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Monday, February 5, 2018
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Good morning, everyone. Here's what you need to know to get ahead of the day's health news.
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This year's flu season isn't letting up
This year’s flu season is growing worse. Nationwide, 42 states say they’re seeing high levels of flu activity, according to the latest
numbers from the CDC, which cover the week ending Jan. 27. That week, one out of every 14 visits to health care providers was for symptoms of the flu. Health officials say there have been nearly 14,700 hospitalizations
tied to confirmed cases of the flu, and 53 children have died of flu-related causes this season.
The intensity of this year’s flu season has sparked calls for a better flu vaccine. Early
research from Canada suggests the H3N2 component of this season’s vaccine is 17 percent effective at preventing infection. Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) is calling on the country to shell out $1 billion to create a universal flu
vaccine.
But is a universal vaccine actually within reach? STAT's Helen Branswell is hosting a live chat Wednesday to talk about the idea, along with why this year's flu season has been so difficult and how current flu vaccines fall short. Sign up for free
here.
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Two Senators on health committee tied to tobacco investments
Two high-ranking lawmakers on the Senate health committee disclosed that they or their families have traded in stock in tobacco companies while on the committee, STAT’s Ike Swetlitz reports. Financial
disclosure forms show that while the senators were serving on the committee, Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) bought stock in Philip Morris International, while the husband of Patty Murray (D-WA) bought shares in Reynolds American, which he sold in May. The revelations
come hot on the heels of Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald’s resignation as CDC director. Fitzgerald stepped down on Wednesday, the day after Politico
reported she had bought and sold stock in Japan Tobacco.
Get the details
here.
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Millions of unapproved antibiotics sold in India each year
A new
study finds that as the antibiotic resistance crisis grows, millions of unapproved antibiotics are still being sold in India each year. Researchers dug into the country’s regulatory records and drug sales data and turned
up some troubling findings. There were 118 different kinds of fixed-dose combination antibiotics — which include two or more active drugs in a single dose — for sale in India between 2007 and 2012, compared to just 5 in the U.S. and the U.K. Of those, 75 percent
hadn’t been approved by India’s regulatory agency, and some were manufactured by multinational companies. The authors of the new report are calling on those companies to explain why they were selling unapproved drugs in India and also say say governments need
to step up their work to prevent such sales.
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Sponsor content by KOWA PHARMACEUTICALS AMERICA, INC.
Breaking the statin switch cycle
Did you know that at least 50 percent of people stop taking their prescribed statin within one year of starting it, despite the proven impact of statins on lowering cholesterol? With several different
statins on the market and more than 100 million U.S. adults living with high cholesterol, prescribing the right statin for each patient can be challenging.
When patients complain about their statin,
shouldn’t one switch be enough?
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Inside STAT: Could virtual reality help 'super-aging' nations?
tama has far more vr skills than i ever will (Shiho fukada)
The world is rapidly aging — by 2050, the global population of those age 65 and older is projected to
nearly double to 1.6 billion. That global graying has produced a new phrase: “super aging,” or when more than 20 percent of people in a country are age 65 or older. The U.S. hasn’t hit that point yet, but Japan — where
27 percent of citizens are 65 or older — is already there. That demographic shift is spurring new, high-tech innovation in elder care, like the virtual reality technology that’s let 95-year-old Tama see the Leaning Tower of Pisa in Italy and the cherry blossoms
in her home country. STAT contributor Shiho Fukada has more in the first part of a special video report — watch
here.
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The health gap among teens who identify as transgender or non-conforming
Kids who identify as transgender or gender non-conforming report poorer health status than their cisgender peers, according to a new
study published this morning in Pediatrics. The researchers looked at data from more than 8,000 high school students in Minnesota. Of those students, 62 percent who identified as transgender or gender non-conforming reported
their overall health as poor or fair, compared to only 33 percent of cisgender youth, whose gender identity matches the sex they were assigned at birth. The study’s authors say health care providers should be screening young people who are transgender or gender
non-conforming for health risks and to identify barriers that prevent them from getting health care.
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What to read around the web today
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In the U.S. Virgin Islands, health care remains in a critical state.
NPR
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Flu patients arrive in droves, and one hospital rolls out the 'surge tent.'
New York Times
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Health sharing ministries are growing fast.
Politico
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Thanks for reading! More tomorrow,
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