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Leading the News
U.S. sets record for COVID-19 cases over seven days with more than 500,000 infectionsUSA Today (10/28, Bacon) reports the U.S. “set a record this week for new coronavirus cases over a seven-day period with more than 500,000 infections.” Daily deaths “are also climbing – one of us is dying every 107 seconds, according to Johns Hopkins data.” And daily hospitalizations “have been rising steadily for more than a month, from 28,608 on Sept. 20 to more than 44,000 on Tuesday.” |
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Fox News (10/28, Rivas) reports, “Intense sadness, hopelessness and anxiety among new mothers may last up to three years after childbirth,” researchers concluded. For the study, investigators “examined data on 5,000 women from the Upstate KIDS study in New York and found that about one in four moms experienced high levels of depression up to three years after birth.” The findings were published online in Pediatrics.
The New York Times (10/28, Hoffman) reports STD infection rates “had been on track in 2020 to hit record highs in the” U.S., but they are now decreasing. However, experts suspect that the falling rates may reflect a decline in testing due to the COVID-19 pandemic, rather than a decline in actual infections or transmission. For example, 80% “of sexual health screening clinics reported having to reduce hours or shut down altogether sometime during the pandemic, according to a survey by the National Coalition of STD Directors.”
The New York Times (10/28, Bakalar) reports, “Long-term exposure to noise may be linked to an increased risk for Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia,” investigators concluded after conducting “periodic interviews with 5,227 people 65 and older participating in a study on aging.” After controlling for confounding factors, researchers “found that each 10 decibel increase in community noise level was associated with a 36% higher likelihood of mild cognitive impairment, and a 29% increased risk for Alzheimer’s disease.” The findings were published online in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.
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Reuters (10/28) reports the U.S. “will pay as much as $1.19 billion to Eli Lilly and Co to secure nearly 1 million doses of its experimental [SARS-CoV-2] antibody treatment.” The company “will start delivering 300,000 doses of the treatment, for which it is being paid $375 million, within two months of receiving an emergency use authorization.” According to HHS, the federal government then “has an option to buy an additional 650,000 vials for $812.5 million.”
The Hill (10/28, Weixel) reports the deal was announced “a day after Lilly said the drug had no clinical benefit for helping hospitalized patients.” However, “the company said it is confident the drug is helpful to those earlier in the course of a [SARS-CoV-2] infection.”
McClatchy (10/28, Wilner) reports the CDC “sent a letter to governors this week pushing back a Nov. 1 deadline for states to be ready to receive and distribute coronavirus vaccines.” The letter, “obtained by McClatchy, sets a new date of Nov. 15, updating a request made weeks ago from CDC Director Robert Redfield.” Since then, “the companies that are producing the leading vaccine candidates currently in clinical trials – Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca – have all stated that they do not anticipate submitting clinical trial data for review by the Food and Drug Administration until mid-November at the earliest.”
NPR (10/28, Gordon) reports a special article published in the New England Journal of Medicine concluded that “female primary care physicians spend more time with their patients than male doctors – an average of 2.4 minutes per visit,” but “female physicians still make less money.” The study’s “authors argue that the extra time female physicians spend with their patients adds up quickly and has profound implications for the pay gap between women and men.”
• Adults should start screening for colorectal cancer routinely at age 45, USPSTF draft recommendation statement says
• HHS guidance authorizes pharmacy technicians and pharmacy interns to administer vaccines and coronavirus tests
• Medicare to cover coronavirus vaccines for seniors
• Report says health literacy may improve health outcomes among Medicare beneficiaries
• Older Americans better at following COVID-19 health recommendations than younger adults, survey indicates
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