic, desperate and courageous attempt finally to rid the world of a very great evil, the Islamic regime of Iran.

"Those fanatics are up to their necks in the blood of their own people as well as that of American and British soldiers in Iraq and elsewhere. Through their proxies, they’ve made countless innocents into victims of the world’s biggest state sponsor of terrorism, and have slaughtered equally countless Israelis and Jews who they intend to wipe off the map altogether.

"This terrible regime has not only destabilised other countries in the region; it has not only presided over a global drugs trade that has funded its genocidal murder machine by turning untold numbers in the west into lethally addicted zombies; but it also squats at the centre of the global axis of evil comprising Russia, China and North Korea which it has provided with fuel, armaments and a centre of economic and geopolitical gravity.

"If the civilised world is ever to be freed from this lethal constriction that has been relentlessly suffocating the life out of it, the head of the snake must be severed. Yet Britain, the once lion-hearted nation that under Winston Churchill saved the free world and whose greatest exports have been political freedom, military excellence and cricket, has turned its back on this vital and desperate endeavour.

"It has also demonised and punished Israel for defending itself against the regime’s murderous attacks — through promoting the exterminatory Palestinian cause, pushing Hamas propaganda lies, and supporting lawfare witch-hunts and military boycotts against the Jewish state — while fawning over the tyrants of Tehran.

"Shortly before the war, just weeks after the Iranian regime massacred thousands of its own people protesting at its tyranny — with the streets of Tehran reportedly running red with the blood of those who were ruthlessly gunned down by the regime’s security goons — staff of Britain’s Foreign Office actually attended a party at the Iranian embassy in London to celebrate the revolution that had brought these monsters to power in 1979.

"The Telegraph reported:

"As smartly dressed guests, including UK civil servants, gathered at the London event, embassy officials hailed Iran’s “remarkable accomplishments” in spite of “unjust” Western sanctions. Video footage shows attendees standing in silence for a rendition of Iran’s national anthem…

"Seyed Ali Mousavi, Iran’s ambassador to the UK, gave a speech praising the Iranian regime and attacking Western sanctions on Tehran. “For nearly half a century, Iran has faced relentless pressure; from the eight-year imposed war and severe sanctions to acts of sabotage and terrorism,” he said.“Nevertheless, by relying on domestic capabilities, national cohesion and empowered human resources, it has achieved significant progress.” …

"A large banner can be seen adorned with pictures of Ali Khamenei, the former Iranian supreme leader who was later killed by US-Israeli strikes, and Ruhollah Khomeini, his predecessor…The attendance of Foreign Office staff at the embassy event, as well as unnamed “representatives” from the UK Parliament, was hailed by Iranian state media. It is not known how many government officials took part.

"That nauseating spectacle has prompted a rare whistle-blowing moment from within the circles of Britain’s foreign policy establishment. In an article for the Telegraph yesterday, Edmund Fitton-Brown, a former UK ambassador to Yemen and who was a British diplomat from 1984 to 2017, identified a disastrous absence of moral clarity, “systematic bias” against Israel and Islamist entryism. He wrote:

"That officials thought it appropriate to celebrate the Iranian Islamic revolution speaks volumes about the strange topsy-turvy morality of the Foreign Office, an institution increasingly unsure who Britain’s friends and enemies actually are…

"Israel is treated with a forensic level of scrutiny that few other states receive, while the behaviour of its adversaries is frequently contextualised, rationalised, excused or ignored. Take the long list of recently retired senior Foreign Office signatories to a letter last year, calling for the immediate recognition of a Palestinian state, in the face of strenuous US objections. Or the official advice blowing hot and cold over Britain’s involvement in the current conflict with Iran…

"Two decades on from Blair/Bush, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that another factor has grown in importance: Islamist entryism not just in the Foreign Office but also throughout the Civil Service and a range of other professions. We have seen a steady reframing of debates, including in the sphere of national security. Allies portrayed as the problem, adversaries become misunderstood actors with legitimate grievances. Hate marches for Hamas and the Houthis show that inversion in society and the Civil Service reflects society. Over time, that inversion produces exactly the kind of misjudgment we saw this week.

"The Islamic Republic has been waging undeclared war on the West for nearly 47 years, promoting a “Death to America” message that applies equally to the Little Satan, the UK. Iran still refuses to withdraw the fatwa against Salman Rushdie, issued by Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989 and reaffirmed repeatedly since. That decree called for the murder of a British citizen for the crime of writing a novel – and very nearly killed him in 2022. Until it is formally rescinded, the idea that relations with Tehran can ever be described as friendly is fanciful. A government that still sanctions the killing of writers should not expect to party with British officials…

"It is mystifying that Sir Keir Starmer, having promised in opposition to proscribe the IRGC, still hasn’t done it, even after the EU has. We have had many recent terror plots in the UK, often against Jewish targets, and often sponsored by Iran. Who exactly needs to get killed before we take decisive action?

"Foreign policy begins with moral clarity. If we cannot even decide whether celebrating the birth of the Islamic Republic is appropriate for British officials, then it is little wonder that our position in the Middle East increasingly resembles that of a country sitting nervously on the fence, hoping the conflict will pass us by while our influence quietly ebbs away.

"This rare lifting of the curtain to reveal the moral squalor of Britain’s foreign policy establishment, civil service and wider society that is destroying the UK’s position in the world makes Fitton-Brown’s article exceptionally important. Apart from an item on GB News, however, no other media outlet has yet seen fit even to mention it.

"Says it all, doesn’t it."

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Ignoring COVID's Impact

I've never stopped talking about COVID, and there are plenty of people on Twitter and elsewhere who make sure that COVID -- which is still here -- won't be forgotten.

However, there are also plenty of Americans who shrugged off COVID as "just a cold" and who have minimized or ignored it for the most part, preferring to look for conspiracies to explain the pandemic. Those people will never change. 

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

Why we don't talk about COVID anymore

By Alissa Widman Neese at Axios 3-18-26 

Six years ago this week, COVID-19 dominated daily life. Schools closed, headlines tracked cases, and Ohio reported its first deaths and postponed a primary election.

Why it matters: Today, the pandemic that killed over 1 million Americans and reshaped society has largely faded from public conversation.

  • That silence isn't unusual — but it could have real consequences, an Ohio State University public health historian says.

Driving the news: Associate professor Marian Moser Jones and other researchers have interviewed over 120 local and state health officials across the U.S. to document how they navigated the pandemic.

  • They hope to create a historical record before memories fade and society moves on.
  • "There's almost been a consensus — in a time when we don't have consensus about a lot — that we're going to move on and not talk about this anymore," Moser Jones tells Axios.

What they've found: Many health care workers witnessed traumatic scenes, including patients dying alone, and endured months of fear and uncertainty before vaccines and treatments existed.

  • And officials, once praised as heroes, became targets of anger and blame.
  • The urge to suppress painful experiences is deeply human, Moser Jones tells Axios.

Flashback: There was a similar desire to move on after the 1918 influenza pandemic, which killed about 675,000 Americans and intertwined with World War I.

Case in point: The library's Dispatch archives show references to "Spanish flu" or "Spanish influenza" — the virus' original misleading name — waned by the 1930s and then mostly disappeared for decades.

  • In 1964, the newspaper's magazine published a four-page retrospective.

Between the lines: A politicized pandemic is hard to collectively mourn, Moser Jones says. Unlike wars or other tragedies, there are no remembrance days or memorials.

  • And by its nature, an endemic virus has no true "end."

Yes, but: Putting the pandemic behind us too quickly makes it hard to assess what worked and what didn't — and whether public health officials are equipped for the next crisis.

The bottom line: "People are going to want to know what happened," Moser Jones says.

  • "Pandemics are going to come back, whether we repress our memories or not."

Horrific New COVID Death Totals in 2020-2021

As if people need another reason create conspiracy theories about COVID, and to distrust the medical field. This tragic revelation comes from Scientific American 3-18-26:

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

COVID probably killed 150,000 more people in its first two years than official U.S. tolls show. "We have severely undercounted the number of COVID deaths", scientists say.

By Meghan Bartels edited by Tanya Lewis

"COVID may have killed significantly more people in the U.S. in the first two years of the pandemic than official records indicate, with as many as one overlooked death for every five recorded ones. That brings the total to nearly one million deaths just in 2020 and 2021.

"That calculation comes from research published today in Science Advances that seeks to understand how many COVID deaths fell through the cracks of official reporting systems. The untallied cases show the burden of the pandemic in the U.S. fell most heavily on marginalized people.

“These vulnerable groups are just taking a higher risk at every step, and the accumulation of all of that is this disparity in COVID mortality at the end,” says Mathew Kiang, an epidemiologist at Stanford University and a co-author of the study.

"In the new research, Kiang and his colleagues analyzed official records published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for deaths occurring from March 2020 through December 2021 for adults aged 25 and older—some 5.7 million records in all. First, they fed a machine-learning algorithm the records of deaths in hospitals, which at the time were testing most patients for COVID. They trained the algorithm to recognize hospital deaths in which COVID was formally identified as an underlying cause. Then they used the algorithm to flag potential unrecognized COVID deaths by identifying records that looked like hospitalized COVID deaths but occurred in other settings where testing was less likely.

"All told, the algorithm identified between about 150,000 and 160,000 potential unrecognized COVID deaths on top of the 840,251 that were officially reported. Those numbers suggest that for every five recognized COVID deaths, one additional death went unmarked. That ratio is on par with other analyses that have simply compared the total observed number of deaths with the number of total deaths expected based on historical data, says Daniel Weinberger, an epidemiologist at the Yale School of Public Health, but the new method is both more sophisticated and more granular.

Dot plot shows the percentage difference between the algorithm’s estimate and the number of recorded COVID deaths in each U.S. state from March 20 to December 2021.

"Kiang says it isn’t surprising that deaths resulting from COVID were missed. “Death reporting in the United States is a fragmented infrastructure that’s underresourced,” he says. “During the pandemic, it was highly strained. We had more deaths than we’d ever had” in modern history.

"But what stood out to him were the patterns behind the unrecognized likely COVID deaths: they were most likely to have occurred among Hispanic people, at home, among less educated people, and among people with lower incomes. When analyzed by state, Alabama, Oklahoma and South Carolina had the highest ratios of such deaths.

"Those patterns tell an important story about how COVID unfolded within the U.S. and its fragmented health systems. “This underreporting that we found wasn’t random,” Kiang says. “Pretty systematically, what we found was that communities in areas that were most impacted by the pandemic were also the ones with the most unrecognized COVID-19 mortality.” By analyzing the dramatic case of the COVID pandemic’s early years, researchers can better understand how the same factors that made people vulnerable to COVID affect more routine health conditions, Kiang says.

"During the pandemic, “systems in our society, including barriers to accessing health care, kept desperately ill Americans from recognizing the need for care and getting to the hospital,” says Steven Woolf, a physician and social epidemiologist at Virginia Commonwealth University, who was not involved in the new research. He worries not only that those barriers remain but also that cuts to Medicaid and increasing health insurance premiums may be exacerbating them. “People on the margins continue to die at disproportionate rates because they can’t access care.”

When Baseball Meant More Than Just a Game

While watching the final moments of Venezuela's emotional victory in the World Baseball Classic last night, it was obvious to me that the win meant much more to the team than just a trophy. They were winning for their fellow countrymen as a reward for all they had gone through with Maduro. The reactions of the players and especially the fans brought back memories for me of the night President Bush threw out the first pitch -- a perfect strike -- at Yankee Stadium a month after the horrific September 11 terrorist attacks. That attack had unified the country, brought back patriotism, the American flag, and  the singing of  "God Bless America" during the seventh inning stretch.

And Bush's strike in the old Yankee Stadium was the cathartic moment we all needed. 

I think Venezuelans must have felt similar emotions last night.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Your Local Epidemiologist, 3-17-26

Good news on the vaccines front from Katelyn Jetelina, Your Local Epidemiologist, March 17, 2026:

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

A win for your access to vaccines, federal accountability, and health
AAP vs. RFK vaccine lawsuit

HERE. WE. GO.

After a year of chaos around vaccines in the United States, a federal judge just slammed the brakes.

In a lawsuit brought by the American Academy of Pediatrics against RFK Jr., a federal court ruled that the CDC’s vaccine advisory committee cannot move forward under the changes he imposed and reversed every action the committee had taken since summer 2025.

This is an incredible victory for kids who deserve barrier-free access to vaccines, for clinicians who need clear guidance and the autonomy to do what’s best for their patients, and for a country that deserves leadership capable of making both possible.

What happened?

ACIP is an external advisory committee to the CDC. It has an enormous influence on who should get which vaccines and when. Its recommendations shape what insurance covers, what physicians can routinely offer, and how easily families can access vaccines if they choose them.

Because of that influence, ACIP has traditionally relied on a few core principles:

  • Transparent meetings

  • Honest presentation of data

  • Rigorous review of safety and effectiveness

  • Flexibility when new evidence emerges

This process isn’t perfect, and there’s real room for improvement. But it works when evidence is weighed carefully, openly, and fairly.

That same influence also made ACIP a powerful lever. And RFK Jr., who has spent more than two decades publicly questioning vaccines and amplifying falsehoods about their safety and value, was well positioned to pull it.

Last June, after becoming HHS Secretary, he removed the entire existing committee and replaced it with new members whose expertise and interpretation of evidence raised serious concerns. The meetings that followed reflected those concerns:

Science should include disagreement and hard questions, which is healthy. The concern is that a process designed to rigorously evaluate evidence instead becomes a platform for ideological beliefs.

Then, in January 2026, RFK Jr. bypassed his own ACIP committee, the CDC Director, and every scientific and clinical process we have, including rejecting public comment, to unilaterally make sweeping changes to the routine vaccination schedule for children in the United States. This change wasn’t based on new data or new evidence, but rather on political and ideological reasons.

What did the judge say?

The judge temporarily ruled that the decisions made over the past year are invalid, because the process itself broke the law in three ways:

  1. The CDC bypassed ACIP, which Congress requires. Multiple federal laws covering insurance coverage, Medicaid, veterans’ benefits, and the Vaccines for Children program explicitly tie benefits and obligations to ACIP’s recommendations. The HHS Secretary cannot simply change the immunization schedule without ACIP’s involvement.

  2. The new ACIP was not “fairly balanced” as required by the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA). Of the 15 members, the court found only about 6 had meaningful vaccine-related expertise. ACIP’s own charter requires members to be knowledgeable in immunization practices, vaccine use, or vaccine safety research. The rushed appointment process (replacing all 17 members in roughly two days, without normal outreach or vetting) further undermined the committee’s legitimacy.

  3. Changes were arbitrary and capricious. The government gave no real explanation for departing from decades of established process, other than that it was following a presidential memo. That’s not enough under the Administrative Procedure Act.

The judge had some pretty incredible remarks in his ruling:

What’s next?

This ruling is a temporary hold on ACIP while the case moves through the courts.

A much-anticipated ACIP meeting this week was expected to include several votes, including on Covid-19 vaccines. ACIP meetings cannot proceed with the current members, so the meeting is cancelled.

Now, technically, this group of advisors handpicked by RFK Jr. could still gather informally. Anyone can meet anytime. They could hold a book club, a coffee chat, or a knitting circle. And they could find ways to megaphone their ideologies and cherry-pick studies. Many of them have very big online platforms.

But what they can’t do is operate as an official federal advisory committee: using government meeting rooms, staff support, travel funding, and government levers to shape your access to vaccines, like through insurance coverage or physician liability threats.

The real question now is what comes next:

  • Will RFK Jr. follow proper procedure in appointing a new set of ACIP members?

  • What will happen with the fall vaccines? (We still have some time for this one; June is typically the deadline.)

  • Will professional organizations, like the AAP, take the lead, and will they remain accountable through truly public meetings? So far, all deliberations have been behind closed doors.

While this pause is important, the medical decisions Americans make every day do not stop. Neither does the accumulation of new evidence, nor the development of innovative vaccines that are hopefully coming down the pipeline. It’s time to figure out what that next step is before this is clogged up too long.

What does this mean for you right now?

You can get the vaccines you want, for free, based on the best available evidence, and with the same trusted conversations with your doctor. All of the vaccine policy changes RFK Jr. put in place have now been reversed to their pre-June 2025 state.

  • This ruling is a temporary hold, and things could still change as the case moves through the courts.

  • To avoid policy whiplash, continue to rely on the vaccine schedules from specialty medical societies like AAP, AAFP, and ACOG as a steady guide through this storm.

The past year of shifting vaccine policy has left many people with questions and concerns. This ruling does not erase that confusion or immediately reach every family that fell through the cracks and remains unprotected against diseases. We have our work cut out for us.

It also cannot undo the enormous cost of countless hours spent responding to sudden policy changes, correcting falsehoods, and stabilizing guidance for patients and clinicians. This time, energy, and taxpayer dollars could have been used to solve real health problems.

Bottom line

This is a huge win. It restores access to vaccines (for now) and puts the process that determines who can access them back on track. That accountability matters. It protects Americans’ ability to make informed medical decisions and gives people a fair shot at the best possible health, even when so much in this country works against it. It’s a principle countless people have been fighting for, again and again, over the past year. And now, the federal court has confirmed that cutting corners and carelessly removing protections for Americans is not just bad public health policy. It’s illegal.

Love, YLE

Good Riddance to Joe Kent, Who Resigned With Antisemitic Blame

I saw this on the news today.  Joe Kent, the Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, is now its former director, as he has announced his resignation. On Twitter/X, he posted this:

"I cannot in good conscience support the ongoing war in Iran. Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation, and it is clear that we started this war due to pressure from Israel and its powerful American lobby."

He showed his true colors in that statement about Israel and its American lobby, as these are common antisemitic tropes. Maybe he can get a job on Tucker Carlson's radio show.

All I can say is good riddance to him, and thank you to our most faithful partner, Israel. If any country knows all about evil and about the attacks from Iran, it's Israel. We have heard nothing but "Death to Israel" and "Death to America" since 1979, and it was past time for us to put an end to it.

The Joe Kents of this world are a dime a dozen. There is only one Israel, and there is only one America. 

Monday, March 16, 2026

Churchill Must Be Rolling In His Grave Over The Collapse of England

At Spiked, Brendan O'Neill vividly describes the British version of the obscene anti-American, anti-Jewish, and pro-Iran demonstrations we saw last week in New York City.

Will we also be seeing this sort of contemptible gathering later this year at the 25th anniversary remembrance of the victims of the September 11 terror attacks? 

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

Al-Quds Day proves it – multiculturalism has been the death of Britain. The Al-Quds gathering in London was a sickening spectacle of hatred and treason. 

Brendan O'Neill, 3-15-26

"Today in London, a huge mob gathered to sing the praises of a tyrant. They fawned over a murderous theocrat. They swooned like the most sycophantic of acolytes over a man who hated Jews, denied the Holocaust and green-lit the massacre of women. Anyone still denying that multiculturalism is Britain’s death warrant should have been made to mingle with these brash lovers of foreign tyranny. 

"It was the Al-Quds gathering. That’s the annual pro-theocracy shindig, where fanboys of the Iranian regime gather to laud the ayatollah and libel the Jewish State in cities across the world. This year, because of the war in Iran, the London march was banned by the UK home secretary. But a static get-together took place, on the south bank of the Thames. I went down there to see it for myself, and it was one of the most menacing assemblies I’ve ever witnessed.

"Many were in mourning for the butcher of Tehran: Ayatollah Khamenei, who was taken out by an Israeli airstrike on 28 February. His likeness was everywhere. Children waved placards adorned with his face. A vast banner with his beardy image invited us to join him on ‘the right side of history’. This is a man whose vicious militias murdered thousands of innocents just two months ago and yet he was being gushed over as if he were Nelson Mandela.

"‘Khamenei is our leader’, a sea of placards said. Not anymore he isn’t. He’s dead. Jot that down. He’s been sent packing for his 72 virgins by those Jews you hate. Are we allowed to talk about how serious this is, not to mention how sickening – this dystopic vision of people in the UK openly swearing allegiance to an enemy of the West whose proxies murder Jews and whose guards butcher civilians? You can call me ‘Islamophobic’ till the cows come home – to my mind, this is straight-up treasonous behaviour.

"There was the usual Zio-baiting. Placards cried: ‘Stop the genocide! Hands off Iran!’ It’s not genocide, it’s war, you pussies. And it’s a war your idol started when the army of anti-Semites he funded and armed invaded Israel to rape and murder Jews. What a brilliant insight into the fathomless self-pity that lurks within strongman Islamism, when they’ll wail ‘Genocide!’ like big babies just because the Jews had the temerity to respond to the fascistic provocations of their sainted ayatollah. Total soy boy behaviour. 

"‘Israel is a terror state!’, they chanted, which is rich from fools who fall at the feet of a medieval regime that shoots women in the head for wanting freedom. I saw a kid with a placard saying ‘Al-Quds will be liberated’. Al-Quds is Arabic for Jerusalem, of course. Al-Quds Day was instituted by the Islamic Republic itself, to engender global support for its deranged imperious goal of conquering Jerusalem. I felt a pang of sadness at the sight of what I presume is a British-born kid, innocently giving voice to the anti-Semitic atrocity dream of stealing Jerusalem from the Jews.

"Anti-Semitism spread through the crowd like electricity. A truck beamed a blood-red image of Jeffrey Epstein, Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump staring down the mullahs. ‘World War Epstein’, it said. This is Jew hatred masquerading as cultural critique, the implication being that a network of Jewy paedos is trying to destroy the holy Islamic Republic.

"It was the mob’s dog-whistlin’ Epstein euphemisms that led to me getting into trouble. I saw an elderly lady, a leftist I think, with a placard that said: ‘Operation Epstein Fury. The Epstein class will burn the whole world down to save themselves.’ By this point, I was at the end of my tether. ‘Nice anti-Semitic placard’, I said. Then all hell broke loose.

"The lady snitched on me to the organisers. Before I knew it, I was surrounded by a mob of fuming young men. Someone complaining about anti-Semitism? Fucking get him! They squared up to me, shoved me, asked me, ‘What the fuck are you doing?’. ‘I’m observing and taking pictures’, I said. They put their hands up to block my view, they pressed up against me with menacing intention, they glared. So I said what had to be said: ‘This isn’t the Islamic Republic – you can’t silence journalists.’

"That was game over for me. The fury was palpable. The expletives flew – quite unbecoming of religious men, I thought. The police had to escort me away for my own safety. The mob followed. The cops waited until I had got on a Lime bike before returning to the demo. I gave a little wave to my theocratic harassers and cycled off, wondering to myself: what has become of my city?

"I was left in no doubt whatsoever of the double standards that fuel ruling-class identitarianism. Imagine if white Brits had gathered to laud a foreign neo-Nazi who revels in the murder of Jews. Or if they had swarmed the streets to swear allegiance to some far-right regime overseas. The Guardian would cancel all leave for its hacks. Keir Starmer would be readying a televised homily. The cops would have cracked heads on those streets today. But when it comes to a non-white minority, it’s fine apparently. This is the racism of low expectations, in all its bigoted, demented glory. 

"Fundamentally, though, it was the ideology of multiculturalism that was indicted on the streets of London today. There is a tendency to see multiculturalism as merely divisive. If only. The true social cancer in this self-hating creed is that it actively incites hostility towards the nation itself. It simultaneously inflames a culture of grievance within minority groups while heaping sarcastic derision on Britain and its history, giving rise to an extraordinary amount of anti-British, anti-Western, anti-social animus. I glimpsed that today. A bristling hostility towards me not only for my crime of refusing to hate Jews, but also for what I was no doubt seen to represent: whiteness, Britishness, them. The Iran War has dragged into the spotlight the deep fissures on the Western homefront – it would be suicidal to ignore them."

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Force of Infection, 3-15-26

 Here is the 3-15-26 Force of Infection newsletter from Dr. Caitlin Rivers:

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

RSV is peaking later than usual this year

Flu is declining, norovirus hits a new high, and measles cases pass 1,300

Respiratory Diseases

Influenza-like illness

Flu season is still dragging on, but indicators are moving in the right direction. Two more states have moved out of high and very high activity levels—39 jurisdictions are now at moderate, low or minimal activity, compared to 37 last week.

Visits to the doctor for influenza-like illness (that is, fever and cough or sore throat) decreased this week to 3.7%. We are getting closer to, but are still above, the baseline of 3.1%. Once we drop below that, we will have hit the end of flu season.

Outpatient influenza-like illness held roughly steady for the youngest age groups this week, at 10.3% for those aged 0-4 and 7.4% for those aged 5-24. It decreased slightly for all other ages, with all at or below 3%.

More severe illness remains moderate, but is also declining. ED visits decreased slightly to 2.4% this week. Hospitalizations also decreased, to 2.1 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.

This flu season has been particularly rough for children. Interim assessments by the CDC categorize this season as moderate for adults and older adults, and severe for children. The cumulative hospitalization rate for children is the second highest it has been since the 2010-2011 flu season.

Flu B continues its rise, accounting for 73% of clinical lab samples and 40% of public lab samples.


COVID-19

Covid-19 activity is pretty low and continuing to decline further. The Center for Forecasting and Outbreak Analytics estimates that in most states, Covid-19 is likely declining (i.e., that the reproductive rate is <1).

ED visits held steady at a low 0.5% nationally. Covid-19 is sending slightly higher numbers of people to the ED in the South and Midwest (~0.6%) and wastewater activity in both regions is moderate. Activity remains lowest in the West, with ED visits a bit under 0.4% and very low wastewater activity. The Northeast is right in between.

Hospitalizations have been gently declining since the beginning of January, and are now down to a low 1.0 hospitalizations per 100,000 people.


RSV & Other Bugs

RSV: RSV was very slow to ramp up this year, which means we are seeing peak season quite a bit later than we usually do. We are just now reaching the levels of activity we typically see in late December/early January.

However, it does appear that we may have peaked. Test positivity dipped slightly this week to 8.6%. While ED visits held roughly steady at a moderate 0.5% for the total population, rates decreased slightly for the youngest age groups. They dipped to 4.7% for those <1 year, and to 4.0% for those 1-4 years old.

Similarly, hospitalizations decreased slightly to 2.8 hospitalizations per 100,000 people. There was a steep drop in hospitalization for babies (<1 year), dropping from 39 to 27.4 hospitalizations per 100,000 this past week. Hospitalizations also decreased several points for those 1-4 years of age, decreasing to 11.6.

Other Bugs: Cold season is not over either.

  • Human coronaviruses remain very high.

  • Human metapneumovirus continues its upward climb, though the rate is slowing, suggesting we are nearing peak.

  • Adenovirus is spreading at moderate-to-high levels.

  • Parainfluenza and rhinoviruses/enteroviruses remain very low.


Norovirus

Norovirus continues to ratchet up, reaching a new peak for the season: 16.4% test positivity. Every region reported high or very high and rising rates this week.

Stomach bugs spread extremely easily. You can reduce your risk of becoming infected by washing your hands with soap and water regularly, avoiding touching your face, and avoiding communal food (e.g., bowls of nuts and candy).

If someone in your household becomes ill, clean hard surfaces with soap and water, or with a diluted bleach solution; use the sanitizing cycle on a dishwasher to wash dishes; and wash and dry clothes and linens at the highest possible heat setting.

Norovirus continues to spread very effectively for a few days after symptoms stop, so it is best to stay home and avoid preparing food or drinks for others for at least 2-3 days after you start to feel a bit better.


Food recalls

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

New:

  • Nothing new this week

Previously Reported:

  • Expanded recall of frozen chicken fried rice products, sold under multiple brand names: Trader Joe’s, Ajinomoto, Kroger, Ling Ling, and Tai Pei, due to possible glass shards (more info)

  • 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)

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

  • Gerber Arrowroot biscuits (more info)

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


In other news

  • Regional editions are wrapping up for the season. The last state-level edition will publish March 22, with regional coverage resuming in October when flu season resumes. In the meantime, paid subscribers will continue to receive a weekly national report through the summer months, which matters more than it might sound, as Covid-19 tends to surge in summer. Free subscribers will receive occasional essays through the summer months.

  • How effective were the flu vaccines this year? CDC recently published an interim assessment of flu vaccine effectiveness for this season (2025-2026) in the US.

    • For children between 6 months and 18 years, the seasonal flu vaccine was 38-41% effective against outpatient visits and 41% effective against hospitalization. For adults, the vaccine was 22-34% effective against outpatient visits, and 30% effective against hospitalization.

    • This level of vaccine effectiveness is fairly average, but a bit on the lower end. This is likely because there was a bit of a mismatch between the circulating strains and the strains selected for the vaccine. When season flu vaccines are made each year, there is a bit of guesswork involved to try to select strains that will be most common the coming season. This year, the match was not great owing to the emergence and subsequent dominance of H3N2 subclade K.

  • FDA expands approval for RSV vaccine to include younger adults at high risk. Arexvy was previously approved for use in older adults. The FDA has now approved the use of Arexvy (produced by GSK) for adults 18-49 who are at increased risk of lower respiratory tract disease due to RSV. Examples of people at higher risk include those with heart disease, asthma, COPD, cystic fibrosis or other lung diseases, chronic heart failure, diabetes, or chronic kidney disease.

  • Measles spread continues. There have been 1,362 cases of confirmed measles so far this year in the US, across 31 states. I write regularly about the importance of achieving high (>95%) rates of vaccination to stop community spread and achieve herd immunity. Herd immunity protects everyone, including the most vulnerable to severe illness: infants who are too young to be vaccinated, individuals who cannot be vaccinated for medical reasons (such as an allergy), or immunocompromised individuals who have been vaccinated but do not have adequate immune protection. A recent story published by ABC News about Makayla Skjerva, a 14-year-old girl from North Dakota, highlights the risks that losing herd immunity poses to immunocompromised individuals. Despite being fully vaccinated, Makayla became severely ill after a measles exposure at her school, eventually needing intensive care and a respirator. She was so sick that doctors advised her family to say their goodbyes. Fortunately, she survived, but was hospitalized for weeks, is still recovering her ability to walk, and has not yet returned to in-person schooling.

Dr Ruth Report, 3-15-26

Here's the March 15, 2026 newsletter by Dr. Ruth Ann Crystal. As usual, there's a ton of important medical information you and your family can use.

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

Dr. Ruth Report, 3/15/26

COVID levels are decreasing across the United States as this wave slowly comes to its end. RSV is still high in most places, with especially high levels in the Northeast and Midwest. Influenza A has decreased nationally, but Flu B is still high particularly in the Northeast and Midwest.

In California, RSV activity remains elevated and the state has extended recommendations for monoclonal antibody protection (nirsevimab and clesrovimab) for eligible infants through April 30, 2026, with continued insurance coverage. Seasonal flu is still circulating in the state. Flu vaccination, testing, and early treatment are recommended to prevent severe disease. COVID activity is currently very low statewide.

Regional wastewater levels for COVID, RSV, Flu A, Flu B.

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

Spring flowers mean that pollen counts are increasing in many places across the country with the warmest climates seeing the highest pollen levels now.

From: Pollen.com

This week’s unusual weather might change this, of course, as we expect an arctic blast to dump snow on the East coast and a heat wave on the West coast of the US, with damaging winds and potential tornadoes in the South/Midwest.

Expected Precipitation over the next 7 days

From: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/#

Share

Flu

The flu season is finally starting to wind down after a fairly long plateau. Most cases are from Influenza B at this time. Children younger than 18 years have had the second highest hospitalization rate for that age group since the 2010-2011 season.

COVID

COVID in wastewater is more moderate now, as the long winter wave starts to resolve. The midwest and northeast are still most affected.

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

Acute COVID infections, General COVID info

Using medical records from more than 76 million adults, University of Virginia researchers show that “severe COVID-19 is associated with an increased subsequent lung cancer risk” in humans. Across several mouse models, the group also showed that prior viral pneumonia from COVID or influenza can turn on genes leading to a pro-cancer lung environment. However, blocking CXCR2 which recruits neutrophils plus PD-L1 blockade medications in mice enhanced T cell function and suppressed post-viral tumor growth.

From: https://www.cell.com/cell/abstract/S0092-8674(26)00220-5

Duke and Fred Hutchinson researchers followed 259 adults recovering from COVID infection and found that people who cleared SARS-CoV-2 within 21 days mounted a more coordinated immune response: their antibodies, T cells, and immune effector functions all worked together as a system. Longer viral shedding was linked to a less synchronized defense, which suggests immune coordination may help determine how long viral material lingers after infection.

Social and Advocacy

The Sick Times featured an article on how many Long COVID clinics, including the University of North Carolina clinic, are closing and are leaving thousands of complex patients without specialized care.

Long COVID

Today, March 15, is Long COVID Awareness Day and tonight, landmarks from around the world will be lit up teal to bring attention to Long COVID. It has been 6 years since the beginning of the COVID pandemic.

From: https://www.longcfoundation.org/lit-for-long-covid

This week RTHM and the Patient-Led Research Collaborative released their new Long COVID Treatment Guide with helpful information on medications, supplements and OTC drugs, lifestyle strategies like pacing, and procedures such as the Stellate Ganglion Block to help treat Long COVID symptoms.

In a small proof-of-concept study, UCSF tested AER002, a monoclonal antibody (mAb) against SARS-CoV-2, in 36 Long COVID patients randomized 2:1 to treatment versus placebo. The drug was safe and well-tolerated, but showed no significant improvement over placebo in physical health, quality of life, cognition, or biomarkers at 90 days. A post-hoc signal did emerge showing that participants with lower baseline SARS-CoV-2 antibodies and higher drug exposure were more likely to report improvement. The trial suggests that clearing lingering SARS-2 virus may require different approaches such as using multiple doses of mAbs, the use of different mAbs, or combination therapy with several antivirals may be key. Another study by Dr. Nancy Klimas, using one dose of a mAb Sipavibart, with the possibility of a second dose 6 months later, has started enrollment. It will be very interesting to see those results, although I believe that controlling SARS-CoV-2 viral persistence in Long COVID may require longer courses of combination antivirals, similar to the multidrug regimens used to treat HIV.

A preprint from the J. Craig Venter Institute and Mount Sinai found SARS-CoV-2 spike protein persisting in gut tissue of both Long COVID patients and healthy controls, but with a key difference: in Long COVID patients, more spike protein was noted and the spike-positive areas showed abnormal immune cell accumulation and overactive inflammation, while the same areas around spike protein in the tissues of healthy controls were immunologically quiet (inert). The findings support viral persistence as a driver of Long COVID and suggest that treatments targeting residual spike protein in tissues may be essential.

When China lifted its zero-COVID policy in late 2022, virtually the entire population was infected with Omicron simultaneously, creating a rare natural experiment. Shandong University researchers analyzed immune cell data from 40,537 patients and found that CD8 T cells remained 10% below pre-COVID baseline at 20 months, while patients with cardiovascular disease fared far worse, with T lymphocytes still 73% below baseline at 20 months. The authors concluded that their findings “redefine SARS-CoV-2 infection as a condition of long-lasting immune compromise.

From: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971225005090#fig0006

Share

Researchers at the Medical University of Innsbruck retrospectively examined 840 Long COVID patients and found two overlapping problems: microclots (microaggregates) large enough to block small blood vessels in 40% of patients, and the reactivation of Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Chart review showed that platelet-inhibiting drugs (blood thinners) produced clinical improvement in a large number of patients and that outcomes were even better when EBV was simultaneously treated with antivirals like valacyclovir.

A University of Alberta review found that Long COVID patients have significantly lower plasma taurine levels than fully recovered individuals. Taurine, an amino acid with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties, is naturally elevated during COVID recovery. In other medical conditions with symptoms that overlap with Long COVID, taurine improved blood sugar, lipid profiles, blood pressure, and exercise capacity, though it had no effect on cognition. A daily dose of 3,000 mg appears optimal, though caution should be used since taurine may interact with antidepressants, antiseizure drugs, blood thinners, and statins. Taurine has not yet been tested in Long COVID patients- this review extrapolates possible benefits from other diseases with similar symptoms.

From: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12879-026-13009-y

The University of Pittsburgh and collaborators used ultra high resolution 7T MRI to scan 179 adults across four US and UK medical centers, comparing 52 who had been hospitalized for severe COVID against 127 who had not. Previously hospitalized COVID patients showed smaller hippocampal volumes, lower plasma GFAP levels, and worse scores on memory and cognitive tests 19 months after discharge. White matter lesion burden was similar between the two groups, but in hospitalized patients those lesions correlated more strongly with poor cognition and elevated tau and amyloid biomarkers. The findings point to long lasting, measurable brain changes in people who had severe COVID infection.

Analyzing EHR data from 650,173 COVID-19 cases from U.S. military treatment facilities, researchers found that 42.8% (278,278 service members) developed post-COVID-19 syndrome. The most common symptoms were pulmonary (22.4%), neurological (14.6%), and fatigue (13.5%). Notably, cognitive symptoms affected only 3.7% of patients but persisted the longest of any symptom, raising particular concern for military readiness. Females, warrant officers, and Air Force personnel were disproportionately affected, and comorbidities such as obesity and anxiety significantly increased symptom odds.

A CDC analysis found about 6.6% of adults have Long COVID across 48 states, with higher rates in states that had more infections, more severe illness, and more chronic disease. States with higher COVID vaccination rates had lower Long COVID prevalence, suggesting vaccines can reduce population-level risk.

Measles

As of March 12, 2026, 1,362 confirmed measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026, with 5% (65 of 1362 cases) reported as hospitalized per the CDC.

As of March 13, 2026, the South Carolina Department of Public Health is reporting 996 cases of measles centered around Spartanburg County, SC.

As of March 10, 405 Utahns have been diagnosed with measles in this outbreak, with 98 of those cases reported in the last 3 weeks.

Government Health News

In Minnesota, increased ICE presence has led many undocumented immigrants to avoid going to hospitals and clinics for medical care out of fear of detention. In response, volunteer physicians, nurses, and community groups have organized informal networks to provide medical care through home visits, underground clinics, and trusted community sites. Similar underground clinics were organized in Los Angeles where a community health organization made home medical visits to roughly 2,000 immigrant families after appointment cancellations exceeded 30%.

An Illinois judge blocked the Trump administration from rescinding $600 million in public health funds from California, Colorado, Illinois, and Minnesota.

Other news

How do GLP-1 drugs work? Researchers at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California used mouse pancreatic islets and beta cell models to investigate how GLP-1 receptor agonists alter gene expression. They discovered that GLP-1 drugs activate the phosphorylation of the Med14 protein in pancreatic beta cells, activating gene programs that help the cells to survive longer, produce insulin, and better handle stress.

A new study shows that almost all adults over age 40 have some sort of rotator cuff abnormality on MRI. In a population-based study of 602 Finnish adults (ages 41 to 76) who underwent bilateral shoulder MRI, 98.7% had at least one rotator cuff abnormality: 25% tendinopathy, 62% partial-thickness tears, and 11% full-thickness tears. Critically, rotator cuff abnormalities were present in 96% of asymptomatic shoulders and 98% of symptomatic shoulders, with no significant difference after adjusting for relevant confounders. The authors concluded that these findings represent normal age-related changes rather than disease, and that routine MRI imaging should not guide diagnosis or treatment of atraumatic shoulder pain.

Antibiotic effects on the gut microbiome last longer than most people realize. A new study from Sweden of 14,979 adults shows that oral clindamycin, fluoroquinolones, and flucloxacillin altered 10-15% of gut bacterial species for up to 8 years after use. Penicillins and nitrofurantoin had a more limited impact.

With over 10,000 Americans on liver transplant waitlists and many too sick for surgery, MIT engineers developed an injectable alternative: liver cells (hepatocytes) mixed with hydrogel microspheres that self-assemble into “mini livers” inside the body and connect to nearby blood vessels. In mice, the cells remained viable and secreted key liver enzymes and proteins into the blood for eight weeks after injection. Immunosuppression is still required, but researchers are working toward a solution.

AI assistant bots are everywhere. But did you know that the Chipotle bot can help you with coding? Here is what happened when someone asked the Chipotle bot about python script:

Have a good week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD