Get free masks at grocery stores and pharmacies starting Jan. 28

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N95 masks began arriving at grocery stores and pharmacies on. Jan. 28, and consumers will be able to pick them up for free while supplies last.

The first batches are expected to arrive in some stores on Jan. 27, and many locations will begin offering them to customers on Jan. 28, according to NPR.

Meijer, which operates more than 250 groceries and pharmacies throughout the Midwest, has received about 3 million masks. Customers can pick up masks from the greeter stand at the store entrance.

More than 2,200 Kroger stores with pharmacies will give out free masks, with the first shipment expected to arrive on Jan. 27, a spokeswoman told NPR.

Walgreens will likely begin offering masks in some stores on Jan. 28, which will continue “on a rolling basis in the days and weeks following,” a spokesman told NPR.

Masks should arrive by Jan. 28 at Southeastern Grocers locations with in-store pharmacies, including Fresco y Mas, Harveys, and Winn-Dixie, according to CNN.

Hy-Vee received and began giving out masks on Jan. 21, and most stores with pharmacies were giving them out Jan. 26, according to Today.

CVS Pharmacy locations will offer free masks as early as Jan. 27, a spokesman told Today. That will include CVS Pharmacy locations inside Target and Schnucks.

Albertsons is “currently working to finalize details regarding inventory and distribution,” the chain told Today.

Rite Aid will have free masks in some stores at the end of the week, with all stores receiving them by early February, Today reported.

Walmart and Sam’s Club will offer free masks late next week at the earliest, according to NBC Chicago.

The Biden administration is sending out 400 million N95 masks from the Strategic National Stockpile. Each person can take up to three free masks, if they’re available, the Department of Health and Human Services has said.

The distribution of masks is meant to align with the CDC’s latest recommendation to wear an N95 or KN95 mask to prevent the spread of the highly transmissible Omicron variant. When worn correctly over the mouth and nose, the high-filtration masks are made to filter out 95% or more of airborne particles.

The Biden administration is also sending masks to community health centers and COVID-19 test kits directly to Americans. The programs are ramping up now and should be fully running by early February, NPR reported.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

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N95 masks began arriving at grocery stores and pharmacies on. Jan. 28, and consumers will be able to pick them up for free while supplies last.

The first batches are expected to arrive in some stores on Jan. 27, and many locations will begin offering them to customers on Jan. 28, according to NPR.

Meijer, which operates more than 250 groceries and pharmacies throughout the Midwest, has received about 3 million masks. Customers can pick up masks from the greeter stand at the store entrance.

More than 2,200 Kroger stores with pharmacies will give out free masks, with the first shipment expected to arrive on Jan. 27, a spokeswoman told NPR.

Walgreens will likely begin offering masks in some stores on Jan. 28, which will continue “on a rolling basis in the days and weeks following,” a spokesman told NPR.

Masks should arrive by Jan. 28 at Southeastern Grocers locations with in-store pharmacies, including Fresco y Mas, Harveys, and Winn-Dixie, according to CNN.

Hy-Vee received and began giving out masks on Jan. 21, and most stores with pharmacies were giving them out Jan. 26, according to Today.

CVS Pharmacy locations will offer free masks as early as Jan. 27, a spokesman told Today. That will include CVS Pharmacy locations inside Target and Schnucks.

Albertsons is “currently working to finalize details regarding inventory and distribution,” the chain told Today.

Rite Aid will have free masks in some stores at the end of the week, with all stores receiving them by early February, Today reported.

Walmart and Sam’s Club will offer free masks late next week at the earliest, according to NBC Chicago.

The Biden administration is sending out 400 million N95 masks from the Strategic National Stockpile. Each person can take up to three free masks, if they’re available, the Department of Health and Human Services has said.

The distribution of masks is meant to align with the CDC’s latest recommendation to wear an N95 or KN95 mask to prevent the spread of the highly transmissible Omicron variant. When worn correctly over the mouth and nose, the high-filtration masks are made to filter out 95% or more of airborne particles.

The Biden administration is also sending masks to community health centers and COVID-19 test kits directly to Americans. The programs are ramping up now and should be fully running by early February, NPR reported.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

N95 masks began arriving at grocery stores and pharmacies on. Jan. 28, and consumers will be able to pick them up for free while supplies last.

The first batches are expected to arrive in some stores on Jan. 27, and many locations will begin offering them to customers on Jan. 28, according to NPR.

Meijer, which operates more than 250 groceries and pharmacies throughout the Midwest, has received about 3 million masks. Customers can pick up masks from the greeter stand at the store entrance.

More than 2,200 Kroger stores with pharmacies will give out free masks, with the first shipment expected to arrive on Jan. 27, a spokeswoman told NPR.

Walgreens will likely begin offering masks in some stores on Jan. 28, which will continue “on a rolling basis in the days and weeks following,” a spokesman told NPR.

Masks should arrive by Jan. 28 at Southeastern Grocers locations with in-store pharmacies, including Fresco y Mas, Harveys, and Winn-Dixie, according to CNN.

Hy-Vee received and began giving out masks on Jan. 21, and most stores with pharmacies were giving them out Jan. 26, according to Today.

CVS Pharmacy locations will offer free masks as early as Jan. 27, a spokesman told Today. That will include CVS Pharmacy locations inside Target and Schnucks.

Albertsons is “currently working to finalize details regarding inventory and distribution,” the chain told Today.

Rite Aid will have free masks in some stores at the end of the week, with all stores receiving them by early February, Today reported.

Walmart and Sam’s Club will offer free masks late next week at the earliest, according to NBC Chicago.

The Biden administration is sending out 400 million N95 masks from the Strategic National Stockpile. Each person can take up to three free masks, if they’re available, the Department of Health and Human Services has said.

The distribution of masks is meant to align with the CDC’s latest recommendation to wear an N95 or KN95 mask to prevent the spread of the highly transmissible Omicron variant. When worn correctly over the mouth and nose, the high-filtration masks are made to filter out 95% or more of airborne particles.

The Biden administration is also sending masks to community health centers and COVID-19 test kits directly to Americans. The programs are ramping up now and should be fully running by early February, NPR reported.

A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

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Jeopardy! champion’s parents sue doctors, hospital when patient dies after colectomy

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The parents of Jeopardy! winner Brayden Smith are suing a Las Vegas surgeon and a hospitalist for negligence after their son died following a colectomy.

Mr. Smith, who suffered from ulcerative colitis, underwent a colectomy on Jan. 15, 2021, at St. Rose Dominican Hospital–San Martin Campus in Las Vegas. At the time, the 24-year-old man was malnourished, extremely weak, and was having more than 10 bloody bowel movements a day, according to a Jan. 11, 2022, lawsuit filed by Smith’s parents.

The allegations state that, after the procedure, hospital staff did not provide Mr. Smith with anticoagulants and did not administer or suggest that Mr. Smith take anticoagulants upon his discharge on Jan. 19. On Jan. 29, 2021, Mr. Smith collapsed at home and his family called an ambulance. He was taken back to St. Rose where he died from bilateral pulmonary emboli.

Mr. Smith’s legal complaint claims that treatment by Smith’s surgeon, hospitalist, and nursing staff fell below the standard of care because they failed to administer anticoagulants following the surgery. After the surgery, Mr. Smith’s surgeon referenced “DVT/VTE prophylaxis/anticoagulation” in the record and another note read “already ordered,” according to Keith Beiermeister, MD, a colon and rectal surgeon retained by the Smiths’ attorney, Robert E. Murdock. However, the order section of the notes included no specific order for heparin or Lovenox (enoxaparin). A hospitalist who cared for Mr. Smith after the surgery also mentioned “DVT prophylaxis” in the progress notes, but the hospitalist did not order it nor ensure that anticoagulants were given, the lawsuit claims.

“In a surgery such as this, the standard of care requires both mechanical and chemical anticoagulation,” Dr. Beiermeister wrote in the complaint. “This is especially true after colectomy and with Brayden’s history. Anticoagulants and mechanical anticoagulation are needed to prevent emboli. The medical literature is clear that patients undergoing colorectal surgery as compared to general surgery have a significant increase in the risk of emboli. This is especially true with preexisting inflammation as is present in inflammatory bowel disease.”

A spokesman for St. Rose said the hospital does not comment on pending litigation.

Mr. Smith was a five-time Jeopardy! winner and gained national fame during his championship run. In a statement, Jeopardy! officials said the Jeopardy! family was “heartbroken by the tragic loss of Brayden Smith” and that he “will be missed.”
 

Surgeon must face second trial in stroke suit

A cardiovascular surgeon must face a second trial over claims that he performed an unnecessary surgery that caused a patient’s stroke, the Iowa Supreme Court has ruled.

William McGrew visited a Waterloo, Iowa, cardiovascular surgeon in 2014 after experiencing transient foggy vision in one eye. An ophthalmologist initially diagnosed Mr. McGrew with cataract, but he was referred to the surgeon to rule out other possibilities.

Because of Mr. McGrew’s age (69) and history of hypertension, the cardiovascular surgeon suspected carotid disease and recommended a CT angiogram to further investigate, according to a summary in the Iowa Supreme Court’s opinion.

The CT angiogram was performed at a local imaging center and read by a radiologist who interpreted it as showing 65% stenosis, or narrowing, of the right carotid artery. The surgeon did his own review and interpreted the results as showing 70% stenosis, according to court documents. The surgeon believed that McGrew was at significant risk for stroke and he recommended surgery, specifically a right carotid endarterectomy to remove the plaque from the right carotid artery. He advised McGrew of the surgery’s possible risks, the most common being a stroke.

The endarterectomy initially appeared successful, but the next morning, Mr. McGrew experienced facial droop and weakness on his left side. An MRI and CT scan showed that Mr. McGrew experienced a stroke on the right side of his brain. A CT angiogram showed that his right carotid artery was blocked. The surgeon performed another surgery to remove the carotid artery blockage, but the second surgery did not alleviate Mr. McGrew’s symptoms, according to court documents. Mr. McGrew remains wheelchair-bound, unable to move his left side, and requires nursing home care.

Mr. McGrew and his family later went to a neurologist who analyzed Mr. McGrew’s prior CT angiogram. He interpreted the angiogram as showing only 40% stenosis. The neurologist also asked a neuroradiologist to analyze the CT angiogram, and he assessed the stenosis at 32%. In his opinion, 40% stenosis was not significant to justify an endarterectomy, the neurologist told Mr. McGrew.

Mr. McGrew sued the surgeon and the radiologist in 2016, and later settled with the radiologist. The McGrews claimed that the surgeon negligently misinterpreted the CT angiogram and performed an ill-advised surgery that resulted in a stroke. The McGrews sought damages for pain and suffering, permanent loss of function, loss of income, past and future medical expenses, and loss of consortium.

At trial, attorneys for the surgeon asked the court to limit his and the radiologist’s testimonies, arguing that their opinions were not properly disclosed in expert reports. The trial court granted the motion, and jurors heard only a limited version of the testimony. In addition, some medical records were redacted. A jury found in the surgeon’s favor, deeming him not negligent.

The McGrews appealed. In a Jan. 21, 2022, opinion, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that the trial court abused its discretion by not allowing the earlier testimonies. Justices said both the neurologist and the neuroradiologist should have been allowed to testify on the applicable standard of care. The district court also abused its discretion in preventing Mr. McGrew from introducing complete versions of the contemporaneous medical records, the court ruled.

Justices reversed the district court’s decision and remanded the case for a new trial.
 

 

 

Court: Patient must pay doc’s legal expenses

A patient must pay a physician about $20,000 in legal expenses after the patient’s malpractice suit was thrown out, an Arizona appeals court has ruled.

Scottsdale plastic surgeon Corwin Martin, MD, performed dental implant surgery on Penny Preszler in February 2012. Following the surgery, Ms. Preszler claimed numbness in her face and mouth, according to the appellate decision. She sued Dr. Martin and his practice for malpractice in 2015.

As the case continued, Ms. Preszler withdrew her first expert and disclosed a new expert. When Ms. Preszler’s second standard of care expert withdrew, she was given 30 days to disclose a new expert. When she failed to do so, Dr. Martin asked the court to dismiss the suit based on Ms. Preszler’s failure to disclose a proper standard of care expert.

She eventually presented a third expert, but Martin’s attorneys argued that the doctor was not a qualified expert under state law because he was board certified in periodontia, while Dr. Martin is board certified in oral and maxillofacial surgery. By this time, the case had gone on for 4 years.

When Ms. Preszler couldn’t come up with a fourth expert who was qualified, the court dismissed the case. The judge also awarded Dr. Martin $19,279.05 for expenses incurred in discovery related to Ms. Preszler’s first expert, attorneys’ fees, and expenses.

Ms. Preszler appealed, arguing that the periodontist was qualified to testify against Martin because he performed dental implant surgeries in the past without the board certification Dr. Martin obtained. In its Jan. 20, 2022, decision, a panel of the Arizona Court of Appeals upheld the decision, ruling that the expert was not qualified to opine. The patient must also pay the physician’s legal expenses as ordered by the lower court.

“[Ms.] Preszler has not shown the superior court abused its discretion in the award issued,” appellate judges wrote. “Three years after [Ms.] Preszler disclosed her first expert witness, that expert withdrew. [Dr.] Martin claimed substantial expenses relating to discovery addressing [Ms.] Preszler’s first expert, which were no longer beneficial given his withdrawal. ... [Ms.] Preszler has not shown that the expenses awarded to [Dr.] Martin were unreasonable or disproportionate to the time and costs expended regarding the withdrawn expert.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The parents of Jeopardy! winner Brayden Smith are suing a Las Vegas surgeon and a hospitalist for negligence after their son died following a colectomy.

Mr. Smith, who suffered from ulcerative colitis, underwent a colectomy on Jan. 15, 2021, at St. Rose Dominican Hospital–San Martin Campus in Las Vegas. At the time, the 24-year-old man was malnourished, extremely weak, and was having more than 10 bloody bowel movements a day, according to a Jan. 11, 2022, lawsuit filed by Smith’s parents.

The allegations state that, after the procedure, hospital staff did not provide Mr. Smith with anticoagulants and did not administer or suggest that Mr. Smith take anticoagulants upon his discharge on Jan. 19. On Jan. 29, 2021, Mr. Smith collapsed at home and his family called an ambulance. He was taken back to St. Rose where he died from bilateral pulmonary emboli.

Mr. Smith’s legal complaint claims that treatment by Smith’s surgeon, hospitalist, and nursing staff fell below the standard of care because they failed to administer anticoagulants following the surgery. After the surgery, Mr. Smith’s surgeon referenced “DVT/VTE prophylaxis/anticoagulation” in the record and another note read “already ordered,” according to Keith Beiermeister, MD, a colon and rectal surgeon retained by the Smiths’ attorney, Robert E. Murdock. However, the order section of the notes included no specific order for heparin or Lovenox (enoxaparin). A hospitalist who cared for Mr. Smith after the surgery also mentioned “DVT prophylaxis” in the progress notes, but the hospitalist did not order it nor ensure that anticoagulants were given, the lawsuit claims.

“In a surgery such as this, the standard of care requires both mechanical and chemical anticoagulation,” Dr. Beiermeister wrote in the complaint. “This is especially true after colectomy and with Brayden’s history. Anticoagulants and mechanical anticoagulation are needed to prevent emboli. The medical literature is clear that patients undergoing colorectal surgery as compared to general surgery have a significant increase in the risk of emboli. This is especially true with preexisting inflammation as is present in inflammatory bowel disease.”

A spokesman for St. Rose said the hospital does not comment on pending litigation.

Mr. Smith was a five-time Jeopardy! winner and gained national fame during his championship run. In a statement, Jeopardy! officials said the Jeopardy! family was “heartbroken by the tragic loss of Brayden Smith” and that he “will be missed.”
 

Surgeon must face second trial in stroke suit

A cardiovascular surgeon must face a second trial over claims that he performed an unnecessary surgery that caused a patient’s stroke, the Iowa Supreme Court has ruled.

William McGrew visited a Waterloo, Iowa, cardiovascular surgeon in 2014 after experiencing transient foggy vision in one eye. An ophthalmologist initially diagnosed Mr. McGrew with cataract, but he was referred to the surgeon to rule out other possibilities.

Because of Mr. McGrew’s age (69) and history of hypertension, the cardiovascular surgeon suspected carotid disease and recommended a CT angiogram to further investigate, according to a summary in the Iowa Supreme Court’s opinion.

