Tuesday, September 14, 2021

In case you missed it...9/14

This is the most dangerous of times and we have to stay informed. Sometimes we're so busy and the news is overwhelming. Here's a digest of stories you may have missed. Or that the news skipped.


IT'S REPUBLICAN RECALL ELECTION DAY IN CA

CA Gov. Gavin Newsom
Photo credit: Gage Skidmore


 


Having a good listener improves your brain health

Source:
NYU Langone Health / NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Summary:
Researchers find having someone to listen to you when you need to talk is associated with greater cognitive resilience. New study shows social interaction in adulthood can stave off cognitive decline despite brain aging.

    

FULL STORY

Supportive social interactions in adulthood are important for your ability to stave off cognitive decline despite brain aging or neuropathological changes such as those present in Alzheimer's disease, a new study finds.


Friday, September 10, 2021

Double vaccination halves risk of long COVID, study finds



Date:
September 1, 2021
Source:
King's College London
Summary:
Adults who have received a double vaccination are 47 percent less likely to have long COVID should they contract a COVID-19 infection, according to new research.
:
    FULL STORY

Adults who have received a double vaccination are 49% less likely to have Long COVID should they contract a COVID-19 infection, a new study finds.

Researchers at King's College London analysed data from participants logging their symptoms, tests and vaccines 8th December 2020 and 4 July 2021, including 1,240,009 (first dose) and 971,504 (second dose) vaccinated UK adults. The research team assessed a range of factors, including age, frailty and areas of deprivation and compared that with post-vaccination infection.

The study, published today in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, found that in the unlikely event of catching COVID-19 after being double vaccinated, the risk of Long COVID was reduced by almost half. There were also fewer hospitalisations (73% less likely) and lower burden of acute symptoms (31% less likely) among those fully vaccinated. The nature of the most common symptoms were similar to unvaccinated adults -- e.g. anosmia,(loss of smell) cough, fever, headaches, and fatigue. All these symptoms were milder and less frequently reported by people who were vaccinated, and they were half as likely to get multiple symptoms in the first week of illness. Sneezing was the only symptom which was more commonly reported in vaccinated people with COVID-19.

The findings demonstrate the need to target at-risk groups. Frail adults have already been shown to be disproportionately affected by COVID-19. The research team suggests strategies such as a timely booster programme, targeted infection control measures and more research into the immune response to vaccination in this group could help address the issue.

Lead researcher Dr Claire Steves from King's College London said: "In terms of the burden of Long COVID, it's good news that our research has found that having a double vaccination significantly reduces the risk of both catching the virus and if you do, developing long standing symptoms. However, among our frail, older adults and those living in deprived areas the risk is still significant and they should be urgently prioritised for second and booster vaccinations."


Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Having a good listener improves your brain health

 


Your amazing brain in clear language


Having a good listener improves your brain health

Source:
NYU Langone Health / NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Summary:
Researchers find having someone to listen to you when you need to talk is associated with greater cognitive resilience. New study shows social interaction in adulthood can stave off cognitive decline despite brain aging.

    
FULL STORY

Supportive social interactions in adulthood are important for your ability to stave off cognitive decline despite brain aging or neuropathological changes such as those present in Alzheimer's disease, a new study finds.


Friday, June 11, 2021

One lifestyle may hold a key to slowing down aging


Your amazing brain in clear language.

Tsimane people are unique for their healthy brains that age more slowly


Date:

May 26, 2021

Source:

University of Southern California


Summary:

The Tsimane indigenous people of the Bolivian Amazon experience less brain atrophy than their American and European peers. The decrease in their brain volumes with age is 70% slower than in Western populations.


    

FULL STORY

A team of international researchers has found that the Tsimane indigenous people of the Bolivian Amazon experience less brain atrophy than their American and European peers. The decrease in their brain volumes with age is 70% slower than in Western populations. Accelerated brain volume loss can be a sign of dementia.



The study was published May 26, 2021 in the Journal of Gerontology, Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences.


Although people in industrialized nations have access to modern medical care, they are more sedentary and eat a diet high in saturated fats. In contrast, the Tsimane have little or no access to health care but are extremely physically active and consume a high-fiber diet that includes vegetables, fish and lean meat.


"The Tsimane have provided us with an amazing natural experiment on the potentially detrimental effects of modern lifestyles on our health," said study author Andrei Irimia, an assistant professor of gerontology, neuroscience and biomedical engineering at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology and the USC Viterbi School of Engineering. "These findings suggest that brain atrophy may be slowed substantially by the same lifestyle factors associated with very low risk of heart disease."




The researchers enrolled 746 Tsimane adults, ages 40 to 94, in their study. To acquire brain scans, they provided transportation for the participants from their remote villages to Trinidad, Bolivia, the closest town with CT scanning equipment. That journey could last as long as two full days with travel by river and road.


The team used the scans to calculate brain volumes and then examined their association with age for Tsimane. Next, they compared these results to those in three industrialized populations in the U.S. and Europe.


The scientists found that the difference in brain volumes between middle age and old age is 70% smaller in Tsimane than in Western populations. This suggests that the Tsimane's brains likely experience far less brain atrophy than Westerners as they age; atrophy is correlated with risk of cognitive impairment, functional decline and dementia.


The researchers note that the Tsimane have high levels of inflammation, which is typically associated with brain atrophy in Westerners. But their study suggests that high inflammation does not have a pronounced effect upon Tsimane brains.


According to the study authors, the Tsimane's low cardiovascular risks may outweigh their infection-driven inflammatory risk, raising new questions about the causes of dementia. One possible reason is that, in Westerners, inflammation is associated with obesity and metabolic causes whereas, in the Tsimane, it is driven by respiratory, gastrointestinal, and parasitic infections. Infectious diseases are the most prominent cause of death among the Tsimane.


"Our sedentary lifestyle and diet rich in sugars and fats may be accelerating the loss of brain tissue with age and making us more vulnerable to diseases such as Alzheimer's," said study author Hillard Kaplan, a professor of health economics and anthropology at Chapman University who has studied the Tsimane for nearly two decades. "The Tsimane can serve as a baseline for healthy brain aging."


Healthier hearts and -- new research shows -- healthier brains


The indigenous Tsimane people captured scientists' -- and the world's -- attention when an earlier study found them to have extraordinarily healthy hearts in older age. That prior study, published by the Lancet in 2017, showed that Tsimane have the lowest prevalence of coronary atherosclerosis of any population known to science and that they have few cardiovascular disease risk factors. The very low rate of heart disease among the roughly 16,000 Tsimane is very likely related to their pre-industrial subsistence lifestyle of hunting, gathering, fishing, and farming.


"This study demonstrates that the Tsimane stand out not only in terms of heart health, but brain health as well," Kaplan said. "The findings suggest ample opportunities for interventions to improve brain health, even in populations with high levels of inflammation."


Story Source:


Materials provided by University of Southern California. Original written by Jenesse Miller. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.






Wednesday, May 26, 2021

The immortal Henrietta Lacks and the Covid vaccine


Credit: Keith Henry Brown. Henrietta Lacks, the "Mother of Modern Medicine," made a vital contribution to the Covid-19 vaccines, 70 years after her death.

At this time of year when we honor the memory of George Floyd and repairing racial injustice, we must not forget the story of Henrietta Lacks. She is called the "Mother of Modern Medicine" for good reason. Her cells, used in research around the world, on many projects, played a significant role in the development of the Covid-19 vaccine, as they did for the development of the polio vaccine by Dr. Jonas Salk.

Remarkably, 70 years after her death from cervical cancer, Henrietta Lacks' cells live on, allowing for lower research cost and for researchers scientists to avoid testing on human subjects.

Correcting a longstanding injustice

Henrietta Lacks' contributions in the form of her immortal cells have finally been recognized by the biomedical community. Johns Hopkins University, where she was treated for cervical cancer, the National Institutes of Health, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and other individuals have made reparations to the family in terms of cash payments from the results of experiments on her cells. 

A Henrietta Lacks Foundation, seats on the board that decides how her cells will be used, and symposiums and scholarships in her name all honor Henrietta Lacks and have begun to correct the ethically wrong use of her cells, which was begun without her consent. 

Read more about this important, remarkable story. And it is hoped that some will get the vaccine which, incredibly, she helped make possible decades after her death.

Learn more about Henrietta Lacks, the vaccine, Covid-19 and public health in this new book:



Sunday, May 23, 2021

Is your state getting vaccinated?

 

Find out where your state ranks in vaccine rates.

This week, CNN ranked the states by order of percentage of residents who have received at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose.


The numbers can be looked at in several ways, but they are falling short, in some states very short, of the goals for herd immunity, i.e., community immunity. President Biden has set a goal to have 70% of Americans with at least one vaccine dose by early July. 


We need to pull together in this effort, to encourage people to get vaccinated against Covid-19 and then even to get angry that people are ignoring the science and risking the health of their neighbors, friends, and families. 


Get more information for yourself by ordering a copy of the book listed below. 


Here are the states and their vaccination rates as of May 19th.


  1. Maine 50.12% 
  2. Connecticut 49.29% 
  3. Vermont 48.39% 
  4. Rhode Island 47.97% 
  5. Massachusetts 47.68% 
  6. New Jersey 45.16% 
  7. New Mexico 44.92% 
  8. Hawaii 44.68% 
  9. Maryland 43.66% 
  10. New York 43.44% 
  11. Minnesota 42.41%, 
  12. Wisconsin 42.05% 
  13. Colorado 41.94% 
  14. District of Columbia 41.54% 
  15. Virginia 41.32% 
  16. Washington 41.28% 
  17. South Dakota 41.25% 
  18. Iowa 41.22% 
  19. Pennsylvania 40.11% 
  20. Nebraska 39.98% 
  21. Oregon 39.98% 
  22. Delaware 39.81% 
  23. California 39.33%, 
  24. Michigan 39.25% 
  25. Maryland 38.90%
  26. Ohio 38.14% 
  27. Alaska 38.04% 
  28. New Hampshire 37.93%
  29. Illinois 37.11% 
  30. Kansas 36.71%
  31. Kentucky 36.56% 
  32. Montana 36.55% 
  33. Florida 36.15% 
  34. North Dakota 35.33% 
  35. North Carolina 34.42% 
  36. Nevada 34.25% 
  37. Texas 33.06% 
  38. West Virginia 33.02%
  39. Indiana 32.99% 
  40. Missouri 32.83% 
  41. Oklahoma 32.58% 
  42. South Carolina 31.97%  
  43. Idaho 31.16% 
  44. Wyoming 30.6% 
  45. Utah 30.22% 
  46. Tennessee 30.17% 
  47. Louisiana 29.88% 
  48. Georgia 29.53% 
  49. Arkansas 29.5% 
  50. Alabama 27.79% 
  51. Mississippi 26.24%

Learn more about the vaccine, about Covid-19 and about public health in this new book:

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Vax-a-million Lottery offers $1 million


Ohio residents can get a vaccine and a special Lottery ticket.
 

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine gets credit for creativity, if nothing else. Using Covid relief money from the federal government, the governor and his administration set up the nation's first lottery to to lure vaccine reluctant Ohioans to get jabbed.


Vaccine rates for Ohio citizens over the age of 18, which had slowed, are now on the increase. And this special lottery, offering five prizes of a million dollars each, is open solely to the newly vaccinated. The first drawing will be held on May 26th. Winners will be announced weekly until June 23rd.


Officials can't officially confirm that the lottery caused the increase, but first indications are that the idea is the driving force behind increased vaccination rates.


But this isn't the only incentive states are offering. In New Jersey, residents 21 and over can get a free beer after their first vaccination. In Alabama, residents who received a vaccine or a Covid-19 test were able to take a free drive on the famed Talladega speedway last weekend. 


Residents of Maine, who got their first dose of the vaccine before the end of May, can get complimentary fishing or hunting licenses or day passes to State Parks.

Learn more about the vaccine, about Covid-19 and about public health in this new book: