Health & Fitness

New swine flu in China could morph to cause human pandemic, study warns – CBS News
Health & Fitness

New swine flu in China could morph to cause human pandemic, study warns – CBS News

Researchers in China have discovered a new type of swine flu that is capable of triggering a pandemic, according to a study published Monday in the U.S. scientific journal PNAS. Named G4, it is genetically descended from the H1N1 strain that caused a pandemic in 2009. It possesses "all the essential hallmarks of being highly adapted to infect humans," say the authors, scientists at Chinese universities and China's Center for Disease Control and Prevention. The World Health Organization said Tuesday that it would "read carefully" the study on the new virus, with a spokesman saying the findings highlighted the importance of the world not letting "our guard down on influenza." The global medical community must "be vigilant and continue surveillance, even in thecoronavirus pandemic," WHO rep...
A new virus emerging in Chinese pig farms has the ‘essential hallmarks’ for a pandemic – MarketWatch
Health & Fitness

A new virus emerging in Chinese pig farms has the ‘essential hallmarks’ for a pandemic – MarketWatch

An emergent strain of flu in China is attracting the attention of scientists just as the world is wrestling with the worst pandemic since the 1918 Spanish flu. Chinese researchers identified a novel strain of influenza that is infecting pigs in China and that has characteristics of the so-called swine flu, or H1N1, that resulted in the 2009 pandemic. Researchers earlier this week published a report in peer-reviewed science journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, or PNAS, that identifies a strain of flu — G4 EA H1N1 — that has traits akin to H1N1 and could be transmitted to humans. The scientists, who conducted research on Chinese pig populations in various provinces from 2011 to 2018, described the novel flu as having all the n...
Project CommUNITY: COVID-19 highlights generations of racial health inequities – KCRA Sacramento
Health & Fitness

Project CommUNITY: COVID-19 highlights generations of racial health inequities – KCRA Sacramento

Kevin Carter is making health a priority so he can stay strong for his community. The co-founder of the Poor People’s Campaign in Sacramento is advocating for COVID-19 prevention in communities most at-risk. “I'm 60 years old, I have atrial fibrillation, and I'm a little bit overweight, so I have to pay attention,” explained Carter. “It's important for the Black and Brown community to make sure that we have health care.” Carter is among several community advocates who pushed for the testing clinic in Oak Park, which is one of six new community testing sites in Sacramento.“Everything is out at Cal Expo and people cannot make it to Cal Expo and we need something in the community,” Carter said. Dr. Jann Murray-García M.P.H. at UC Davis School of Nursing has been devoting her career to c...
Pooled testing for COVID-19 holds promise, pitfalls – The Associated Press
Health & Fitness

Pooled testing for COVID-19 holds promise, pitfalls – The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The nation’s top health officials are banking on a new approach to dramatically boost U.S. screening for the coronavirus: combining test samples in batches instead of running them one by one. The potential benefits include stretching laboratory supplies, reducing costs and expanding testing to millions more Americans who may unknowingly be spreading the virus. Health officials think infected people who aren’t showing symptoms are largely responsible for the rising number of cases across more than half of states. “Pooling would give us the capacity to go from a half-a-million tests per day to potentially 5 million individuals tested per day,” Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House’s coronavirus response coordinator, told a recent meeting of laboratory experts. For now, feder...
Lake Elsinore Man Says He Regrets Attending Party, Then Dies of Coronavirus – NBC Southern California
Health & Fitness

Lake Elsinore Man Says He Regrets Attending Party, Then Dies of Coronavirus – NBC Southern California

The family of a Lake Elsinore man says he died of COVID-19 after going to a party and becoming infected, and he even posted about feeling sick on social media, saying he regretted going to the gathering. Tommy Macias went to a party with friends a few weeks ago, then he got a phone call from one of those friends saying he tested positive for COVID19, and everyone should get tested. Just days later, Macias died in the hospital.  Laughing and being goofy is how the family of Macias says they want to remember him. "He was just a fun loving person. He loved to pick on people. He loved to crack jokes about everything," said his niece, Danielle Lopez. Her uncle posted on Facebook days before his death saying he contracted the coronavirus after going out and he worri...
Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today – The New York Times
Health & Fitness

Coronavirus Briefing: What Happened Today – The New York Times

Did protests help spread the virus? When the protests against police brutality erupted nationwide, there were fears that the large gatherings could be breeding grounds for the coronavirus. Now, a month after the first demonstrations, we’re wondering: What effect have the protests had on the spread of the virus? For insight we turned to Mitch Smith, a reporter at The Times who is tracking Covid-19 cases. While he and his team are still collecting data, Mitch told us that they have reached out to health officials in 140 cities and counties where there have been protests and have researched protest-linked cases from local news reports. “So far we have confirmed more than 50 people who were at protests, either protesting or working, who were later found to have had the virus,” Mitch told us...
What you need to know about COVID-19: Some states bring back restrictions, hope to slow cases – WJCL News
Health & Fitness

What you need to know about COVID-19: Some states bring back restrictions, hope to slow cases – WJCL News

on. People got complacent. People got a little bit overly confident in our ability to manage, You know more normally and people started to act like it was summer. They started to act like they wanted to go back to parties and do lots of big things like that. And it's coming back and it's fighting That's quite frank. So exactly tripled in an exact four week period of time. So that's a pretty significant rate of increase. Its been accelerating over the last 10 to 14. Excuse me days as well. I like to say this this really very worrisome rise and surge I was both predicted and predictable if you spoke to any of the epidemiologic modelers. And admittedly, it's a model. Back in April, they were pretty clear that we needed to maintain social distancing all the way through the month of...
Gov. DeSantis blames young people partying for coronavirus surge – New York Post
Health & Fitness

Gov. DeSantis blames young people partying for coronavirus surge – New York Post

Florida’s governor has blamed younger people for the dramatic surge in coronavirus cases — claiming it’s impossible to stop them from partying. “If you look at that 25 to 34 age group, that is now by far the leading age group for positive tests,” Gov. Ron DeSantis said at a press conference Sunday, as seen on Wink News. He insisted you “can’t control” them because “they’re younger people.” “They’re going to do what they’re going to do,” DeSantis said. Cell phone data partially backs the governor’s theory — rebellious Floridians had begun leaving their homes more frequently even before reopenings started on May 4, the Tampa Bay Times said. Bars also take some of the blame, DeSantis said as he decried “widespread noncompliance” in packed establishments that “tossed aside” ...