The CT angiogram was performed at a local imaging center and read by a radiologist who interpreted it as showing 65% stenosis, or narrowing, of the right carotid artery. The surgeon did his own review and interpreted the results as showing 70% stenosis, according to court documents. The surgeon believed that McGrew was at significant risk for stroke and he recommended surgery, specifically a right carotid endarterectomy to remove the plaque from the right carotid artery. He advised McGrew of the surgery’s possible risks, the most common being a stroke.

The endarterectomy initially appeared successful, but the next morning, Mr. McGrew experienced facial droop and weakness on his left side. An MRI and CT scan showed that Mr. McGrew experienced a stroke on the right side of his brain. A CT angiogram showed that his right carotid artery was blocked. The surgeon performed another surgery to remove the carotid artery blockage, but the second surgery did not alleviate Mr. McGrew’s symptoms, according to court documents. Mr. McGrew remains wheelchair-bound, unable to move his left side, and requires nursing home care.

Mr. McGrew and his family later went to a neurologist who analyzed Mr. McGrew’s prior CT angiogram. He interpreted the angiogram as showing only 40% stenosis. The neurologist also asked a neuroradiologist to analyze the CT angiogram, and he assessed the stenosis at 32%. In his opinion, 40% stenosis was not significant to justify an endarterectomy, the neurologist told Mr. McGrew.

Mr. McGrew sued the surgeon and the radiologist in 2016, and later settled with the radiologist. The McGrews claimed that the surgeon negligently misinterpreted the CT angiogram and performed an ill-advised surgery that resulted in a stroke. The McGrews sought damages for pain and suffering, permanent loss of function, loss of income, past and future medical expenses, and loss of consortium.

At trial, attorneys for the surgeon asked the court to limit his and the radiologist’s testimonies, arguing that their opinions were not properly disclosed in expert reports. The trial court granted the motion, and jurors heard only a limited version of the testimony. In addition, some medical records were redacted. A jury found in the surgeon’s favor, deeming him not negligent.

The McGrews appealed. In a Jan. 21, 2022, opinion, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that the trial court abused its discretion by not allowing the earlier testimonies. Justices said both the neurologist and the neuroradiologist should have been allowed to testify on the applicable standard of care. The district court also abused its discretion in preventing Mr. McGrew from introducing complete versions of the contemporaneous medical records, the court ruled.

Justices reversed the district court’s decision and remanded the case for a new trial.
 

 

 

Court: Patient must pay doc’s legal expenses

A patient must pay a physician about $20,000 in legal expenses after the patient’s malpractice suit was thrown out, an Arizona appeals court has ruled.

Scottsdale plastic surgeon Corwin Martin, MD, performed dental implant surgery on Penny Preszler in February 2012. Following the surgery, Ms. Preszler claimed numbness in her face and mouth, according to the appellate decision. She sued Dr. Martin and his practice for malpractice in 2015.

As the case continued, Ms. Preszler withdrew her first expert and disclosed a new expert. When Ms. Preszler’s second standard of care expert withdrew, she was given 30 days to disclose a new expert. When she failed to do so, Dr. Martin asked the court to dismiss the suit based on Ms. Preszler’s failure to disclose a proper standard of care expert.

She eventually presented a third expert, but Martin’s attorneys argued that the doctor was not a qualified expert under state law because he was board certified in periodontia, while Dr. Martin is board certified in oral and maxillofacial surgery. By this time, the case had gone on for 4 years.

When Ms. Preszler couldn’t come up with a fourth expert who was qualified, the court dismissed the case. The judge also awarded Dr. Martin $19,279.05 for expenses incurred in discovery related to Ms. Preszler’s first expert, attorneys’ fees, and expenses.

Ms. Preszler appealed, arguing that the periodontist was qualified to testify against Martin because he performed dental implant surgeries in the past without the board certification Dr. Martin obtained. In its Jan. 20, 2022, decision, a panel of the Arizona Court of Appeals upheld the decision, ruling that the expert was not qualified to opine. The patient must also pay the physician’s legal expenses as ordered by the lower court.

“[Ms.] Preszler has not shown the superior court abused its discretion in the award issued,” appellate judges wrote. “Three years after [Ms.] Preszler disclosed her first expert witness, that expert withdrew. [Dr.] Martin claimed substantial expenses relating to discovery addressing [Ms.] Preszler’s first expert, which were no longer beneficial given his withdrawal. ... [Ms.] Preszler has not shown that the expenses awarded to [Dr.] Martin were unreasonable or disproportionate to the time and costs expended regarding the withdrawn expert.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The parents of Jeopardy! winner Brayden Smith are suing a Las Vegas surgeon and a hospitalist for negligence after their son died following a colectomy.

Mr. Smith, who suffered from ulcerative colitis, underwent a colectomy on Jan. 15, 2021, at St. Rose Dominican Hospital–San Martin Campus in Las Vegas. At the time, the 24-year-old man was malnourished, extremely weak, and was having more than 10 bloody bowel movements a day, according to a Jan. 11, 2022, lawsuit filed by Smith’s parents.

The allegations state that, after the procedure, hospital staff did not provide Mr. Smith with anticoagulants and did not administer or suggest that Mr. Smith take anticoagulants upon his discharge on Jan. 19. On Jan. 29, 2021, Mr. Smith collapsed at home and his family called an ambulance. He was taken back to St. Rose where he died from bilateral pulmonary emboli.

Mr. Smith’s legal complaint claims that treatment by Smith’s surgeon, hospitalist, and nursing staff fell below the standard of care because they failed to administer anticoagulants following the surgery. After the surgery, Mr. Smith’s surgeon referenced “DVT/VTE prophylaxis/anticoagulation” in the record and another note read “already ordered,” according to Keith Beiermeister, MD, a colon and rectal surgeon retained by the Smiths’ attorney, Robert E. Murdock. However, the order section of the notes included no specific order for heparin or Lovenox (enoxaparin). A hospitalist who cared for Mr. Smith after the surgery also mentioned “DVT prophylaxis” in the progress notes, but the hospitalist did not order it nor ensure that anticoagulants were given, the lawsuit claims.

“In a surgery such as this, the standard of care requires both mechanical and chemical anticoagulation,” Dr. Beiermeister wrote in the complaint. “This is especially true after colectomy and with Brayden’s history. Anticoagulants and mechanical anticoagulation are needed to prevent emboli. The medical literature is clear that patients undergoing colorectal surgery as compared to general surgery have a significant increase in the risk of emboli. This is especially true with preexisting inflammation as is present in inflammatory bowel disease.”

A spokesman for St. Rose said the hospital does not comment on pending litigation.

Mr. Smith was a five-time Jeopardy! winner and gained national fame during his championship run. In a statement, Jeopardy! officials said the Jeopardy! family was “heartbroken by the tragic loss of Brayden Smith” and that he “will be missed.”
 

Surgeon must face second trial in stroke suit

A cardiovascular surgeon must face a second trial over claims that he performed an unnecessary surgery that caused a patient’s stroke, the Iowa Supreme Court has ruled.

William McGrew visited a Waterloo, Iowa, cardiovascular surgeon in 2014 after experiencing transient foggy vision in one eye. An ophthalmologist initially diagnosed Mr. McGrew with cataract, but he was referred to the surgeon to rule out other possibilities.

Because of Mr. McGrew’s age (69) and history of hypertension, the cardiovascular surgeon suspected carotid disease and recommended a CT angiogram to further investigate, according to a summary in the Iowa Supreme Court’s opinion.

The CT angiogram was performed at a local imaging center and read by a radiologist who interpreted it as showing 65% stenosis, or narrowing, of the right carotid artery. The surgeon did his own review and interpreted the results as showing 70% stenosis, according to court documents. The surgeon believed that McGrew was at significant risk for stroke and he recommended surgery, specifically a right carotid endarterectomy to remove the plaque from the right carotid artery. He advised McGrew of the surgery’s possible risks, the most common being a stroke.

The endarterectomy initially appeared successful, but the next morning, Mr. McGrew experienced facial droop and weakness on his left side. An MRI and CT scan showed that Mr. McGrew experienced a stroke on the right side of his brain. A CT angiogram showed that his right carotid artery was blocked. The surgeon performed another surgery to remove the carotid artery blockage, but the second surgery did not alleviate Mr. McGrew’s symptoms, according to court documents. Mr. McGrew remains wheelchair-bound, unable to move his left side, and requires nursing home care.

Mr. McGrew and his family later went to a neurologist who analyzed Mr. McGrew’s prior CT angiogram. He interpreted the angiogram as showing only 40% stenosis. The neurologist also asked a neuroradiologist to analyze the CT angiogram, and he assessed the stenosis at 32%. In his opinion, 40% stenosis was not significant to justify an endarterectomy, the neurologist told Mr. McGrew.

Mr. McGrew sued the surgeon and the radiologist in 2016, and later settled with the radiologist. The McGrews claimed that the surgeon negligently misinterpreted the CT angiogram and performed an ill-advised surgery that resulted in a stroke. The McGrews sought damages for pain and suffering, permanent loss of function, loss of income, past and future medical expenses, and loss of consortium.

At trial, attorneys for the surgeon asked the court to limit his and the radiologist’s testimonies, arguing that their opinions were not properly disclosed in expert reports. The trial court granted the motion, and jurors heard only a limited version of the testimony. In addition, some medical records were redacted. A jury found in the surgeon’s favor, deeming him not negligent.

The McGrews appealed. In a Jan. 21, 2022, opinion, the Iowa Supreme Court ruled that the trial court abused its discretion by not allowing the earlier testimonies. Justices said both the neurologist and the neuroradiologist should have been allowed to testify on the applicable standard of care. The district court also abused its discretion in preventing Mr. McGrew from introducing complete versions of the contemporaneous medical records, the court ruled.

Justices reversed the district court’s decision and remanded the case for a new trial.
 

 

 

Court: Patient must pay doc’s legal expenses

A patient must pay a physician about $20,000 in legal expenses after the patient’s malpractice suit was thrown out, an Arizona appeals court has ruled.

Scottsdale plastic surgeon Corwin Martin, MD, performed dental implant surgery on Penny Preszler in February 2012. Following the surgery, Ms. Preszler claimed numbness in her face and mouth, according to the appellate decision. She sued Dr. Martin and his practice for malpractice in 2015.

As the case continued, Ms. Preszler withdrew her first expert and disclosed a new expert. When Ms. Preszler’s second standard of care expert withdrew, she was given 30 days to disclose a new expert. When she failed to do so, Dr. Martin asked the court to dismiss the suit based on Ms. Preszler’s failure to disclose a proper standard of care expert.

She eventually presented a third expert, but Martin’s attorneys argued that the doctor was not a qualified expert under state law because he was board certified in periodontia, while Dr. Martin is board certified in oral and maxillofacial surgery. By this time, the case had gone on for 4 years.

When Ms. Preszler couldn’t come up with a fourth expert who was qualified, the court dismissed the case. The judge also awarded Dr. Martin $19,279.05 for expenses incurred in discovery related to Ms. Preszler’s first expert, attorneys’ fees, and expenses.

Ms. Preszler appealed, arguing that the periodontist was qualified to testify against Martin because he performed dental implant surgeries in the past without the board certification Dr. Martin obtained. In its Jan. 20, 2022, decision, a panel of the Arizona Court of Appeals upheld the decision, ruling that the expert was not qualified to opine. The patient must also pay the physician’s legal expenses as ordered by the lower court.

“[Ms.] Preszler has not shown the superior court abused its discretion in the award issued,” appellate judges wrote. “Three years after [Ms.] Preszler disclosed her first expert witness, that expert withdrew. [Dr.] Martin claimed substantial expenses relating to discovery addressing [Ms.] Preszler’s first expert, which were no longer beneficial given his withdrawal. ... [Ms.] Preszler has not shown that the expenses awarded to [Dr.] Martin were unreasonable or disproportionate to the time and costs expended regarding the withdrawn expert.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Kids’ mask use linked with fewer childcare closings

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Mask-wearing in childcare programs is linked with fewer COVID-19–related program closures, new data released suggest.

Researchers included 6,654 childcare professionals in a prospective, 1-year, longitudinal electronic survey study of home- and center-based childcare programs in all 50 states.

Findings by Thomas S. Murray, MD, PhD, with the department of pediatrics, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and coauthors, were published in JAMA Network Open on Jan. 28, 2022.

They found that mask-wearing from the May 22, 2020, baseline to June 8, 2020, was associated with a 13% reduction in program closures within the following year (adjusted relative risk, 0.87; 95% confidence interval, 0.77-0.99). Continued mask-wearing throughout the 1-year follow-up was associated with a 14% reduction in program closures (aRR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.74-1.00).

The authors said the evidence supports current masking recommendation in younger children provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

They wrote: “This finding has important public health policy implications for families that rely on childcare to sustain employment.”

The benefits of masking in preventing COVID-19 transmission within kindergarten through 12th-grade classes are well documented. Masks are particularly important in areas where vaccinations are not widespread.

Masks can be worn safely by young children without harming respiratory function, studies have shown.

William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., pointed out that the American Academy of Pediatrics has said there are no noteworthy effects on breathing function for most children.

“There’s been so much discussion about the contribution of masks to reducing the risk of COVID that it’s nice to have the data,” he said, adding that this is a relationship that has been difficult to study, but this analysis was able to make the connection with hard numbers.

“It’s an important outcome,” he said in an interview.

The authors pointed out there is evidence that school-age children can identify most emotions in masked faces.

They added that “2-year-old children recognize spoken words better through an opaque mask, compared with a clear face shield, suggesting verbal communication to infants is not harmed by face masks.”

Studies have shown that childhood infection with other respiratory viruses also decreased and asthma symptoms were not reported when preschool children wore masks and used other preventative steps.

The authors wrote that a potential reason for that may be that those who wear masks have less face touching, known to increase the spread of COVID-19.

Paloma Beamer, PhD, an engineer and exposure scientist at University of Arizona, Tucson, who also has a 3-year-old son who wears masks at his daycare center, said in an interview that she works closely with his school on training kids how to wear their masks because getting young children to keep them on and finding ones that fit is challenging.

“We need layered controls and protections in place at schools as much as possible,” she said, adding that the authors didn’t mention ventilation, but that’s another important component as well.

“We’re fortunate in Arizona that we are in an old school and the windows are open as much as possible,” she said.

She said this study shows that “masks are a great form of additional control.” Her son is on his third quarantine this month after three kids tested positive, she added.

She said: “I think these newer variants perhaps make the findings of this study more compelling and it will be interesting to see if the researchers do a follow-up study.”

Strengths of the study include that it utilized prospective data from a large national cohort of childcare professionals. Additionally, the retention rate was high at 1 year. And the self-reported information likely gives better information than looking at policies that may or may not be well followed.

Limitations include potential reporting bias because the self-reports were not independently confirmed. Also, family behavior outside childcare, such as social gatherings where masking is not enforced, also influence COVID-19 cases when children gather and may affect the numbers of closures.

Having the option of childcare centers benefits kids with in-person early education and social interactions with staff, the authors noted. The centers also help parents return to work without interruptions at home.

“Our findings support current national recommendations endorsed by many local and state governments for masking children 2 years and older in childcare programs when community COVID-19 transmission levels are elevated,” the authors wrote.

Dr. Schaffner said the results have implications outside of childcare centers and should be included in discussions of masking in schools and in the general public.

All phases of this study were supported by and coauthors report grants from the Andrew & Julie Klingenstein Family Fund, Esther A. & Joseph Klingenstein Fund, Heising-Simons Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Foundation for Child Development, Early Educator Investment Collaborative, and Scholastic. The study was partially funded by the Yale Institute for Global Health. Dr. Schaffner and Dr. Beamer reported no relevant financial relationships.

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Mask-wearing in childcare programs is linked with fewer COVID-19–related program closures, new data released suggest.

Researchers included 6,654 childcare professionals in a prospective, 1-year, longitudinal electronic survey study of home- and center-based childcare programs in all 50 states.

Findings by Thomas S. Murray, MD, PhD, with the department of pediatrics, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and coauthors, were published in JAMA Network Open on Jan. 28, 2022.

They found that mask-wearing from the May 22, 2020, baseline to June 8, 2020, was associated with a 13% reduction in program closures within the following year (adjusted relative risk, 0.87; 95% confidence interval, 0.77-0.99). Continued mask-wearing throughout the 1-year follow-up was associated with a 14% reduction in program closures (aRR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.74-1.00).

The authors said the evidence supports current masking recommendation in younger children provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

They wrote: “This finding has important public health policy implications for families that rely on childcare to sustain employment.”

The benefits of masking in preventing COVID-19 transmission within kindergarten through 12th-grade classes are well documented. Masks are particularly important in areas where vaccinations are not widespread.

Masks can be worn safely by young children without harming respiratory function, studies have shown.

William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., pointed out that the American Academy of Pediatrics has said there are no noteworthy effects on breathing function for most children.

“There’s been so much discussion about the contribution of masks to reducing the risk of COVID that it’s nice to have the data,” he said, adding that this is a relationship that has been difficult to study, but this analysis was able to make the connection with hard numbers.

“It’s an important outcome,” he said in an interview.

The authors pointed out there is evidence that school-age children can identify most emotions in masked faces.

They added that “2-year-old children recognize spoken words better through an opaque mask, compared with a clear face shield, suggesting verbal communication to infants is not harmed by face masks.”

Studies have shown that childhood infection with other respiratory viruses also decreased and asthma symptoms were not reported when preschool children wore masks and used other preventative steps.

The authors wrote that a potential reason for that may be that those who wear masks have less face touching, known to increase the spread of COVID-19.

Paloma Beamer, PhD, an engineer and exposure scientist at University of Arizona, Tucson, who also has a 3-year-old son who wears masks at his daycare center, said in an interview that she works closely with his school on training kids how to wear their masks because getting young children to keep them on and finding ones that fit is challenging.

“We need layered controls and protections in place at schools as much as possible,” she said, adding that the authors didn’t mention ventilation, but that’s another important component as well.

“We’re fortunate in Arizona that we are in an old school and the windows are open as much as possible,” she said.

She said this study shows that “masks are a great form of additional control.” Her son is on his third quarantine this month after three kids tested positive, she added.

She said: “I think these newer variants perhaps make the findings of this study more compelling and it will be interesting to see if the researchers do a follow-up study.”

Strengths of the study include that it utilized prospective data from a large national cohort of childcare professionals. Additionally, the retention rate was high at 1 year. And the self-reported information likely gives better information than looking at policies that may or may not be well followed.

Limitations include potential reporting bias because the self-reports were not independently confirmed. Also, family behavior outside childcare, such as social gatherings where masking is not enforced, also influence COVID-19 cases when children gather and may affect the numbers of closures.

Having the option of childcare centers benefits kids with in-person early education and social interactions with staff, the authors noted. The centers also help parents return to work without interruptions at home.

“Our findings support current national recommendations endorsed by many local and state governments for masking children 2 years and older in childcare programs when community COVID-19 transmission levels are elevated,” the authors wrote.

Dr. Schaffner said the results have implications outside of childcare centers and should be included in discussions of masking in schools and in the general public.

All phases of this study were supported by and coauthors report grants from the Andrew & Julie Klingenstein Family Fund, Esther A. & Joseph Klingenstein Fund, Heising-Simons Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Foundation for Child Development, Early Educator Investment Collaborative, and Scholastic. The study was partially funded by the Yale Institute for Global Health. Dr. Schaffner and Dr. Beamer reported no relevant financial relationships.

Mask-wearing in childcare programs is linked with fewer COVID-19–related program closures, new data released suggest.

Researchers included 6,654 childcare professionals in a prospective, 1-year, longitudinal electronic survey study of home- and center-based childcare programs in all 50 states.

Findings by Thomas S. Murray, MD, PhD, with the department of pediatrics, Yale University, New Haven, Conn., and coauthors, were published in JAMA Network Open on Jan. 28, 2022.

They found that mask-wearing from the May 22, 2020, baseline to June 8, 2020, was associated with a 13% reduction in program closures within the following year (adjusted relative risk, 0.87; 95% confidence interval, 0.77-0.99). Continued mask-wearing throughout the 1-year follow-up was associated with a 14% reduction in program closures (aRR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.74-1.00).

The authors said the evidence supports current masking recommendation in younger children provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

They wrote: “This finding has important public health policy implications for families that rely on childcare to sustain employment.”

The benefits of masking in preventing COVID-19 transmission within kindergarten through 12th-grade classes are well documented. Masks are particularly important in areas where vaccinations are not widespread.

Masks can be worn safely by young children without harming respiratory function, studies have shown.

William Schaffner, MD, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., pointed out that the American Academy of Pediatrics has said there are no noteworthy effects on breathing function for most children.

“There’s been so much discussion about the contribution of masks to reducing the risk of COVID that it’s nice to have the data,” he said, adding that this is a relationship that has been difficult to study, but this analysis was able to make the connection with hard numbers.

“It’s an important outcome,” he said in an interview.

The authors pointed out there is evidence that school-age children can identify most emotions in masked faces.

They added that “2-year-old children recognize spoken words better through an opaque mask, compared with a clear face shield, suggesting verbal communication to infants is not harmed by face masks.”

Studies have shown that childhood infection with other respiratory viruses also decreased and asthma symptoms were not reported when preschool children wore masks and used other preventative steps.

The authors wrote that a potential reason for that may be that those who wear masks have less face touching, known to increase the spread of COVID-19.

Paloma Beamer, PhD, an engineer and exposure scientist at University of Arizona, Tucson, who also has a 3-year-old son who wears masks at his daycare center, said in an interview that she works closely with his school on training kids how to wear their masks because getting young children to keep them on and finding ones that fit is challenging.

“We need layered controls and protections in place at schools as much as possible,” she said, adding that the authors didn’t mention ventilation, but that’s another important component as well.

“We’re fortunate in Arizona that we are in an old school and the windows are open as much as possible,” she said.

She said this study shows that “masks are a great form of additional control.” Her son is on his third quarantine this month after three kids tested positive, she added.

She said: “I think these newer variants perhaps make the findings of this study more compelling and it will be interesting to see if the researchers do a follow-up study.”

Strengths of the study include that it utilized prospective data from a large national cohort of childcare professionals. Additionally, the retention rate was high at 1 year. And the self-reported information likely gives better information than looking at policies that may or may not be well followed.

Limitations include potential reporting bias because the self-reports were not independently confirmed. Also, family behavior outside childcare, such as social gatherings where masking is not enforced, also influence COVID-19 cases when children gather and may affect the numbers of closures.

Having the option of childcare centers benefits kids with in-person early education and social interactions with staff, the authors noted. The centers also help parents return to work without interruptions at home.

“Our findings support current national recommendations endorsed by many local and state governments for masking children 2 years and older in childcare programs when community COVID-19 transmission levels are elevated,” the authors wrote.

Dr. Schaffner said the results have implications outside of childcare centers and should be included in discussions of masking in schools and in the general public.

All phases of this study were supported by and coauthors report grants from the Andrew & Julie Klingenstein Family Fund, Esther A. & Joseph Klingenstein Fund, Heising-Simons Foundation, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Foundation for Child Development, Early Educator Investment Collaborative, and Scholastic. The study was partially funded by the Yale Institute for Global Health. Dr. Schaffner and Dr. Beamer reported no relevant financial relationships.

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Infectious disease pop quiz: Clinical challenge #12 for the ObGyn

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What are the best office-based tests for the diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis?

Continue to the answer...

 

 

In patients with bacterial vaginosis, the vaginal pH typically is elevated in the range of 4.5. When a drop of potassium hydroxide solution is added to the vaginal secretions, a characteristic fishlike (amine) odor is liberated (positive “whiff test”). With saline microscopy, the key findings are a relative absence of lactobacilli in the background, an abundance of small cocci and bacilli, and the presence of clue cells, which are epithelial cells studded with bacteria along their outer margin.

References
  1. Duff P. Maternal and perinatal infections: bacterial. In: Landon MB, Galan HL, Jauniaux ERM, et al. Gabbe’s Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies. 8th ed. Elsevier; 2021:1124-1146.
  2. Duff P. Maternal and fetal infections. In: Resnik R, Lockwood CJ, Moore TJ, et al. Creasy & Resnik’s Maternal-Fetal Medicine: Principles and Practice. 8th ed. Elsevier; 2019:862-919.
Author and Disclosure Information

Dr. Edwards is a Resident in the Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville.
 

Dr. Duff is Professor of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

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Dr. Edwards is a Resident in the Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville.
 

Dr. Duff is Professor of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

Author and Disclosure Information

Dr. Edwards is a Resident in the Department of Medicine, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville.
 

Dr. Duff is Professor of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville.

The authors report no financial relationships relevant to this article.

 

 

What are the best office-based tests for the diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis?

Continue to the answer...

 

 

In patients with bacterial vaginosis, the vaginal pH typically is elevated in the range of 4.5. When a drop of potassium hydroxide solution is added to the vaginal secretions, a characteristic fishlike (amine) odor is liberated (positive “whiff test”). With saline microscopy, the key findings are a relative absence of lactobacilli in the background, an abundance of small cocci and bacilli, and the presence of clue cells, which are epithelial cells studded with bacteria along their outer margin.

 

 

What are the best office-based tests for the diagnosis of bacterial vaginosis?

Continue to the answer...

 

 

In patients with bacterial vaginosis, the vaginal pH typically is elevated in the range of 4.5. When a drop of potassium hydroxide solution is added to the vaginal secretions, a characteristic fishlike (amine) odor is liberated (positive “whiff test”). With saline microscopy, the key findings are a relative absence of lactobacilli in the background, an abundance of small cocci and bacilli, and the presence of clue cells, which are epithelial cells studded with bacteria along their outer margin.

References
  1. Duff P. Maternal and perinatal infections: bacterial. In: Landon MB, Galan HL, Jauniaux ERM, et al. Gabbe’s Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies. 8th ed. Elsevier; 2021:1124-1146.
  2. Duff P. Maternal and fetal infections. In: Resnik R, Lockwood CJ, Moore TJ, et al. Creasy & Resnik’s Maternal-Fetal Medicine: Principles and Practice. 8th ed. Elsevier; 2019:862-919.
References
  1. Duff P. Maternal and perinatal infections: bacterial. In: Landon MB, Galan HL, Jauniaux ERM, et al. Gabbe’s Obstetrics: Normal and Problem Pregnancies. 8th ed. Elsevier; 2021:1124-1146.
  2. Duff P. Maternal and fetal infections. In: Resnik R, Lockwood CJ, Moore TJ, et al. Creasy & Resnik’s Maternal-Fetal Medicine: Principles and Practice. 8th ed. Elsevier; 2019:862-919.
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Another winter for our discontent

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Here we are. Again. It’s cold and it’s gray. The sun rises late and sets early, so that it feels like midnight by 8 p.m. Indoor venues are risky with the highly contagious Omicron variant, and I feel like we are all pushing the replay button on 2021’s miserable winter.

In some ways, it’s worse: In 2021 we had the hope that vaccines would pull us out of the pandemic and we had guidance on all that we should not be doing. In January, we were gaming the various Internet sites to get a coveted vaccine for ourselves or our family and friends, then lining up to get jabbed. We did not yet know that it wouldn’t be enough – that we’d need boosters, that Delta and Omicron would defy the vaccines. Yes, the vaccines work miracles to prevent severe disease and death, but the worry of passing the virus to someone who is vulnerable or unvaccinated(!), or both, remains – and now we can wonder how we’ll ever get out of this mess with hopeful talk of an endemic, while we wait on the next variant. I like certainty, and this pandemic is one big screaming reminder that certainty about anything is just a pleasant notion, death and taxes excluded, of course.

PeopleImages/E+/Getty Images

Kris Lukish, vice president of human resources at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, started an update to the hospital employees with: “As we begin 2022, it feels like we are experiencing dejà vu, or ‘Groundhog Day,’ or ‘50 First Dates.’ In ‘50 First Dates,’ Drew Barrymore wakes up each day reliving one specific day. It never changes. I realize our world may seem a little like that right now. We thought we’d turned a corner with COVID, and instead we saw a rapid rise in cases and hospitalizations due to the Omicron variant, higher than in previous surges.”

In 2021, many of us skipped holiday travel and ate outdoors. My morning coffee group moved to Zoom and it wasn’t until late spring, when community rates of COVID nose-dived, that I began seeing patients in my office for the first time in over a year. Since many of my patients are over 60, I tested myself with a home antigen test before going into the office. I changed my schedule so sessions began on the half-hour to be sure the suite’s waiting room would be empty, and I purchased an air purifier, cracked the window open, and figured everyone was as safe as we could reasonably be.

By the first Monday in January 2022, the positivity rate in Maryland was just shy of 30%. Twitter circulated anecdotes about false negatives with the home antigen test kits, and I decided it was safest to return to all-virtual appointments.

Mona Masood, DO, is cofounder of the Physician Support Line, a call-in service for doctors that started in March 2020. She has noted a change in the problems physicians face.

“We’re seeing a lot of empathy fatigue,” Dr. Masood said. “It’s not unexpected with a prolonged situation like this – the trauma has doctors in survival mode and they need to be present for themselves, their families, and their patients. People are emotionally drained, and we’re stretching them to the limit. Now at the front lines, doctors are getting a lot of backlash. There are the conspiracy theories, and people who challenge their knowledge and training and it leads them to ask if they should be doing this work. Some callers are thinking about leaving medicine and asking: ‘Is this what I signed up for?’ and these are large decisions that are being made in a specific context.

“The other thing we’re hearing is from trainees – residents and fellows – who are expected to carry a lot of work on the COVID units. Some are being told that they can’t graduate because they haven’t finished their other training requirements. This type of systemic issue produces moral injury.”

Dr. Dinah Miller

Dr. Masood talked about what running the support line has been like for her. “I know people want to give more in a catastrophe, and I was realistic that the enthusiasm might die off. I would go as long as psychiatrists volunteer, and the most incredible thing is that it hasn’t stopped. Some of the original people are no longer with us, but others have come aboard, and it’s been incredible to be a part of this.”

In her Jan. 26, 2022, newsletter, epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, PhD, MPH, tried to be reassuring about the future. “In order to know how this will end, we need to look at how other pandemics ended,” Dr. Jetelina wrote. “First, recognize the last part of that sentence ... pandemics end. Every epi curve comes down. This pandemic will end, too. Hold that fact close to you.”

She wrote about the three ways that pandemics end. The SARS pandemic of 2002 lasted 1.5 years as public health measures were effective, in large part because the disease was spread only by symptomatic patients. Vaccines offer a second way to end pandemics, as they have for polio and smallpox. “If the globe works together, we could possibly eradicate SARS-CoV-2 with vaccines. [Now that we have numerous animal reservoirs, though, this is close to impossible.]”



Finally, Dr. Jetelina noted that the 1918 flu changed from a pandemic situation to being endemic. “Over time, the virus attenuated, it became less severe.” Society acclimates to a virus with a low mortality rate. “The vast majority of scientists think an endemic state is the future of SARS-CoV-2. I agree.” And she goes on to define endemic as a steady state, but not the absence of suffering. She likens it to malaria and tuberculosis, illnesses with high global mortality.

“An endemic will come without an announcement or headlines, we won’t know we’re there until well after we’ve arrived.” She wrote of the uncertainty that faces us moving forward: We don’t know how much, or how long, immunity from Omicron infections will last, or if future variants will cause more or less severe disease. She casted her vote for global vaccinations, boosters, masks, better ventilation, communication, empathy, and tolerance to end the pandemic.

In Maryland, hospitalizations and positivity are starting to decline from the postholiday surge. I have figured out that I am not good at predicting what will happen next, and the experts don’t seem to be much better. I’d like a headline ending, the kind we looked to be heading toward last June.

I’ve told my patients who want to come in person that I will reassess in March. We have written our own rules, and mine are somewhere in the middle – I don’t go to public indoor spaces unmasked, but I do see vaccinated family and friends in our homes without masks. I don’t want to be responsible for transmitting a potentially fatal illness to a vulnerable patient. Honestly, this makes no sense, but since there is a video option, I feel I should not risk passing a potentially lethal virus to my patients. I just hope I’m not writing this same article again in January 2023.

Dr. Miller is a coauthor of “Committed: The Battle Over Involuntary Psychiatric Care” (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016). She has a private practice and is assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins. Dr. Miller has no conflicts of interest.

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Here we are. Again. It’s cold and it’s gray. The sun rises late and sets early, so that it feels like midnight by 8 p.m. Indoor venues are risky with the highly contagious Omicron variant, and I feel like we are all pushing the replay button on 2021’s miserable winter.

In some ways, it’s worse: In 2021 we had the hope that vaccines would pull us out of the pandemic and we had guidance on all that we should not be doing. In January, we were gaming the various Internet sites to get a coveted vaccine for ourselves or our family and friends, then lining up to get jabbed. We did not yet know that it wouldn’t be enough – that we’d need boosters, that Delta and Omicron would defy the vaccines. Yes, the vaccines work miracles to prevent severe disease and death, but the worry of passing the virus to someone who is vulnerable or unvaccinated(!), or both, remains – and now we can wonder how we’ll ever get out of this mess with hopeful talk of an endemic, while we wait on the next variant. I like certainty, and this pandemic is one big screaming reminder that certainty about anything is just a pleasant notion, death and taxes excluded, of course.

PeopleImages/E+/Getty Images

Kris Lukish, vice president of human resources at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, started an update to the hospital employees with: “As we begin 2022, it feels like we are experiencing dejà vu, or ‘Groundhog Day,’ or ‘50 First Dates.’ In ‘50 First Dates,’ Drew Barrymore wakes up each day reliving one specific day. It never changes. I realize our world may seem a little like that right now. We thought we’d turned a corner with COVID, and instead we saw a rapid rise in cases and hospitalizations due to the Omicron variant, higher than in previous surges.”

In 2021, many of us skipped holiday travel and ate outdoors. My morning coffee group moved to Zoom and it wasn’t until late spring, when community rates of COVID nose-dived, that I began seeing patients in my office for the first time in over a year. Since many of my patients are over 60, I tested myself with a home antigen test before going into the office. I changed my schedule so sessions began on the half-hour to be sure the suite’s waiting room would be empty, and I purchased an air purifier, cracked the window open, and figured everyone was as safe as we could reasonably be.

By the first Monday in January 2022, the positivity rate in Maryland was just shy of 30%. Twitter circulated anecdotes about false negatives with the home antigen test kits, and I decided it was safest to return to all-virtual appointments.

Mona Masood, DO, is cofounder of the Physician Support Line, a call-in service for doctors that started in March 2020. She has noted a change in the problems physicians face.

“We’re seeing a lot of empathy fatigue,” Dr. Masood said. “It’s not unexpected with a prolonged situation like this – the trauma has doctors in survival mode and they need to be present for themselves, their families, and their patients. People are emotionally drained, and we’re stretching them to the limit. Now at the front lines, doctors are getting a lot of backlash. There are the conspiracy theories, and people who challenge their knowledge and training and it leads them to ask if they should be doing this work. Some callers are thinking about leaving medicine and asking: ‘Is this what I signed up for?’ and these are large decisions that are being made in a specific context.

“The other thing we’re hearing is from trainees – residents and fellows – who are expected to carry a lot of work on the COVID units. Some are being told that they can’t graduate because they haven’t finished their other training requirements. This type of systemic issue produces moral injury.”

Dr. Dinah Miller

Dr. Masood talked about what running the support line has been like for her. “I know people want to give more in a catastrophe, and I was realistic that the enthusiasm might die off. I would go as long as psychiatrists volunteer, and the most incredible thing is that it hasn’t stopped. Some of the original people are no longer with us, but others have come aboard, and it’s been incredible to be a part of this.”

In her Jan. 26, 2022, newsletter, epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, PhD, MPH, tried to be reassuring about the future. “In order to know how this will end, we need to look at how other pandemics ended,” Dr. Jetelina wrote. “First, recognize the last part of that sentence ... pandemics end. Every epi curve comes down. This pandemic will end, too. Hold that fact close to you.”

She wrote about the three ways that pandemics end. The SARS pandemic of 2002 lasted 1.5 years as public health measures were effective, in large part because the disease was spread only by symptomatic patients. Vaccines offer a second way to end pandemics, as they have for polio and smallpox. “If the globe works together, we could possibly eradicate SARS-CoV-2 with vaccines. [Now that we have numerous animal reservoirs, though, this is close to impossible.]”



Finally, Dr. Jetelina noted that the 1918 flu changed from a pandemic situation to being endemic. “Over time, the virus attenuated, it became less severe.” Society acclimates to a virus with a low mortality rate. “The vast majority of scientists think an endemic state is the future of SARS-CoV-2. I agree.” And she goes on to define endemic as a steady state, but not the absence of suffering. She likens it to malaria and tuberculosis, illnesses with high global mortality.

“An endemic will come without an announcement or headlines, we won’t know we’re there until well after we’ve arrived.” She wrote of the uncertainty that faces us moving forward: We don’t know how much, or how long, immunity from Omicron infections will last, or if future variants will cause more or less severe disease. She casted her vote for global vaccinations, boosters, masks, better ventilation, communication, empathy, and tolerance to end the pandemic.

In Maryland, hospitalizations and positivity are starting to decline from the postholiday surge. I have figured out that I am not good at predicting what will happen next, and the experts don’t seem to be much better. I’d like a headline ending, the kind we looked to be heading toward last June.

I’ve told my patients who want to come in person that I will reassess in March. We have written our own rules, and mine are somewhere in the middle – I don’t go to public indoor spaces unmasked, but I do see vaccinated family and friends in our homes without masks. I don’t want to be responsible for transmitting a potentially fatal illness to a vulnerable patient. Honestly, this makes no sense, but since there is a video option, I feel I should not risk passing a potentially lethal virus to my patients. I just hope I’m not writing this same article again in January 2023.

Dr. Miller is a coauthor of “Committed: The Battle Over Involuntary Psychiatric Care” (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016). She has a private practice and is assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins. Dr. Miller has no conflicts of interest.

Here we are. Again. It’s cold and it’s gray. The sun rises late and sets early, so that it feels like midnight by 8 p.m. Indoor venues are risky with the highly contagious Omicron variant, and I feel like we are all pushing the replay button on 2021’s miserable winter.

In some ways, it’s worse: In 2021 we had the hope that vaccines would pull us out of the pandemic and we had guidance on all that we should not be doing. In January, we were gaming the various Internet sites to get a coveted vaccine for ourselves or our family and friends, then lining up to get jabbed. We did not yet know that it wouldn’t be enough – that we’d need boosters, that Delta and Omicron would defy the vaccines. Yes, the vaccines work miracles to prevent severe disease and death, but the worry of passing the virus to someone who is vulnerable or unvaccinated(!), or both, remains – and now we can wonder how we’ll ever get out of this mess with hopeful talk of an endemic, while we wait on the next variant. I like certainty, and this pandemic is one big screaming reminder that certainty about anything is just a pleasant notion, death and taxes excluded, of course.

PeopleImages/E+/Getty Images

Kris Lukish, vice president of human resources at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, started an update to the hospital employees with: “As we begin 2022, it feels like we are experiencing dejà vu, or ‘Groundhog Day,’ or ‘50 First Dates.’ In ‘50 First Dates,’ Drew Barrymore wakes up each day reliving one specific day. It never changes. I realize our world may seem a little like that right now. We thought we’d turned a corner with COVID, and instead we saw a rapid rise in cases and hospitalizations due to the Omicron variant, higher than in previous surges.”

In 2021, many of us skipped holiday travel and ate outdoors. My morning coffee group moved to Zoom and it wasn’t until late spring, when community rates of COVID nose-dived, that I began seeing patients in my office for the first time in over a year. Since many of my patients are over 60, I tested myself with a home antigen test before going into the office. I changed my schedule so sessions began on the half-hour to be sure the suite’s waiting room would be empty, and I purchased an air purifier, cracked the window open, and figured everyone was as safe as we could reasonably be.

By the first Monday in January 2022, the positivity rate in Maryland was just shy of 30%. Twitter circulated anecdotes about false negatives with the home antigen test kits, and I decided it was safest to return to all-virtual appointments.

Mona Masood, DO, is cofounder of the Physician Support Line, a call-in service for doctors that started in March 2020. She has noted a change in the problems physicians face.

“We’re seeing a lot of empathy fatigue,” Dr. Masood said. “It’s not unexpected with a prolonged situation like this – the trauma has doctors in survival mode and they need to be present for themselves, their families, and their patients. People are emotionally drained, and we’re stretching them to the limit. Now at the front lines, doctors are getting a lot of backlash. There are the conspiracy theories, and people who challenge their knowledge and training and it leads them to ask if they should be doing this work. Some callers are thinking about leaving medicine and asking: ‘Is this what I signed up for?’ and these are large decisions that are being made in a specific context.

“The other thing we’re hearing is from trainees – residents and fellows – who are expected to carry a lot of work on the COVID units. Some are being told that they can’t graduate because they haven’t finished their other training requirements. This type of systemic issue produces moral injury.”

Dr. Dinah Miller

Dr. Masood talked about what running the support line has been like for her. “I know people want to give more in a catastrophe, and I was realistic that the enthusiasm might die off. I would go as long as psychiatrists volunteer, and the most incredible thing is that it hasn’t stopped. Some of the original people are no longer with us, but others have come aboard, and it’s been incredible to be a part of this.”

In her Jan. 26, 2022, newsletter, epidemiologist Katelyn Jetelina, PhD, MPH, tried to be reassuring about the future. “In order to know how this will end, we need to look at how other pandemics ended,” Dr. Jetelina wrote. “First, recognize the last part of that sentence ... pandemics end. Every epi curve comes down. This pandemic will end, too. Hold that fact close to you.”

She wrote about the three ways that pandemics end. The SARS pandemic of 2002 lasted 1.5 years as public health measures were effective, in large part because the disease was spread only by symptomatic patients. Vaccines offer a second way to end pandemics, as they have for polio and smallpox. “If the globe works together, we could possibly eradicate SARS-CoV-2 with vaccines. [Now that we have numerous animal reservoirs, though, this is close to impossible.]”



Finally, Dr. Jetelina noted that the 1918 flu changed from a pandemic situation to being endemic. “Over time, the virus attenuated, it became less severe.” Society acclimates to a virus with a low mortality rate. “The vast majority of scientists think an endemic state is the future of SARS-CoV-2. I agree.” And she goes on to define endemic as a steady state, but not the absence of suffering. She likens it to malaria and tuberculosis, illnesses with high global mortality.

“An endemic will come without an announcement or headlines, we won’t know we’re there until well after we’ve arrived.” She wrote of the uncertainty that faces us moving forward: We don’t know how much, or how long, immunity from Omicron infections will last, or if future variants will cause more or less severe disease. She casted her vote for global vaccinations, boosters, masks, better ventilation, communication, empathy, and tolerance to end the pandemic.

In Maryland, hospitalizations and positivity are starting to decline from the postholiday surge. I have figured out that I am not good at predicting what will happen next, and the experts don’t seem to be much better. I’d like a headline ending, the kind we looked to be heading toward last June.

I’ve told my patients who want to come in person that I will reassess in March. We have written our own rules, and mine are somewhere in the middle – I don’t go to public indoor spaces unmasked, but I do see vaccinated family and friends in our homes without masks. I don’t want to be responsible for transmitting a potentially fatal illness to a vulnerable patient. Honestly, this makes no sense, but since there is a video option, I feel I should not risk passing a potentially lethal virus to my patients. I just hope I’m not writing this same article again in January 2023.

Dr. Miller is a coauthor of “Committed: The Battle Over Involuntary Psychiatric Care” (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016). She has a private practice and is assistant professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns Hopkins. Dr. Miller has no conflicts of interest.

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Marijuana use during pregnancy raised risk of adverse neonatal outcomes

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Women who used marijuana during pregnancy were at increased risk for adverse neonatal outcomes, based on data from a meta-analysis of nearly 60,000 individuals.

Marijuana misuse remains a top substance use disorder and studies of prenatal use show a prevalence as high as 22% worldwide, wrote Greg J. Marchand, MD, of the Marchand Institute for Minimally Invasive Surgery, Mesa, Ariz., and colleagues.

Dr. Greg J. Marchand

“The prevalence of marijuana use during pregnancy may continue to increase, given that there is a suggested association between legalized recreational marijuana and increased use in prenatal and postpartum periods,” they wrote. “Remarkably, 34%-60% of individuals who use marijuana keep using it during pregnancy,” and many women cite a belief that marijuana is safe to use while pregnant, they noted.

Cannabinoid receptors are present in the developing fetus by the start of the second trimester, and exposure to exogenous cannabinoids may be associated with changes in the prefrontal cortex, including development and function, the researchers said. However, previous studies of an association between maternal marijuana use and poor neonatal outcomes have been inconsistent, they added.

In a study published in JAMA Network Open, the researchers identified 16 interventional and observational studies including 59,138 patients; each study included pregnant women who were exposed to marijuana, compared with those not exposed to marijuana, along with neonatal outcomes. The data selection included studies published until Aug. 16, 2021, and 10 studies were published in 2015 or later.

Overall, the risk for seven adverse neonatal outcomes was significantly increased among women who were exposed to marijuana during pregnancy, compared with those not exposed. The researchers identified increased risk for birth weight less than 2,500 g (relative risk, 2.06; P = .005), small for gestational age (RR, 1.61; P < .001), preterm delivery (RR, 1.28; P < .001), and NICU admission (RR, 1.38; P < .001). In addition, they found significant differences in mean birth weight (mean difference, −112.30 g; P < .001), Apgar score at 1 minute (mean difference, −0.26; P = .002), and infant head circumference (mean difference, −0.34cm; P = .02) between women who used marijuana during pregnancy and those who did not.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the assessment of only cohort studies, which might suffer from bias given their retrospective designs, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the reliance on self-reports, the inability to adjust for tobacco/marijuana coexposure, and the lack of differentiation between levels of use and between different types of marijuana ingestion, they added.

However, the results support an association between marijuana use and adverse neonatal outcomes, and the researchers recommended additional studies of both maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with marijuana exposure. “Given increasing marijuana legalization and use worldwide, raising awareness and educating patients about these adverse outcomes may help to improve neonatal health,” they concluded.

New research prompted new review

The motivation to conduct this analysis at this time was prompted by the publication of several new, high-quality studies on the use of marijuana in pregnancy, according to Dr. Marchand. “It’s been a few years since a full analysis of all of the available data had been done, so we decided it was time to see if the old conclusions still held,” he said in an interview.

 

 

Dr. Marchand said he was surprised to see such a clear connection to preterm deliveries and lower birth weights. “When we perform a meta-analysis, we use all of the available data, and some important studies performed as recently as the past few years provided the depth of evidence behind these connections,” he said. “We didn’t have that level of evidence the last time this topic was studied only a few years ago,” he added.

The study is the largest meta-analysis on this topic to date, so the message to clinicians is highly significant, Dr. Marchand said. That message is “that we now have a very high level of evidence to say that smoking marijuana during pregnancy is harmful, and we (physicians especially) can no longer state that we just don’t know,” he said. “This is going to mean that deciding to smoke marijuana during your pregnancy is also deciding to do something that can harm your baby,” he emphasized. “This paper also will force some difficult decisions for mothers who use marijuana to treat medical problems, and there may not be good substitute treatments for some of these conditions, especially chronic pain and anxiety,” Dr. Marchand noted. “This will set up a difficult risk-versus-benefits situation, where these mothers, ideally with the help of their physicians, will have to decide if the risks of stopping marijuana outweigh the possible harm to the unborn baby,” he said.

As for additional research, long-term studies to assess behavioral changes as exposed children grow up would be beneficial, Dr. Marchand said. Such studies “could really help us balance the risk of marijuana exposure in pregnancy, especially if it is being used to treat serious medical conditions,” he noted.

Findings are a call to action

The view among many women that prenatal cannabis use is safe and without consequence “is a false narrative perpetuated by a combination of outdated evidence and recent changes to state-level cannabis policies,” wrote Kara R. Skelton, PhD, of Towson (Md.) University, and Sara E. Benjamin-Neelon, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in an accompanying editorial.

The findings from the current study add to the growing evidence that prenatal cannabis use is associated with adverse birth outcomes, they wrote. “Clinician-directed communication about cannabis has been criticized by pregnant women, with recent findings supporting a need for increased cannabis communication by clinicians,” and not only clinicians, but all health professionals who encounter women who are pregnant or attempting pregnancy should not miss the opportunity to communicate the risks of prenatal cannabis use, they emphasized.

The authors highlighted some of the current study’s limitations, including the inability to determine a dose-response association, the reliance on self-reports, and the lack of adjustment for tobacco/marijuana coexposure. However, they noted that the inclusion of recent studies (10 published in 2015 or later) strengthens the results because of the significant increase in the potency of Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, in recent decades.

“We urge clinicians, public health professionals, and policy makers to carefully consider the consequences of in utero cannabis exposure identified by Marchand et al. and partner to ensure prioritization of infant and child health during this time of precipitous cannabis legalization and commercialization,” the authors emphasized. “Without necessary safeguards to protect neonatal health, prenatal cannabis use poses a substantial threat to current and future generations of children,” they wrote.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. The editorialists had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Women who used marijuana during pregnancy were at increased risk for adverse neonatal outcomes, based on data from a meta-analysis of nearly 60,000 individuals.

Marijuana misuse remains a top substance use disorder and studies of prenatal use show a prevalence as high as 22% worldwide, wrote Greg J. Marchand, MD, of the Marchand Institute for Minimally Invasive Surgery, Mesa, Ariz., and colleagues.

Dr. Greg J. Marchand

“The prevalence of marijuana use during pregnancy may continue to increase, given that there is a suggested association between legalized recreational marijuana and increased use in prenatal and postpartum periods,” they wrote. “Remarkably, 34%-60% of individuals who use marijuana keep using it during pregnancy,” and many women cite a belief that marijuana is safe to use while pregnant, they noted.

Cannabinoid receptors are present in the developing fetus by the start of the second trimester, and exposure to exogenous cannabinoids may be associated with changes in the prefrontal cortex, including development and function, the researchers said. However, previous studies of an association between maternal marijuana use and poor neonatal outcomes have been inconsistent, they added.

In a study published in JAMA Network Open, the researchers identified 16 interventional and observational studies including 59,138 patients; each study included pregnant women who were exposed to marijuana, compared with those not exposed to marijuana, along with neonatal outcomes. The data selection included studies published until Aug. 16, 2021, and 10 studies were published in 2015 or later.

Overall, the risk for seven adverse neonatal outcomes was significantly increased among women who were exposed to marijuana during pregnancy, compared with those not exposed. The researchers identified increased risk for birth weight less than 2,500 g (relative risk, 2.06; P = .005), small for gestational age (RR, 1.61; P < .001), preterm delivery (RR, 1.28; P < .001), and NICU admission (RR, 1.38; P < .001). In addition, they found significant differences in mean birth weight (mean difference, −112.30 g; P < .001), Apgar score at 1 minute (mean difference, −0.26; P = .002), and infant head circumference (mean difference, −0.34cm; P = .02) between women who used marijuana during pregnancy and those who did not.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the assessment of only cohort studies, which might suffer from bias given their retrospective designs, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the reliance on self-reports, the inability to adjust for tobacco/marijuana coexposure, and the lack of differentiation between levels of use and between different types of marijuana ingestion, they added.

However, the results support an association between marijuana use and adverse neonatal outcomes, and the researchers recommended additional studies of both maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with marijuana exposure. “Given increasing marijuana legalization and use worldwide, raising awareness and educating patients about these adverse outcomes may help to improve neonatal health,” they concluded.

New research prompted new review

The motivation to conduct this analysis at this time was prompted by the publication of several new, high-quality studies on the use of marijuana in pregnancy, according to Dr. Marchand. “It’s been a few years since a full analysis of all of the available data had been done, so we decided it was time to see if the old conclusions still held,” he said in an interview.

 

 

Dr. Marchand said he was surprised to see such a clear connection to preterm deliveries and lower birth weights. “When we perform a meta-analysis, we use all of the available data, and some important studies performed as recently as the past few years provided the depth of evidence behind these connections,” he said. “We didn’t have that level of evidence the last time this topic was studied only a few years ago,” he added.

The study is the largest meta-analysis on this topic to date, so the message to clinicians is highly significant, Dr. Marchand said. That message is “that we now have a very high level of evidence to say that smoking marijuana during pregnancy is harmful, and we (physicians especially) can no longer state that we just don’t know,” he said. “This is going to mean that deciding to smoke marijuana during your pregnancy is also deciding to do something that can harm your baby,” he emphasized. “This paper also will force some difficult decisions for mothers who use marijuana to treat medical problems, and there may not be good substitute treatments for some of these conditions, especially chronic pain and anxiety,” Dr. Marchand noted. “This will set up a difficult risk-versus-benefits situation, where these mothers, ideally with the help of their physicians, will have to decide if the risks of stopping marijuana outweigh the possible harm to the unborn baby,” he said.

As for additional research, long-term studies to assess behavioral changes as exposed children grow up would be beneficial, Dr. Marchand said. Such studies “could really help us balance the risk of marijuana exposure in pregnancy, especially if it is being used to treat serious medical conditions,” he noted.

Findings are a call to action

The view among many women that prenatal cannabis use is safe and without consequence “is a false narrative perpetuated by a combination of outdated evidence and recent changes to state-level cannabis policies,” wrote Kara R. Skelton, PhD, of Towson (Md.) University, and Sara E. Benjamin-Neelon, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in an accompanying editorial.

The findings from the current study add to the growing evidence that prenatal cannabis use is associated with adverse birth outcomes, they wrote. “Clinician-directed communication about cannabis has been criticized by pregnant women, with recent findings supporting a need for increased cannabis communication by clinicians,” and not only clinicians, but all health professionals who encounter women who are pregnant or attempting pregnancy should not miss the opportunity to communicate the risks of prenatal cannabis use, they emphasized.

The authors highlighted some of the current study’s limitations, including the inability to determine a dose-response association, the reliance on self-reports, and the lack of adjustment for tobacco/marijuana coexposure. However, they noted that the inclusion of recent studies (10 published in 2015 or later) strengthens the results because of the significant increase in the potency of Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, in recent decades.

“We urge clinicians, public health professionals, and policy makers to carefully consider the consequences of in utero cannabis exposure identified by Marchand et al. and partner to ensure prioritization of infant and child health during this time of precipitous cannabis legalization and commercialization,” the authors emphasized. “Without necessary safeguards to protect neonatal health, prenatal cannabis use poses a substantial threat to current and future generations of children,” they wrote.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. The editorialists had no financial conflicts to disclose.

 

Women who used marijuana during pregnancy were at increased risk for adverse neonatal outcomes, based on data from a meta-analysis of nearly 60,000 individuals.

Marijuana misuse remains a top substance use disorder and studies of prenatal use show a prevalence as high as 22% worldwide, wrote Greg J. Marchand, MD, of the Marchand Institute for Minimally Invasive Surgery, Mesa, Ariz., and colleagues.

Dr. Greg J. Marchand

“The prevalence of marijuana use during pregnancy may continue to increase, given that there is a suggested association between legalized recreational marijuana and increased use in prenatal and postpartum periods,” they wrote. “Remarkably, 34%-60% of individuals who use marijuana keep using it during pregnancy,” and many women cite a belief that marijuana is safe to use while pregnant, they noted.

Cannabinoid receptors are present in the developing fetus by the start of the second trimester, and exposure to exogenous cannabinoids may be associated with changes in the prefrontal cortex, including development and function, the researchers said. However, previous studies of an association between maternal marijuana use and poor neonatal outcomes have been inconsistent, they added.

In a study published in JAMA Network Open, the researchers identified 16 interventional and observational studies including 59,138 patients; each study included pregnant women who were exposed to marijuana, compared with those not exposed to marijuana, along with neonatal outcomes. The data selection included studies published until Aug. 16, 2021, and 10 studies were published in 2015 or later.

Overall, the risk for seven adverse neonatal outcomes was significantly increased among women who were exposed to marijuana during pregnancy, compared with those not exposed. The researchers identified increased risk for birth weight less than 2,500 g (relative risk, 2.06; P = .005), small for gestational age (RR, 1.61; P < .001), preterm delivery (RR, 1.28; P < .001), and NICU admission (RR, 1.38; P < .001). In addition, they found significant differences in mean birth weight (mean difference, −112.30 g; P < .001), Apgar score at 1 minute (mean difference, −0.26; P = .002), and infant head circumference (mean difference, −0.34cm; P = .02) between women who used marijuana during pregnancy and those who did not.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including the assessment of only cohort studies, which might suffer from bias given their retrospective designs, the researchers noted. Other limitations included the reliance on self-reports, the inability to adjust for tobacco/marijuana coexposure, and the lack of differentiation between levels of use and between different types of marijuana ingestion, they added.

However, the results support an association between marijuana use and adverse neonatal outcomes, and the researchers recommended additional studies of both maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with marijuana exposure. “Given increasing marijuana legalization and use worldwide, raising awareness and educating patients about these adverse outcomes may help to improve neonatal health,” they concluded.

New research prompted new review

The motivation to conduct this analysis at this time was prompted by the publication of several new, high-quality studies on the use of marijuana in pregnancy, according to Dr. Marchand. “It’s been a few years since a full analysis of all of the available data had been done, so we decided it was time to see if the old conclusions still held,” he said in an interview.

 

 

Dr. Marchand said he was surprised to see such a clear connection to preterm deliveries and lower birth weights. “When we perform a meta-analysis, we use all of the available data, and some important studies performed as recently as the past few years provided the depth of evidence behind these connections,” he said. “We didn’t have that level of evidence the last time this topic was studied only a few years ago,” he added.

The study is the largest meta-analysis on this topic to date, so the message to clinicians is highly significant, Dr. Marchand said. That message is “that we now have a very high level of evidence to say that smoking marijuana during pregnancy is harmful, and we (physicians especially) can no longer state that we just don’t know,” he said. “This is going to mean that deciding to smoke marijuana during your pregnancy is also deciding to do something that can harm your baby,” he emphasized. “This paper also will force some difficult decisions for mothers who use marijuana to treat medical problems, and there may not be good substitute treatments for some of these conditions, especially chronic pain and anxiety,” Dr. Marchand noted. “This will set up a difficult risk-versus-benefits situation, where these mothers, ideally with the help of their physicians, will have to decide if the risks of stopping marijuana outweigh the possible harm to the unborn baby,” he said.

As for additional research, long-term studies to assess behavioral changes as exposed children grow up would be beneficial, Dr. Marchand said. Such studies “could really help us balance the risk of marijuana exposure in pregnancy, especially if it is being used to treat serious medical conditions,” he noted.

Findings are a call to action

The view among many women that prenatal cannabis use is safe and without consequence “is a false narrative perpetuated by a combination of outdated evidence and recent changes to state-level cannabis policies,” wrote Kara R. Skelton, PhD, of Towson (Md.) University, and Sara E. Benjamin-Neelon, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, in an accompanying editorial.

The findings from the current study add to the growing evidence that prenatal cannabis use is associated with adverse birth outcomes, they wrote. “Clinician-directed communication about cannabis has been criticized by pregnant women, with recent findings supporting a need for increased cannabis communication by clinicians,” and not only clinicians, but all health professionals who encounter women who are pregnant or attempting pregnancy should not miss the opportunity to communicate the risks of prenatal cannabis use, they emphasized.

The authors highlighted some of the current study’s limitations, including the inability to determine a dose-response association, the reliance on self-reports, and the lack of adjustment for tobacco/marijuana coexposure. However, they noted that the inclusion of recent studies (10 published in 2015 or later) strengthens the results because of the significant increase in the potency of Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main psychoactive ingredient in cannabis, in recent decades.

“We urge clinicians, public health professionals, and policy makers to carefully consider the consequences of in utero cannabis exposure identified by Marchand et al. and partner to ensure prioritization of infant and child health during this time of precipitous cannabis legalization and commercialization,” the authors emphasized. “Without necessary safeguards to protect neonatal health, prenatal cannabis use poses a substantial threat to current and future generations of children,” they wrote.

The study received no outside funding. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose. The editorialists had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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'The whitest specialty,' revisited

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A recent STAT article by Usha Lee McFarling identified orthopedic surgery as “the whitest specialty.” That’s a problem many, perhaps most, orthopedic surgeons are aware of. But seeing it stated so bluntly is jolting. It’s disconcerting to think that the orthopedic community is making so little progress toward achieving the principal ideal articulated in our country’s fundamental declaration of moral values: that all people are created equal and that they have inalienable rights – in our case, that everyone, Black, brown, as well as White, has the right to the same high level of medical care.

Unfortunately, as study after study has shown, minorities do not enjoy the right to equitable care. Instead, they are subject to disparities in treatment and outcomes that speak to the prejudices that are built into the health care system and are present – sometimes consciously, but most often subconsciously – in the minds of physicians. One important contributing element to these disparities is the paucity of minority practitioners. Studies have also shown that Black patients, for example, respond better to Black physicians, who so often share a psychological and cultural sympathy unavailable to most White physicians. It’s for that reason that being identified as “the whitest specialty” is so immensely troubling.

In researching her STAT article, Ms. McFarling spoke with American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons leaders, practicing surgeons, residents, and med students about the dearth of minority and female orthopedic surgeons. What she heard was perplexity and frustration about why better progress hasn’t been made toward correcting the gross underrepresentation of everyone other than White men. The AAOS, she noted, was one of the first specialties to recognize the lack of diversity and over the years has put in great effort to address the problem, creating task forces, committees, and diversity awards and sponsoring conferences and discussions. Yet progress has been glacial, at best.

From her respondents, Ms. McFarling heard an array of reasons for this. Black, Hispanic, and Native American persons are underrepresented in medical schools, so the pool of potential applicants for orthopedic residencies is shallow to begin with. STEM studies are notoriously inadequate in poorer primary and secondary schools, in which so many minority students are educated. The MCAT and USMLE Step 1 test, which play a role in acceptance to residencies, have been shown to be biased. The specialty has few Black or brown role models and, consequently, few advocates and a lack of mentorship. Overt bias may be fairly rare (though microaggressions are still a common and ongoing problem), but most minority and female orthopedic surgeons feel strongly that implicit or subconscious bias is entrenched and works against acceptance to residencies, success in residencies, and advancement in the field.

One of this article’s authors (AW) saw all these factors at work as a resident, then as an admissions committee member at both Yale and Harvard. But the fact is that other medical specialties face exactly these problems and barriers, and yet have been substantially more successful in overcoming them.

What seems to be distinctive about orthopedics is that the mindset which perpetuated (and still perpetuates) the old, lily-white, male predominance in medicine seems stronger, more ingrained, and more resistant to change than it is among physicians in other specialties. In this regard, Kristy Weber, MD, the first female president of the AAOS, told Ms. McFarling that the critical first step to bringing in more women or people of color is changing the culture. There seems to be a consensus about that.

So, what does that mean, given that the AAOS has made serious efforts in that regard that have clearly been less than effective?

The answer, as we see it, is first – to not give in to frustration. The time frames involved in changing customary states of mind are typically elongated, and the deeper the habituation, the longer transformation takes. Deep changes always mean a long, hard slog. For transformations of this sort to take place, the requirements are a general agreement on the value of the transformation, exposure to the destructive consequences of the customary modus operandi, and persuasion for why change needs to happen.

In orthopedics, the first requirement has been met. The AAOS espouses diversity and inclusion as a high-level value. In terms of the second two requirements – exposure and persuasion – orthopedic surgeons have been witness to events, campaigns, conferences, et cetera. But these have not been enough, which means that efforts need to be focused, enlarged, sustained, determined, and innovative.

Does the orthopedic surgery community have the ability to do that?

The answer is: Yes, it does.

Currently the orthopedic surgeon community boasts a number of organizations, groups, and individuals pushing for change, in addition to the AAOS’s Diversity Advisory Board. The predominantly African American J. Robert Gladden Orthopaedic Society, the Ruth Jackson Orthopaedic Society of female orthopedic physicians, and the Association of Latino Orthopaedic Surgeons are all energetic advocates, as is Nth Dimensions, the Perry Initiative, and various ad hoc and individual endeavors.

These are all strong proponents for their own groups in their own way. But history has shown in so many cases that concerted rather than individual action empowers advocacy, and what orthopedic surgery needs in its current situation of gross underrepresentation of minorities and women is an enhanced campaign to raise awareness and redouble persuasion.

One of many examples of the power of collective action is the Association of Minority Health Professions Schools founded by Dr. Louis Sullivan in 1977.* Dr. Sullivan (later secretary of the Department of Health & Human Services) was at that time the founding dean of Morehouse School of Medicine. Morehouse had been launched on a shoestring and needed funding urgently. Other Black health schools, such as Meharry Medical College and Tuskegee College of Veterinary Medicine, were in even more pressing financial need. The coalition of schools that Dr. Sullivan organized became a powerful force in Congress and the National Institutes of Health, magnitudes more effective in raising funds from government and other sources than the best individual efforts of the separate institutions.

Dr. Sullivan’s association is only one of a multitude of historical examples of the effectiveness of unified action. AAOS currently has no single officer charged with bringing together the efforts of the change assets that already exist. It could, perhaps should, have someone in that position. AAOS could invest that same office with a mandate to survey the other medical specialties and bring to bear the most effective diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices in their arsenals.

Finally, despite the attention AAOS has brought to DEI needs, a look at the organization’s strategic goals, its core values, and its “key enablers” finds not a single mention of diversity or inclusion. Given the country’s current focus on the need for equality, given the poor performance of the orthopedic surgery specialty in terms of inclusion, the obvious question is: Should there not be an official declaration positing diversity as a primary AAOS desideratum?

There is recent precedent for this in the American College of Physicians/American Board of Internal Medicine’s Physician Charter on Professionalism, which includes “social justice” as a primary goal of medical practice. This highlights and reinforces the humanitarian strivings of the profession. In light of the paralysis illuminated by Ms. McFarling’s STAT article, a clear, concise declaration by the AAOS of the value and need for DEI as a central component of the organization’s values should be high on the AAOS order of business. A commitment in that form would serve as a powerful catalyst for bringing orthopedic surgery into step with its sister specialties, as well as affirming the core egalitarian principle that underlies all of medical care.

Dr. White is the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medical Education and Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Dr. Chanoff is a founding board member of the Augustus A. White III Institute for Healthcare Equity. Neither Dr. White nor Dr. Chanoff reported any conflicts of interest. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Correction, 2/1/22: An earlier version of this article omitted the title of "Dr." before Dr. Louis Sullivan's name.

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A recent STAT article by Usha Lee McFarling identified orthopedic surgery as “the whitest specialty.” That’s a problem many, perhaps most, orthopedic surgeons are aware of. But seeing it stated so bluntly is jolting. It’s disconcerting to think that the orthopedic community is making so little progress toward achieving the principal ideal articulated in our country’s fundamental declaration of moral values: that all people are created equal and that they have inalienable rights – in our case, that everyone, Black, brown, as well as White, has the right to the same high level of medical care.

Unfortunately, as study after study has shown, minorities do not enjoy the right to equitable care. Instead, they are subject to disparities in treatment and outcomes that speak to the prejudices that are built into the health care system and are present – sometimes consciously, but most often subconsciously – in the minds of physicians. One important contributing element to these disparities is the paucity of minority practitioners. Studies have also shown that Black patients, for example, respond better to Black physicians, who so often share a psychological and cultural sympathy unavailable to most White physicians. It’s for that reason that being identified as “the whitest specialty” is so immensely troubling.

In researching her STAT article, Ms. McFarling spoke with American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons leaders, practicing surgeons, residents, and med students about the dearth of minority and female orthopedic surgeons. What she heard was perplexity and frustration about why better progress hasn’t been made toward correcting the gross underrepresentation of everyone other than White men. The AAOS, she noted, was one of the first specialties to recognize the lack of diversity and over the years has put in great effort to address the problem, creating task forces, committees, and diversity awards and sponsoring conferences and discussions. Yet progress has been glacial, at best.

From her respondents, Ms. McFarling heard an array of reasons for this. Black, Hispanic, and Native American persons are underrepresented in medical schools, so the pool of potential applicants for orthopedic residencies is shallow to begin with. STEM studies are notoriously inadequate in poorer primary and secondary schools, in which so many minority students are educated. The MCAT and USMLE Step 1 test, which play a role in acceptance to residencies, have been shown to be biased. The specialty has few Black or brown role models and, consequently, few advocates and a lack of mentorship. Overt bias may be fairly rare (though microaggressions are still a common and ongoing problem), but most minority and female orthopedic surgeons feel strongly that implicit or subconscious bias is entrenched and works against acceptance to residencies, success in residencies, and advancement in the field.

One of this article’s authors (AW) saw all these factors at work as a resident, then as an admissions committee member at both Yale and Harvard. But the fact is that other medical specialties face exactly these problems and barriers, and yet have been substantially more successful in overcoming them.

What seems to be distinctive about orthopedics is that the mindset which perpetuated (and still perpetuates) the old, lily-white, male predominance in medicine seems stronger, more ingrained, and more resistant to change than it is among physicians in other specialties. In this regard, Kristy Weber, MD, the first female president of the AAOS, told Ms. McFarling that the critical first step to bringing in more women or people of color is changing the culture. There seems to be a consensus about that.

So, what does that mean, given that the AAOS has made serious efforts in that regard that have clearly been less than effective?

The answer, as we see it, is first – to not give in to frustration. The time frames involved in changing customary states of mind are typically elongated, and the deeper the habituation, the longer transformation takes. Deep changes always mean a long, hard slog. For transformations of this sort to take place, the requirements are a general agreement on the value of the transformation, exposure to the destructive consequences of the customary modus operandi, and persuasion for why change needs to happen.

In orthopedics, the first requirement has been met. The AAOS espouses diversity and inclusion as a high-level value. In terms of the second two requirements – exposure and persuasion – orthopedic surgeons have been witness to events, campaigns, conferences, et cetera. But these have not been enough, which means that efforts need to be focused, enlarged, sustained, determined, and innovative.

Does the orthopedic surgery community have the ability to do that?

The answer is: Yes, it does.

Currently the orthopedic surgeon community boasts a number of organizations, groups, and individuals pushing for change, in addition to the AAOS’s Diversity Advisory Board. The predominantly African American J. Robert Gladden Orthopaedic Society, the Ruth Jackson Orthopaedic Society of female orthopedic physicians, and the Association of Latino Orthopaedic Surgeons are all energetic advocates, as is Nth Dimensions, the Perry Initiative, and various ad hoc and individual endeavors.

These are all strong proponents for their own groups in their own way. But history has shown in so many cases that concerted rather than individual action empowers advocacy, and what orthopedic surgery needs in its current situation of gross underrepresentation of minorities and women is an enhanced campaign to raise awareness and redouble persuasion.

One of many examples of the power of collective action is the Association of Minority Health Professions Schools founded by Dr. Louis Sullivan in 1977.* Dr. Sullivan (later secretary of the Department of Health & Human Services) was at that time the founding dean of Morehouse School of Medicine. Morehouse had been launched on a shoestring and needed funding urgently. Other Black health schools, such as Meharry Medical College and Tuskegee College of Veterinary Medicine, were in even more pressing financial need. The coalition of schools that Dr. Sullivan organized became a powerful force in Congress and the National Institutes of Health, magnitudes more effective in raising funds from government and other sources than the best individual efforts of the separate institutions.

Dr. Sullivan’s association is only one of a multitude of historical examples of the effectiveness of unified action. AAOS currently has no single officer charged with bringing together the efforts of the change assets that already exist. It could, perhaps should, have someone in that position. AAOS could invest that same office with a mandate to survey the other medical specialties and bring to bear the most effective diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices in their arsenals.

Finally, despite the attention AAOS has brought to DEI needs, a look at the organization’s strategic goals, its core values, and its “key enablers” finds not a single mention of diversity or inclusion. Given the country’s current focus on the need for equality, given the poor performance of the orthopedic surgery specialty in terms of inclusion, the obvious question is: Should there not be an official declaration positing diversity as a primary AAOS desideratum?

There is recent precedent for this in the American College of Physicians/American Board of Internal Medicine’s Physician Charter on Professionalism, which includes “social justice” as a primary goal of medical practice. This highlights and reinforces the humanitarian strivings of the profession. In light of the paralysis illuminated by Ms. McFarling’s STAT article, a clear, concise declaration by the AAOS of the value and need for DEI as a central component of the organization’s values should be high on the AAOS order of business. A commitment in that form would serve as a powerful catalyst for bringing orthopedic surgery into step with its sister specialties, as well as affirming the core egalitarian principle that underlies all of medical care.

Dr. White is the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medical Education and Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Dr. Chanoff is a founding board member of the Augustus A. White III Institute for Healthcare Equity. Neither Dr. White nor Dr. Chanoff reported any conflicts of interest. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Correction, 2/1/22: An earlier version of this article omitted the title of "Dr." before Dr. Louis Sullivan's name.

A recent STAT article by Usha Lee McFarling identified orthopedic surgery as “the whitest specialty.” That’s a problem many, perhaps most, orthopedic surgeons are aware of. But seeing it stated so bluntly is jolting. It’s disconcerting to think that the orthopedic community is making so little progress toward achieving the principal ideal articulated in our country’s fundamental declaration of moral values: that all people are created equal and that they have inalienable rights – in our case, that everyone, Black, brown, as well as White, has the right to the same high level of medical care.

Unfortunately, as study after study has shown, minorities do not enjoy the right to equitable care. Instead, they are subject to disparities in treatment and outcomes that speak to the prejudices that are built into the health care system and are present – sometimes consciously, but most often subconsciously – in the minds of physicians. One important contributing element to these disparities is the paucity of minority practitioners. Studies have also shown that Black patients, for example, respond better to Black physicians, who so often share a psychological and cultural sympathy unavailable to most White physicians. It’s for that reason that being identified as “the whitest specialty” is so immensely troubling.

In researching her STAT article, Ms. McFarling spoke with American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons leaders, practicing surgeons, residents, and med students about the dearth of minority and female orthopedic surgeons. What she heard was perplexity and frustration about why better progress hasn’t been made toward correcting the gross underrepresentation of everyone other than White men. The AAOS, she noted, was one of the first specialties to recognize the lack of diversity and over the years has put in great effort to address the problem, creating task forces, committees, and diversity awards and sponsoring conferences and discussions. Yet progress has been glacial, at best.

From her respondents, Ms. McFarling heard an array of reasons for this. Black, Hispanic, and Native American persons are underrepresented in medical schools, so the pool of potential applicants for orthopedic residencies is shallow to begin with. STEM studies are notoriously inadequate in poorer primary and secondary schools, in which so many minority students are educated. The MCAT and USMLE Step 1 test, which play a role in acceptance to residencies, have been shown to be biased. The specialty has few Black or brown role models and, consequently, few advocates and a lack of mentorship. Overt bias may be fairly rare (though microaggressions are still a common and ongoing problem), but most minority and female orthopedic surgeons feel strongly that implicit or subconscious bias is entrenched and works against acceptance to residencies, success in residencies, and advancement in the field.

One of this article’s authors (AW) saw all these factors at work as a resident, then as an admissions committee member at both Yale and Harvard. But the fact is that other medical specialties face exactly these problems and barriers, and yet have been substantially more successful in overcoming them.

What seems to be distinctive about orthopedics is that the mindset which perpetuated (and still perpetuates) the old, lily-white, male predominance in medicine seems stronger, more ingrained, and more resistant to change than it is among physicians in other specialties. In this regard, Kristy Weber, MD, the first female president of the AAOS, told Ms. McFarling that the critical first step to bringing in more women or people of color is changing the culture. There seems to be a consensus about that.

So, what does that mean, given that the AAOS has made serious efforts in that regard that have clearly been less than effective?

The answer, as we see it, is first – to not give in to frustration. The time frames involved in changing customary states of mind are typically elongated, and the deeper the habituation, the longer transformation takes. Deep changes always mean a long, hard slog. For transformations of this sort to take place, the requirements are a general agreement on the value of the transformation, exposure to the destructive consequences of the customary modus operandi, and persuasion for why change needs to happen.

In orthopedics, the first requirement has been met. The AAOS espouses diversity and inclusion as a high-level value. In terms of the second two requirements – exposure and persuasion – orthopedic surgeons have been witness to events, campaigns, conferences, et cetera. But these have not been enough, which means that efforts need to be focused, enlarged, sustained, determined, and innovative.

Does the orthopedic surgery community have the ability to do that?

The answer is: Yes, it does.

Currently the orthopedic surgeon community boasts a number of organizations, groups, and individuals pushing for change, in addition to the AAOS’s Diversity Advisory Board. The predominantly African American J. Robert Gladden Orthopaedic Society, the Ruth Jackson Orthopaedic Society of female orthopedic physicians, and the Association of Latino Orthopaedic Surgeons are all energetic advocates, as is Nth Dimensions, the Perry Initiative, and various ad hoc and individual endeavors.

These are all strong proponents for their own groups in their own way. But history has shown in so many cases that concerted rather than individual action empowers advocacy, and what orthopedic surgery needs in its current situation of gross underrepresentation of minorities and women is an enhanced campaign to raise awareness and redouble persuasion.

One of many examples of the power of collective action is the Association of Minority Health Professions Schools founded by Dr. Louis Sullivan in 1977.* Dr. Sullivan (later secretary of the Department of Health & Human Services) was at that time the founding dean of Morehouse School of Medicine. Morehouse had been launched on a shoestring and needed funding urgently. Other Black health schools, such as Meharry Medical College and Tuskegee College of Veterinary Medicine, were in even more pressing financial need. The coalition of schools that Dr. Sullivan organized became a powerful force in Congress and the National Institutes of Health, magnitudes more effective in raising funds from government and other sources than the best individual efforts of the separate institutions.

Dr. Sullivan’s association is only one of a multitude of historical examples of the effectiveness of unified action. AAOS currently has no single officer charged with bringing together the efforts of the change assets that already exist. It could, perhaps should, have someone in that position. AAOS could invest that same office with a mandate to survey the other medical specialties and bring to bear the most effective diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) practices in their arsenals.

Finally, despite the attention AAOS has brought to DEI needs, a look at the organization’s strategic goals, its core values, and its “key enablers” finds not a single mention of diversity or inclusion. Given the country’s current focus on the need for equality, given the poor performance of the orthopedic surgery specialty in terms of inclusion, the obvious question is: Should there not be an official declaration positing diversity as a primary AAOS desideratum?

There is recent precedent for this in the American College of Physicians/American Board of Internal Medicine’s Physician Charter on Professionalism, which includes “social justice” as a primary goal of medical practice. This highlights and reinforces the humanitarian strivings of the profession. In light of the paralysis illuminated by Ms. McFarling’s STAT article, a clear, concise declaration by the AAOS of the value and need for DEI as a central component of the organization’s values should be high on the AAOS order of business. A commitment in that form would serve as a powerful catalyst for bringing orthopedic surgery into step with its sister specialties, as well as affirming the core egalitarian principle that underlies all of medical care.

Dr. White is the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medical Education and Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School, Boston. Dr. Chanoff is a founding board member of the Augustus A. White III Institute for Healthcare Equity. Neither Dr. White nor Dr. Chanoff reported any conflicts of interest. A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Correction, 2/1/22: An earlier version of this article omitted the title of "Dr." before Dr. Louis Sullivan's name.

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FDA approves risankizumab (Skyrizi) for psoriatic arthritis

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The Food and Drug Administration on Jan. 21 approved risankizumab-rzaa (Skyrizi) for a second indication – treating adults with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) – making it the second anti–interleukin-23 monoclonal antibody available to treat PsA, according to an announcement from manufacturer AbbVie.

The agency previously approved risankizumab in April 2019 for adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.



The dosing regimen for PsA is the same as it is for patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a single 150-mg subcutaneous injection four times a year (after two starter doses at weeks 0 and 4), and it can be administered alone or in combination with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs).

Two phase 3 trials, KEEPsAKE 1 and KEEPsAKE 2, were the basis for the approval. These two trials tested the biologic agent in adults with active PsA, including those who had responded inadequately or were intolerant to biologic therapy and/or nonbiologic DMARDs. Fulfillment of the trials’ primary endpoint of at least a 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria at 24 weeks occurred in 51.3%-57.3% of patients, compared with 26.5%-33.5% of placebo-treated patients.

Those on risankizumab also achieved significantly higher rates of ACR50 and ACR70 responses than those on placebo. In addition, patients with preexisting dactylitis and enthesitis experienced improvements in these PsA manifestations. Risankizumab was also associated with an improvement in physical function at 24 weeks on the Health Assessment Questionnaire–Disability Index, bettering placebo by a mean difference of 0.16-0.20 points in the two trials. A significantly higher percentage of patients who had psoriatic skin lesions experienced at least 90% improvement with risankizumab on the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, compared with placebo.

AbbVie said that the safety profile of risankizumab in patients with PsA has been generally consistent with its effects in patients with plaque psoriasis.



The KEEPsAKE 1 and KEEPsAKE 2 studies are ongoing, and patients in the long-term extensions of the trials remain blinded to the original randomized allocation for the duration of the studies.

Phase 3 trials of risankizumab are also ongoing in patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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The Food and Drug Administration on Jan. 21 approved risankizumab-rzaa (Skyrizi) for a second indication – treating adults with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) – making it the second anti–interleukin-23 monoclonal antibody available to treat PsA, according to an announcement from manufacturer AbbVie.

The agency previously approved risankizumab in April 2019 for adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.



The dosing regimen for PsA is the same as it is for patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a single 150-mg subcutaneous injection four times a year (after two starter doses at weeks 0 and 4), and it can be administered alone or in combination with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs).

Two phase 3 trials, KEEPsAKE 1 and KEEPsAKE 2, were the basis for the approval. These two trials tested the biologic agent in adults with active PsA, including those who had responded inadequately or were intolerant to biologic therapy and/or nonbiologic DMARDs. Fulfillment of the trials’ primary endpoint of at least a 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria at 24 weeks occurred in 51.3%-57.3% of patients, compared with 26.5%-33.5% of placebo-treated patients.

Those on risankizumab also achieved significantly higher rates of ACR50 and ACR70 responses than those on placebo. In addition, patients with preexisting dactylitis and enthesitis experienced improvements in these PsA manifestations. Risankizumab was also associated with an improvement in physical function at 24 weeks on the Health Assessment Questionnaire–Disability Index, bettering placebo by a mean difference of 0.16-0.20 points in the two trials. A significantly higher percentage of patients who had psoriatic skin lesions experienced at least 90% improvement with risankizumab on the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, compared with placebo.

AbbVie said that the safety profile of risankizumab in patients with PsA has been generally consistent with its effects in patients with plaque psoriasis.



The KEEPsAKE 1 and KEEPsAKE 2 studies are ongoing, and patients in the long-term extensions of the trials remain blinded to the original randomized allocation for the duration of the studies.

Phase 3 trials of risankizumab are also ongoing in patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

The Food and Drug Administration on Jan. 21 approved risankizumab-rzaa (Skyrizi) for a second indication – treating adults with active psoriatic arthritis (PsA) – making it the second anti–interleukin-23 monoclonal antibody available to treat PsA, according to an announcement from manufacturer AbbVie.

The agency previously approved risankizumab in April 2019 for adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis.



The dosing regimen for PsA is the same as it is for patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis: a single 150-mg subcutaneous injection four times a year (after two starter doses at weeks 0 and 4), and it can be administered alone or in combination with disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs).

Two phase 3 trials, KEEPsAKE 1 and KEEPsAKE 2, were the basis for the approval. These two trials tested the biologic agent in adults with active PsA, including those who had responded inadequately or were intolerant to biologic therapy and/or nonbiologic DMARDs. Fulfillment of the trials’ primary endpoint of at least a 20% improvement in American College of Rheumatology response criteria at 24 weeks occurred in 51.3%-57.3% of patients, compared with 26.5%-33.5% of placebo-treated patients.

Those on risankizumab also achieved significantly higher rates of ACR50 and ACR70 responses than those on placebo. In addition, patients with preexisting dactylitis and enthesitis experienced improvements in these PsA manifestations. Risankizumab was also associated with an improvement in physical function at 24 weeks on the Health Assessment Questionnaire–Disability Index, bettering placebo by a mean difference of 0.16-0.20 points in the two trials. A significantly higher percentage of patients who had psoriatic skin lesions experienced at least 90% improvement with risankizumab on the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index, compared with placebo.

AbbVie said that the safety profile of risankizumab in patients with PsA has been generally consistent with its effects in patients with plaque psoriasis.



The KEEPsAKE 1 and KEEPsAKE 2 studies are ongoing, and patients in the long-term extensions of the trials remain blinded to the original randomized allocation for the duration of the studies.

Phase 3 trials of risankizumab are also ongoing in patients with Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Steroid-free remission doesn’t decrease risk of Crohn’s disease progression

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Achieving steroid-free clinical and endoscopic remission does not decrease the risk of Crohn’s disease progression measured by surgery, hospitalization, or initiation of new treatments, according to a post hoc analysis of data from a prospective RCT.

The therapeutic goals of Crohn’s disease have evolved from controlling symptoms to blocking disease progression and reducing complications, wrote David Laharie, MD, of Hôpital Haut-Lévêque, Pessac, France, and colleagues. The goal of steroid-free remission has been used as an endpoint of treatment, but data on the impact of such remission on long-term disease are limited, the researchers noted in a retrospective study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

undefined undefined/iStock/Getty Images

In the study, the researchers reviewed data from 95 adults with early Crohn’s disease (CD) who participated in the TAILORIX trial involving treatment with infliximab and immunomodulators. The primary endpoint of the TAILORIX trial was sustained corticosteroid-free remission from week 22 to 54. In the current study, the primary endpoint was progression-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years in patients who did or did not meet the TAILORIX primary endpoint. The median disease duration was 4.5 months, and the median follow-up was 64.2 months.

Progression-free survival was defined as a composite of luminal surgery, anal surgery, hospitalization, and the need for a new CD treatment during the follow-up period.

In the study population, 45 patients achieved corticosteroid-free remission and 50 did not. At 54 weeks, 17 patients with corticosteroid-free remission (38%) and 28 patients without remission (56%) achieved complete mucosal healing, and progression-free survival rates were similar between these groups.

Overall, the rates of progression-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years were not significantly different between the remission and nonremission groups: 86% versus 91%, respectively, at 1 year; 70% for both groups at 3 years; and 64% and 61%, respectively, at 5 years.

The researchers also compared individual components of the primary endpoint (luminal surgery, anal surgery, hospitalization, and the need for a new CD treatment), and found no significant differences in survival rates in patients who had and had not achieved steroid-free remission.

Survival rates without luminal surgery at 1, 3, and 5 years were 97% versus 96%, 93% versus 90%, and 87% versus 82%, respectively, for remission and nonremission groups. Similarly, survival rates without anal surgery were 93%, 86%, and 86% versus 96%, 88%, and 85%, respectively, for the two groups. Rates of hospitalization-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years were 90% versus 92%, 81% versus 81%, and 78% versus 69%, respectively, in the remission and nonremission groups. Survival rates without a new systemic CD treatment also were similar at 1, 3, and 5 years: 93% versus 95%, 71% versus 93%, and 60% versus 51%, respectively, for the remission and nonremission groups.

CD progression was not associated with not achieving corticosteroid-free remission (hazard ratio, 0.861). Other factors that were not associated with disease progression in this study included CRP greater than 5 mg/L, age older than 30 years, active smoking, and B1 phenotype.

The researchers noted that, although endoscopic and clinical remission is currently recommended for CD, “there is no validated or standardized definition of this endoscopic goal.” The high rates of survival without major abdominal surgery, regardless of remission status, suggest a significant impact of early combination therapy for CD patients who were biologic naive. Other studies have shown similar improved outcomes for CD patients with early treatment.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the retrospective design and lack of power to compare long-term progression-free survival, the researchers noted. However, the results were strengthened by the robust data on hospitalizations and surgeries from the TAILORIX trial.

The results support a more flexible strategy for CD, “recommending endoscopic and clinical remission in early diagnosed patients and less stringent objectives in those with more refractory or advanced disease,” they concluded.
 

 

 

Findings may guide patient management

The current study is important to help clinicians know whether CD patients who achieve a short-term, steroid-free clinical and endoscopic remission go on to experience better long-term disease outcomes than those who do not achieve this short-term remission, Atsushi Sakuraba, MD, of the University of Chicago said in an interview.

Dr. Sakuraba said that he was surprised by the study findings. “Achieving a clinical remission off steroids with complete endoscopic remission, i.e., deep remission, is considered a treatment goal, but the fact that it did not result in less disease progression was surprising.”

The take-home message for clinicians from the study is that CD patients may still experience disease progression after achieving a single time of clinical and endoscopic remission “mainly due to loss of response to infliximab, so continued long-term disease monitoring and control are required,” Dr. Sakuraba said.

The current study was a post hoc follow-up analysis of a previous trial, Dr. Sakuraba noted. Therefore, studies primarily focused on changing the disease progression and natural course of CD are warranted.

Dr. Laharie disclosed counseling, boards, transportation, or fees from AbbVie, Biogaran, Biogen, Ferring, HAC-pharma, Janssen, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Prometheus, Roche, Takeda, Theradiag, and Tillots. Dr. Sakuraba had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.

This article was updated Feb. 10, 2022.

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Achieving steroid-free clinical and endoscopic remission does not decrease the risk of Crohn’s disease progression measured by surgery, hospitalization, or initiation of new treatments, according to a post hoc analysis of data from a prospective RCT.

The therapeutic goals of Crohn’s disease have evolved from controlling symptoms to blocking disease progression and reducing complications, wrote David Laharie, MD, of Hôpital Haut-Lévêque, Pessac, France, and colleagues. The goal of steroid-free remission has been used as an endpoint of treatment, but data on the impact of such remission on long-term disease are limited, the researchers noted in a retrospective study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

undefined undefined/iStock/Getty Images

In the study, the researchers reviewed data from 95 adults with early Crohn’s disease (CD) who participated in the TAILORIX trial involving treatment with infliximab and immunomodulators. The primary endpoint of the TAILORIX trial was sustained corticosteroid-free remission from week 22 to 54. In the current study, the primary endpoint was progression-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years in patients who did or did not meet the TAILORIX primary endpoint. The median disease duration was 4.5 months, and the median follow-up was 64.2 months.

Progression-free survival was defined as a composite of luminal surgery, anal surgery, hospitalization, and the need for a new CD treatment during the follow-up period.

In the study population, 45 patients achieved corticosteroid-free remission and 50 did not. At 54 weeks, 17 patients with corticosteroid-free remission (38%) and 28 patients without remission (56%) achieved complete mucosal healing, and progression-free survival rates were similar between these groups.

Overall, the rates of progression-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years were not significantly different between the remission and nonremission groups: 86% versus 91%, respectively, at 1 year; 70% for both groups at 3 years; and 64% and 61%, respectively, at 5 years.

The researchers also compared individual components of the primary endpoint (luminal surgery, anal surgery, hospitalization, and the need for a new CD treatment), and found no significant differences in survival rates in patients who had and had not achieved steroid-free remission.

Survival rates without luminal surgery at 1, 3, and 5 years were 97% versus 96%, 93% versus 90%, and 87% versus 82%, respectively, for remission and nonremission groups. Similarly, survival rates without anal surgery were 93%, 86%, and 86% versus 96%, 88%, and 85%, respectively, for the two groups. Rates of hospitalization-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years were 90% versus 92%, 81% versus 81%, and 78% versus 69%, respectively, in the remission and nonremission groups. Survival rates without a new systemic CD treatment also were similar at 1, 3, and 5 years: 93% versus 95%, 71% versus 93%, and 60% versus 51%, respectively, for the remission and nonremission groups.

CD progression was not associated with not achieving corticosteroid-free remission (hazard ratio, 0.861). Other factors that were not associated with disease progression in this study included CRP greater than 5 mg/L, age older than 30 years, active smoking, and B1 phenotype.

The researchers noted that, although endoscopic and clinical remission is currently recommended for CD, “there is no validated or standardized definition of this endoscopic goal.” The high rates of survival without major abdominal surgery, regardless of remission status, suggest a significant impact of early combination therapy for CD patients who were biologic naive. Other studies have shown similar improved outcomes for CD patients with early treatment.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the retrospective design and lack of power to compare long-term progression-free survival, the researchers noted. However, the results were strengthened by the robust data on hospitalizations and surgeries from the TAILORIX trial.

The results support a more flexible strategy for CD, “recommending endoscopic and clinical remission in early diagnosed patients and less stringent objectives in those with more refractory or advanced disease,” they concluded.
 

 

 

Findings may guide patient management

The current study is important to help clinicians know whether CD patients who achieve a short-term, steroid-free clinical and endoscopic remission go on to experience better long-term disease outcomes than those who do not achieve this short-term remission, Atsushi Sakuraba, MD, of the University of Chicago said in an interview.

Dr. Sakuraba said that he was surprised by the study findings. “Achieving a clinical remission off steroids with complete endoscopic remission, i.e., deep remission, is considered a treatment goal, but the fact that it did not result in less disease progression was surprising.”

The take-home message for clinicians from the study is that CD patients may still experience disease progression after achieving a single time of clinical and endoscopic remission “mainly due to loss of response to infliximab, so continued long-term disease monitoring and control are required,” Dr. Sakuraba said.

The current study was a post hoc follow-up analysis of a previous trial, Dr. Sakuraba noted. Therefore, studies primarily focused on changing the disease progression and natural course of CD are warranted.

Dr. Laharie disclosed counseling, boards, transportation, or fees from AbbVie, Biogaran, Biogen, Ferring, HAC-pharma, Janssen, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Prometheus, Roche, Takeda, Theradiag, and Tillots. Dr. Sakuraba had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.

This article was updated Feb. 10, 2022.

Achieving steroid-free clinical and endoscopic remission does not decrease the risk of Crohn’s disease progression measured by surgery, hospitalization, or initiation of new treatments, according to a post hoc analysis of data from a prospective RCT.

The therapeutic goals of Crohn’s disease have evolved from controlling symptoms to blocking disease progression and reducing complications, wrote David Laharie, MD, of Hôpital Haut-Lévêque, Pessac, France, and colleagues. The goal of steroid-free remission has been used as an endpoint of treatment, but data on the impact of such remission on long-term disease are limited, the researchers noted in a retrospective study published in Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

undefined undefined/iStock/Getty Images

In the study, the researchers reviewed data from 95 adults with early Crohn’s disease (CD) who participated in the TAILORIX trial involving treatment with infliximab and immunomodulators. The primary endpoint of the TAILORIX trial was sustained corticosteroid-free remission from week 22 to 54. In the current study, the primary endpoint was progression-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years in patients who did or did not meet the TAILORIX primary endpoint. The median disease duration was 4.5 months, and the median follow-up was 64.2 months.

Progression-free survival was defined as a composite of luminal surgery, anal surgery, hospitalization, and the need for a new CD treatment during the follow-up period.

In the study population, 45 patients achieved corticosteroid-free remission and 50 did not. At 54 weeks, 17 patients with corticosteroid-free remission (38%) and 28 patients without remission (56%) achieved complete mucosal healing, and progression-free survival rates were similar between these groups.

Overall, the rates of progression-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years were not significantly different between the remission and nonremission groups: 86% versus 91%, respectively, at 1 year; 70% for both groups at 3 years; and 64% and 61%, respectively, at 5 years.

The researchers also compared individual components of the primary endpoint (luminal surgery, anal surgery, hospitalization, and the need for a new CD treatment), and found no significant differences in survival rates in patients who had and had not achieved steroid-free remission.

Survival rates without luminal surgery at 1, 3, and 5 years were 97% versus 96%, 93% versus 90%, and 87% versus 82%, respectively, for remission and nonremission groups. Similarly, survival rates without anal surgery were 93%, 86%, and 86% versus 96%, 88%, and 85%, respectively, for the two groups. Rates of hospitalization-free survival at 1, 3, and 5 years were 90% versus 92%, 81% versus 81%, and 78% versus 69%, respectively, in the remission and nonremission groups. Survival rates without a new systemic CD treatment also were similar at 1, 3, and 5 years: 93% versus 95%, 71% versus 93%, and 60% versus 51%, respectively, for the remission and nonremission groups.

CD progression was not associated with not achieving corticosteroid-free remission (hazard ratio, 0.861). Other factors that were not associated with disease progression in this study included CRP greater than 5 mg/L, age older than 30 years, active smoking, and B1 phenotype.

The researchers noted that, although endoscopic and clinical remission is currently recommended for CD, “there is no validated or standardized definition of this endoscopic goal.” The high rates of survival without major abdominal surgery, regardless of remission status, suggest a significant impact of early combination therapy for CD patients who were biologic naive. Other studies have shown similar improved outcomes for CD patients with early treatment.

The study findings were limited by several factors including the retrospective design and lack of power to compare long-term progression-free survival, the researchers noted. However, the results were strengthened by the robust data on hospitalizations and surgeries from the TAILORIX trial.

The results support a more flexible strategy for CD, “recommending endoscopic and clinical remission in early diagnosed patients and less stringent objectives in those with more refractory or advanced disease,” they concluded.
 

 

 

Findings may guide patient management

The current study is important to help clinicians know whether CD patients who achieve a short-term, steroid-free clinical and endoscopic remission go on to experience better long-term disease outcomes than those who do not achieve this short-term remission, Atsushi Sakuraba, MD, of the University of Chicago said in an interview.

Dr. Sakuraba said that he was surprised by the study findings. “Achieving a clinical remission off steroids with complete endoscopic remission, i.e., deep remission, is considered a treatment goal, but the fact that it did not result in less disease progression was surprising.”

The take-home message for clinicians from the study is that CD patients may still experience disease progression after achieving a single time of clinical and endoscopic remission “mainly due to loss of response to infliximab, so continued long-term disease monitoring and control are required,” Dr. Sakuraba said.

The current study was a post hoc follow-up analysis of a previous trial, Dr. Sakuraba noted. Therefore, studies primarily focused on changing the disease progression and natural course of CD are warranted.

Dr. Laharie disclosed counseling, boards, transportation, or fees from AbbVie, Biogaran, Biogen, Ferring, HAC-pharma, Janssen, MSD, Novartis, Pfizer, Prometheus, Roche, Takeda, Theradiag, and Tillots. Dr. Sakuraba had no relevant financial conflicts to disclose.

This article was updated Feb. 10, 2022.

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We’re dying to tell you about fatigability

Article Type
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Are you tired? Or are you death tired?

When we’re feeling that burnout monster creep in we sometimes say that we’re being worked to death or that we’re dead tired, but what if that feeling could predict when it’s your actual time to go?

In a recent study published in the Journals of Gerontology: Series A, epidemiologists from the University of Pittsburgh were able to associate a level of “physical fatigability” with mortality.

LittleBee80/Thinkstock

The researchers administered the Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale to almost 3,000 participants aged ≥ 60 years, who ranked from 0 to 5 on how tired they thought they would be after doing activities like light housework or a leisurely 30-minute walk. After accounting for factors such as preexisting conditions and mental health, the researchers found that people who scored 25 or more points were 2.3 times more likely to die in the next 2.7 years, compared with those who scored under 25.

So what does that tell us about the importance of being continuously active? It’s pretty important.

“Previous research indicates that getting more physical activity can reduce a person’s fatigability. Our study is the first to link more severe physical fatigability to an earlier death,” lead author Nancy W. Glynn, PhD, said in a separate statement. The best way to keep physically active, she suggested, is to set manageable goals and a routine.

A nice walk around the neighborhood during golden hour or a little bit of yoga before breakfast could be a great way to keep the body moving, because you know what they say: Use it or lose it.
 

This work is NFT protected: Do not screenshot

If you’ve been following the nonmedical news, you’ve likely heard the term “NFT” explode in the past few months. Standing for nonfungible token, NFTs are, at least theoretically, a proof of ownership for digital creations that prevents anyone other than the buyer from reselling the artwork. Sounds like a great idea: It protects artists and buyers alike.

Dr. Manuel González Reyes/Pixabay

Much like its cousin cryptocurrency, however, the NFT world is rife with speculation, scams, misunderstanding, and drawings of bored monkeys. It’s the Wild West out there in the digital art universe: One poor unfortunate accidentally sold a $300k NFT image for $3,000, a group of investors spent $3 million buying an NFT for a rare version of Dune believing it gave them the copyright (it did not), and an Indonesian engineering student’s 5-year series of expressionless selfies is now worth a million dollars.

This is a column detailing weird medical news, however, so with our setup complete (though our understanding of NFTs is very much not), we move to France and meet our hero (?), Emmanuel Masmejean, an orthopedic surgeon who apparently wasn’t making enough money in his lucrative medical career.

In a move of apocalyptic madness, he threw ethics out the window, delved into his archive, and found an x-ray of a young woman with a bullet lodged in her arm. The woman was a survivor of the Bataclan mass shooting and bombing in 2015, and don’t you worry, our intrepid entrepreneur made sure to identify her as such when he tried selling the x-ray as an NFT on an online art website for $2,776. Yes, this is very much a violation of doctor-patient confidentiality, and no, that’s not a lot of money to risk your medical career on.

Naturally, the woman was horrified and shocked to learn that the image was being sold, her lawyer told the Guardian. When the doctor called her, he merely attempted to justify his action, rather than apologizing or showing any remorse. Dr. Masmejean is now facing legal action and a disciplinary charge for his attempted entry into the NFT world for publishing the image without permission, and the NFT has been removed from the website. Should have stuck with the bored monkeys.
 

 

 

Avatars could be the future

Zoom, FaceTime, and Skype are great when people can’t be together in the same room, state, or country. Not the same as being somewhere in person, but a pretty good replacement during a global pandemic. But what if you had a robot that could be present for you?

mohamed hassan/PxHere

Seven-year-old Joshua Martinangeli of Berlin has a severe lung disease and needs to wear a tube in his neck, so he cannot attend school. A robot avatar, donated to Joshua through a private initiative, sits in his seat in the classroom and is able to interact with the students and teacher, according to Reuters. A light on the avatar blinks when Joshua wants to speak and the children can talk with him too. Joshua and his classmates agree that it’s not the same as him really being there to talk and learn, but it’s a great way to keep him included.

“We are the only district in Berlin that has bought four avatars for its schools. The impetus was COVID-19, but I think this will be the future well beyond the pandemic,” Torsten Kuehne, district education councilor, told Reuters.

So where do we get an avatar to go out and run errands? Can we send it to the office instead of Zooming the next meeting? Or maybe our avatar could go to the gym for us. But how do we get the results to show up on our bodies? C’mon science, figure this out.
 

Futility, thy name is Kiribati

Before we get to the rest of our regularly scheduled hilarity, a brief geography lesson is in order: Kiribati is an island nation – actually 32 atolls and one coral island – in the central Pacific Ocean. Those atolls are spread out across 1.4 million square miles around the intersection of the equator and the International Date Line, so Kiribati is the only country in the world located in all four hemispheres.

U.S. Department of State

Now, back to the news.

Kiribati closed its borders early in the COVID-19 pandemic and recorded only two cases in almost 2 years. Things were going so well that the authorities recently decided to reopen the country to international travelers. Silly authorities.

The first plane was set to arrive on Jan. 14 from Fiji. This being the age of COVID, plans were made and precautions were taken. All 54 passengers quarantined for 2 weeks before the flight and underwent regular testing, the Guardian noted, and “they were only allowed on the flight after returning negative tests.”

You guessed it. Two-thirds of those 54 people tested positive for COVID-19 after landing in Kiribati.

All of the passengers were quarantined, but since then a security guard at the quarantine center has tested positive, as has someone who was not involved in the quarantine. According to NPR, the government said that “there is now an assumption that COVID-19 is now spreading in the community on South Tarawa and Betio.”

Moral of the story? You can’t beat COVID, so never try.

[EDITOR: Is that really the message we want to send to our readers?]

If you can’t beat them, join them.

[EDITOR: Nope. Try again.]

Resistance is futile?

[EDITOR: Sigh. Close enough.]
 

Publications
Topics
Sections

 

Are you tired? Or are you death tired?

When we’re feeling that burnout monster creep in we sometimes say that we’re being worked to death or that we’re dead tired, but what if that feeling could predict when it’s your actual time to go?

In a recent study published in the Journals of Gerontology: Series A, epidemiologists from the University of Pittsburgh were able to associate a level of “physical fatigability” with mortality.

LittleBee80/Thinkstock

The researchers administered the Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale to almost 3,000 participants aged ≥ 60 years, who ranked from 0 to 5 on how tired they thought they would be after doing activities like light housework or a leisurely 30-minute walk. After accounting for factors such as preexisting conditions and mental health, the researchers found that people who scored 25 or more points were 2.3 times more likely to die in the next 2.7 years, compared with those who scored under 25.

So what does that tell us about the importance of being continuously active? It’s pretty important.

“Previous research indicates that getting more physical activity can reduce a person’s fatigability. Our study is the first to link more severe physical fatigability to an earlier death,” lead author Nancy W. Glynn, PhD, said in a separate statement. The best way to keep physically active, she suggested, is to set manageable goals and a routine.

A nice walk around the neighborhood during golden hour or a little bit of yoga before breakfast could be a great way to keep the body moving, because you know what they say: Use it or lose it.
 

This work is NFT protected: Do not screenshot

If you’ve been following the nonmedical news, you’ve likely heard the term “NFT” explode in the past few months. Standing for nonfungible token, NFTs are, at least theoretically, a proof of ownership for digital creations that prevents anyone other than the buyer from reselling the artwork. Sounds like a great idea: It protects artists and buyers alike.

Dr. Manuel González Reyes/Pixabay

Much like its cousin cryptocurrency, however, the NFT world is rife with speculation, scams, misunderstanding, and drawings of bored monkeys. It’s the Wild West out there in the digital art universe: One poor unfortunate accidentally sold a $300k NFT image for $3,000, a group of investors spent $3 million buying an NFT for a rare version of Dune believing it gave them the copyright (it did not), and an Indonesian engineering student’s 5-year series of expressionless selfies is now worth a million dollars.

This is a column detailing weird medical news, however, so with our setup complete (though our understanding of NFTs is very much not), we move to France and meet our hero (?), Emmanuel Masmejean, an orthopedic surgeon who apparently wasn’t making enough money in his lucrative medical career.

In a move of apocalyptic madness, he threw ethics out the window, delved into his archive, and found an x-ray of a young woman with a bullet lodged in her arm. The woman was a survivor of the Bataclan mass shooting and bombing in 2015, and don’t you worry, our intrepid entrepreneur made sure to identify her as such when he tried selling the x-ray as an NFT on an online art website for $2,776. Yes, this is very much a violation of doctor-patient confidentiality, and no, that’s not a lot of money to risk your medical career on.

Naturally, the woman was horrified and shocked to learn that the image was being sold, her lawyer told the Guardian. When the doctor called her, he merely attempted to justify his action, rather than apologizing or showing any remorse. Dr. Masmejean is now facing legal action and a disciplinary charge for his attempted entry into the NFT world for publishing the image without permission, and the NFT has been removed from the website. Should have stuck with the bored monkeys.
 

 

 

Avatars could be the future

Zoom, FaceTime, and Skype are great when people can’t be together in the same room, state, or country. Not the same as being somewhere in person, but a pretty good replacement during a global pandemic. But what if you had a robot that could be present for you?

mohamed hassan/PxHere

Seven-year-old Joshua Martinangeli of Berlin has a severe lung disease and needs to wear a tube in his neck, so he cannot attend school. A robot avatar, donated to Joshua through a private initiative, sits in his seat in the classroom and is able to interact with the students and teacher, according to Reuters. A light on the avatar blinks when Joshua wants to speak and the children can talk with him too. Joshua and his classmates agree that it’s not the same as him really being there to talk and learn, but it’s a great way to keep him included.

“We are the only district in Berlin that has bought four avatars for its schools. The impetus was COVID-19, but I think this will be the future well beyond the pandemic,” Torsten Kuehne, district education councilor, told Reuters.

So where do we get an avatar to go out and run errands? Can we send it to the office instead of Zooming the next meeting? Or maybe our avatar could go to the gym for us. But how do we get the results to show up on our bodies? C’mon science, figure this out.
 

Futility, thy name is Kiribati

Before we get to the rest of our regularly scheduled hilarity, a brief geography lesson is in order: Kiribati is an island nation – actually 32 atolls and one coral island – in the central Pacific Ocean. Those atolls are spread out across 1.4 million square miles around the intersection of the equator and the International Date Line, so Kiribati is the only country in the world located in all four hemispheres.

U.S. Department of State

Now, back to the news.

Kiribati closed its borders early in the COVID-19 pandemic and recorded only two cases in almost 2 years. Things were going so well that the authorities recently decided to reopen the country to international travelers. Silly authorities.

The first plane was set to arrive on Jan. 14 from Fiji. This being the age of COVID, plans were made and precautions were taken. All 54 passengers quarantined for 2 weeks before the flight and underwent regular testing, the Guardian noted, and “they were only allowed on the flight after returning negative tests.”

You guessed it. Two-thirds of those 54 people tested positive for COVID-19 after landing in Kiribati.

All of the passengers were quarantined, but since then a security guard at the quarantine center has tested positive, as has someone who was not involved in the quarantine. According to NPR, the government said that “there is now an assumption that COVID-19 is now spreading in the community on South Tarawa and Betio.”

Moral of the story? You can’t beat COVID, so never try.

[EDITOR: Is that really the message we want to send to our readers?]

If you can’t beat them, join them.

[EDITOR: Nope. Try again.]

Resistance is futile?

[EDITOR: Sigh. Close enough.]
 

 

Are you tired? Or are you death tired?

When we’re feeling that burnout monster creep in we sometimes say that we’re being worked to death or that we’re dead tired, but what if that feeling could predict when it’s your actual time to go?

In a recent study published in the Journals of Gerontology: Series A, epidemiologists from the University of Pittsburgh were able to associate a level of “physical fatigability” with mortality.

LittleBee80/Thinkstock

The researchers administered the Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale to almost 3,000 participants aged ≥ 60 years, who ranked from 0 to 5 on how tired they thought they would be after doing activities like light housework or a leisurely 30-minute walk. After accounting for factors such as preexisting conditions and mental health, the researchers found that people who scored 25 or more points were 2.3 times more likely to die in the next 2.7 years, compared with those who scored under 25.

So what does that tell us about the importance of being continuously active? It’s pretty important.

“Previous research indicates that getting more physical activity can reduce a person’s fatigability. Our study is the first to link more severe physical fatigability to an earlier death,” lead author Nancy W. Glynn, PhD, said in a separate statement. The best way to keep physically active, she suggested, is to set manageable goals and a routine.

A nice walk around the neighborhood during golden hour or a little bit of yoga before breakfast could be a great way to keep the body moving, because you know what they say: Use it or lose it.
 

This work is NFT protected: Do not screenshot

If you’ve been following the nonmedical news, you’ve likely heard the term “NFT” explode in the past few months. Standing for nonfungible token, NFTs are, at least theoretically, a proof of ownership for digital creations that prevents anyone other than the buyer from reselling the artwork. Sounds like a great idea: It protects artists and buyers alike.

Dr. Manuel González Reyes/Pixabay

Much like its cousin cryptocurrency, however, the NFT world is rife with speculation, scams, misunderstanding, and drawings of bored monkeys. It’s the Wild West out there in the digital art universe: One poor unfortunate accidentally sold a $300k NFT image for $3,000, a group of investors spent $3 million buying an NFT for a rare version of Dune believing it gave them the copyright (it did not), and an Indonesian engineering student’s 5-year series of expressionless selfies is now worth a million dollars.

This is a column detailing weird medical news, however, so with our setup complete (though our understanding of NFTs is very much not), we move to France and meet our hero (?), Emmanuel Masmejean, an orthopedic surgeon who apparently wasn’t making enough money in his lucrative medical career.

In a move of apocalyptic madness, he threw ethics out the window, delved into his archive, and found an x-ray of a young woman with a bullet lodged in her arm. The woman was a survivor of the Bataclan mass shooting and bombing in 2015, and don’t you worry, our intrepid entrepreneur made sure to identify her as such when he tried selling the x-ray as an NFT on an online art website for $2,776. Yes, this is very much a violation of doctor-patient confidentiality, and no, that’s not a lot of money to risk your medical career on.

Naturally, the woman was horrified and shocked to learn that the image was being sold, her lawyer told the Guardian. When the doctor called her, he merely attempted to justify his action, rather than apologizing or showing any remorse. Dr. Masmejean is now facing legal action and a disciplinary charge for his attempted entry into the NFT world for publishing the image without permission, and the NFT has been removed from the website. Should have stuck with the bored monkeys.
 

 

 

Avatars could be the future

Zoom, FaceTime, and Skype are great when people can’t be together in the same room, state, or country. Not the same as being somewhere in person, but a pretty good replacement during a global pandemic. But what if you had a robot that could be present for you?

mohamed hassan/PxHere

Seven-year-old Joshua Martinangeli of Berlin has a severe lung disease and needs to wear a tube in his neck, so he cannot attend school. A robot avatar, donated to Joshua through a private initiative, sits in his seat in the classroom and is able to interact with the students and teacher, according to Reuters. A light on the avatar blinks when Joshua wants to speak and the children can talk with him too. Joshua and his classmates agree that it’s not the same as him really being there to talk and learn, but it’s a great way to keep him included.

“We are the only district in Berlin that has bought four avatars for its schools. The impetus was COVID-19, but I think this will be the future well beyond the pandemic,” Torsten Kuehne, district education councilor, told Reuters.

So where do we get an avatar to go out and run errands? Can we send it to the office instead of Zooming the next meeting? Or maybe our avatar could go to the gym for us. But how do we get the results to show up on our bodies? C’mon science, figure this out.
 

Futility, thy name is Kiribati

Before we get to the rest of our regularly scheduled hilarity, a brief geography lesson is in order: Kiribati is an island nation – actually 32 atolls and one coral island – in the central Pacific Ocean. Those atolls are spread out across 1.4 million square miles around the intersection of the equator and the International Date Line, so Kiribati is the only country in the world located in all four hemispheres.

U.S. Department of State

Now, back to the news.

Kiribati closed its borders early in the COVID-19 pandemic and recorded only two cases in almost 2 years. Things were going so well that the authorities recently decided to reopen the country to international travelers. Silly authorities.

The first plane was set to arrive on Jan. 14 from Fiji. This being the age of COVID, plans were made and precautions were taken. All 54 passengers quarantined for 2 weeks before the flight and underwent regular testing, the Guardian noted, and “they were only allowed on the flight after returning negative tests.”

You guessed it. Two-thirds of those 54 people tested positive for COVID-19 after landing in Kiribati.

All of the passengers were quarantined, but since then a security guard at the quarantine center has tested positive, as has someone who was not involved in the quarantine. According to NPR, the government said that “there is now an assumption that COVID-19 is now spreading in the community on South Tarawa and Betio.”

Moral of the story? You can’t beat COVID, so never try.

[EDITOR: Is that really the message we want to send to our readers?]

If you can’t beat them, join them.

[EDITOR: Nope. Try again.]

Resistance is futile?

[EDITOR: Sigh. Close enough.]
 

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