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To: marcher who wrote (202174)10/20/2023 9:38:52 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 218534
 
Tropical disease now endemic in U.S., CDC says. In deadlier form, it's coming via dogs.



EDUARDO CUEVAS, USA TODAY
October 19, 2023 at 2:41 PM

A tropical disease once seen almost exclusively among Americans returning from travel abroad now has a unique U.S. strain.

Health officials warn that a related, deadlier parasite seen in other countries could thrive in the U.S. due to these improved climatological conditions for the disease.

The parasite known as leishmania spreads when sandflies, historically found in tropical climes, bite people. Sandflies carrying the parasite also infect other mammals such as woodrats which further allow its movement. Climate change, some researchers say, may be expanding the geographical reach of sandflies and, consequently, the reach of the disease.

A related parasite also comes in undetected by way of one million dogs entering the country annually. The U.S. doesn't have adequate screening in place for the parasite, which is something researchers hope to address.

Previous infections came to the U.S. when people traveling from warmer areas brought the disease back. The U.S. doesn’t have federal reporting on the disease, making it difficult to understand its sudden prevalence in recent years. But new findings from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicate cases of the milder form of the disease, cutaneous leishmaniasis, derived from a slightly different American parasitic strain.

Public health: Illinois reports first case of measles in the state in 4 years, health officials say

“This is a disease that we in the United States don’t really think about,” said Dr. Mary Kamb, a medical epidemiologist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria. “It’s really a disease that belongs to other countries.”

The World Health Organization estimates as many as one million people get cutaneous leishmaniasis annually. The populations infected are mostly in areas with warmer climates such as the Mediterranean, the Middle East and Latin America. However, health officials suspect warmer southern American states, including Texas, have more suitable conditions for sandflies to thrive and pass on the disease.

The disease can disfigure people’s skin with ulcers that sometimes take weeks or months to show after a person has been bitten. It can leave scarring that researchers say is recognizable and brings a social stigma in low-income countries. Cutaneous leishmaniasis doesn’t cause death or severe disability, they said.

Medical mystery: How is leprosy spreading domestically in the US? Some experts point to armadillos.

On Thursday, Kamb and other CDC researchers presented an analysis at the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene’s annual conference in Chicago looking at cases sent to CDC laboratories for testing from 2005 to 2019. The CDC findings are based on more than 2,000 cases across the U.S., Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Eighty-six of the people involved in the research had not traveled abroad prior to developing leishmaniasis.

While cases found in the U.S. typically have genetic strains from abroad, the CDC researchers’ analysis indicates that a parasitic strain circulating in the U.S. for years is slightly different from the parasitic strain of leishmania mexicana that’s typically found in Mexico and Central America.

The findings suggest the local strain has circulated for some time, and study authors recommend the U.S. develop better screening of the disease, Kamb said.

Hard to track without national reportingOther research, in addition to the study presented this week, has previously found leishmaniasis occurring within the U.S.

While training in Texas, Dr. Bridget McIlwee, a dermatologist now based in Springfield, Illinois, worked with a patient with no history of international travel who contracted leishmaniasis. The man had small bumps on his ears. The marks didn’t resemble textbook images of cases, McIlwee noted, so she said it could have been confused for another benign health condition. After performing a biopsy on the bumps, tissue samples matched leishmaniasis.

In a 2018 study, McIlwee examined additional cases, mostly reported to the Texas Department of State Health Services, which includes leishmaniasis as a reportable condition, from 2007 to 2017. About 59% of the cases involved patients who had not traveled abroad for 10 years.

Even for cases that doctors diagnosed leishmaniasis, few were actually reported to public health officials, McIlwee added.

“If it's not required to be reported, then we can't really track it nationally,” McIlwee said. “That is another interesting piece of the puzzle because it's going to be hard for us to keep an eye on it without a mechanism for national reporting.”



Dogs could bring more deadly disease, officials warnAs conditions warm due to climate change, habitats for sandflies are projected to expand northward, increasing vectors and reservoirs for leishmaniasis, said McIlwee, who has upcoming research on projections about the spread of the parasite.

The increased evidence of cutaneous leishmaniasis among American sandfly populations also increases the risk of a more severe form of the tropical disease surfacing in the U.S.

The focus of this week's presentation introduces another element for transmission: Dogs.

Known as visceral leishmaniasis, the deadlier disease researchers studied sometimes circulates among local insect populations after spreading from imported dogs carrying the pathogen into communities, according to researchers from the University of Iowa, U.S. Army Veterinary Services, Johns Hopkins University and the CDC who planned to present on the risks on Thursday. This strain is transmitted the same way as the skin-related disease, via sandfly bites, but visceral leishmaniasis contains a related parasite, leishmania infantum, that affects organs and kills upwards of 20,000 people annually in regions where the parasite thrives.

There isn’t a human vaccine for leishmaniasis, but vaccines are available for dogs in Europe and Brazil. Researchers on Thursday planned to show a new tool to promote screenings at ports of entry.

With both mild and severe forms of leishmaniasis, the U.S. needs to work with other countries to fight infectious diseases, according to Dr. Daniel Bausch, the president of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.

“A global approach is especially important," he said in a statement, "since climate change allows insects that carry pathogens like Leishmania, dengue virus and malaria to expand their range.”

Eduardo Cuevas covers health and breaking news for USA TODAY. He can be reached at EMCuevas1@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tropical disease endemic, CDC says. Coming in deadlier form via dogs.



To: marcher who wrote (202174)10/20/2023 10:28:01 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 218534
 
Covid deaths are on the rise again, so what happens? Mask-wearing in hospitals is scrapped

George Monbiot



The only masking that’s going on is that of the government’s continued failure to get to grips with the virus

Mon 16 Oct 2023 01.00 EDT


1697


For some people, going to hospital may now be more dangerous than staying at home untreated. Many clinically vulnerable people fear, sometimes with good reason, that a visit to hospital or the doctors’ surgery could be the end of them. Of course, there have always been dangers where sick people gather. But, until now, health services have sought to minimise them. Astonishingly, this is often no longer the case.

Across the UK, over the past two years, the NHS has been standing down even the most basic precautions against Covid-19. For example, staff in many surgeries and hospitals are no longer required to wear face masks in most clinical settings. Reassuring posters have appeared even in cancer wards, where patients might be severely immunocompromised. A notice, photographed and posted on social media last week, tells people that while they are “no longer required to wear a mask in this area”, they should use hand sanitiser “to protect our vulnerable patients, visitors and our staff”. Sanitising is good practice. But Covid-19 is an airborne virus, which spreads further and faster by exhalation than by touch.

The story this policy tells, which the government would have us believe, is that Covid-19 is all but over. It’s not true. Despite a collapse in testing, which means the figures will be grossly understated, the number of death certificates giving Covid-19 as a cause has been climbing steadily as autumn approaches, rising from 80 per week in early August to 306 in late September. Who knows what the real number may be?

Forget it, be happy, keep shopping: if you don’t live and work as though the virus has vanished, you’re holding the country back. There could scarcely be a more powerful symbol of the all-clear than doctors and nurses greeting their patients without masks.

When we forget the virus, we forget the clinically vulnerable people – an estimated 2.2 million in the UK – trapped by our insouciance. Some can scarcely leave their homes, as the danger to them of infection is so great. They are the shadow that falls across the sunny story the government tells, a shadow that must be ignored and denied.

Clinical staff, long after the clapping died away, have continued to carry the weight of this disease. A recent British Medical Association (BMA) survey of hundreds of doctors with long Covid revealed its ruinous impact on their lives. From junior doctors to consultants, they’ve been abandoned by the system, unable to get appointments or referrals, left alone to face the loss of their careers and almost every other aspect of their lives.

Long Covid is so debilitating that a study in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) this year found many who suffer it reported a lower quality of life than people with stage 4 lung cancer. Another study found that typical symptoms of long Covid “had an impact on health as severe as the long-term effects of traumatic brain injury”. Some doctors, the BMA survey found, are unable to work, to care for their children, cook, perform basic arithmetic, even brush their hair. Some are now facing the loss of their homes, bankruptcy and destitution. Though most caught the virus in the line of duty, they’ve been bright-sided, sacrificed to the officially sanctioned delusion that it’s over, and we should all get on with our lives. They must wish they could.

Masks work, especially if they’re N95 respirators or equivalent. They work best when everyone uses them, and are kept on throughout the time we spend in an enclosed space. This is because the aerosols that carry the virus can keep circulating in a room, long after they’ve been exhaled.

But unmasking isn’t the end of it. Testing for Covid-19 in hospitals has also been largely curtailed. As the Observer revealed, clinical staff in some places are being discouraged from testing themselves. If they want a test, they must buy it. Why would hospitals want less information about infection?

Now we discover that the government is stockpiling vaccines rather than deploying them. It’s senseless for two reasons. First, because it should be maximising protection before the full autumn surge begins; second, because by the time they’re used, new mutations could render them worthless.

Bad enough? Oh no. Current government guidance advises staff who think they’re infected to stay at home, but only if they “have a high temperature or do not feel well enough to go to work”. Even then, they’re not required to take a test. If they feel well enough to work, it seems, they’re welcome to spread it around.



Living with long Covid, I’m terrified of being reinfected with one of the new variants
Kathryn Bromwich



Read more


The same advice has been issued by the government to schools: “If your child has mild symptoms such as a runny nose, sore throat or mild cough, and they feel well enough, they can go to school or childcare.” Were you to devise a formula for spreading the disease as far and wide as possible, you could scarcely do better than this.

We know how to minimise infection: ventilation, air filtration and germicidal ultraviolet light in indoor public spaces; N95 masks and Covid tests provided free to those who want them; mask mandates in clinical settings; vaccines that are widely available and up to date; proper support for workers and for the parents of children who test positive, so they can stay at home without losing their income.

There’s plenty of masking going on, but not the kind that prevents infection. The government is masking its failure to get to grips with this virus. It’s masking the fact that, thanks to three years of such failures, Covid-19 is now a constantly evolving endemic infection likely to kill or disable many thousands every winter. It’s masking the ableism its rhetoric has encouraged: the othering and blaming of those who contract the disease, driven by the widespread but wholly mistaken belief that fit and healthy people don’t catch it. It’s masking the cruelty of a system that shuts down the lives of clinically vulnerable people.

These facts – and these people – are treated as social embarrassments, locked in the government’s moral attic like a relative with a mental illness in Victorian England. They’re the country’s family secret. That coughing noise upstairs? Nothing that need concern you.

  • George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist




To: marcher who wrote (202174)10/21/2023 5:08:47 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 218534
 
Re <<blocker>>

reuters.com.

China ship is focus of pipeline damage probe, Finland says
Andrius Sytas
October 21, 20234:36 AM GMT+8
Updated 12 hours ago

HELSINKI/VILNIUS, Oct 20 (Reuters) - An investigation into the damage to the Balticonnector gas pipeline is currently focused on the role of the Chinese NewNew Polar Bear container vessel, Finland's National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) said on Friday.

Early on Oct. 8, a gas pipeline and a telecoms cable connecting Finland and Estonia were broken, in what Finnish investigators said may have been sabotage, though they have yet to conclude whether it was an accident or a deliberate act.

On Tuesday, Sweden said a third link, connecting Stockholm to Tallinn, had been damaged at roughly the same time as the other two.

"The police have established in the criminal investigation that the movements of the vessel NewNew Polar Bear flying the flag of Hong Kong coincide with the time and place of the gas pipeline damage," NBI said in a statement.

"For this reason, the investigation is now focused on the role of the said vessel," the Finnish investigators added.



Location of damaged gas pipeFollowing Finland's NBI statement, Estonian investigators, who are also looking into the telecoms cable incidents, said they were still looking at two ships, the NewNew Polar Bear and Russia's Sevmorput.

"We have identified that during the incidents, the vessels NewNew Polar Bear and Sevmorput were in the area. We are still investigating whether or not these vessels had anything to do with the damage," they said in a statement to Reuters.

Only these two ships were present at all three incident sites around the approximate time when the damage occurred, according to vessel tracking data reviewed by Reuters.

'HEAVY OBJECT'

Finland's NBI said "a heavy object" was found on the seabed near the pipeline damage and were investigating whether this was linked to the incident.

"The investigation has confirmed that the damage has been caused by an external mechanical force, and based on current knowledge there is no reason to believe the damage has been caused by an explosion," Detective Superintendent Risto Lohi said in the statement.

A recently formed "huge clump of soil" deep in the clay seabed was believed to contain an extremely heavy object, and was the subject of investigation, the NBI said.

"Attempts will be made to lift the object from the sea for technical examination," Lohi said.

NewNew Shipping, the owner and operator of the NewNew Polar Bear, declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.

INCIDENTS

Separately, Finland's foreign ministry said on Friday it had contacted China and Russia via diplomatic channels regarding the investigation of damage to a pipeline and a telecoms cable.

The Finnish foreign ministry, in a statement to Reuters said it had contacted China to seek help to get in touch with the NewNew Polar Bear.

Regarding Russia, Finland contacted the Russian foreign ministry "stating the seriousness of the matter" and that an investigation had been launched.

A second telecoms cable, linking Sweden and Estonia, suffered a partial outageat around the same time, which may also have been caused by outside influence, Swedish and Estonian authorities have said.

The incidents have stoked concerns about the security of energy supplies in the wider Nordic region and prompted the NATO military alliance to ramp up patrolsin the Baltic Sea.

Russia's Rosatom said the Sevmorput had no link to any of the pipeline damage.

"We categorically reject as groundless any suggestions that a Rosatom-operated ship may have been in any way connected to the Balticconnector pipeline incident in the Gulf of Finland on October 8," Rosatom said in a statement to Reuters.

"It passed through the Gulf of Finland, an area of intense maritime traffic, without stopping or slowing down, maintaining an average speed of 14.5 knots. The crew did not observe or record anything unusual, suspicious, or otherwise reportable."

Reporting by Anne Kauranen, additional reporting by Beijing and Moscow newsrooms, writing by Terje Solsvik, editing by Gwladys Fouche, Alex Richardson, Jonathan Oatis and Jane Merriman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Acquire Licensing Rights

Andrius covers politics and general news in the Baltics - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, the three key states along the NATO's eastern flank, the staunchest supporters of Ukraine and the most vocal critics of Russia in NATO and the European Union. He wrote stories on everything from China pressuring German companies to leave Taiwan-supporting Lithuania to Iraqi migrants hiding in the forest at the Belarus border to a farmer burning grain for heat during the energy crisis. Contact: +37068274006.



To: marcher who wrote (202174)10/21/2023 5:21:05 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218534
 
Re <<blocker>> my jack pointed me here en.wikipedia.org