Wednesday, February 04, 2026

I.C.E Derangement and Israel Derangement Syndromes

I had thought of the similarities myself.  Both I.C.E. and Jews are also reviled and harassed incessantly, and both I.C.E. and Israel receive consistently negative press.  The inciters (not 'protesters') who march against Israel are like the anti-I.C.E. inciters in Minnesota with their signs and their threats. Also, both Israel and I.C.E. are the good guys fighting the bad guys!

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The Daily Signal - Commentary
ICE and Israel Face the Same Dilemna

By Victor Joecks | February 04, 2026

"When you think about recent events in the Middle East, it’s easier to understand what’s happening in Minnesota.

"There are significant parallels between the tactics of Hamas and pro-illegal immigrant agitators. Start with this. Both have no realistic way to achieve their objective through conventional means.

"Despite the brutality of the Oct. 7 massacre, Hamas couldn’t defeat Israel militarily. That’s the reason it had to rely on a surprise attack. In response, Israel decimated Hamas’ leadership.

"President Donald Trump ran on deporting illegal immigrants, and voters gave him a resounding victory in 2024. Unlike most politicians, Trump is actually keeping his promises. Thanks to the “One Big, Beautiful Bill,” there’s plenty of funding to deport illegal immigrants, too.

"The proper way to counter this would be for pro-illegal immigrant activists to win an election or two. Then, they could change the law. But the Left’s commitment to democracy fades when its opponents are in power.

"Outmatched in bullets and ballots, both groups have sought to use political pressure to achieve their aims. Putting their own people in danger is key to these efforts. Hamas hides its military infrastructure in and around hospitals and schools. Israel either avoids attacking legitimate military targets, or Hamas rushes out pictures of dead women and children.

"Something similar is happening in Minnesota. Agitators are actively stalking U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and then physically trying to prevent federal agents from arresting illegal immigrants."

"Crowd control should be a job for local cops. But Minnesota politicians have prevented local police from coordinating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement. In December, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara even told residents to call the cops on ICE.

"Federal agents are put in a no-win situation. Either they allow agitators to stop them from arresting a criminal illegal immigrant, or they must use physical force to arrest the agitators. At a minimum, that will produce ugly-looking videos. 

"Twice when an agitator has resisted, things have turned deadly. Illegal immigration activists then promote out-of-context videos and lob vile accusations at federal agents.

"In both situations, there is a disproportionate focus on the actions of one side. Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israel. Hamas brutalized hostages for months or years. Hamas used human shields. Yet, the propaganda press, many on the left and even some on the right, obsessively focused on any perceived misdeeds by Israeli forces.

"The same is true in Minnesota and around the country. Last year, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called ICE a “modern-day Gestapo.” Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner recently called ICE agents “wannabe Nazis” and vowed to “hunt you down.” Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker has said ICE’s work would “essentially” turn the country into “Nazi Germany.”

"The propaganda press largely ignores incendiary rhetoric like this. They barely even report on the violence committed by illegal immigration sympathizers. 

"In September, an anti-ICE gunman opened fire on an ICE field office in Dallas. Police believe he killed one detainee and injured two others.

"Pro-illegal immigration activists recently stormed a St. Paul church, terrifying children and disrupting the service.

"Recently, an anti-ICE agitator even reportedly bit off the finger of a federal agent.

"But the propaganda press offers frame-by-frame scrutiny of agents who have to make split-second decisions when an agitator resists arrest.

"These similarities show why it’d be a mistake for the Trump administration to capitulate in Minnesota. Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip in 2005. Gaza residents didn’t thank Israel. They gave power to Hamas, setting the stage for the attack on Oct. 7, 2023.

"If violence gives illegal immigration agitators a de facto veto over federal immigration law, that violence will spread.

"Israel learned this lesson the hard way. ICE shouldn’t have to."

Unvaccinated Adults Over Fifty

You would think that by now, older people would be smarter than this. I guess not.

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From CIDRAP 2-3-26:

Large share of older US adults haven’t had a recent flu or COVID vaccine, poll finds  

By Laine Bergeson, 

"Despite a severe influenza season and rising COVID-19 activity this winter, 42% of adults ages 50 and older remain unvaccinated, according to a new University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging. The survey also highlights gaps in understanding the vaccines’ ability to reduce the risk of severe illness.

"The poll, conducted from December 29, 2025, to January 13, 2026, asked 2,964 US adults ages 50 to 98 about their vaccination status and reasons for not getting vaccinated. Overall, 42% reported that they had not received either a flu or COVID vaccine in the past six months. For 49% of people over 50, it had been more than a year since their last COVID vaccine, and 15% said they had never been vaccinated against COVID.

"In total, 29% said they had received both vaccines, while 27% had received just the updated flu shot. The poll findings did not include a margin of sampling error.

"The leading reason people gave for not getting vaccinated was thinking they didn’t need to: 28% of older adults who didn’t get the flu vaccine in the past six months and 29% of those who didn’t get a COVID-19 vaccine in the past year (or ever) cited this as the main reason. This may reflect how people underestimate their personal risk from respiratory diseases or the benefits of vaccination, or both, even as strong evidence suggests that staying current on vaccines helps reduce the risk of severe illness and death in older adults.

"Concerns about side effects and doubts about vaccine effectiveness were the next most-reported reasons for not getting vaccinated: 19% of respondents who didn’t get the flu vaccine and 27% who didn’t get the COVID vaccine cited side effects as the reason, and 18% of those who didn’t get the flu vaccine and 19% who didn’t get the COVID vaccine cited doubts about vaccine effectiveness. Only a nominal number of respondents cited time, cost, or eligibility concerns.

Nearly 4 in 10 with chronic conditions unvaccinated

"The poll found clear differences in vaccination rates among different subgroups, with uptake highest among those at greatest risk.

"Nearly half (46%) of adults ages 75 and older (who face the highest risk of severe illness) said they had received a COVID vaccine in the past six months, compared with 37% of those ages 65 to 74 and 20% of those ages 50 to 64. Flu vaccination rates were higher across all age-groups: 76% among those 75 and older, 64% among those ages 65 to 74, and 42% of those age 50 to 64.

"Adults with at least one chronic health condition were more likely than those without such conditions to have received both vaccines, but gaps remained. Nearly four in 10 respondents with chronic conditions (39%) said they had not received either vaccine in the past six months.

"The poll also highlights a group at growing risk: older adults who have never received a COVID vaccine. One in five adults ages 50 to 64 reported never being vaccinated against COVID, along with 12% of those ages 65 to 74 and 7% of those 75 and older.

"Income disparities were also evident. Nearly one in five respondents (19%) with household incomes under $60,000 said they had never received a COVID vaccine, compared with 12% of those with higher incomes.

2025 guideline changes didn’t impact vaccine uptake

"Last year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention changed its recommendation about which adults should receive the COVID vaccine, saying that those ages 50 to 64 who do not have any chronic health conditions that increase COVID risk do not need to be vaccinated.

"This shift didn’t appear to affect decision making around vaccination. Fewer than 1% of respondents who skipped the COVID vaccine in the past year said they did so because they thought they were no longer eligible.

"COVID vaccination is still recommended for most older adults, including two doses a year for everyone 65 and older and for people with compromised immune systems, and one dose a year for higher-risk adults under 65.

"Guidance on flu vaccination did not change. Annual flu vaccination is still recommended for everyone ages 6 months and older, and major medical societies and insurers continue to recommend and cover both flu and COVID vaccines for all adults.

Personal messaging may improve uptake

"Helping people understand what vaccination means for them personally may be key to improving uptake among adults 50 and older, says poll director and associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan Medical School, Jeffrey Kullgren, MD, MPH.

"News coverage often describes vaccine effectiveness using population-level statistics such as percentage reductions in hospitalization or death. But that framing doesn’t always line up with the questions people may care about most: whether vaccination will keep them from getting sick at all or from becoming seriously ill.

“These findings suggest that we must do a much better job helping people in their 50s and up understand that they will benefit from getting these updated vaccines each year, that the vaccine side effects are mild and short-lived, and that even if they later get infected and develop symptoms, vaccination means they won’t get as sick,” says Kullgren in a news release.

"Even when a vaccine isn’t a perfect match for currently circulating strains, a recent dose primes the immune system to respond and may help reduce both the severity and duration of the illness.

"And, Kullgren adds, it’s not too late for anyone to get a flu or COVID vaccine this season."

Illegal Alien Crime

This is from Powerline, and it makes you wonder: if it's this bad in Tennessee, then why is Minnesota fighting so hard to protect their illegal aliens at the expense of their own citizens?  And why would you vote for Democrats whose priority this is?  It's criminal -- no pun intended.

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The Havoc Wrought By Illegal Aliens

"In Tennessee, a state agency is required by law to compile data on crimes committed by illegal aliens. The numbers for 2025 have been released, and they are eye-opening:

The office of the Tennessee District Attorneys General Conference has released its annual state immigration report revealing that in 2025, illegal migrants committed 2,183 violent offenses, including 41 homicides, 145 sexual offenses, 11 child rapes, and more.

"This table tells the story:

"Tennessee has a little over two percent of the U.S. population, so, assuming Tennessee’s illegals are no more violent than the norm, that would translate to something like 100,000 violent offenses, 2,000 murders, and so on. There were about 14,000 or 15,000 murders in the U.S. in 2025, so illegals probably accounted for around 1/7 of them. These are the people whom the Democratic Party is determined to keep within our borders. One might reasonably ask why."

Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Your Local Epidemiologist: The Dose 2-3-26

Nipah in India, measles is the first building block to fall, flu increasing again, and US out but CA in on WHO

By Katelyn Jetelina and Hannah Totte, MPH, at Your Local Epidemiologist: The Dose, 2-3-26

As many of you are shoveling yourselves out of the snow, there is a lot happening in infectious diseases. Measles blew January out of the water, Nipah virus (yes, the virus that inspired the movie Contagion) is making headlines, and flu and RSV are still lingering.

Meanwhile, the U.S. officially left the WHO, which seems… poorly timed, to say the least. A heartbreaking photo marks the moment and stands in stark contrast to the pride I felt when I worked at WHO ten years ago.

What does this all mean for you? Let’s dig in.


Measles: the first crack in childhood disease protection

We are watching the first building block of childhood disease protection fall in real time: protection against measles. Because this is the most contagious virus on Earth, even small drops in vaccination coverage give it an opening. And boy, are we giving it openings both nationally and globally.

What’s happening globally. On January 23, 2026, the World Health Organization (WHO) announced six European countries lost their measles elimination status: Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Spain, the United Kingdom, and Uzbekistan. Canada lost its elimination status late last year. This means measles is no longer a random event in these countries; it’s endemic and freely flowing.

This is due to several forces colliding:

  • Collective amnesia about vaccine-preventable diseases (vaccines are victims of their own success)

  • Global instability

  • A radically changed online information ecosystem

  • Bad actors exploiting spaces

  • Deepening mistrust in institutions

WHO will examine the U.S. measles elimination status in April, and all signs point toward us losing it.

What’s happening in the U.S. This year isn’t off to a great start. In January 2026 alone, 662 measles cases were reported. This is an astonishing number for a single month. It’s especially concerning because January is typically a slower month for measles spread.

Public health eyes are on several areas:

  • South Carolina, where a large outbreak has surpassed the size of Texas’s outbreak last year, and is spreading through a tightly knit religious community with low vaccination rates. Wastewater is showing some hopeful signs that the outbreak may be slowing down.

  • Utah and Arizona, where cases continue to raise concern.

  • ICE detention centers in Arizona and Texas are reporting cases. This is concerning because these facilities have close quarters, making them a perfect breeding ground for measles.

What’s most troubling, in all of this, is the silence from national leadership. In the past, federal health leaders publicly encouraged vaccination and ran national prevention campaigns. Right now, that messaging is absent. Awareness, education, and empowerment are not front and center. As a result, measles will likely demand far more public health attention in the years ahead.

What this means for you: If you’re vaccinated, you’re very well protected. About 96% of cases are among unvaccinated people. Check vaccination rates in your county using this map. If you have a child under 12 months old, an early first MMR dose at 6 months may be an option. Talk with your pediatrician.


Nipah virus: scary headlines, low risk

Do you remember the movie Contagion? That fictional outbreak was inspired by Nipah, a serious virus that can cause brain swelling and has a high fatality rate (40-75%). There’s no approved treatment yet, though vaccines are in development, including one in clinical trials at Oxford. Vaccine progress in the U.S. has largely stopped due to vaccine skepticism and regulatory headwinds.

Contagion | United Nations

Right now, Nipah is causing a small outbreak in India. Social media and international headlines are lighting up, but we are not on the brink of another pandemic.

Here’s why.

  1. The outbreak is small and controlled. This means the immediate risk is limited. Two nurses were infected in West Bengal. Indian health officials rapidly traced 196 contacts. All were quarantined, asymptomatic, and tested negative. This means the outbreak is under control. Some airports have added screening measures, despite no cases outside India, which appears to be an abundance of caution and possibly a reaction to exaggerated reports.

  2. Nipah does not spread easily between people. Infected people become very sick very quickly, often dying, which limits opportunities for the virus to move to others. Nipah spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids, like blood, or contaminated food, but not through the air. As a result, one person with Nipah typically infects fewer than one other person. Compare that to measles, which can infect about 18 unvaccinated people from a single case. In short, human-to-human transmission is extremely limited.

  3. Nipah primarily lives in animals. Fruit bats are the virus’s natural host, where it thrives. Occasionally, the virus jumps from bats to humans, particularly as deforestation, globalization, and climate change drive ecosystem changes. These spillover events are rare, and the virus does not easily spread from person to person.

Nipah poses a serious but highly localized risk rather than a global pandemic threat. While it could mutate, the risk of a pandemic is very, very small (about 2%).

What this means for you: Epidemiologists are keeping a close eye on this, and India has moved fast on containment. For now, Nipah still makes a great movie, but your risk is essentially zero.


Respiratory viruses: resurging

Reports of fever, cough, and sore throat are rising again, as is typical when schools resume after the holidays.

Source: CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

This increase is mostly driven by flu, especially among children. RSV is also contributing.

Source: CDC; Annotated by Your Local Epidemiologist.

Covid-19 levels continue to drop nationally. While they remain highest in the Midwest, there might be increasing activity in the South. We will see where this virus takes us next.

What this means for you: At this point, it probably doesn’t make sense to get a flu vaccine until next season. Covid-19 vaccines for spring should be coming soon for those over 65 years old.


The U.S. officially leaves the WHO

More than ten years ago, I checked into the WHO headquarters in Geneva and took the picture below of all the UN flags—pride oozing from my veins as I worked toward a healthier world with all countries. Last week, I was sent a starkly different image: the U.S. flag being lowered at the WHO as the U.S. officially departed.

WHO has long needed support and reform; there’s no question about that. But reforming is very different from walking away, and it’s worth the effort. While this move may not directly affect all of us in the short term, the consequences are real: reduced financial support for low-income countries facing outbreaks like Nipah, diminished U.S. influence on the global stage, and Americans themselves becoming less informed and less prepared.

I wrote about this when the president first announced the plan to leave WHO, and the implications haven’t changed. Read more here:

The U.S. withdrawal from the WHO

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January 23, 2025
The U.S. withdrawal from the WHO

More than 10 years ago, I moved to Geneva to work at the World Health Organization (WHO). I was a bright-eyed young epidemiologist with one mission: change the world! My job was admittedly unglamorous: sit in front of Excel, analyze HIV/AIDS drug prices across countries, and write a grueling report for each. and. every. country.

Did California join the WHO? Not exactly. States can’t be full members. But after the U.S. withdrawal, the California Department of Public Health began joining WHO weekly calls through the Global Outbreak Alert & Response Network, and other states will likely follow. This keeps states connected to critical information on global outbreaks and their potential impact on Americans, now that the CDC is no longer filling this role.

What this means for you: Health threats don’t respect borders. This will make it much harder for public health to protect you.


Bottom line

Infectious diseases love this time of year, and this week is no exception. I hope you all stay healthy, safe, and warm out there.

Love, YLE


Your Local Epidemiologist (YLE) is founded and operated by Dr. Katelyn Jetelina, MPH PhD—an epidemiologist, wife, and mom of two little girls. Hannah Totte, MPH, is an epidemiologist and YLE Community Manager. YLE reaches more than 425,000 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.

Monday, February 02, 2026

Dr Ruth's COVID, Flu, Measles & More, 2/1/2026

There's a huge amount of important information in this latest newsletter by Dr. Ruth Ann Crystal!

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COVID, Flu, Measles & More, 2/1/2026
Ruth Ann Crystal MD, Feb 02, 2026

TL;DR: The Midwest and Northeast have high levels of COVID. Flu had peaked, but looks like there may be a second wave starting which is common for influenza. RSV remains high across the United States and is affecting young children and older adults. Babies under age 1 are most often being hospitalized for RSV. The CDC ACIP chair proposed making polio and measles vaccines optional for children, despite a raging outbreak of measles currently in South Carolina that is already even bigger than the Texas measles outbreak from last year.

Flu

Seasonal influenza activity remains elevated nationally. After three weeks of decreasing cases, flu cases increased this week. It is not uncommon for flu seasons to have a couple of peaks in cases. Influenza A (H3N2) accounts for most cases, but influenza B activity is increasing nationally as well.

Last year’s pediatric flu deaths were the highest since the CDC began tracking them, yet the influenza vaccine is no longer recommended for all children following recent changes to the pediatric vaccine schedule by the CDC. This week, 8 more children died of influenza, bringing the total to 52 pediatric flu deaths this season. The CDC estimates that unvaccinated children made up 90% of pediatric deaths from flu.

In California, Influenza levels are high in Bay Area wastewater and continue to rise in all California regions, with children having a higher positivity rate than adults. “Many Californians are visiting emergency departments and hospitalization rates for children are increasing for flu. CDPH urges vaccination, testing, and quick treatment to avoid serious illness.”

COVID

COVID infections are VERY HIGH in the Midwest right now and are HIGH in the Northeast. Levels of COVID are MODERATE in the South per the CDC. The West Coast is seeing LOW levels of COVID in wastewater, probably because we had a high late summer wave. Mike Hoerger predicts that there are 732,000 new COVID infections daily in the U.S. and that about 1 in 67 people has COVID now, although there are great variations depending on region. For instance, every 1 in 17 people in Oklahoma and in South Dakota are infectious with COVID now, and about every 1 in 24 people in Michigan and Indiana have COVID.

COVID in wastewater per CDC:

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

WastewaterSCAN (today) COVID is HIGH especially in the Midwest and Northeast:

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

COVID and Children

“COVID-19 may leave silent cardiac footprints in children.” Researchers in Athens followed 137 children for one year after COVID infection and found a persistent reduction in left ventricular global longitudinal strain (GLS), indicating subclinical heart dysfunction despite normal standard echocardiograms. Nearly one quarter (24%) reported Long COVID symptoms, most commonly fatigue in 17%. Children with moderate to severe infections also had elevated sICAM-1 levels, suggesting ongoing endothelial activation.

Dr. Buonsenso, who runs a specialty clinic in Italy for children with Long COVID, reviewed studies showing that COVID reinfection more than doubles the risk of a Long COVID diagnosis in people under 21. In America, more children are living with Long COVID than with asthma, which was the most common chronic illness of childhood. The effects of Long COVID will be long-lasting for these children and will likely carry broader societal consequences. He emphasizes the urgent need for clinical trials that include children and young adults, who are currently excluded from most treatment studies.

New CDC research of 11,057 U.S. children found that 1.4% of school-aged kids had Long COVID, which was linked to chronic absenteeism (missing more than 18 school days for health reasons) and functional limitations. Children with Long COVID were also more likely to report memory problems than those without it (18.3% vs. 8.6%). Long COVID continues to be a serious public health concern for school-aged children- improved ventilation and air filtration, vaccination and masking are important to protect kids from reinfections with COVID.

Antiviral treatments
Traws Pharma reported ongoing clinical study data showing that its COVID antiviral Ratutrelvir appears safe with no viral rebound in early data. Ratutrelvir does not contain ritonavir like Paxlovid and provides faster symptom relief for COVID infections.

“Choroid plexus enlargement is a neuroimaging biomarker of neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration.” NYU researchers analyzed brain MRIs and blood biomarkers from 179 people and found that those with Long COVID had enlargement of the choroid plexus and reduced cerebral blood flow. These changes were linked to cognitive decline and higher levels of Alzheimer’s-related plasma biomarkers, including GFAP and p-tau217. Choroid plexus changes on MRI may serve as a marker of ongoing neuroinflammation and a higher risk of neurodegenerative processes after COVID. The authors propose that these MRI changes could serve as imaging markers to track neurological symptoms, neuroinflammation, and Alzheimer’s disease risk after COVID infection.

In a Munich study of 102 people with Long COVID and 204 matched controls, retinal vessel analysis revealed persistent retinal microvascular damage consistent with ongoing endothelial dysfunction. This impairment was most pronounced in Long COVID patients who met criteria for ME/CFS and closely tracked with inflammation, symptom severity, and neurocognitive complaints. The findings suggest retinal imaging may offer a simple, noninvasive way to measure endothelial dysfunction in post-viral syndromes.

Researchers from Italy report that patients with Long COVID exhibit significantly disrupted salivary cortisol rhythms, indicating a fundamental breakdown in the body’s stress response and internal biological clock. These hormonal abnormalities in the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis correlate closely with reported levels of fatigue and cognitive “brain fog,” suggesting that the virus causes a persistent state of physiological stress. Symptom severity correlated with the degree of cortisol disruption.

Orexin (hypocretin) producing neurons in the hypothalamus regulate REM sleep and wakefulness. When they are lost, the brain cannot properly control sleep–wake transitions as seen in Narcolepsy type 1. A new preclinical study from Korea shows that SARS-CoV-2 infection in mice leads to long-lasting cortical neuronal injury and dysfunction of the hypothalamic orexin system. Increasing orexin reversed this effect, revealing a possible root cause of Long COVID extreme fatigue, sleep disruptions, and brain fog.

A new review from Montreal shows evidence that Long COVID neurological symptoms such as brain fog may actually start in the gut. When the intestinal barrier is damaged (“leaky gut”), in combination with SARS-CoV-2 viral persistence, microbial products (bacteria and virus fragments) can enter the bloodstream, which then trigger blood-brain barrier disruption, and subsequent brain neuroinflammation.

Figure 1. Proposed gut-brain axis linking intestinal barrier dysfunction to neuroinflammation in Long COVID.

From: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/aging-neuroscience/articles/10.3389/fnagi.2025.1744415/full

Another interesting review looks at the importance of a different part of the gut-brain axis. Researchers from Arc Institute and the University of Pennsylvania describe how gut sensory signaling (“interoception”) detects nutrients, microbes, and immune signals and communicates this information directly to the brain. This ongoing gut–brain signaling helps regulate hunger, mood, and sleep, and may contribute to diseases such as IBS and post-viral syndromes like Long COVID.

Figure 5: Impact of gut interoception on physiology and disease

From: https://www.cell.com/neuron/abstract/S0896-6273(25)00923-7

In a cross-sectional study from Spain, researchers compared 157 people with Long COVID to healthy controls and found significant impairment in episodic memory. People with Long COVID had difficulty storing and retrieving information across multiple tests, even when given cues or recognition prompts.

Researchers at the Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital studied 143 individuals with Long COVID, 170 with ME/CFS, 290 patients with hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (hEDS), and 73 healthy controls. The authors found that “both Long COVID and ME/CFS demonstrate dysregulation in cerebrovascular blood flow, autonomic reflexes, and small fiber neuropathy, suggesting that these conditions may share a common underlying pathophysiology. However, differing distributions of findings in patients with hEDS raise the question of whether these conditions represent distinct but overlapping syndromes or reflect a shared underlying pathway.”

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Long COVID

Researchers from Cape Town, South Africa designed a novel sensor using nanobodies to detect the SARS-CoV-2 spike S1 protein with ultra-high sensitivity and specificity to a detection limit of just 0.04 pg/mL. The technology could allow monitoring of viral persistence by identifying SARS-CoV-2 at extremely low concentrations in the blood.

University of California San Francisco (UCSF) scientists with decades of HIV expertise have leveraged their experience to show SARS-CoV-2 viral persistence in the gut, bone marrow, brain and other tissues. By following a cohort of more than 1,700 people with Long COVID in the ongoing LIINC study, the team has demonstrated how chronic viral reservoirs drive ongoing immune activation and neurological symptoms in Long COVID. Treating Long COVID may require antiviral or immunomodulatory strategies similar to those used in HIV management.

VYD2311 is an investigational monoclonal antibody that shows in vitro antiviral activity against “all clinically recorded variants of SARS-CoV-2”. Invivyd, the maker of Pemgarda and VYD2311, will be launching a Phase 2 trial in mid-2026 with the SPEAR group to test multiple high doses of VYD2311 to treat people with Long COVID who show SARS-CoV-2 viral persistence.

Many people in the world, including some doctors, do not believe that Long COVID is a real disease. To combat misinformation, the World Health Organization (WHO), with support from the European Union, released “8 Long COVID myth-busters that use evidence-based information and real patient stories to clear up these myths and promote scientifically accurate understanding. These messages are published in the form of social media assets that can easily be adapted by any individuals and organizations and further shared.”

From: https://www.who.int/europe/event/myth-busters--debunking-long-covid-myths-and-misconceptions

Measles

The CDC reported that as of January 29, 2026, 588 confirmed measles cases were reported in the United States in 2026 with 3% (17 of 588 cases) hospitalized. Typically about 12% of people with measles are hospitalized for complications as was seen in 2025.

However, the South Carolina Department of Public Health reports that as of January 30, there are actually 847 cases of measles just in South Carolina alone. The South Carolina measles outbreak is now bigger than last year’s Texas outbreak of measles. “Dr. Linda Bell, South Carolina’s state epidemiologist, points out that in Texas, measles cases grew over the course of seven months, while in South Carolina it has taken just 16 weeks to surpass the Texas case count.”

Measles is extremely contagious and each person with measles will, on average, infect 12 to 18 other people (R0) in an unvaccinated population. The incubation period for measles is long, ranging from 7 to 21 days. So, if an unvaccinated person is exposed, they will need to quarantine from school or work for 21 days.

From: https://www.cnn.com/2026/01/27/health/largest-us-measles-outbreak-south-carolina

Today, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) stopped “all movement” at the Dilley family detention facility in Texas because two detainees are infected with measles. Immigrant advocacy lawyers express concern about conditions and urge that this not be used to block facility inspections. Dilley is the detention center where 5 year old Liam Conejo Ramos and his father were being detained, until they were flown back to Minnesota today. I hope that they were vaccinated against the measles or some people from that plane may need to quarantine as well.

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Government and Medicine News

Minnesota physician Dr. Trappey wrote an important piece in the New England Journal of Medicine this week entitled “We Do Care”. I highly recommend it. You can read the full article here. He talks about how as physicians, we must first do no harm (primum non nocere) and discusses how difficult it has been in Minnesota as ICE shoots people in the streets and then does not let physicians give them medical care as they die of their gunshot wounds. Sick patients are scared to go to the hospital to seek care, and when they do finally come in, they are much sicker than they would have been if they had come in earlier. He talks about tear gas being used on children and “critically ill infants whose parents are too terrified to come to the hospital to comfort them.”

The Annals of Medicine reports widespread “unexplained pauses” in nearly half of the CDC’s public health surveillance databases in 2025, especially for vaccination and respiratory disease data, raising concerns that gaps in real-time data could weaken evidence-based policy and public trust.

This week, the new chair of the federal vaccine advisory panel Dr. Kirk Milhoan (CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices) suggested in a podcast interview that routine childhood immunizations, including polio and measles, should be made optional. Vaccines have a long proven history of protecting public and individual health.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), endorsed by 12 leading medical and healthcare organizations, released its updated 2026 Childhood and Adolescent Immunization Schedule which is based on scientific evidence. At least 28 states have announced they will not follow the CDC’s new pared-down childhood vaccine recommendations. I anticipate that these states will follow the AAP recommendations, but there may be variations depending on the state.

A day after the U.S. federal government left the World Health Organization (WHO), the state of California joined the WHO’s Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network, aiming to maintain international public-health cooperation despite federal disengagement.

A new analysis shows that the U.S. federal government has lost over 10,000 STEM Ph.D. scientists since the start of the Trump administration. This massive “brain drain” means that our nation is losing the high-level expertise which could affect research and innovation in many fields.

Other news

The autonomic nervous system (ANS) is broken into 3 parts:

1. the sympathetic nervous system (fight or flight),

2. the parasympathetic nervous system (rest and digest) and

3. the enteric nervous system (ENS).

The enteric nervous system (ENS) consists of a mesh-like system of nerves that line and surround the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and control GI motility and secretion.

Muscularis macrophages (ME-Macs) are specialized immune cells residing in the muscle layers of the intestines and are considered “trained guardians”, working with enteric neurons of the ENS to regulate motility, protect against injury, and support tissue repair to keep the gut healthy. A new study in Nature shows how the α-synuclein (αS) protein that clumps in the brains of people with Parkinson’s disease actually originates in the gut. The α-synuclein is picked up by ME-Macs in the intestines. This triggers expansion of circulating T cells that do not remove the toxic α-synuclein from the ENS (gut nervous system) and the CNS (brain). Depleting gut ME-Macs in this study led to reduction of α-synuclein pathology in the brain. “These results indicate ME-Macs as early cellular mediators of αS pathology along the gut–brain axis, presenting cellular mechanisms that may underlie body-first Parkinson’s Disease.”

ME-Macs: The Gut’s Role in Parkinson’s Disease via the Gut-Brain Axis

Image made with Gemini Nano Banana

Researchers from the Snyder lab at Stanford announced CordDB, a comprehensive database of umbilical cord blood metabolite profiles linked to clinical data. The database is available at https://corddb.stanford.edu/. Major findings in analysis of the cord blood samples “include (1) characterization of the umbilical cord arteriovenous gradient, revealing that fatty acids are a primary source of carbon for the developing fetus; (2) the presence of an umbilical cord signature in healthy newborns, characterized by elevated levels of vitamin B5 and tryptophan betaine; (3) the association of microbial metabolites with the health status of the mother and the health outcomes of the newborn; (4) association of the taurine metabolic pathway with newborn health; (5) the ability to predict lung surfactant administration based on cord blood molecular profiling; (6) the demonstration that bupivacaine is metabolized by the newborn; and (7) the observation that when mothers receive betamethasone, the metabolically predicted gestational age of the newborn is different than their actual gestational age.” The group plans to expand the CordDB database by adding data from a large variety of maternal-fetal conditions over time.

Newborn dried blood spot screening for inborn errors of metabolism is a routine test in many countries. Researchers from the Aghaeepour lab at Stanford analyzed routine newborn dried blood spot metabolites from 13,536 premature infants and used a deep learning model to create a “metabolic health index”. The index predicts which premature babies will go on to develop lung, brain, eye, or intestinal complications more accurately than gestational age or birthweight alone and was validated in an independent cohort of 3,299 very premature newborns from Ontario, Canada.

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Score another one for the shingles vaccine! A new study from the University of Southern California of 3,884 adults age 70+ shows that those who received the shingles vaccine had decreased inflammation, slower epigenetic aging, and a lower overall biological aging score. “Biological aging improvements were most pronounced within three years post-vaccination.” Other studies have shown that the live-attenuated shingles vaccine reduces or delays dementia.

Several new articles came out in Nature magazine this week showing that fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) from healthy donors before immunotherapy can improve efficacy against melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, and renal cell carcinoma. Treatment response rates were much higher than expected with the addition of the FMT.

This week, I discovered the website of award-winning wildlife photographer Suzi Eszterhas. She is known for documenting animals with their babies as seen by this sea otter with her 3 day old newborn pup.

Have a great week,

Ruth Ann Crystal MD 

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Ignoring The Meaning of The Holocaust

This is similar to the  Melanie Phillips column, and I'm very glad that people are pointing out this continual attempt to ignore, attack, and erase the Jewish people.  It's as if by admitting that the Holocaust was the extermination of the Jews of Eastern Europe, they would be telling the truth, and they never do that. For the rabidly politically correct, everyone is a victim -- except the Jews.

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Brendan O'Neill, Chief Political Writer at Spiked, 1/30/26

Stealing the Holocaust from the Jews. Failing to mention the Jews on Holocaust Remembrance Day reflects a deep moral sickness.

"It’s not often we can say JD Vance and the BBC have something in common. The bruising VP of the United States and the lily-handed woke-mongers of Britain’s public broadcaster probably disagree on every big topic. But this week, briefly, they were as one: both made the shameful moral error of failing to mention the Jews in their remembrance of the Holocaust.

"It still boggles my mind that people can talk about the Holocaust without saying the J-word. It’s like holding forth on the transatlantic slave trade and not once saying ‘people from Africa’. Or lamenting the nuking of Hiroshima and forgetting to mention Japanese people. And yet here we are, 80 years after the Shoah, surrounded by Jew-free yapping about that most calamitous event in history.

"‘Today we remember the millions of lives lost during the Holocaust’, said Vance on X. He gave a nod to ‘the millions of stories’ from what was ‘one of the darkest chapters in human history’. Millions this and millions that, but not one solitary reference to the six million souls who were shot, gassed and vaporised by the Nazi regime solely on the basis of their ethnicity. Vance mourned the ‘unspeakable brutality’ of that period. Unspeakable brutality against who, JD?

"The Beeb must have been kicking itself. It loves nothing more than an opportunity to have a pop at Trump’s second-in-command, only it made the exact same unpardonable blunder. On Tuesday, Holocaust Remembrance Day, it made a number of Jew-less broadcasts. A seven-minute broadcast on BBC Breakfast made no mention of either Jews or anti-Semitism. Radio 4 said ‘six million people’ were killed. What kind of people? Buddhists? Freemasons?

"The BBC later apologised. Our broadcasts were ‘incorrectly worded’, it said. We should have said ‘six million Jewish people’, it confessed. It added a correction to its website. Take this in: it’s 2026, we have eight decades’ worth of proof for the anti-Semitic lunacy and butchery of the Holocaust, and one of the world’s best-known broadcasters is having to say: ‘Oops. Sorry we forgot the Jews. We’ll add them in now.’

"To my mind the BBC’s apology counts for nothing. Huge questions still dangle over its broadcasts. These faux-virtous lamentations were written by someone, edited by someone, fed into an autocue by someone, read out by someone and filmed, clipped and broadcast by reams of people. And not one of them – not one – said: ‘Oh fuck. We forgot to mention the Jews.’ This is so much more than a mistake – it speaks to a profound moral rot in the upper echelons of society where the poisonous politics of identity has clearly laid ruinous waste to decency and truth.

"This isn’t the first time the Jews have been so crudely shunted from the crime that almost consumed them. Back in 2008, the Socialist Workers Party handed out a leaflet bewailing the Nazi slaughter of ‘LGBT people, trade unionists and disabled people’. Anyone else? Last year, the UK’s then deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, paid tribute to ‘all those who were murdered just for being who they were’, as if the Holocaust were a militant act of political incorrectness rather than an industrialised effort to wipe every last Jew from the Earth.

"In part, this Jew-less memorialising is fuelled by a rank instinct for appeasement. Consciously or otherwise, people drop ‘the Jews’ in order to avoid rankling those sections of society who don’t like them. That’s one reason fewer British schools are marking Holocaust Memorial Day – they don’t want to rile certain Muslim kids and others in the student body who might have been radicalised into Jewphobia in the swirling aftermath of 7 October 2023.

"Josh Shapiro, the Democratic governor of Pennsylvania, wonders if a similar impulse was behind Vance’s Jew-free post. It ‘speaks volumes’, he said, that Vance ‘couldn’t bring himself to acknowledge that six million Jews were killed by Hitler’. Perhaps he’s trying to ‘comfort’ the ‘anti-Semites on the right who are infecting the Republican Party’. Shapiro raises a pressing question. Vance is a clever bloke. He knows who was targeted by Hitler. He also knows that the digital arena in which he makes a splash is polluted by phrenologist freaks who loathe the Jews and the Jewish homeland. If he failed to name the Jews in order to keep such scumbags sweet, that is beyond immoral.

"Among both the new right and the wet liberals who stink up our institutions, it seems the truth of the Holocaust is being sacrificed at the altar of identitarianism. Faux progressives ditch the Jews in the cynical name of maintaining the multicultural order in which ‘brown’ people are perma-victims and ‘whites’, including Jews, are perma-oppressors. Referencing the psychotic efforts of industrialised racism to annihilate European Jewry grates against contemporary narratives of victimhood and privilege, so it’s memory-holed. And on the other side, among Vance and others, it would seem a reluctance to poke the Jew-wariness of white identitarians is behind their deficient Holocaust remembrance.

"It’s a species of Holocaust denial. I’m not saying these people are ideological racists like David Irving and other lowlifes who devote their every waking hour to lying about the greatest crime in history. But the consequence of their failure to use the J-word is nonetheless to obfuscate, to blur, to deny. When you say the Holocaust was a sad event in which people died, you are diverting from the singular, epoch-shaping truth of that event – which is that the Nazis sought to exterminate the Jews.

"There’s something else going on, too. Something incredibly creepy. In my book, After the Pogrom: 7 October, Israel and the Crisis of Civilisation, I call it ‘Holocaust envy’. Today’s all-ravaging culture of grievance, the nauseating spectacle of competitive victimhood, has given rise to a situation where people chip away at the Jewishness of the Holocaust in order to weaken the Jews’ claim to historic victimhood and boost their own. Hence we increasingly see advocacy groups saying the Holocaust was as much a crime against gay people, trans people and left-wing people as it was against Jewish people.

"We now have the truly obscene situation where those who insist the Holocaust was an industrialised campaign to destroy the Jews and their history are themselves accused of ‘Holocaust denial’. ‘How dare you distract attention from trans suffering and gay suffering, you denier!’ – that now gets barked at people, primarily Jews, who cling for dear life to the truth of the Shoah as the seas of moral relativism, institutionalised self-pity and outright racism swirl dangerously around it. In this twisted Kafkaesque universe, truth is denialism, and denialism truth.

"Let us be clear: everyone suffered under the Nazis. The working classes, trade unionists, homosexuals and especially disabled people and the Roma. But only one people was expressly targeted for complete and utter destruction. Say it: the Jews. The Holocaust was an attempt to dejudify Europe. Now we are witnessing the dejudification of the Holocaust itself. The ‘liberation’ of that crime from those who suffered it in order that other special interest groups might lay claim to it instead, and in the process indulge their depthless capacity for self-pity and self-promotion. It is something even worse than Holocaust denial – it’s Holocaust theft."

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Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. His latest book – After the Pogrom: 7 October, Israel and the Crisis of Civilisation – is available to order on Amazon UK and Amazon US now. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy.