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Proclivity ID
18813001
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Specialty Focus
Psoriatic Arthritis
Spondyloarthropathies
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Osteoarthritis
Negative Keywords
gaming
gambling
compulsive behaviors
ammunition
assault rifle
black jack
Boko Haram
bondage
child abuse
cocaine
Daech
drug paraphernalia
explosion
gun
human trafficking
ISIL
ISIS
Islamic caliphate
Islamic state
mixed martial arts
MMA
molestation
national rifle association
NRA
nsfw
pedophile
pedophilia
poker
porn
pornography
psychedelic drug
recreational drug
sex slave rings
slot machine
terrorism
terrorist
Texas hold 'em
UFC
substance abuse
abuseed
abuseer
abusees
abuseing
abusely
abuses
aeolus
aeolused
aeoluser
aeoluses
aeolusing
aeolusly
aeoluss
ahole
aholeed
aholeer
aholees
aholeing
aholely
aholes
alcohol
alcoholed
alcoholer
alcoholes
alcoholing
alcoholly
alcohols
allman
allmaned
allmaner
allmanes
allmaning
allmanly
allmans
alted
altes
alting
altly
alts
analed
analer
anales
analing
anally
analprobe
analprobeed
analprobeer
analprobees
analprobeing
analprobely
analprobes
anals
anilingus
anilingused
anilinguser
anilinguses
anilingusing
anilingusly
anilinguss
anus
anused
anuser
anuses
anusing
anusly
anuss
areola
areolaed
areolaer
areolaes
areolaing
areolaly
areolas
areole
areoleed
areoleer
areolees
areoleing
areolely
areoles
arian
arianed
arianer
arianes
arianing
arianly
arians
aryan
aryaned
aryaner
aryanes
aryaning
aryanly
aryans
asiaed
asiaer
asiaes
asiaing
asialy
asias
ass
ass hole
ass lick
ass licked
ass licker
ass lickes
ass licking
ass lickly
ass licks
assbang
assbanged
assbangeded
assbangeder
assbangedes
assbangeding
assbangedly
assbangeds
assbanger
assbanges
assbanging
assbangly
assbangs
assbangsed
assbangser
assbangses
assbangsing
assbangsly
assbangss
assed
asser
asses
assesed
asseser
asseses
assesing
assesly
assess
assfuck
assfucked
assfucker
assfuckered
assfuckerer
assfuckeres
assfuckering
assfuckerly
assfuckers
assfuckes
assfucking
assfuckly
assfucks
asshat
asshated
asshater
asshates
asshating
asshatly
asshats
assholeed
assholeer
assholees
assholeing
assholely
assholes
assholesed
assholeser
assholeses
assholesing
assholesly
assholess
assing
assly
assmaster
assmastered
assmasterer
assmasteres
assmastering
assmasterly
assmasters
assmunch
assmunched
assmuncher
assmunches
assmunching
assmunchly
assmunchs
asss
asswipe
asswipeed
asswipeer
asswipees
asswipeing
asswipely
asswipes
asswipesed
asswipeser
asswipeses
asswipesing
asswipesly
asswipess
azz
azzed
azzer
azzes
azzing
azzly
azzs
babeed
babeer
babees
babeing
babely
babes
babesed
babeser
babeses
babesing
babesly
babess
ballsac
ballsaced
ballsacer
ballsaces
ballsacing
ballsack
ballsacked
ballsacker
ballsackes
ballsacking
ballsackly
ballsacks
ballsacly
ballsacs
ballsed
ballser
ballses
ballsing
ballsly
ballss
barf
barfed
barfer
barfes
barfing
barfly
barfs
bastard
bastarded
bastarder
bastardes
bastarding
bastardly
bastards
bastardsed
bastardser
bastardses
bastardsing
bastardsly
bastardss
bawdy
bawdyed
bawdyer
bawdyes
bawdying
bawdyly
bawdys
beaner
beanered
beanerer
beaneres
beanering
beanerly
beaners
beardedclam
beardedclamed
beardedclamer
beardedclames
beardedclaming
beardedclamly
beardedclams
beastiality
beastialityed
beastialityer
beastialityes
beastialitying
beastialityly
beastialitys
beatch
beatched
beatcher
beatches
beatching
beatchly
beatchs
beater
beatered
beaterer
beateres
beatering
beaterly
beaters
beered
beerer
beeres
beering
beerly
beeyotch
beeyotched
beeyotcher
beeyotches
beeyotching
beeyotchly
beeyotchs
beotch
beotched
beotcher
beotches
beotching
beotchly
beotchs
biatch
biatched
biatcher
biatches
biatching
biatchly
biatchs
big tits
big titsed
big titser
big titses
big titsing
big titsly
big titss
bigtits
bigtitsed
bigtitser
bigtitses
bigtitsing
bigtitsly
bigtitss
bimbo
bimboed
bimboer
bimboes
bimboing
bimboly
bimbos
bisexualed
bisexualer
bisexuales
bisexualing
bisexually
bisexuals
bitch
bitched
bitcheded
bitcheder
bitchedes
bitcheding
bitchedly
bitcheds
bitcher
bitches
bitchesed
bitcheser
bitcheses
bitchesing
bitchesly
bitchess
bitching
bitchly
bitchs
bitchy
bitchyed
bitchyer
bitchyes
bitchying
bitchyly
bitchys
bleached
bleacher
bleaches
bleaching
bleachly
bleachs
blow job
blow jobed
blow jober
blow jobes
blow jobing
blow jobly
blow jobs
blowed
blower
blowes
blowing
blowjob
blowjobed
blowjober
blowjobes
blowjobing
blowjobly
blowjobs
blowjobsed
blowjobser
blowjobses
blowjobsing
blowjobsly
blowjobss
blowly
blows
boink
boinked
boinker
boinkes
boinking
boinkly
boinks
bollock
bollocked
bollocker
bollockes
bollocking
bollockly
bollocks
bollocksed
bollockser
bollockses
bollocksing
bollocksly
bollockss
bollok
bolloked
bolloker
bollokes
bolloking
bollokly
bolloks
boner
bonered
bonerer
boneres
bonering
bonerly
boners
bonersed
bonerser
bonerses
bonersing
bonersly
bonerss
bong
bonged
bonger
bonges
bonging
bongly
bongs
boob
boobed
boober
boobes
boobies
boobiesed
boobieser
boobieses
boobiesing
boobiesly
boobiess
boobing
boobly
boobs
boobsed
boobser
boobses
boobsing
boobsly
boobss
booby
boobyed
boobyer
boobyes
boobying
boobyly
boobys
booger
boogered
boogerer
boogeres
boogering
boogerly
boogers
bookie
bookieed
bookieer
bookiees
bookieing
bookiely
bookies
bootee
booteeed
booteeer
booteees
booteeing
booteely
bootees
bootie
bootieed
bootieer
bootiees
bootieing
bootiely
booties
booty
bootyed
bootyer
bootyes
bootying
bootyly
bootys
boozeed
boozeer
boozees
boozeing
boozely
boozer
boozered
boozerer
boozeres
boozering
boozerly
boozers
boozes
boozy
boozyed
boozyer
boozyes
boozying
boozyly
boozys
bosomed
bosomer
bosomes
bosoming
bosomly
bosoms
bosomy
bosomyed
bosomyer
bosomyes
bosomying
bosomyly
bosomys
bugger
buggered
buggerer
buggeres
buggering
buggerly
buggers
bukkake
bukkakeed
bukkakeer
bukkakees
bukkakeing
bukkakely
bukkakes
bull shit
bull shited
bull shiter
bull shites
bull shiting
bull shitly
bull shits
bullshit
bullshited
bullshiter
bullshites
bullshiting
bullshitly
bullshits
bullshitsed
bullshitser
bullshitses
bullshitsing
bullshitsly
bullshitss
bullshitted
bullshitteded
bullshitteder
bullshittedes
bullshitteding
bullshittedly
bullshitteds
bullturds
bullturdsed
bullturdser
bullturdses
bullturdsing
bullturdsly
bullturdss
bung
bunged
bunger
bunges
bunging
bungly
bungs
busty
bustyed
bustyer
bustyes
bustying
bustyly
bustys
butt
butt fuck
butt fucked
butt fucker
butt fuckes
butt fucking
butt fuckly
butt fucks
butted
buttes
buttfuck
buttfucked
buttfucker
buttfuckered
buttfuckerer
buttfuckeres
buttfuckering
buttfuckerly
buttfuckers
buttfuckes
buttfucking
buttfuckly
buttfucks
butting
buttly
buttplug
buttpluged
buttpluger
buttpluges
buttpluging
buttplugly
buttplugs
butts
caca
cacaed
cacaer
cacaes
cacaing
cacaly
cacas
cahone
cahoneed
cahoneer
cahonees
cahoneing
cahonely
cahones
cameltoe
cameltoeed
cameltoeer
cameltoees
cameltoeing
cameltoely
cameltoes
carpetmuncher
carpetmunchered
carpetmuncherer
carpetmuncheres
carpetmunchering
carpetmuncherly
carpetmunchers
cawk
cawked
cawker
cawkes
cawking
cawkly
cawks
chinc
chinced
chincer
chinces
chincing
chincly
chincs
chincsed
chincser
chincses
chincsing
chincsly
chincss
chink
chinked
chinker
chinkes
chinking
chinkly
chinks
chode
chodeed
chodeer
chodees
chodeing
chodely
chodes
chodesed
chodeser
chodeses
chodesing
chodesly
chodess
clit
clited
cliter
clites
cliting
clitly
clitoris
clitorised
clitoriser
clitorises
clitorising
clitorisly
clitoriss
clitorus
clitorused
clitoruser
clitoruses
clitorusing
clitorusly
clitoruss
clits
clitsed
clitser
clitses
clitsing
clitsly
clitss
clitty
clittyed
clittyer
clittyes
clittying
clittyly
clittys
cocain
cocaine
cocained
cocaineed
cocaineer
cocainees
cocaineing
cocainely
cocainer
cocaines
cocaining
cocainly
cocains
cock
cock sucker
cock suckered
cock suckerer
cock suckeres
cock suckering
cock suckerly
cock suckers
cockblock
cockblocked
cockblocker
cockblockes
cockblocking
cockblockly
cockblocks
cocked
cocker
cockes
cockholster
cockholstered
cockholsterer
cockholsteres
cockholstering
cockholsterly
cockholsters
cocking
cockknocker
cockknockered
cockknockerer
cockknockeres
cockknockering
cockknockerly
cockknockers
cockly
cocks
cocksed
cockser
cockses
cocksing
cocksly
cocksmoker
cocksmokered
cocksmokerer
cocksmokeres
cocksmokering
cocksmokerly
cocksmokers
cockss
cocksucker
cocksuckered
cocksuckerer
cocksuckeres
cocksuckering
cocksuckerly
cocksuckers
coital
coitaled
coitaler
coitales
coitaling
coitally
coitals
commie
commieed
commieer
commiees
commieing
commiely
commies
condomed
condomer
condomes
condoming
condomly
condoms
coon
cooned
cooner
coones
cooning
coonly
coons
coonsed
coonser
coonses
coonsing
coonsly
coonss
corksucker
corksuckered
corksuckerer
corksuckeres
corksuckering
corksuckerly
corksuckers
cracked
crackwhore
crackwhoreed
crackwhoreer
crackwhorees
crackwhoreing
crackwhorely
crackwhores
crap
craped
craper
crapes
craping
craply
crappy
crappyed
crappyer
crappyes
crappying
crappyly
crappys
cum
cumed
cumer
cumes
cuming
cumly
cummin
cummined
cumminer
cummines
cumming
cumminged
cumminger
cumminges
cumminging
cummingly
cummings
cummining
cumminly
cummins
cums
cumshot
cumshoted
cumshoter
cumshotes
cumshoting
cumshotly
cumshots
cumshotsed
cumshotser
cumshotses
cumshotsing
cumshotsly
cumshotss
cumslut
cumsluted
cumsluter
cumslutes
cumsluting
cumslutly
cumsluts
cumstain
cumstained
cumstainer
cumstaines
cumstaining
cumstainly
cumstains
cunilingus
cunilingused
cunilinguser
cunilinguses
cunilingusing
cunilingusly
cunilinguss
cunnilingus
cunnilingused
cunnilinguser
cunnilinguses
cunnilingusing
cunnilingusly
cunnilinguss
cunny
cunnyed
cunnyer
cunnyes
cunnying
cunnyly
cunnys
cunt
cunted
cunter
cuntes
cuntface
cuntfaceed
cuntfaceer
cuntfacees
cuntfaceing
cuntfacely
cuntfaces
cunthunter
cunthuntered
cunthunterer
cunthunteres
cunthuntering
cunthunterly
cunthunters
cunting
cuntlick
cuntlicked
cuntlicker
cuntlickered
cuntlickerer
cuntlickeres
cuntlickering
cuntlickerly
cuntlickers
cuntlickes
cuntlicking
cuntlickly
cuntlicks
cuntly
cunts
cuntsed
cuntser
cuntses
cuntsing
cuntsly
cuntss
dago
dagoed
dagoer
dagoes
dagoing
dagoly
dagos
dagosed
dagoser
dagoses
dagosing
dagosly
dagoss
dammit
dammited
dammiter
dammites
dammiting
dammitly
dammits
damn
damned
damneded
damneder
damnedes
damneding
damnedly
damneds
damner
damnes
damning
damnit
damnited
damniter
damnites
damniting
damnitly
damnits
damnly
damns
dick
dickbag
dickbaged
dickbager
dickbages
dickbaging
dickbagly
dickbags
dickdipper
dickdippered
dickdipperer
dickdipperes
dickdippering
dickdipperly
dickdippers
dicked
dicker
dickes
dickface
dickfaceed
dickfaceer
dickfacees
dickfaceing
dickfacely
dickfaces
dickflipper
dickflippered
dickflipperer
dickflipperes
dickflippering
dickflipperly
dickflippers
dickhead
dickheaded
dickheader
dickheades
dickheading
dickheadly
dickheads
dickheadsed
dickheadser
dickheadses
dickheadsing
dickheadsly
dickheadss
dicking
dickish
dickished
dickisher
dickishes
dickishing
dickishly
dickishs
dickly
dickripper
dickrippered
dickripperer
dickripperes
dickrippering
dickripperly
dickrippers
dicks
dicksipper
dicksippered
dicksipperer
dicksipperes
dicksippering
dicksipperly
dicksippers
dickweed
dickweeded
dickweeder
dickweedes
dickweeding
dickweedly
dickweeds
dickwhipper
dickwhippered
dickwhipperer
dickwhipperes
dickwhippering
dickwhipperly
dickwhippers
dickzipper
dickzippered
dickzipperer
dickzipperes
dickzippering
dickzipperly
dickzippers
diddle
diddleed
diddleer
diddlees
diddleing
diddlely
diddles
dike
dikeed
dikeer
dikees
dikeing
dikely
dikes
dildo
dildoed
dildoer
dildoes
dildoing
dildoly
dildos
dildosed
dildoser
dildoses
dildosing
dildosly
dildoss
diligaf
diligafed
diligafer
diligafes
diligafing
diligafly
diligafs
dillweed
dillweeded
dillweeder
dillweedes
dillweeding
dillweedly
dillweeds
dimwit
dimwited
dimwiter
dimwites
dimwiting
dimwitly
dimwits
dingle
dingleed
dingleer
dinglees
dingleing
dinglely
dingles
dipship
dipshiped
dipshiper
dipshipes
dipshiping
dipshiply
dipships
dizzyed
dizzyer
dizzyes
dizzying
dizzyly
dizzys
doggiestyleed
doggiestyleer
doggiestylees
doggiestyleing
doggiestylely
doggiestyles
doggystyleed
doggystyleer
doggystylees
doggystyleing
doggystylely
doggystyles
dong
donged
donger
donges
donging
dongly
dongs
doofus
doofused
doofuser
doofuses
doofusing
doofusly
doofuss
doosh
dooshed
doosher
dooshes
dooshing
dooshly
dooshs
dopeyed
dopeyer
dopeyes
dopeying
dopeyly
dopeys
douchebag
douchebaged
douchebager
douchebages
douchebaging
douchebagly
douchebags
douchebagsed
douchebagser
douchebagses
douchebagsing
douchebagsly
douchebagss
doucheed
doucheer
douchees
doucheing
douchely
douches
douchey
doucheyed
doucheyer
doucheyes
doucheying
doucheyly
doucheys
drunk
drunked
drunker
drunkes
drunking
drunkly
drunks
dumass
dumassed
dumasser
dumasses
dumassing
dumassly
dumasss
dumbass
dumbassed
dumbasser
dumbasses
dumbassesed
dumbasseser
dumbasseses
dumbassesing
dumbassesly
dumbassess
dumbassing
dumbassly
dumbasss
dummy
dummyed
dummyer
dummyes
dummying
dummyly
dummys
dyke
dykeed
dykeer
dykees
dykeing
dykely
dykes
dykesed
dykeser
dykeses
dykesing
dykesly
dykess
erotic
eroticed
eroticer
erotices
eroticing
eroticly
erotics
extacy
extacyed
extacyer
extacyes
extacying
extacyly
extacys
extasy
extasyed
extasyer
extasyes
extasying
extasyly
extasys
fack
facked
facker
fackes
facking
fackly
facks
fag
faged
fager
fages
fagg
fagged
faggeded
faggeder
faggedes
faggeding
faggedly
faggeds
fagger
fagges
fagging
faggit
faggited
faggiter
faggites
faggiting
faggitly
faggits
faggly
faggot
faggoted
faggoter
faggotes
faggoting
faggotly
faggots
faggs
faging
fagly
fagot
fagoted
fagoter
fagotes
fagoting
fagotly
fagots
fags
fagsed
fagser
fagses
fagsing
fagsly
fagss
faig
faiged
faiger
faiges
faiging
faigly
faigs
faigt
faigted
faigter
faigtes
faigting
faigtly
faigts
fannybandit
fannybandited
fannybanditer
fannybandites
fannybanditing
fannybanditly
fannybandits
farted
farter
fartes
farting
fartknocker
fartknockered
fartknockerer
fartknockeres
fartknockering
fartknockerly
fartknockers
fartly
farts
felch
felched
felcher
felchered
felcherer
felcheres
felchering
felcherly
felchers
felches
felching
felchinged
felchinger
felchinges
felchinging
felchingly
felchings
felchly
felchs
fellate
fellateed
fellateer
fellatees
fellateing
fellately
fellates
fellatio
fellatioed
fellatioer
fellatioes
fellatioing
fellatioly
fellatios
feltch
feltched
feltcher
feltchered
feltcherer
feltcheres
feltchering
feltcherly
feltchers
feltches
feltching
feltchly
feltchs
feom
feomed
feomer
feomes
feoming
feomly
feoms
fisted
fisteded
fisteder
fistedes
fisteding
fistedly
fisteds
fisting
fistinged
fistinger
fistinges
fistinging
fistingly
fistings
fisty
fistyed
fistyer
fistyes
fistying
fistyly
fistys
floozy
floozyed
floozyer
floozyes
floozying
floozyly
floozys
foad
foaded
foader
foades
foading
foadly
foads
fondleed
fondleer
fondlees
fondleing
fondlely
fondles
foobar
foobared
foobarer
foobares
foobaring
foobarly
foobars
freex
freexed
freexer
freexes
freexing
freexly
freexs
frigg
frigga
friggaed
friggaer
friggaes
friggaing
friggaly
friggas
frigged
frigger
frigges
frigging
friggly
friggs
fubar
fubared
fubarer
fubares
fubaring
fubarly
fubars
fuck
fuckass
fuckassed
fuckasser
fuckasses
fuckassing
fuckassly
fuckasss
fucked
fuckeded
fuckeder
fuckedes
fuckeding
fuckedly
fuckeds
fucker
fuckered
fuckerer
fuckeres
fuckering
fuckerly
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Tachycardia syndrome may be distinct marker for long COVID

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:43

Tachycardia is commonly reported in patients with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome (PACS), also known as long COVID, authors report in a new article. The researchers say tachycardia syndrome should be considered a distinct phenotype.

The study by Marcus Ståhlberg, MD, PhD, of Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, and colleagues was published online August 11 in The American Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Ståhlberg told this news organization that although much attention has been paid to cases of clotting and perimyocarditis in patients after COVID, relatively little attention has been paid to tachycardia, despite case reports that show that palpitations are a common complaint.

“We have diagnosed a large number of patients with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome [POTS] and other forms of COVID-related tachycardia at our post-COVID outpatient clinic at Karolinska University Hospital and wanted to highlight this phenomenon,” he said.

Between 25% and 50% of patients at the clinic report tachycardia and/or palpitations that last 12 weeks or longer, the authors report.

“Systematic investigations suggest that 9% of Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome patients report palpitations at six months,” the authors write.

The findings also shed light on potential tests and treatments, he said.

“Physicians should be liberal in performing a basic cardiological workup, including an ECG [electrocardiogram], echocardiography, and Holter ECG monitoring in patients complaining of palpitations and/or chest pain,” Dr. Ståhlberg said.

“If orthostatic intolerance is also reported – such as vertigo, nausea, dyspnea – suspicion of POTS should be raised and a head-up tilt test or at least an active standing test should be performed,” he said.



If POTS is confirmed, he said, patients should be offered a heart rate–lowering drug, such as low-dose propranolol or ivabradine. Compression garments, increased fluid intake, and a structured rehabilitation program also help.

“According to our clinical experience, ivabradine can also reduce symptoms in patients with inappropriate sinus tachycardia and post-COVID,” Dr. Ståhlberg said. “Another finding on Holter-ECG to look out for is frequent premature extrasystoles, which could indicate myocarditis and should warrant a cardiac MRI.”

Dr. Ståhlberg said the researchers think the mechanism underlying the tachycardia is autoimmune and that primary SARS-CoV-2 infections trigger an autoimmune response with formation of autoantibodies that can activate receptors regulating blood pressure and heart rate.

Long-lasting symptoms from COVID are prevalent, the authors note, especially in patients who experienced severe forms of the disease.

In the longest follow-up study to date of patients hospitalized with COVID, more than 60% experienced fatigue or muscle weakness 6 months after hospitalization.

PACS should not be considered a single syndrome; the term denotes an array of subsyndromes and phenotypes, the authors write. Typical symptoms include headache, fatigue, dyspnea, and mental fog but can involve multiple organs and systems.

Tachycardia can also be used as a marker to help gauge the severity of long COVID, the authors write.

“[T]achycardia can be considered a universal and easily obtainable quantitative marker of Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome and its severity rather than patient-reported symptoms, blood testing, and thoracic CT-scans,” they write.

An underrecognized complication

Erin D. Michos, MD, MHS, director of women’s cardiovascular health and associate director of preventive cardiology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview that she has seen many similar symptoms in the long-COVID patients referred to her practice.

Dr. Michos, who is also an associate professor of medicine and epidemiology, said she’s been receiving a “huge number” of referrals of long-COVID patients with postural tachycardia, inappropriate sinus tachycardia, and POTS.

“I think this is all in the spectrum of autonomic dysfunction that has been recognized a lot since COVID. POTS has been thought to have [a potentially] viral cause that triggers an autoimmune response. Even before COVID, many patients had POTS triggered by a viral infection. The question is whether COVID-related POTS for long COVID is different from other kinds of POTS.”

She says she treats long-COVID patients who complain of elevated heart rates with many of the cardiac workup procedures the authors list and that she treats them in a way similar to the way she treats patients with POTS.

She recommends checking resting oxygen levels and having patients walk the halls and measure their oxygen levels after walking, because their elevated heart rate may be related to ongoing lung injury from COVID.

Eric Adler, MD, a cardiologist with University of San Diego Health, told this news organization that the findings by Dr. Ståhlberg and colleagues are consistent with what he’s seeing in his clinical practice.

Dr. Adler agrees with the authors that tachycardia is an underrecognized complication of long COVID.

He said the article represents further proof that though people may survive COVID, the threat of long-term symptoms, such as heart palpitations, is real and supports the case for vaccinations.

The authors, Dr. Michos, and Dr. Adler have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Tachycardia is commonly reported in patients with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome (PACS), also known as long COVID, authors report in a new article. The researchers say tachycardia syndrome should be considered a distinct phenotype.

The study by Marcus Ståhlberg, MD, PhD, of Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, and colleagues was published online August 11 in The American Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Ståhlberg told this news organization that although much attention has been paid to cases of clotting and perimyocarditis in patients after COVID, relatively little attention has been paid to tachycardia, despite case reports that show that palpitations are a common complaint.

“We have diagnosed a large number of patients with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome [POTS] and other forms of COVID-related tachycardia at our post-COVID outpatient clinic at Karolinska University Hospital and wanted to highlight this phenomenon,” he said.

Between 25% and 50% of patients at the clinic report tachycardia and/or palpitations that last 12 weeks or longer, the authors report.

“Systematic investigations suggest that 9% of Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome patients report palpitations at six months,” the authors write.

The findings also shed light on potential tests and treatments, he said.

“Physicians should be liberal in performing a basic cardiological workup, including an ECG [electrocardiogram], echocardiography, and Holter ECG monitoring in patients complaining of palpitations and/or chest pain,” Dr. Ståhlberg said.

“If orthostatic intolerance is also reported – such as vertigo, nausea, dyspnea – suspicion of POTS should be raised and a head-up tilt test or at least an active standing test should be performed,” he said.



If POTS is confirmed, he said, patients should be offered a heart rate–lowering drug, such as low-dose propranolol or ivabradine. Compression garments, increased fluid intake, and a structured rehabilitation program also help.

“According to our clinical experience, ivabradine can also reduce symptoms in patients with inappropriate sinus tachycardia and post-COVID,” Dr. Ståhlberg said. “Another finding on Holter-ECG to look out for is frequent premature extrasystoles, which could indicate myocarditis and should warrant a cardiac MRI.”

Dr. Ståhlberg said the researchers think the mechanism underlying the tachycardia is autoimmune and that primary SARS-CoV-2 infections trigger an autoimmune response with formation of autoantibodies that can activate receptors regulating blood pressure and heart rate.

Long-lasting symptoms from COVID are prevalent, the authors note, especially in patients who experienced severe forms of the disease.

In the longest follow-up study to date of patients hospitalized with COVID, more than 60% experienced fatigue or muscle weakness 6 months after hospitalization.

PACS should not be considered a single syndrome; the term denotes an array of subsyndromes and phenotypes, the authors write. Typical symptoms include headache, fatigue, dyspnea, and mental fog but can involve multiple organs and systems.

Tachycardia can also be used as a marker to help gauge the severity of long COVID, the authors write.

“[T]achycardia can be considered a universal and easily obtainable quantitative marker of Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome and its severity rather than patient-reported symptoms, blood testing, and thoracic CT-scans,” they write.

An underrecognized complication

Erin D. Michos, MD, MHS, director of women’s cardiovascular health and associate director of preventive cardiology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview that she has seen many similar symptoms in the long-COVID patients referred to her practice.

Dr. Michos, who is also an associate professor of medicine and epidemiology, said she’s been receiving a “huge number” of referrals of long-COVID patients with postural tachycardia, inappropriate sinus tachycardia, and POTS.

“I think this is all in the spectrum of autonomic dysfunction that has been recognized a lot since COVID. POTS has been thought to have [a potentially] viral cause that triggers an autoimmune response. Even before COVID, many patients had POTS triggered by a viral infection. The question is whether COVID-related POTS for long COVID is different from other kinds of POTS.”

She says she treats long-COVID patients who complain of elevated heart rates with many of the cardiac workup procedures the authors list and that she treats them in a way similar to the way she treats patients with POTS.

She recommends checking resting oxygen levels and having patients walk the halls and measure their oxygen levels after walking, because their elevated heart rate may be related to ongoing lung injury from COVID.

Eric Adler, MD, a cardiologist with University of San Diego Health, told this news organization that the findings by Dr. Ståhlberg and colleagues are consistent with what he’s seeing in his clinical practice.

Dr. Adler agrees with the authors that tachycardia is an underrecognized complication of long COVID.

He said the article represents further proof that though people may survive COVID, the threat of long-term symptoms, such as heart palpitations, is real and supports the case for vaccinations.

The authors, Dr. Michos, and Dr. Adler have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Tachycardia is commonly reported in patients with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome (PACS), also known as long COVID, authors report in a new article. The researchers say tachycardia syndrome should be considered a distinct phenotype.

The study by Marcus Ståhlberg, MD, PhD, of Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, and colleagues was published online August 11 in The American Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Ståhlberg told this news organization that although much attention has been paid to cases of clotting and perimyocarditis in patients after COVID, relatively little attention has been paid to tachycardia, despite case reports that show that palpitations are a common complaint.

“We have diagnosed a large number of patients with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome [POTS] and other forms of COVID-related tachycardia at our post-COVID outpatient clinic at Karolinska University Hospital and wanted to highlight this phenomenon,” he said.

Between 25% and 50% of patients at the clinic report tachycardia and/or palpitations that last 12 weeks or longer, the authors report.

“Systematic investigations suggest that 9% of Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome patients report palpitations at six months,” the authors write.

The findings also shed light on potential tests and treatments, he said.

“Physicians should be liberal in performing a basic cardiological workup, including an ECG [electrocardiogram], echocardiography, and Holter ECG monitoring in patients complaining of palpitations and/or chest pain,” Dr. Ståhlberg said.

“If orthostatic intolerance is also reported – such as vertigo, nausea, dyspnea – suspicion of POTS should be raised and a head-up tilt test or at least an active standing test should be performed,” he said.



If POTS is confirmed, he said, patients should be offered a heart rate–lowering drug, such as low-dose propranolol or ivabradine. Compression garments, increased fluid intake, and a structured rehabilitation program also help.

“According to our clinical experience, ivabradine can also reduce symptoms in patients with inappropriate sinus tachycardia and post-COVID,” Dr. Ståhlberg said. “Another finding on Holter-ECG to look out for is frequent premature extrasystoles, which could indicate myocarditis and should warrant a cardiac MRI.”

Dr. Ståhlberg said the researchers think the mechanism underlying the tachycardia is autoimmune and that primary SARS-CoV-2 infections trigger an autoimmune response with formation of autoantibodies that can activate receptors regulating blood pressure and heart rate.

Long-lasting symptoms from COVID are prevalent, the authors note, especially in patients who experienced severe forms of the disease.

In the longest follow-up study to date of patients hospitalized with COVID, more than 60% experienced fatigue or muscle weakness 6 months after hospitalization.

PACS should not be considered a single syndrome; the term denotes an array of subsyndromes and phenotypes, the authors write. Typical symptoms include headache, fatigue, dyspnea, and mental fog but can involve multiple organs and systems.

Tachycardia can also be used as a marker to help gauge the severity of long COVID, the authors write.

“[T]achycardia can be considered a universal and easily obtainable quantitative marker of Post-acute COVID-19 syndrome and its severity rather than patient-reported symptoms, blood testing, and thoracic CT-scans,” they write.

An underrecognized complication

Erin D. Michos, MD, MHS, director of women’s cardiovascular health and associate director of preventive cardiology at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said in an interview that she has seen many similar symptoms in the long-COVID patients referred to her practice.

Dr. Michos, who is also an associate professor of medicine and epidemiology, said she’s been receiving a “huge number” of referrals of long-COVID patients with postural tachycardia, inappropriate sinus tachycardia, and POTS.

“I think this is all in the spectrum of autonomic dysfunction that has been recognized a lot since COVID. POTS has been thought to have [a potentially] viral cause that triggers an autoimmune response. Even before COVID, many patients had POTS triggered by a viral infection. The question is whether COVID-related POTS for long COVID is different from other kinds of POTS.”

She says she treats long-COVID patients who complain of elevated heart rates with many of the cardiac workup procedures the authors list and that she treats them in a way similar to the way she treats patients with POTS.

She recommends checking resting oxygen levels and having patients walk the halls and measure their oxygen levels after walking, because their elevated heart rate may be related to ongoing lung injury from COVID.

Eric Adler, MD, a cardiologist with University of San Diego Health, told this news organization that the findings by Dr. Ståhlberg and colleagues are consistent with what he’s seeing in his clinical practice.

Dr. Adler agrees with the authors that tachycardia is an underrecognized complication of long COVID.

He said the article represents further proof that though people may survive COVID, the threat of long-term symptoms, such as heart palpitations, is real and supports the case for vaccinations.

The authors, Dr. Michos, and Dr. Adler have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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FDA authorizes booster shot for immunocompromised Americans

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:43

 

The FDA has authorized a third dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccines for people with compromised immune systems.

The decision, which came late on Aug. 12, was not unexpected and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) panel meeting Aug. 13 is expected to approve directions to doctors and health care providers on who should receive the booster shot.

“The country has entered yet another wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the FDA is especially cognizant that immunocompromised people are particularly at risk for severe disease. After a thorough review of the available data, the FDA determined that this small, vulnerable group may benefit from a third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna Vaccines,” acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock, MD, said in a statement.

Those eligible for a third dose include solid organ transplant recipients, those undergoing cancer treatments, and people with autoimmune diseases that suppress their immune systems.

Meanwhile, White House officials said Aug. 12 they “have supply and are prepared” to give all U.S. residents COVID-19 boosters -- which, as of now, are likely to be authorized first only for immunocompromised people.

“We believe sooner or later you will need a booster,” Anthony Fauci, MD, said at a news briefing Aug. 12. “Right now, we are evaluating this on a day-by-day, week-by-week, month-by-month basis.”

He added: “Right at this moment, apart from the immunocompromised -- elderly or not elderly -- people do not need a booster.” But, he said, “We’re preparing for the eventuality of doing that.”

White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients said officials “have supply and are prepared” to at some point provide widespread access to boosters.

The immunocompromised population is very small -- less than 3% of adults, said CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD.

Meanwhile, COVID-19 rates continue to rise. Dr. Walensky reported that the 7-day average of daily cases is 132,384 -- an increase of 24% from the previous week. Average daily hospitalizations are up 31%, at 9,700, and deaths are up to 452 -- an increase of 22%.

In the past week, Florida has had more COVID-19 cases than the 30 states with the lowest case rates combined, Mr. Zients said. Florida and Texas alone have accounted for nearly 40% of new hospitalizations across the country.


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

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The FDA has authorized a third dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccines for people with compromised immune systems.

The decision, which came late on Aug. 12, was not unexpected and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) panel meeting Aug. 13 is expected to approve directions to doctors and health care providers on who should receive the booster shot.

“The country has entered yet another wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the FDA is especially cognizant that immunocompromised people are particularly at risk for severe disease. After a thorough review of the available data, the FDA determined that this small, vulnerable group may benefit from a third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna Vaccines,” acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock, MD, said in a statement.

Those eligible for a third dose include solid organ transplant recipients, those undergoing cancer treatments, and people with autoimmune diseases that suppress their immune systems.

Meanwhile, White House officials said Aug. 12 they “have supply and are prepared” to give all U.S. residents COVID-19 boosters -- which, as of now, are likely to be authorized first only for immunocompromised people.

“We believe sooner or later you will need a booster,” Anthony Fauci, MD, said at a news briefing Aug. 12. “Right now, we are evaluating this on a day-by-day, week-by-week, month-by-month basis.”

He added: “Right at this moment, apart from the immunocompromised -- elderly or not elderly -- people do not need a booster.” But, he said, “We’re preparing for the eventuality of doing that.”

White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients said officials “have supply and are prepared” to at some point provide widespread access to boosters.

The immunocompromised population is very small -- less than 3% of adults, said CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD.

Meanwhile, COVID-19 rates continue to rise. Dr. Walensky reported that the 7-day average of daily cases is 132,384 -- an increase of 24% from the previous week. Average daily hospitalizations are up 31%, at 9,700, and deaths are up to 452 -- an increase of 22%.

In the past week, Florida has had more COVID-19 cases than the 30 states with the lowest case rates combined, Mr. Zients said. Florida and Texas alone have accounted for nearly 40% of new hospitalizations across the country.


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

 

The FDA has authorized a third dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna COVID-19 vaccines for people with compromised immune systems.

The decision, which came late on Aug. 12, was not unexpected and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) panel meeting Aug. 13 is expected to approve directions to doctors and health care providers on who should receive the booster shot.

“The country has entered yet another wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the FDA is especially cognizant that immunocompromised people are particularly at risk for severe disease. After a thorough review of the available data, the FDA determined that this small, vulnerable group may benefit from a third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna Vaccines,” acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock, MD, said in a statement.

Those eligible for a third dose include solid organ transplant recipients, those undergoing cancer treatments, and people with autoimmune diseases that suppress their immune systems.

Meanwhile, White House officials said Aug. 12 they “have supply and are prepared” to give all U.S. residents COVID-19 boosters -- which, as of now, are likely to be authorized first only for immunocompromised people.

“We believe sooner or later you will need a booster,” Anthony Fauci, MD, said at a news briefing Aug. 12. “Right now, we are evaluating this on a day-by-day, week-by-week, month-by-month basis.”

He added: “Right at this moment, apart from the immunocompromised -- elderly or not elderly -- people do not need a booster.” But, he said, “We’re preparing for the eventuality of doing that.”

White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Jeff Zients said officials “have supply and are prepared” to at some point provide widespread access to boosters.

The immunocompromised population is very small -- less than 3% of adults, said CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD.

Meanwhile, COVID-19 rates continue to rise. Dr. Walensky reported that the 7-day average of daily cases is 132,384 -- an increase of 24% from the previous week. Average daily hospitalizations are up 31%, at 9,700, and deaths are up to 452 -- an increase of 22%.

In the past week, Florida has had more COVID-19 cases than the 30 states with the lowest case rates combined, Mr. Zients said. Florida and Texas alone have accounted for nearly 40% of new hospitalizations across the country.


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

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Hep B vaccine response varied among youth with inflammatory, autoimmune disorders

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Thu, 08/12/2021 - 15:18

Most pediatric patients diagnosed with an inflammatory or autoimmune disorder lacked evidence of an immune response to the hepatitis B vaccine, results from a single-center retrospective study showed.

Alexandra Ritter

“Hepatitis B is a common viral infection with 2 billion people worldwide having evidence of prior or current infection, and it can present as an acute or chronic infection,” or with chronic sequelae, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, Alexandra Ritter said during the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology. A three-dose vaccination series is recommended beginning at birth, and in 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 90.5% of U.S. children aged 19-35 months had completed the series.

While the vaccine series provides protection in healthy individuals more than 95% of the time, a decreased response has been noted in specific pediatric populations, including those with inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. “This is important to note and investigate further because a decreased vaccine response increases the risk for this high-risk population, and the use of boosters is currently debated,” said Ms. Ritter, who is a fourth-year student at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.

To determine the percent of pediatric patients with inflammatory or autoimmune disease who lack evidence of immunity following the hepatitis B vaccine series, Ms. Ritter and colleagues Abigail Truitt and pediatric dermatologist Lara Wine Lee, MD, PhD, of MUSC, retrospectively reviewed the charts of 160 patients between the ages of 6 months and 21 years, who were diagnosed with an autoimmune or autoinflammatory disease, or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and had documented evidence of vaccination and serologic testing prior to the start of immunosuppressive therapy.

Of the 160 patients, 100 (63%) had IBD, 34 (21%) had an autoimmune disease, 26 (16%) had an autoinflammatory disease, 89 (56%) were female, and their mean age was 15 years.

The researchers observed variation in the testing ordered between the three patient groups. Specifically, 88.2% of autoimmune patients had hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) testing, compared with 96.15% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 67% of patients with IBD, while 76.47% of patients with an autoimmune disease had hepatitis B core antibody (anti-HBc) testing, compared with 88.46% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 31% of patients with IBD.

In addition, 82.35% of patients with an autoimmune disease had HBsAg testing, compared with 100% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 94% of patients with IBD.

Of the 148 patients who had HBsAg testing ordered and completed prior to starting an immunosuppressive drug, there was no statistically significant difference in the percent of patients showing evidence of an immune response to the hepatitis B vaccine (32.14% among patients with an autoimmune disease, 34.62% among patients with an autoinflammatory disease, and 31.91% among patients with IBD). Combined, 67.57% of tested negative for the hepatitis B surface antibody.



“Our study showed that the majority of these patients did not show serologic evidence of immunity despite being fully vaccinated,” Ms. Ritter said. “There was also variation in the testing ordered and a more standardized approach is needed in this high-risk population.” She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective design and lack of a control group.

“This brings us to our next question of whether this indicates a failure of the vaccine, or the way immunity is tested,” she continued. “The CDC and the European Consensus Group on Hepatitis B Immunity recommend a cutoff of greater than 10 mIU/mL. Those that achieve immunity are protected for up to 20 years due to immune memory, even if their antibody levels later drop. There have been rare cases of immunocompetent individuals having evidence of transient asymptomatic infections when antibody levels drop. The chronic disease has only been documented in infants born to positive mothers. In hemodialysis patients, however, clinically significant infections have been documented when antibody levels drop.”

The CDC only recommends postvaccination testing to infants born to positive mothers, health care workers at high risk, hemodialysis patients, people with HIV and other immunocompromised people, and needle-sharing partners of chronically infected people. This is completed 1-2 months following the third vaccine dose, and those with antibody levels less than 10 mIU/mL should be revaccinated. “As some groups do not respond to the vaccine series, alternative dosing and the intradermal vaccine have been studied and shown to be effective in certain groups,” she said.

When it comes to monitoring immunocompromised individuals and giving booster shots, however, there are conflicting recommendations. The CDC recommends yearly testing and booster shots when levels drop below 10 mIU/mL only in hemodialysis patients, while the European Consensus Group recommends testing every 6-12 months for immunocompromised individuals and boosters when their levels drop below 10 mIU/mL.

“The CDC has not yet determined if other immunocompromised individuals should receive a booster, with more research required, but studies have shown it to be effective,” Ms. Ritter said. In a similar study looking at evidence of immunity in children with connective tissue disease who were on immunosuppressive treatment, 50% had no evidence of protective antibodies, compared with 96% in the control group. “In that study, a booster shot was given, and protective antibody concentrations were found at follow-up,” she said.

The researchers reported having no financial disclosures.

dbrunk@mdedge.com

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Most pediatric patients diagnosed with an inflammatory or autoimmune disorder lacked evidence of an immune response to the hepatitis B vaccine, results from a single-center retrospective study showed.

Alexandra Ritter

“Hepatitis B is a common viral infection with 2 billion people worldwide having evidence of prior or current infection, and it can present as an acute or chronic infection,” or with chronic sequelae, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, Alexandra Ritter said during the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology. A three-dose vaccination series is recommended beginning at birth, and in 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 90.5% of U.S. children aged 19-35 months had completed the series.

While the vaccine series provides protection in healthy individuals more than 95% of the time, a decreased response has been noted in specific pediatric populations, including those with inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. “This is important to note and investigate further because a decreased vaccine response increases the risk for this high-risk population, and the use of boosters is currently debated,” said Ms. Ritter, who is a fourth-year student at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.

To determine the percent of pediatric patients with inflammatory or autoimmune disease who lack evidence of immunity following the hepatitis B vaccine series, Ms. Ritter and colleagues Abigail Truitt and pediatric dermatologist Lara Wine Lee, MD, PhD, of MUSC, retrospectively reviewed the charts of 160 patients between the ages of 6 months and 21 years, who were diagnosed with an autoimmune or autoinflammatory disease, or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and had documented evidence of vaccination and serologic testing prior to the start of immunosuppressive therapy.

Of the 160 patients, 100 (63%) had IBD, 34 (21%) had an autoimmune disease, 26 (16%) had an autoinflammatory disease, 89 (56%) were female, and their mean age was 15 years.

The researchers observed variation in the testing ordered between the three patient groups. Specifically, 88.2% of autoimmune patients had hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) testing, compared with 96.15% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 67% of patients with IBD, while 76.47% of patients with an autoimmune disease had hepatitis B core antibody (anti-HBc) testing, compared with 88.46% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 31% of patients with IBD.

In addition, 82.35% of patients with an autoimmune disease had HBsAg testing, compared with 100% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 94% of patients with IBD.

Of the 148 patients who had HBsAg testing ordered and completed prior to starting an immunosuppressive drug, there was no statistically significant difference in the percent of patients showing evidence of an immune response to the hepatitis B vaccine (32.14% among patients with an autoimmune disease, 34.62% among patients with an autoinflammatory disease, and 31.91% among patients with IBD). Combined, 67.57% of tested negative for the hepatitis B surface antibody.



“Our study showed that the majority of these patients did not show serologic evidence of immunity despite being fully vaccinated,” Ms. Ritter said. “There was also variation in the testing ordered and a more standardized approach is needed in this high-risk population.” She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective design and lack of a control group.

“This brings us to our next question of whether this indicates a failure of the vaccine, or the way immunity is tested,” she continued. “The CDC and the European Consensus Group on Hepatitis B Immunity recommend a cutoff of greater than 10 mIU/mL. Those that achieve immunity are protected for up to 20 years due to immune memory, even if their antibody levels later drop. There have been rare cases of immunocompetent individuals having evidence of transient asymptomatic infections when antibody levels drop. The chronic disease has only been documented in infants born to positive mothers. In hemodialysis patients, however, clinically significant infections have been documented when antibody levels drop.”

The CDC only recommends postvaccination testing to infants born to positive mothers, health care workers at high risk, hemodialysis patients, people with HIV and other immunocompromised people, and needle-sharing partners of chronically infected people. This is completed 1-2 months following the third vaccine dose, and those with antibody levels less than 10 mIU/mL should be revaccinated. “As some groups do not respond to the vaccine series, alternative dosing and the intradermal vaccine have been studied and shown to be effective in certain groups,” she said.

When it comes to monitoring immunocompromised individuals and giving booster shots, however, there are conflicting recommendations. The CDC recommends yearly testing and booster shots when levels drop below 10 mIU/mL only in hemodialysis patients, while the European Consensus Group recommends testing every 6-12 months for immunocompromised individuals and boosters when their levels drop below 10 mIU/mL.

“The CDC has not yet determined if other immunocompromised individuals should receive a booster, with more research required, but studies have shown it to be effective,” Ms. Ritter said. In a similar study looking at evidence of immunity in children with connective tissue disease who were on immunosuppressive treatment, 50% had no evidence of protective antibodies, compared with 96% in the control group. “In that study, a booster shot was given, and protective antibody concentrations were found at follow-up,” she said.

The researchers reported having no financial disclosures.

dbrunk@mdedge.com

Most pediatric patients diagnosed with an inflammatory or autoimmune disorder lacked evidence of an immune response to the hepatitis B vaccine, results from a single-center retrospective study showed.

Alexandra Ritter

“Hepatitis B is a common viral infection with 2 billion people worldwide having evidence of prior or current infection, and it can present as an acute or chronic infection,” or with chronic sequelae, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma, Alexandra Ritter said during the annual meeting of the Society for Pediatric Dermatology. A three-dose vaccination series is recommended beginning at birth, and in 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 90.5% of U.S. children aged 19-35 months had completed the series.

While the vaccine series provides protection in healthy individuals more than 95% of the time, a decreased response has been noted in specific pediatric populations, including those with inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. “This is important to note and investigate further because a decreased vaccine response increases the risk for this high-risk population, and the use of boosters is currently debated,” said Ms. Ritter, who is a fourth-year student at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.

To determine the percent of pediatric patients with inflammatory or autoimmune disease who lack evidence of immunity following the hepatitis B vaccine series, Ms. Ritter and colleagues Abigail Truitt and pediatric dermatologist Lara Wine Lee, MD, PhD, of MUSC, retrospectively reviewed the charts of 160 patients between the ages of 6 months and 21 years, who were diagnosed with an autoimmune or autoinflammatory disease, or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and had documented evidence of vaccination and serologic testing prior to the start of immunosuppressive therapy.

Of the 160 patients, 100 (63%) had IBD, 34 (21%) had an autoimmune disease, 26 (16%) had an autoinflammatory disease, 89 (56%) were female, and their mean age was 15 years.

The researchers observed variation in the testing ordered between the three patient groups. Specifically, 88.2% of autoimmune patients had hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) testing, compared with 96.15% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 67% of patients with IBD, while 76.47% of patients with an autoimmune disease had hepatitis B core antibody (anti-HBc) testing, compared with 88.46% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 31% of patients with IBD.

In addition, 82.35% of patients with an autoimmune disease had HBsAg testing, compared with 100% of patients with an autoinflammatory disease and 94% of patients with IBD.

Of the 148 patients who had HBsAg testing ordered and completed prior to starting an immunosuppressive drug, there was no statistically significant difference in the percent of patients showing evidence of an immune response to the hepatitis B vaccine (32.14% among patients with an autoimmune disease, 34.62% among patients with an autoinflammatory disease, and 31.91% among patients with IBD). Combined, 67.57% of tested negative for the hepatitis B surface antibody.



“Our study showed that the majority of these patients did not show serologic evidence of immunity despite being fully vaccinated,” Ms. Ritter said. “There was also variation in the testing ordered and a more standardized approach is needed in this high-risk population.” She acknowledged certain limitations of the study, including its retrospective design and lack of a control group.

“This brings us to our next question of whether this indicates a failure of the vaccine, or the way immunity is tested,” she continued. “The CDC and the European Consensus Group on Hepatitis B Immunity recommend a cutoff of greater than 10 mIU/mL. Those that achieve immunity are protected for up to 20 years due to immune memory, even if their antibody levels later drop. There have been rare cases of immunocompetent individuals having evidence of transient asymptomatic infections when antibody levels drop. The chronic disease has only been documented in infants born to positive mothers. In hemodialysis patients, however, clinically significant infections have been documented when antibody levels drop.”

The CDC only recommends postvaccination testing to infants born to positive mothers, health care workers at high risk, hemodialysis patients, people with HIV and other immunocompromised people, and needle-sharing partners of chronically infected people. This is completed 1-2 months following the third vaccine dose, and those with antibody levels less than 10 mIU/mL should be revaccinated. “As some groups do not respond to the vaccine series, alternative dosing and the intradermal vaccine have been studied and shown to be effective in certain groups,” she said.

When it comes to monitoring immunocompromised individuals and giving booster shots, however, there are conflicting recommendations. The CDC recommends yearly testing and booster shots when levels drop below 10 mIU/mL only in hemodialysis patients, while the European Consensus Group recommends testing every 6-12 months for immunocompromised individuals and boosters when their levels drop below 10 mIU/mL.

“The CDC has not yet determined if other immunocompromised individuals should receive a booster, with more research required, but studies have shown it to be effective,” Ms. Ritter said. In a similar study looking at evidence of immunity in children with connective tissue disease who were on immunosuppressive treatment, 50% had no evidence of protective antibodies, compared with 96% in the control group. “In that study, a booster shot was given, and protective antibody concentrations were found at follow-up,” she said.

The researchers reported having no financial disclosures.

dbrunk@mdedge.com

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CAR T-cell therapy drives refractory SLE into remission

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Thu, 08/12/2021 - 14:19

Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy, a life-extending treatment for patients with advanced B-cell malignancies and multiple myeloma, has now been shown to be effective for treating refractory systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in at least one patient.

Dr. Georg Schett

A 20-year-old woman with severe, refractory SLE, active lupus nephritis, pericarditis, and other serious symptoms had both serologic and clinical remission follow the infusion of a CAR T cell product directed against the B-cell surface antigen CD19, reported Georg Schett, MD, and colleagues from the German Center for Immunotherapy at Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg in Erlangen, Germany.

“Given the role of B cells in a variety of severe autoimmune diseases, CAR T-cell therapy that targets B-cell antigens may have wider application,” they wrote in a letter to the editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Schett said in an email response to an interview request that the patient has remained healthy and asymptomatic without further treatment after 6 months of follow-up.

“The key question will be whether B cells return and whether these B cells will carry on to make antibodies against double-stranded DNA,” he said. “We think that the loss of B cells could be sustained given that CAR T cells are still present in the patient. The main question will be how long CAR T cells will be there and how long they deplete the B cells.”
 

Not just for cancer anymore

CAR T therapy involves harvesting autologous T cells and transducing them with a lentiviral vector to recognize CD19 or other B-cell surface antigens. The transduced cells are then expanded and reinfused into the patient following a lymphodepletion regimen.

There are currently five CAR T constructs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and other B-lineage lymphomas, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, multiple myeloma, and other hematologic malignancies.

For this patient, however, Dr. Schett and colleagues created their own CAR T construct rather than adapting an off-the-shelf product.

The use of this groundbreaking therapy to treat an autoimmune condition is novel, the investigators noted: “This technological breakthrough, together with recent convincing data on the role of B cells in disease pathogenesis derived from preclinical lupus models, provides a rationale for the use of CAR T-cell therapies in patients with SLE,” they wrote.

One such preclinical study was reported in Science Translational Medicine in 2019 by Marko Z. Radic, PhD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, and colleagues.

Dr. Marko Z. Radic


Those investigators generated CD19-targeted CAR T constructs and demonstrated that in mouse models of lupus, CD8-positive T cells from two different lupus strains could be successfully transfected, and that transfer of the CD19-targeting CAR T cells ablated both autoantibodies and CD19-positive cells.

“In both models, survival was remarkably extended, and target organs were spared. These exciting results could pave the way for using CD19-targeted T cells to treat patients with lupus,” they wrote.

Now, that prediction has come to fruition.

“It’s brilliant that the first case report has now been accomplished. I am fully convinced that this method will rid therapy refractory patients of their symptoms,” Dr. Radic said in an interview.
 

 

 

Anti-CD20 failures

B-cell depletion with the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab has been shown to be an effective therapeutic strategy for patients with rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, but was ineffective in two separate clinical trials for SLE.

“Incomplete B-cell depletion of tissue-resident B cells, or the transient nature of the treatment, may have contributed to the failure of the initial rituximab trials to attain satisfactory outcomes,” Dr. Radic and coauthors wrote.

In patients with severe lupus, autoreactive B cells may lurk in lymphatic organs and/or inflamed tissues. Alternatively, CD20-negative plasma cells, which are unaffected by rituximab, could also be a source of SLE autoantibodies, Dr. Schett and coinvestigators said.
 

Case details

As noted before, the 20-year-old patient described by Dr. Schett and colleagues presented with World Health Organization class IIIA active lupus nephritis, indicating focal proliferative disease. In addition, she also had nephritic syndrome, pericarditis, pleurisy, rash, and arthritis, and had a history of Libman-Sacks endocarditis.

Her disease was refractory to treatment with all the usual suspects, including hydroxychloroquine, high-dose glucocorticoids, cyclophosphamide, mycophenolate mofetil, tacrolimus, rituximab, and belimumab, another B-cell targeted agent.

The T cell collection, transduction, expansion, and infusion were all successfully performed. By day 9 following infusion, CAR T cells comprised nearly one-third of her total circulating T cells, and then began to decrease, but remained detectable in circulation for the ensuing 7 weeks.



Levels of anti–double-stranded DNA decreased from above 5,000 U/mL to 4 U/mL within 5 weeks, and her complement levels (C3 and C4) normalized.

“These signs of serologic remission were paralleled by clinical remission with proteinuria decreasing from above 2,000 mg of protein per gram of creatinine to less than 250 mg of protein per gram of creatinine,” the investigators wrote.

The patient’s SLE Disease Activity Index score with SELENA (Safety of Estrogens in Lupus National Assessment) modification dropped from 16 at baseline to 0 at follow-up.

The patient did not experience any of the adverse events that are commonly seen in patients treated with CAR T therapy, such as the cytokine release syndrome, neurotoxic adverse events, or prolonged cytopenias.

Unanswered questions

Dr. Radic said that it was unclear from the brief case report whether Dr. Schett and colleagues considered including a “kill switch” in their CAR T construct, which could be activated in the case of serious toxicities.

In addition, their use of both CD4-positive T cells in addition to CD8-positive cells in their construct raises some concern, because in patients with SLE there is evidence that CD4-positive helper T cells can be autoreactive, he noted.

The work by Dr. Schett and colleagues was supported by grants from the German government, European Union, and the Innovative Medicines Initiative. Dr. Schett reported having no conflicts of interest to disclose. Dr. Radic is listed as inventor on a patent for anti-CD19 CAR T cells in lupus.

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Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy, a life-extending treatment for patients with advanced B-cell malignancies and multiple myeloma, has now been shown to be effective for treating refractory systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in at least one patient.

Dr. Georg Schett

A 20-year-old woman with severe, refractory SLE, active lupus nephritis, pericarditis, and other serious symptoms had both serologic and clinical remission follow the infusion of a CAR T cell product directed against the B-cell surface antigen CD19, reported Georg Schett, MD, and colleagues from the German Center for Immunotherapy at Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg in Erlangen, Germany.

“Given the role of B cells in a variety of severe autoimmune diseases, CAR T-cell therapy that targets B-cell antigens may have wider application,” they wrote in a letter to the editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Schett said in an email response to an interview request that the patient has remained healthy and asymptomatic without further treatment after 6 months of follow-up.

“The key question will be whether B cells return and whether these B cells will carry on to make antibodies against double-stranded DNA,” he said. “We think that the loss of B cells could be sustained given that CAR T cells are still present in the patient. The main question will be how long CAR T cells will be there and how long they deplete the B cells.”
 

Not just for cancer anymore

CAR T therapy involves harvesting autologous T cells and transducing them with a lentiviral vector to recognize CD19 or other B-cell surface antigens. The transduced cells are then expanded and reinfused into the patient following a lymphodepletion regimen.

There are currently five CAR T constructs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and other B-lineage lymphomas, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, multiple myeloma, and other hematologic malignancies.

For this patient, however, Dr. Schett and colleagues created their own CAR T construct rather than adapting an off-the-shelf product.

The use of this groundbreaking therapy to treat an autoimmune condition is novel, the investigators noted: “This technological breakthrough, together with recent convincing data on the role of B cells in disease pathogenesis derived from preclinical lupus models, provides a rationale for the use of CAR T-cell therapies in patients with SLE,” they wrote.

One such preclinical study was reported in Science Translational Medicine in 2019 by Marko Z. Radic, PhD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, and colleagues.

Dr. Marko Z. Radic


Those investigators generated CD19-targeted CAR T constructs and demonstrated that in mouse models of lupus, CD8-positive T cells from two different lupus strains could be successfully transfected, and that transfer of the CD19-targeting CAR T cells ablated both autoantibodies and CD19-positive cells.

“In both models, survival was remarkably extended, and target organs were spared. These exciting results could pave the way for using CD19-targeted T cells to treat patients with lupus,” they wrote.

Now, that prediction has come to fruition.

“It’s brilliant that the first case report has now been accomplished. I am fully convinced that this method will rid therapy refractory patients of their symptoms,” Dr. Radic said in an interview.
 

 

 

Anti-CD20 failures

B-cell depletion with the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab has been shown to be an effective therapeutic strategy for patients with rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, but was ineffective in two separate clinical trials for SLE.

“Incomplete B-cell depletion of tissue-resident B cells, or the transient nature of the treatment, may have contributed to the failure of the initial rituximab trials to attain satisfactory outcomes,” Dr. Radic and coauthors wrote.

In patients with severe lupus, autoreactive B cells may lurk in lymphatic organs and/or inflamed tissues. Alternatively, CD20-negative plasma cells, which are unaffected by rituximab, could also be a source of SLE autoantibodies, Dr. Schett and coinvestigators said.
 

Case details

As noted before, the 20-year-old patient described by Dr. Schett and colleagues presented with World Health Organization class IIIA active lupus nephritis, indicating focal proliferative disease. In addition, she also had nephritic syndrome, pericarditis, pleurisy, rash, and arthritis, and had a history of Libman-Sacks endocarditis.

Her disease was refractory to treatment with all the usual suspects, including hydroxychloroquine, high-dose glucocorticoids, cyclophosphamide, mycophenolate mofetil, tacrolimus, rituximab, and belimumab, another B-cell targeted agent.

The T cell collection, transduction, expansion, and infusion were all successfully performed. By day 9 following infusion, CAR T cells comprised nearly one-third of her total circulating T cells, and then began to decrease, but remained detectable in circulation for the ensuing 7 weeks.



Levels of anti–double-stranded DNA decreased from above 5,000 U/mL to 4 U/mL within 5 weeks, and her complement levels (C3 and C4) normalized.

“These signs of serologic remission were paralleled by clinical remission with proteinuria decreasing from above 2,000 mg of protein per gram of creatinine to less than 250 mg of protein per gram of creatinine,” the investigators wrote.

The patient’s SLE Disease Activity Index score with SELENA (Safety of Estrogens in Lupus National Assessment) modification dropped from 16 at baseline to 0 at follow-up.

The patient did not experience any of the adverse events that are commonly seen in patients treated with CAR T therapy, such as the cytokine release syndrome, neurotoxic adverse events, or prolonged cytopenias.

Unanswered questions

Dr. Radic said that it was unclear from the brief case report whether Dr. Schett and colleagues considered including a “kill switch” in their CAR T construct, which could be activated in the case of serious toxicities.

In addition, their use of both CD4-positive T cells in addition to CD8-positive cells in their construct raises some concern, because in patients with SLE there is evidence that CD4-positive helper T cells can be autoreactive, he noted.

The work by Dr. Schett and colleagues was supported by grants from the German government, European Union, and the Innovative Medicines Initiative. Dr. Schett reported having no conflicts of interest to disclose. Dr. Radic is listed as inventor on a patent for anti-CD19 CAR T cells in lupus.

Chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T) therapy, a life-extending treatment for patients with advanced B-cell malignancies and multiple myeloma, has now been shown to be effective for treating refractory systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in at least one patient.

Dr. Georg Schett

A 20-year-old woman with severe, refractory SLE, active lupus nephritis, pericarditis, and other serious symptoms had both serologic and clinical remission follow the infusion of a CAR T cell product directed against the B-cell surface antigen CD19, reported Georg Schett, MD, and colleagues from the German Center for Immunotherapy at Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg in Erlangen, Germany.

“Given the role of B cells in a variety of severe autoimmune diseases, CAR T-cell therapy that targets B-cell antigens may have wider application,” they wrote in a letter to the editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.

Dr. Schett said in an email response to an interview request that the patient has remained healthy and asymptomatic without further treatment after 6 months of follow-up.

“The key question will be whether B cells return and whether these B cells will carry on to make antibodies against double-stranded DNA,” he said. “We think that the loss of B cells could be sustained given that CAR T cells are still present in the patient. The main question will be how long CAR T cells will be there and how long they deplete the B cells.”
 

Not just for cancer anymore

CAR T therapy involves harvesting autologous T cells and transducing them with a lentiviral vector to recognize CD19 or other B-cell surface antigens. The transduced cells are then expanded and reinfused into the patient following a lymphodepletion regimen.

There are currently five CAR T constructs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and other B-lineage lymphomas, acute lymphoblastic leukemia, multiple myeloma, and other hematologic malignancies.

For this patient, however, Dr. Schett and colleagues created their own CAR T construct rather than adapting an off-the-shelf product.

The use of this groundbreaking therapy to treat an autoimmune condition is novel, the investigators noted: “This technological breakthrough, together with recent convincing data on the role of B cells in disease pathogenesis derived from preclinical lupus models, provides a rationale for the use of CAR T-cell therapies in patients with SLE,” they wrote.

One such preclinical study was reported in Science Translational Medicine in 2019 by Marko Z. Radic, PhD, of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center in Memphis, and colleagues.

Dr. Marko Z. Radic


Those investigators generated CD19-targeted CAR T constructs and demonstrated that in mouse models of lupus, CD8-positive T cells from two different lupus strains could be successfully transfected, and that transfer of the CD19-targeting CAR T cells ablated both autoantibodies and CD19-positive cells.

“In both models, survival was remarkably extended, and target organs were spared. These exciting results could pave the way for using CD19-targeted T cells to treat patients with lupus,” they wrote.

Now, that prediction has come to fruition.

“It’s brilliant that the first case report has now been accomplished. I am fully convinced that this method will rid therapy refractory patients of their symptoms,” Dr. Radic said in an interview.
 

 

 

Anti-CD20 failures

B-cell depletion with the anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody rituximab has been shown to be an effective therapeutic strategy for patients with rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis, but was ineffective in two separate clinical trials for SLE.

“Incomplete B-cell depletion of tissue-resident B cells, or the transient nature of the treatment, may have contributed to the failure of the initial rituximab trials to attain satisfactory outcomes,” Dr. Radic and coauthors wrote.

In patients with severe lupus, autoreactive B cells may lurk in lymphatic organs and/or inflamed tissues. Alternatively, CD20-negative plasma cells, which are unaffected by rituximab, could also be a source of SLE autoantibodies, Dr. Schett and coinvestigators said.
 

Case details

As noted before, the 20-year-old patient described by Dr. Schett and colleagues presented with World Health Organization class IIIA active lupus nephritis, indicating focal proliferative disease. In addition, she also had nephritic syndrome, pericarditis, pleurisy, rash, and arthritis, and had a history of Libman-Sacks endocarditis.

Her disease was refractory to treatment with all the usual suspects, including hydroxychloroquine, high-dose glucocorticoids, cyclophosphamide, mycophenolate mofetil, tacrolimus, rituximab, and belimumab, another B-cell targeted agent.

The T cell collection, transduction, expansion, and infusion were all successfully performed. By day 9 following infusion, CAR T cells comprised nearly one-third of her total circulating T cells, and then began to decrease, but remained detectable in circulation for the ensuing 7 weeks.



Levels of anti–double-stranded DNA decreased from above 5,000 U/mL to 4 U/mL within 5 weeks, and her complement levels (C3 and C4) normalized.

“These signs of serologic remission were paralleled by clinical remission with proteinuria decreasing from above 2,000 mg of protein per gram of creatinine to less than 250 mg of protein per gram of creatinine,” the investigators wrote.

The patient’s SLE Disease Activity Index score with SELENA (Safety of Estrogens in Lupus National Assessment) modification dropped from 16 at baseline to 0 at follow-up.

The patient did not experience any of the adverse events that are commonly seen in patients treated with CAR T therapy, such as the cytokine release syndrome, neurotoxic adverse events, or prolonged cytopenias.

Unanswered questions

Dr. Radic said that it was unclear from the brief case report whether Dr. Schett and colleagues considered including a “kill switch” in their CAR T construct, which could be activated in the case of serious toxicities.

In addition, their use of both CD4-positive T cells in addition to CD8-positive cells in their construct raises some concern, because in patients with SLE there is evidence that CD4-positive helper T cells can be autoreactive, he noted.

The work by Dr. Schett and colleagues was supported by grants from the German government, European Union, and the Innovative Medicines Initiative. Dr. Schett reported having no conflicts of interest to disclose. Dr. Radic is listed as inventor on a patent for anti-CD19 CAR T cells in lupus.

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Hospitals struggle to find nurses, beds, even oxygen as Delta surges

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The state of Mississippi is out of intensive care unit beds. The University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson – the state’s largest health system – is converting part of a parking garage into a field hospital to make more room.

Andriy Onufriyenko

“Hospitals are full from Memphis to Gulfport, Natchez to Meridian. Everything’s full,” said Alan Jones, MD, the hospital’s COVID-19 response leader, in a press briefing Aug. 11.

The state has requested the help of a federal disaster medical assistance team of physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, pharmacists, and paramedics to staff the extra beds. The goal is to open the field hospital on Aug. 13.

Arkansas hospitals have as little as eight ICU beds left to serve a population of 3 million people. Alabama isn’t far behind.

As of Aug. 10, several large metro Atlanta hospitals were diverting patients because they were full.

Hospitals in Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, and Texas are canceling elective surgeries, as they are flooded with COVID patients.  

Florida has ordered more ventilators from the federal government. Some hospitals in that state have so many patients on high-flow medical oxygen that it is taxing the building supply lines.

“Most hospitals were not designed for this type of volume distribution in their facilities,” said Mary Mayhew, president of the Florida Hospital Association.

That’s when they can get it. Oxygen deliveries have been disrupted because of a shortage of drivers who are trained to transport it.

“Any disruption in the timing of a delivery can be hugely problematic because of the volume of oxygen they’re going through,” Ms. Mayhew said.
 

Hospitals ‘under great stress’

In a setting where most Americans now have access to safe and highly effective vaccines, hospitals in the Southeast are once again under siege from COVID-19.

Over the month of June, the number of COVID patients in Florida hospitals soared from 2,000 to 10,000. Ms. Mayhew says it took twice as long during the last surge for the state to reach those numbers. And they’re still climbing. The state had 15,000 hospitalized COVID patients as of Aug. 11.

COVID hospitalizations tripled in 3 weeks in South Carolina, said state epidemiologist Linda Bell, MD, in a news conference Aug. 11.

“These hospitals are under great stress,” says Eric Toner, MD, a senior scientist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore

The Delta variant has swept through the unvaccinated South with such veracity that hospitals in the region are unable to keep up. Patients with non-COVID health conditions are in jeopardy too.

Lee Owens, age 56, said he was supposed to have triple bypass surgery on Aug. 12 at St. Thomas West Hospital in Nashville, Tenn. Three of the arteries around his heart are 100%, 90%, and 70% blocked. Mr. Owens said the hospital called him Aug. 10 to postpone his surgery because they’ve cut back elective procedures to just one each day because the ICU beds there are full.

“I’m okay with having to wait a few days (my family isn’t!), especially if there are people worse than me, but so much anger at the reason,” he said. “These idiots that refused health care are now taking up my slot for heart surgery. It’s really aggravating.”

Anjali Bright, a spokesperson for St. Thomas West, provided a statement to this news organization saying they are not suspending elective procedures, but they are reviewing those “requiring an inpatient stay on a case-by-case basis.”

She emphasized, though, that “we will never delay care if the patient’s status changes to ‘urgent.’ ”

“Because of how infectious this variant is, this has the potential to be so much worse than what we saw in January,” said Donald Williamson, MD, president of the Alabama Hospital Association.

Dr. Williamson said they have modeled three possible scenarios for spread in the state, which ranks dead last in the United States for vaccination, with just 35% of its population fully protected. If the Delta variant spreads as it did in the United Kingdom, Alabama could see it hospitalize up to 3,000 people. 

“That’s the best scenario,” he said.

If it sweeps through the state as it did in India, Alabama is looking at up to 4,500 patients hospitalized, a number that would require more beds and more staff to care for patients.

Then, there is what Dr. Williamson calls his “nightmare scenario.” If the entire state begins to see transmission rates as high as they’re currently seeing in coastal Mobile and Baldwin counties, that could mean up to 8,000 people in the hospital.

“If we see R-naughts of 5-8 statewide, we’re in real trouble,” he said. The R-naught is the basic rate of reproduction, and it means that each infected person would go on to infect 5-8 others. Dr. Williamson said the federal government would have to send them more staff to handle that kind of a surge.
 

 

 

‘Sense of betrayal’

Unlike the surges of last winter and spring, which sent hospitals scrambling for beds and supplies, the biggest pain point for hospitals now is staffing.

In Mississippi, where 200 patients are parked in emergency departments waiting for available and staffed ICU beds, the state is facing Delta with 2,000 fewer registered nurses than it had during its winter surge. 

Some have left because of stress and burnout. Others have taken higher-paying jobs with travel nursing companies. To stop the exodus, hospitals are offering better pay, easier schedules, and sign-on and stay-on bonuses.

Doctors say the incentives are nice, but they don’t help with the anguish and anger many feel after months of battling COVID.

“There’s a big sense of betrayal,” said Sarah Nafziger, MD, vice president of clinical support services at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital. “Our staff and health care workers, in general, feel like we’ve been betrayed by the community.”

“We have a vaccine, which is the key to ending this pandemic and people just refuse to take it, and so I think we’re very frustrated. We feel that our communities have let us down by not taking advantage of the vaccine,” Dr. Nafziger said. “It’s just baffling to me and it’s broken my heart every single day.”

Dr. Nafziger said she met with several surgeons at UAB on Aug. 11 and began making decisions about which surgeries would need to be canceled the following week. “We’re talking about cancer surgery. We’re talking about heart surgery. We’re talking about things that are critical to people.”

Compounding the staffing problems, about half of hospital workers in Alabama are still unvaccinated. Dr. Williamson says they’re now starting to see these unvaccinated health care workers come down with COVID too. He says that will exacerbate their surge even further as health care workers become too sick to help care for patients and some will end up needing hospital beds themselves.

At the University of Mississippi Medical Center, 70 hospital employees and another 20 clinic employees are now being quarantined or have COVID, Dr. Jones said.

“The situation is bleak for Mississippi hospitals,” said Timothy Moore, president and CEO of the Mississippi Hospital Association. He said he doesn’t expect it to get better anytime soon.

Mississippi has more patients hospitalized now than at any other point in the pandemic, said Thomas Dobbs, MD, MPH, the state epidemiologist.

“If we look at the rapidity of this rise, it’s really kind of terrifying and awe-inspiring,” Dr. Dobbs said in a news conference Aug. 11.

Schools are just starting back, and, in many parts of the South, districts are operating under a patchwork of policies – some require masks, while others have made them voluntary. Physicians say they are bracing for what these half measures could mean for pediatric cases and community transmission.

The only sure way for people to help themselves and their hospitals and schools, experts said, is vaccination.

“State data show that in this latest COVID surge, 97% of new COVID-19 infections, 89% of hospitalizations, and 82% of deaths occur in unvaccinated residents,” Mr. Moore said.

“To relieve pressure on hospitals, we need Mississippians – even those who have previously had COVID – to get vaccinated and wear a mask in public. The Delta variant is highly contagious and we need to do all we can to stop the spread,” he said.

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

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The state of Mississippi is out of intensive care unit beds. The University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson – the state’s largest health system – is converting part of a parking garage into a field hospital to make more room.

Andriy Onufriyenko

“Hospitals are full from Memphis to Gulfport, Natchez to Meridian. Everything’s full,” said Alan Jones, MD, the hospital’s COVID-19 response leader, in a press briefing Aug. 11.

The state has requested the help of a federal disaster medical assistance team of physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, pharmacists, and paramedics to staff the extra beds. The goal is to open the field hospital on Aug. 13.

Arkansas hospitals have as little as eight ICU beds left to serve a population of 3 million people. Alabama isn’t far behind.

As of Aug. 10, several large metro Atlanta hospitals were diverting patients because they were full.

Hospitals in Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, and Texas are canceling elective surgeries, as they are flooded with COVID patients.  

Florida has ordered more ventilators from the federal government. Some hospitals in that state have so many patients on high-flow medical oxygen that it is taxing the building supply lines.

“Most hospitals were not designed for this type of volume distribution in their facilities,” said Mary Mayhew, president of the Florida Hospital Association.

That’s when they can get it. Oxygen deliveries have been disrupted because of a shortage of drivers who are trained to transport it.

“Any disruption in the timing of a delivery can be hugely problematic because of the volume of oxygen they’re going through,” Ms. Mayhew said.
 

Hospitals ‘under great stress’

In a setting where most Americans now have access to safe and highly effective vaccines, hospitals in the Southeast are once again under siege from COVID-19.

Over the month of June, the number of COVID patients in Florida hospitals soared from 2,000 to 10,000. Ms. Mayhew says it took twice as long during the last surge for the state to reach those numbers. And they’re still climbing. The state had 15,000 hospitalized COVID patients as of Aug. 11.

COVID hospitalizations tripled in 3 weeks in South Carolina, said state epidemiologist Linda Bell, MD, in a news conference Aug. 11.

“These hospitals are under great stress,” says Eric Toner, MD, a senior scientist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore

The Delta variant has swept through the unvaccinated South with such veracity that hospitals in the region are unable to keep up. Patients with non-COVID health conditions are in jeopardy too.

Lee Owens, age 56, said he was supposed to have triple bypass surgery on Aug. 12 at St. Thomas West Hospital in Nashville, Tenn. Three of the arteries around his heart are 100%, 90%, and 70% blocked. Mr. Owens said the hospital called him Aug. 10 to postpone his surgery because they’ve cut back elective procedures to just one each day because the ICU beds there are full.

“I’m okay with having to wait a few days (my family isn’t!), especially if there are people worse than me, but so much anger at the reason,” he said. “These idiots that refused health care are now taking up my slot for heart surgery. It’s really aggravating.”

Anjali Bright, a spokesperson for St. Thomas West, provided a statement to this news organization saying they are not suspending elective procedures, but they are reviewing those “requiring an inpatient stay on a case-by-case basis.”

She emphasized, though, that “we will never delay care if the patient’s status changes to ‘urgent.’ ”

“Because of how infectious this variant is, this has the potential to be so much worse than what we saw in January,” said Donald Williamson, MD, president of the Alabama Hospital Association.

Dr. Williamson said they have modeled three possible scenarios for spread in the state, which ranks dead last in the United States for vaccination, with just 35% of its population fully protected. If the Delta variant spreads as it did in the United Kingdom, Alabama could see it hospitalize up to 3,000 people. 

“That’s the best scenario,” he said.

If it sweeps through the state as it did in India, Alabama is looking at up to 4,500 patients hospitalized, a number that would require more beds and more staff to care for patients.

Then, there is what Dr. Williamson calls his “nightmare scenario.” If the entire state begins to see transmission rates as high as they’re currently seeing in coastal Mobile and Baldwin counties, that could mean up to 8,000 people in the hospital.

“If we see R-naughts of 5-8 statewide, we’re in real trouble,” he said. The R-naught is the basic rate of reproduction, and it means that each infected person would go on to infect 5-8 others. Dr. Williamson said the federal government would have to send them more staff to handle that kind of a surge.
 

 

 

‘Sense of betrayal’

Unlike the surges of last winter and spring, which sent hospitals scrambling for beds and supplies, the biggest pain point for hospitals now is staffing.

In Mississippi, where 200 patients are parked in emergency departments waiting for available and staffed ICU beds, the state is facing Delta with 2,000 fewer registered nurses than it had during its winter surge. 

Some have left because of stress and burnout. Others have taken higher-paying jobs with travel nursing companies. To stop the exodus, hospitals are offering better pay, easier schedules, and sign-on and stay-on bonuses.

Doctors say the incentives are nice, but they don’t help with the anguish and anger many feel after months of battling COVID.

“There’s a big sense of betrayal,” said Sarah Nafziger, MD, vice president of clinical support services at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital. “Our staff and health care workers, in general, feel like we’ve been betrayed by the community.”

“We have a vaccine, which is the key to ending this pandemic and people just refuse to take it, and so I think we’re very frustrated. We feel that our communities have let us down by not taking advantage of the vaccine,” Dr. Nafziger said. “It’s just baffling to me and it’s broken my heart every single day.”

Dr. Nafziger said she met with several surgeons at UAB on Aug. 11 and began making decisions about which surgeries would need to be canceled the following week. “We’re talking about cancer surgery. We’re talking about heart surgery. We’re talking about things that are critical to people.”

Compounding the staffing problems, about half of hospital workers in Alabama are still unvaccinated. Dr. Williamson says they’re now starting to see these unvaccinated health care workers come down with COVID too. He says that will exacerbate their surge even further as health care workers become too sick to help care for patients and some will end up needing hospital beds themselves.

At the University of Mississippi Medical Center, 70 hospital employees and another 20 clinic employees are now being quarantined or have COVID, Dr. Jones said.

“The situation is bleak for Mississippi hospitals,” said Timothy Moore, president and CEO of the Mississippi Hospital Association. He said he doesn’t expect it to get better anytime soon.

Mississippi has more patients hospitalized now than at any other point in the pandemic, said Thomas Dobbs, MD, MPH, the state epidemiologist.

“If we look at the rapidity of this rise, it’s really kind of terrifying and awe-inspiring,” Dr. Dobbs said in a news conference Aug. 11.

Schools are just starting back, and, in many parts of the South, districts are operating under a patchwork of policies – some require masks, while others have made them voluntary. Physicians say they are bracing for what these half measures could mean for pediatric cases and community transmission.

The only sure way for people to help themselves and their hospitals and schools, experts said, is vaccination.

“State data show that in this latest COVID surge, 97% of new COVID-19 infections, 89% of hospitalizations, and 82% of deaths occur in unvaccinated residents,” Mr. Moore said.

“To relieve pressure on hospitals, we need Mississippians – even those who have previously had COVID – to get vaccinated and wear a mask in public. The Delta variant is highly contagious and we need to do all we can to stop the spread,” he said.

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

The state of Mississippi is out of intensive care unit beds. The University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson – the state’s largest health system – is converting part of a parking garage into a field hospital to make more room.

Andriy Onufriyenko

“Hospitals are full from Memphis to Gulfport, Natchez to Meridian. Everything’s full,” said Alan Jones, MD, the hospital’s COVID-19 response leader, in a press briefing Aug. 11.

The state has requested the help of a federal disaster medical assistance team of physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, pharmacists, and paramedics to staff the extra beds. The goal is to open the field hospital on Aug. 13.

Arkansas hospitals have as little as eight ICU beds left to serve a population of 3 million people. Alabama isn’t far behind.

As of Aug. 10, several large metro Atlanta hospitals were diverting patients because they were full.

Hospitals in Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, and Texas are canceling elective surgeries, as they are flooded with COVID patients.  

Florida has ordered more ventilators from the federal government. Some hospitals in that state have so many patients on high-flow medical oxygen that it is taxing the building supply lines.

“Most hospitals were not designed for this type of volume distribution in their facilities,” said Mary Mayhew, president of the Florida Hospital Association.

That’s when they can get it. Oxygen deliveries have been disrupted because of a shortage of drivers who are trained to transport it.

“Any disruption in the timing of a delivery can be hugely problematic because of the volume of oxygen they’re going through,” Ms. Mayhew said.
 

Hospitals ‘under great stress’

In a setting where most Americans now have access to safe and highly effective vaccines, hospitals in the Southeast are once again under siege from COVID-19.

Over the month of June, the number of COVID patients in Florida hospitals soared from 2,000 to 10,000. Ms. Mayhew says it took twice as long during the last surge for the state to reach those numbers. And they’re still climbing. The state had 15,000 hospitalized COVID patients as of Aug. 11.

COVID hospitalizations tripled in 3 weeks in South Carolina, said state epidemiologist Linda Bell, MD, in a news conference Aug. 11.

“These hospitals are under great stress,” says Eric Toner, MD, a senior scientist at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security in Baltimore

The Delta variant has swept through the unvaccinated South with such veracity that hospitals in the region are unable to keep up. Patients with non-COVID health conditions are in jeopardy too.

Lee Owens, age 56, said he was supposed to have triple bypass surgery on Aug. 12 at St. Thomas West Hospital in Nashville, Tenn. Three of the arteries around his heart are 100%, 90%, and 70% blocked. Mr. Owens said the hospital called him Aug. 10 to postpone his surgery because they’ve cut back elective procedures to just one each day because the ICU beds there are full.

“I’m okay with having to wait a few days (my family isn’t!), especially if there are people worse than me, but so much anger at the reason,” he said. “These idiots that refused health care are now taking up my slot for heart surgery. It’s really aggravating.”

Anjali Bright, a spokesperson for St. Thomas West, provided a statement to this news organization saying they are not suspending elective procedures, but they are reviewing those “requiring an inpatient stay on a case-by-case basis.”

She emphasized, though, that “we will never delay care if the patient’s status changes to ‘urgent.’ ”

“Because of how infectious this variant is, this has the potential to be so much worse than what we saw in January,” said Donald Williamson, MD, president of the Alabama Hospital Association.

Dr. Williamson said they have modeled three possible scenarios for spread in the state, which ranks dead last in the United States for vaccination, with just 35% of its population fully protected. If the Delta variant spreads as it did in the United Kingdom, Alabama could see it hospitalize up to 3,000 people. 

“That’s the best scenario,” he said.

If it sweeps through the state as it did in India, Alabama is looking at up to 4,500 patients hospitalized, a number that would require more beds and more staff to care for patients.

Then, there is what Dr. Williamson calls his “nightmare scenario.” If the entire state begins to see transmission rates as high as they’re currently seeing in coastal Mobile and Baldwin counties, that could mean up to 8,000 people in the hospital.

“If we see R-naughts of 5-8 statewide, we’re in real trouble,” he said. The R-naught is the basic rate of reproduction, and it means that each infected person would go on to infect 5-8 others. Dr. Williamson said the federal government would have to send them more staff to handle that kind of a surge.
 

 

 

‘Sense of betrayal’

Unlike the surges of last winter and spring, which sent hospitals scrambling for beds and supplies, the biggest pain point for hospitals now is staffing.

In Mississippi, where 200 patients are parked in emergency departments waiting for available and staffed ICU beds, the state is facing Delta with 2,000 fewer registered nurses than it had during its winter surge. 

Some have left because of stress and burnout. Others have taken higher-paying jobs with travel nursing companies. To stop the exodus, hospitals are offering better pay, easier schedules, and sign-on and stay-on bonuses.

Doctors say the incentives are nice, but they don’t help with the anguish and anger many feel after months of battling COVID.

“There’s a big sense of betrayal,” said Sarah Nafziger, MD, vice president of clinical support services at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital. “Our staff and health care workers, in general, feel like we’ve been betrayed by the community.”

“We have a vaccine, which is the key to ending this pandemic and people just refuse to take it, and so I think we’re very frustrated. We feel that our communities have let us down by not taking advantage of the vaccine,” Dr. Nafziger said. “It’s just baffling to me and it’s broken my heart every single day.”

Dr. Nafziger said she met with several surgeons at UAB on Aug. 11 and began making decisions about which surgeries would need to be canceled the following week. “We’re talking about cancer surgery. We’re talking about heart surgery. We’re talking about things that are critical to people.”

Compounding the staffing problems, about half of hospital workers in Alabama are still unvaccinated. Dr. Williamson says they’re now starting to see these unvaccinated health care workers come down with COVID too. He says that will exacerbate their surge even further as health care workers become too sick to help care for patients and some will end up needing hospital beds themselves.

At the University of Mississippi Medical Center, 70 hospital employees and another 20 clinic employees are now being quarantined or have COVID, Dr. Jones said.

“The situation is bleak for Mississippi hospitals,” said Timothy Moore, president and CEO of the Mississippi Hospital Association. He said he doesn’t expect it to get better anytime soon.

Mississippi has more patients hospitalized now than at any other point in the pandemic, said Thomas Dobbs, MD, MPH, the state epidemiologist.

“If we look at the rapidity of this rise, it’s really kind of terrifying and awe-inspiring,” Dr. Dobbs said in a news conference Aug. 11.

Schools are just starting back, and, in many parts of the South, districts are operating under a patchwork of policies – some require masks, while others have made them voluntary. Physicians say they are bracing for what these half measures could mean for pediatric cases and community transmission.

The only sure way for people to help themselves and their hospitals and schools, experts said, is vaccination.

“State data show that in this latest COVID surge, 97% of new COVID-19 infections, 89% of hospitalizations, and 82% of deaths occur in unvaccinated residents,” Mr. Moore said.

“To relieve pressure on hospitals, we need Mississippians – even those who have previously had COVID – to get vaccinated and wear a mask in public. The Delta variant is highly contagious and we need to do all we can to stop the spread,” he said.

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

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Pandemic demand for NPs soars, softens for primary care: Report

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Thu, 08/12/2021 - 14:00

The COVID-19 pandemic has fueled a growing demand for nurse practitioners (NPs), while demand for primary care physicians has cooled, according to Merritt Hawkins’ annual review of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting trends.

This marks the first time in the review’s 28-year history that NPs have topped the list of the most recruited practitioners, according to the medical search firm. In the 27 prior years, physicians held the top spot. For the previous 14 years, the No. 1 position was held by family physicians.

“COVID-19 and other market forces are changing the dynamics of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting. NPs are coming into their own in a market that puts a premium on easy access to care and cost containment,” Tom Florence, president of Merritt Hawkins, said in a statement.
 

Primary care ‘recruiting frenzy’ over

Mr. Florence said primary care physicians remain a “vital part of team-based care and will be increasingly responsible for coordinating the care of older patients with multiple chronic conditions. But the recruiting frenzy in primary care is over.”

Merritt Hawkins says that overall COVID-19 has had a “severely inhibiting” effect on demand for physicians. The number of searches the company conducted dropped 25%, compared with 2020, and many hospitals and medical groups shut down or lost money during the pandemic.

But the drop-off in demand for physicians is likely to be temporary because the underlying dynamics driving physician supply and demand remain in place, according to the report. These include a growing and aging population, a limited supply of newly trained physicians, and an aging physician workforce.

COVID-19 will not permanently change these market conditions, and demand for physicians already is rebounding, the company said.

The 2021 review of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting is based on a representative sample of 2,458 permanent search engagements that Merritt Hawkins/AMN Healthcare’s physician staffing companies conducted or were in the process of conducting during the 12-month period from April 1, 2020, to March 31, 2021.

Among the key findings:

  • 18% of Merritt Hawkins’ recruiting searches were for advanced practitioners, including NPs, physician assistants (PAs), and certified registered nurse anesthetists, up from 13% in the 2020 review. This represents the highest percentage in the 28 years the review has been conducted.
  • About two-thirds (64%) of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were for physician specialists, including radiologists, psychiatrists, gastroenterologists, and others, “highlighting the robust demand for specialty physicians.”
  • In 2021, 18% of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were for primary care physicians, down from 20% in 2020 and 22% in 2019, “signaling a relative decline in demand for primary care doctors.”
  • Psychiatrists placed fourth on the list of most requested search engagements, a sign of continued strong demand for mental health professionals that is likely to accelerate because of COVID-19.

Starting salaries take a pandemic hit

Owing to the reduced demand for practitioners, starting salaries decreased for many types of health care professions, with the exception of NPs and PAs.

Average starting salaries for NPs showed strong growth, increasing 12% year over year, from $125,000 to $140,000. The average starting salaries for PAs also showed strong growth, increasing by 14% year over year, from $112,000 to $128,000.

Among physicians, interventional cardiologists were offered the highest average starting salaries, at $611,000, followed by orthopedic surgeons, at $546,000. Pediatricians were offered the lowest average starting salaries, at $236,000.

Merritt Hawkins said only 3% of their search engagements were for solo practice or partnership settings, “underscoring the decline of physician private practice.”

Roughly two-thirds (67%) of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were in communities of 100,000 people or more, indicating that demand for physicians and advanced practitioners is not limited to small or rural communities.

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

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The COVID-19 pandemic has fueled a growing demand for nurse practitioners (NPs), while demand for primary care physicians has cooled, according to Merritt Hawkins’ annual review of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting trends.

This marks the first time in the review’s 28-year history that NPs have topped the list of the most recruited practitioners, according to the medical search firm. In the 27 prior years, physicians held the top spot. For the previous 14 years, the No. 1 position was held by family physicians.

“COVID-19 and other market forces are changing the dynamics of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting. NPs are coming into their own in a market that puts a premium on easy access to care and cost containment,” Tom Florence, president of Merritt Hawkins, said in a statement.
 

Primary care ‘recruiting frenzy’ over

Mr. Florence said primary care physicians remain a “vital part of team-based care and will be increasingly responsible for coordinating the care of older patients with multiple chronic conditions. But the recruiting frenzy in primary care is over.”

Merritt Hawkins says that overall COVID-19 has had a “severely inhibiting” effect on demand for physicians. The number of searches the company conducted dropped 25%, compared with 2020, and many hospitals and medical groups shut down or lost money during the pandemic.

But the drop-off in demand for physicians is likely to be temporary because the underlying dynamics driving physician supply and demand remain in place, according to the report. These include a growing and aging population, a limited supply of newly trained physicians, and an aging physician workforce.

COVID-19 will not permanently change these market conditions, and demand for physicians already is rebounding, the company said.

The 2021 review of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting is based on a representative sample of 2,458 permanent search engagements that Merritt Hawkins/AMN Healthcare’s physician staffing companies conducted or were in the process of conducting during the 12-month period from April 1, 2020, to March 31, 2021.

Among the key findings:

  • 18% of Merritt Hawkins’ recruiting searches were for advanced practitioners, including NPs, physician assistants (PAs), and certified registered nurse anesthetists, up from 13% in the 2020 review. This represents the highest percentage in the 28 years the review has been conducted.
  • About two-thirds (64%) of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were for physician specialists, including radiologists, psychiatrists, gastroenterologists, and others, “highlighting the robust demand for specialty physicians.”
  • In 2021, 18% of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were for primary care physicians, down from 20% in 2020 and 22% in 2019, “signaling a relative decline in demand for primary care doctors.”
  • Psychiatrists placed fourth on the list of most requested search engagements, a sign of continued strong demand for mental health professionals that is likely to accelerate because of COVID-19.

Starting salaries take a pandemic hit

Owing to the reduced demand for practitioners, starting salaries decreased for many types of health care professions, with the exception of NPs and PAs.

Average starting salaries for NPs showed strong growth, increasing 12% year over year, from $125,000 to $140,000. The average starting salaries for PAs also showed strong growth, increasing by 14% year over year, from $112,000 to $128,000.

Among physicians, interventional cardiologists were offered the highest average starting salaries, at $611,000, followed by orthopedic surgeons, at $546,000. Pediatricians were offered the lowest average starting salaries, at $236,000.

Merritt Hawkins said only 3% of their search engagements were for solo practice or partnership settings, “underscoring the decline of physician private practice.”

Roughly two-thirds (67%) of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were in communities of 100,000 people or more, indicating that demand for physicians and advanced practitioners is not limited to small or rural communities.

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

The COVID-19 pandemic has fueled a growing demand for nurse practitioners (NPs), while demand for primary care physicians has cooled, according to Merritt Hawkins’ annual review of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting trends.

This marks the first time in the review’s 28-year history that NPs have topped the list of the most recruited practitioners, according to the medical search firm. In the 27 prior years, physicians held the top spot. For the previous 14 years, the No. 1 position was held by family physicians.

“COVID-19 and other market forces are changing the dynamics of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting. NPs are coming into their own in a market that puts a premium on easy access to care and cost containment,” Tom Florence, president of Merritt Hawkins, said in a statement.
 

Primary care ‘recruiting frenzy’ over

Mr. Florence said primary care physicians remain a “vital part of team-based care and will be increasingly responsible for coordinating the care of older patients with multiple chronic conditions. But the recruiting frenzy in primary care is over.”

Merritt Hawkins says that overall COVID-19 has had a “severely inhibiting” effect on demand for physicians. The number of searches the company conducted dropped 25%, compared with 2020, and many hospitals and medical groups shut down or lost money during the pandemic.

But the drop-off in demand for physicians is likely to be temporary because the underlying dynamics driving physician supply and demand remain in place, according to the report. These include a growing and aging population, a limited supply of newly trained physicians, and an aging physician workforce.

COVID-19 will not permanently change these market conditions, and demand for physicians already is rebounding, the company said.

The 2021 review of physician and advanced practitioner recruiting is based on a representative sample of 2,458 permanent search engagements that Merritt Hawkins/AMN Healthcare’s physician staffing companies conducted or were in the process of conducting during the 12-month period from April 1, 2020, to March 31, 2021.

Among the key findings:

  • 18% of Merritt Hawkins’ recruiting searches were for advanced practitioners, including NPs, physician assistants (PAs), and certified registered nurse anesthetists, up from 13% in the 2020 review. This represents the highest percentage in the 28 years the review has been conducted.
  • About two-thirds (64%) of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were for physician specialists, including radiologists, psychiatrists, gastroenterologists, and others, “highlighting the robust demand for specialty physicians.”
  • In 2021, 18% of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were for primary care physicians, down from 20% in 2020 and 22% in 2019, “signaling a relative decline in demand for primary care doctors.”
  • Psychiatrists placed fourth on the list of most requested search engagements, a sign of continued strong demand for mental health professionals that is likely to accelerate because of COVID-19.

Starting salaries take a pandemic hit

Owing to the reduced demand for practitioners, starting salaries decreased for many types of health care professions, with the exception of NPs and PAs.

Average starting salaries for NPs showed strong growth, increasing 12% year over year, from $125,000 to $140,000. The average starting salaries for PAs also showed strong growth, increasing by 14% year over year, from $112,000 to $128,000.

Among physicians, interventional cardiologists were offered the highest average starting salaries, at $611,000, followed by orthopedic surgeons, at $546,000. Pediatricians were offered the lowest average starting salaries, at $236,000.

Merritt Hawkins said only 3% of their search engagements were for solo practice or partnership settings, “underscoring the decline of physician private practice.”

Roughly two-thirds (67%) of Merritt Hawkins’ search engagements were in communities of 100,000 people or more, indicating that demand for physicians and advanced practitioners is not limited to small or rural communities.

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

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FDA may okay COVID booster for vulnerable adults before weekend: Media

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:43

 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) could green-light a booster dose of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines for people with weakened immune systems within the next two days, according to multiple media reports.

The agency, along with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health, is working through the details of how booster doses for this population would work, and could authorize a third dose of both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines as early as Aug. 12, Politico reports.

About 2.7% of adults in the United States are immunocompromised, according to the CDC. This group includes people who have cancer, have received solid organ or stem cell transplants, have genetic conditions that weaken the immune function, have HIV, or are people with health conditions that require treatment with medications that turn down immune function, such as rheumatoid arthritis

Immune function also wanes with age, so the FDA could consider boosters for the elderly.

New research shows that between one-third and one-half of immunocompromised patients who didn’t develop detectable levels of virus-fighting antibodies after two doses of a COVID vaccine will respond to a third dose. 

A committee of independent experts that advises the CDC on the use of vaccines in the United States had previously signaled its support for giving boosters to those who are immunocompromised, but noted that it couldn’t officially recommend the strategy until the FDA had updated its emergency-use authorization for the shots or granted them a full biologics license, or “full approval.”

It’s unclear which mechanism the FDA might use, or exactly who will be eligible for the shots.

The United States would follow other nations such as Israel, France, the United Kingdom, and Germany in planning for or authorizing boosters for some vulnerable individuals.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has voiced strong opposition to the use of boosters in wealthy countries while much of the world still doesn’t have access to these lifesaving therapies. The WHO has asked wealthy nations to hold off on giving boosters until at least the end of September to give more people the opportunity to get a first dose.

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meets again on Aug. 13 and is expected to discuss booster doses for this population of patients. The ACIP officially makes recommendations on the use of vaccines to the nation’s doctors.

The committee’s recommendation ensures that a vaccine will be covered by public and private insurers. Statutory vaccination requirements are also made based on the ACIP’s recommendations.

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

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) could green-light a booster dose of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines for people with weakened immune systems within the next two days, according to multiple media reports.

The agency, along with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health, is working through the details of how booster doses for this population would work, and could authorize a third dose of both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines as early as Aug. 12, Politico reports.

About 2.7% of adults in the United States are immunocompromised, according to the CDC. This group includes people who have cancer, have received solid organ or stem cell transplants, have genetic conditions that weaken the immune function, have HIV, or are people with health conditions that require treatment with medications that turn down immune function, such as rheumatoid arthritis

Immune function also wanes with age, so the FDA could consider boosters for the elderly.

New research shows that between one-third and one-half of immunocompromised patients who didn’t develop detectable levels of virus-fighting antibodies after two doses of a COVID vaccine will respond to a third dose. 

A committee of independent experts that advises the CDC on the use of vaccines in the United States had previously signaled its support for giving boosters to those who are immunocompromised, but noted that it couldn’t officially recommend the strategy until the FDA had updated its emergency-use authorization for the shots or granted them a full biologics license, or “full approval.”

It’s unclear which mechanism the FDA might use, or exactly who will be eligible for the shots.

The United States would follow other nations such as Israel, France, the United Kingdom, and Germany in planning for or authorizing boosters for some vulnerable individuals.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has voiced strong opposition to the use of boosters in wealthy countries while much of the world still doesn’t have access to these lifesaving therapies. The WHO has asked wealthy nations to hold off on giving boosters until at least the end of September to give more people the opportunity to get a first dose.

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meets again on Aug. 13 and is expected to discuss booster doses for this population of patients. The ACIP officially makes recommendations on the use of vaccines to the nation’s doctors.

The committee’s recommendation ensures that a vaccine will be covered by public and private insurers. Statutory vaccination requirements are also made based on the ACIP’s recommendations.

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

 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) could green-light a booster dose of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines for people with weakened immune systems within the next two days, according to multiple media reports.

The agency, along with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Institutes of Health, is working through the details of how booster doses for this population would work, and could authorize a third dose of both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines as early as Aug. 12, Politico reports.

About 2.7% of adults in the United States are immunocompromised, according to the CDC. This group includes people who have cancer, have received solid organ or stem cell transplants, have genetic conditions that weaken the immune function, have HIV, or are people with health conditions that require treatment with medications that turn down immune function, such as rheumatoid arthritis

Immune function also wanes with age, so the FDA could consider boosters for the elderly.

New research shows that between one-third and one-half of immunocompromised patients who didn’t develop detectable levels of virus-fighting antibodies after two doses of a COVID vaccine will respond to a third dose. 

A committee of independent experts that advises the CDC on the use of vaccines in the United States had previously signaled its support for giving boosters to those who are immunocompromised, but noted that it couldn’t officially recommend the strategy until the FDA had updated its emergency-use authorization for the shots or granted them a full biologics license, or “full approval.”

It’s unclear which mechanism the FDA might use, or exactly who will be eligible for the shots.

The United States would follow other nations such as Israel, France, the United Kingdom, and Germany in planning for or authorizing boosters for some vulnerable individuals.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has voiced strong opposition to the use of boosters in wealthy countries while much of the world still doesn’t have access to these lifesaving therapies. The WHO has asked wealthy nations to hold off on giving boosters until at least the end of September to give more people the opportunity to get a first dose.

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) meets again on Aug. 13 and is expected to discuss booster doses for this population of patients. The ACIP officially makes recommendations on the use of vaccines to the nation’s doctors.

The committee’s recommendation ensures that a vaccine will be covered by public and private insurers. Statutory vaccination requirements are also made based on the ACIP’s recommendations.

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

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It’s time for all physicians to have a national medical license

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Thu, 08/12/2021 - 12:54

The current pandemic is forcing changes throughout the health care industry. Telehealth is witnessing a surge. Hospitals are struggling without elective care, and remarkably, physicians are being laid off during a time of crisis. While some states have a surplus work force, other states go begging, and they lock the system up with delays in the processing of applications.

Considering the prevalence of noncompete clauses and a schism in state-to-state processing of complaints, patients are suffering and dying under an antiquated system. The Federation of State Medical Boards doesn’t seem to add to the solution, but instead confounds the problem with new directives. The time is nigh for the federal government to eliminate state medical licensure and replace it with a national medical license for all physicians and health care professionals.

Because physicians’ training requirements don’t vary from state to state, it makes sense. We must take national standardized exams to qualify. Locum tenens physicians must maintain licensure in as many states as they practice; this creates an unnecessary burden and expense, when there is a better alternative. Some states have arranged reciprocity licensure with other states. This is commendable but doesn’t go far enough to manage national shortages in rural areas.

Under a national licensing system, physicians and other health care professionals would not only be free to travel anywhere in the United States to practice, they can count on consistent and equal management of their license. The federal government can track regional overages and shortages and redirect physicians and other medical professionals with incentives to areas in need.

The FSMB claims that there is interstate continuity among state medical boards, but the data don’t support this.

Why is this the case? Each medical board fails to manage their charges equally. Often, action taken by one state board when reported to another state board can cause a review and readjudication. This occasionally results in the overturning of a reprimand or suspension because of differences in legislation.

Yet the physician or health care professional must bear the burden of the notification against their license. Once again, the FSMB claims there is interstate continuity in disciplinary actions, but the data do not support this.

Once someone brings a complaint against a health professional, which in this health care climate is inevitable, the medical board must institute an investigation. Even if it has no merit, the process must go forward. Under a national system, a consistent approach to dismiss and investigate issues and complaints might expedite the process. This eliminates inefficiency and delays in clearance of charges.

A report in 2006 identified fragmentation and discontinuities in the way each state medical board manages a physician or other health care personnel’s complaints. The number of hands involved in the process varies and is often onerous and redundant. Several sources may request the same information, tying it up as it moves through an inefficient and uncooperative system. With the increase in internal politics since then, this only compounds rather than improves the problem.

Yet the benefit of national licensure is not just for the health care personnel but also for insurance companies that must register and screen physicians as they move from region to region. In each state, the physician must repeat the accreditation process, delaying reimbursements and denying care. Hospitals also must repeat the credentialing task as well. This, although the physician or health care worker has a clean record with the same company or the same hospital system in their original state.

Perhaps data from one insurance group or hospital in another state get lost or altered in transfer, but under national licensing, this would not be possible. Furthermore, the current system limits the individual professional’s input. By nationalizing, record corrections would go through a federal database rather than state data banks that don’t sync.

This already partially exists with the National Practitioner Identifier. But we can take it one step further. Through nationalization, we could institute a fairer system of reporting where both the professional’s and the complainant’s summary is included. One might argue the National Physician Data Bank performs this function, but in fact, it merely reflects state assessments – which again vary.

The infrastructure is already in place to transition from a state to national system with facilities and records kept in each state’s medical board. It would simply be a matter of replacing state personnel with federal employees who all work from the same script. A national medical license simply makes sense for all parties. It reduces discontinuity and increases efficiency. A national medical license empowers the individual rather than institutions, yet benefits both.

The time is nigh to nationally certify and set physicians free, reduce paperwork and needless fees, and eliminate state supremacy.  


Dr. Raymond is an emergency physician based in Hickory, N.C., and Muckendorf an der Donau, Austria.

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

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The current pandemic is forcing changes throughout the health care industry. Telehealth is witnessing a surge. Hospitals are struggling without elective care, and remarkably, physicians are being laid off during a time of crisis. While some states have a surplus work force, other states go begging, and they lock the system up with delays in the processing of applications.

Considering the prevalence of noncompete clauses and a schism in state-to-state processing of complaints, patients are suffering and dying under an antiquated system. The Federation of State Medical Boards doesn’t seem to add to the solution, but instead confounds the problem with new directives. The time is nigh for the federal government to eliminate state medical licensure and replace it with a national medical license for all physicians and health care professionals.

Because physicians’ training requirements don’t vary from state to state, it makes sense. We must take national standardized exams to qualify. Locum tenens physicians must maintain licensure in as many states as they practice; this creates an unnecessary burden and expense, when there is a better alternative. Some states have arranged reciprocity licensure with other states. This is commendable but doesn’t go far enough to manage national shortages in rural areas.

Under a national licensing system, physicians and other health care professionals would not only be free to travel anywhere in the United States to practice, they can count on consistent and equal management of their license. The federal government can track regional overages and shortages and redirect physicians and other medical professionals with incentives to areas in need.

The FSMB claims that there is interstate continuity among state medical boards, but the data don’t support this.

Why is this the case? Each medical board fails to manage their charges equally. Often, action taken by one state board when reported to another state board can cause a review and readjudication. This occasionally results in the overturning of a reprimand or suspension because of differences in legislation.

Yet the physician or health care professional must bear the burden of the notification against their license. Once again, the FSMB claims there is interstate continuity in disciplinary actions, but the data do not support this.

Once someone brings a complaint against a health professional, which in this health care climate is inevitable, the medical board must institute an investigation. Even if it has no merit, the process must go forward. Under a national system, a consistent approach to dismiss and investigate issues and complaints might expedite the process. This eliminates inefficiency and delays in clearance of charges.

A report in 2006 identified fragmentation and discontinuities in the way each state medical board manages a physician or other health care personnel’s complaints. The number of hands involved in the process varies and is often onerous and redundant. Several sources may request the same information, tying it up as it moves through an inefficient and uncooperative system. With the increase in internal politics since then, this only compounds rather than improves the problem.

Yet the benefit of national licensure is not just for the health care personnel but also for insurance companies that must register and screen physicians as they move from region to region. In each state, the physician must repeat the accreditation process, delaying reimbursements and denying care. Hospitals also must repeat the credentialing task as well. This, although the physician or health care worker has a clean record with the same company or the same hospital system in their original state.

Perhaps data from one insurance group or hospital in another state get lost or altered in transfer, but under national licensing, this would not be possible. Furthermore, the current system limits the individual professional’s input. By nationalizing, record corrections would go through a federal database rather than state data banks that don’t sync.

This already partially exists with the National Practitioner Identifier. But we can take it one step further. Through nationalization, we could institute a fairer system of reporting where both the professional’s and the complainant’s summary is included. One might argue the National Physician Data Bank performs this function, but in fact, it merely reflects state assessments – which again vary.

The infrastructure is already in place to transition from a state to national system with facilities and records kept in each state’s medical board. It would simply be a matter of replacing state personnel with federal employees who all work from the same script. A national medical license simply makes sense for all parties. It reduces discontinuity and increases efficiency. A national medical license empowers the individual rather than institutions, yet benefits both.

The time is nigh to nationally certify and set physicians free, reduce paperwork and needless fees, and eliminate state supremacy.  


Dr. Raymond is an emergency physician based in Hickory, N.C., and Muckendorf an der Donau, Austria.

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

The current pandemic is forcing changes throughout the health care industry. Telehealth is witnessing a surge. Hospitals are struggling without elective care, and remarkably, physicians are being laid off during a time of crisis. While some states have a surplus work force, other states go begging, and they lock the system up with delays in the processing of applications.

Considering the prevalence of noncompete clauses and a schism in state-to-state processing of complaints, patients are suffering and dying under an antiquated system. The Federation of State Medical Boards doesn’t seem to add to the solution, but instead confounds the problem with new directives. The time is nigh for the federal government to eliminate state medical licensure and replace it with a national medical license for all physicians and health care professionals.

Because physicians’ training requirements don’t vary from state to state, it makes sense. We must take national standardized exams to qualify. Locum tenens physicians must maintain licensure in as many states as they practice; this creates an unnecessary burden and expense, when there is a better alternative. Some states have arranged reciprocity licensure with other states. This is commendable but doesn’t go far enough to manage national shortages in rural areas.

Under a national licensing system, physicians and other health care professionals would not only be free to travel anywhere in the United States to practice, they can count on consistent and equal management of their license. The federal government can track regional overages and shortages and redirect physicians and other medical professionals with incentives to areas in need.

The FSMB claims that there is interstate continuity among state medical boards, but the data don’t support this.

Why is this the case? Each medical board fails to manage their charges equally. Often, action taken by one state board when reported to another state board can cause a review and readjudication. This occasionally results in the overturning of a reprimand or suspension because of differences in legislation.

Yet the physician or health care professional must bear the burden of the notification against their license. Once again, the FSMB claims there is interstate continuity in disciplinary actions, but the data do not support this.

Once someone brings a complaint against a health professional, which in this health care climate is inevitable, the medical board must institute an investigation. Even if it has no merit, the process must go forward. Under a national system, a consistent approach to dismiss and investigate issues and complaints might expedite the process. This eliminates inefficiency and delays in clearance of charges.

A report in 2006 identified fragmentation and discontinuities in the way each state medical board manages a physician or other health care personnel’s complaints. The number of hands involved in the process varies and is often onerous and redundant. Several sources may request the same information, tying it up as it moves through an inefficient and uncooperative system. With the increase in internal politics since then, this only compounds rather than improves the problem.

Yet the benefit of national licensure is not just for the health care personnel but also for insurance companies that must register and screen physicians as they move from region to region. In each state, the physician must repeat the accreditation process, delaying reimbursements and denying care. Hospitals also must repeat the credentialing task as well. This, although the physician or health care worker has a clean record with the same company or the same hospital system in their original state.

Perhaps data from one insurance group or hospital in another state get lost or altered in transfer, but under national licensing, this would not be possible. Furthermore, the current system limits the individual professional’s input. By nationalizing, record corrections would go through a federal database rather than state data banks that don’t sync.

This already partially exists with the National Practitioner Identifier. But we can take it one step further. Through nationalization, we could institute a fairer system of reporting where both the professional’s and the complainant’s summary is included. One might argue the National Physician Data Bank performs this function, but in fact, it merely reflects state assessments – which again vary.

The infrastructure is already in place to transition from a state to national system with facilities and records kept in each state’s medical board. It would simply be a matter of replacing state personnel with federal employees who all work from the same script. A national medical license simply makes sense for all parties. It reduces discontinuity and increases efficiency. A national medical license empowers the individual rather than institutions, yet benefits both.

The time is nigh to nationally certify and set physicians free, reduce paperwork and needless fees, and eliminate state supremacy.  


Dr. Raymond is an emergency physician based in Hickory, N.C., and Muckendorf an der Donau, Austria.

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

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Motherhood can get old fast, and snubbing can become phubbing

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 08/12/2021 - 09:07

 

Killer babies and their aging mommies

The joys of new parenthood are endless, like the long nights and functioning on 4 hours of sleep. But those babies sure are sweet, and deadly. That’s right, little Johnny junior is shaving years off of your life.

LWA/Dann Tardif/Getty Images

Investigators at the University of California, Los Angeles, found that new mothers who slept less than 7 hours a night 6 months after giving birth were, biologically, 3-7 years older than were those who slept 7 or more hours. But hold on, that doesn’t mean mothers need to update their driver licenses. There’s a difference between biological and chronological age.

Biological aging is measured by epigenetics, which analyzes changes in DNA over time by determining whether coding for certain proteins is turned on or off. The process acts as a sort of clock, lead author Judith E. Carroll, PhD, said in a separate statement, allowing scientists to estimate a person’s biological age.

Although loss of sleep may accelerate biological aging and increase health risks, the researchers don’t want people to think that lack of sleep during infant care is going to automatically cause permanent damage. The jury is still out on whether the effects are long lasting. Instead, they emphasized the importance of prioritizing sleep needs and getting some help from others to do it.

“With every hour of additional sleep, the mother’s biological age was younger,” Dr. Carroll said. “I, and many other sleep scientists, consider sleep health to be just as vital to overall health as diet and exercise.”

So, new moms, fix that gourmet dinner after you go for that run because you’re already up at 4 a.m. anyway. It’s all about balance.
 

Me and my phone-y phriends

It’s been months since you’ve seen your friends in person. You got your vaccine and so, after all this time, you can finally meet with your friends in real life. No more Zoom. It’s a strange dream come true.

nemke/E+

The problem is that half your friends barely seem interested, spending much of your time together staring at their phones. Naturally, there’s a clever term for this: You’ve just been the victim of phubbing, specifically friend phubbing or fphubbing (we’re not sure there are enough “f” sounds at the beginning of that word), and it’s been the focus of a new study from the University of Georgia.

So who are these fphubbers? Researchers found that neurotic and depressed individuals are more likely to fphub, as were those with social anxiety, since they may actually prefer online interaction over face-to-face conversation. On the flip side, people with agreeable traits were less likely to fphub, as they felt doing so would be rude and impolite. Quite a bold stance right there, we know.

The researchers noted the complete ordinariness of people pulling their phones out while with friends, and the rapid acceptance of something many people may still consider rude. It could speak to casual smartphone addiction and the urge we all get when we hear that notification in our pocket. Maybe what we need when we see friends is the equivalent of those PSAs before movies telling you to turn off your cell phones. Then you can all go down to the lobby and get yourselves a treat.
 

 

 

Who needs a vaccine when there’s horse paste?

It’s not the first time, and it won’t be the last, that some people think they know best when it comes to COVID-19 safety.

Mario Olaya/Pixabay

What is the newest “trend” for prevention and treatment? Enter, ivermectin, a Food and Drug Administration–approved drug for treating conditions caused by parasitic worms. The prescription form is hard to find these days, so some folks have been “raiding rural tractor supply stores in search of ivermectin horse paste (packed with ‘apple flavor’!) and [weighing] the benefits of taking ivermectin ‘sheep drench’,” according to the Daily Beast.

The FDA does not condone the use of ivermectin for COVID-19 and warns that the types meant for animals can be harmful to humans if taken in large doses. Facebook has played its part, as groups are forming to share conflicting information about how the drug can be used for COVID-19. The medication often comes from sketchy sources, and it’s seemingly causing more harm than good. Pharmacies are even starting to treat ivermectin as if it’s an opioid.

“My ‘horse’ had no negative side effects, and now he tells me he feels like a million bucks and is now COVID free,” one social media poster wrote in code, according to the Daily Beast.
 

When the card fits, COVID-19 will take a hit

Good news! We have figured out the problem behind the whole COVID-19 vaccine-denial business.

Richard Franki/MDedge

And by “we,” of course, we mean someone else. But we’re telling you about it, and isn’t that really the important part?

Anyway, back to the problem. It’s not the vaccines themselves, it’s the vaccine cards. They’re the wrong size.

The Atlantic’s Amanda Mull explains: “When I got my first shot, in late February, I sat in the mandatory waiting area, holding my new card in one hand and my wallet in the other, trying to understand why the two objects weren’t compatible.”

She didn’t get very far with the CDC, but Chelsea Cirruzzo, a public-health reporter at U.S. News & World Report who has been tweeting about the vaccine cards, suggested that “someone just printed out a bunch of cards that are easy to write your name and vaccine brand on, without thinking about wallets.”

The evidence does fit the nobody-really-gave-it-any-thought argument. The template was available to the public on some state government websites when the vaccine was approved and can still be found on Florida’s, Ms. Mull notes. “Try to imagine governments freely distributing their templates for driver’s licenses, passports, or other documents intended to certify a particular identity or status.” The FBI, we understand, frowns upon this sort of thing.

Well, there you have it, America. When the card fits in a wallet, the vaccine problem will go away. Just remember where you read it, not where we read it.

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Killer babies and their aging mommies

The joys of new parenthood are endless, like the long nights and functioning on 4 hours of sleep. But those babies sure are sweet, and deadly. That’s right, little Johnny junior is shaving years off of your life.

LWA/Dann Tardif/Getty Images

Investigators at the University of California, Los Angeles, found that new mothers who slept less than 7 hours a night 6 months after giving birth were, biologically, 3-7 years older than were those who slept 7 or more hours. But hold on, that doesn’t mean mothers need to update their driver licenses. There’s a difference between biological and chronological age.

Biological aging is measured by epigenetics, which analyzes changes in DNA over time by determining whether coding for certain proteins is turned on or off. The process acts as a sort of clock, lead author Judith E. Carroll, PhD, said in a separate statement, allowing scientists to estimate a person’s biological age.

Although loss of sleep may accelerate biological aging and increase health risks, the researchers don’t want people to think that lack of sleep during infant care is going to automatically cause permanent damage. The jury is still out on whether the effects are long lasting. Instead, they emphasized the importance of prioritizing sleep needs and getting some help from others to do it.

“With every hour of additional sleep, the mother’s biological age was younger,” Dr. Carroll said. “I, and many other sleep scientists, consider sleep health to be just as vital to overall health as diet and exercise.”

So, new moms, fix that gourmet dinner after you go for that run because you’re already up at 4 a.m. anyway. It’s all about balance.
 

Me and my phone-y phriends

It’s been months since you’ve seen your friends in person. You got your vaccine and so, after all this time, you can finally meet with your friends in real life. No more Zoom. It’s a strange dream come true.

nemke/E+

The problem is that half your friends barely seem interested, spending much of your time together staring at their phones. Naturally, there’s a clever term for this: You’ve just been the victim of phubbing, specifically friend phubbing or fphubbing (we’re not sure there are enough “f” sounds at the beginning of that word), and it’s been the focus of a new study from the University of Georgia.

So who are these fphubbers? Researchers found that neurotic and depressed individuals are more likely to fphub, as were those with social anxiety, since they may actually prefer online interaction over face-to-face conversation. On the flip side, people with agreeable traits were less likely to fphub, as they felt doing so would be rude and impolite. Quite a bold stance right there, we know.

The researchers noted the complete ordinariness of people pulling their phones out while with friends, and the rapid acceptance of something many people may still consider rude. It could speak to casual smartphone addiction and the urge we all get when we hear that notification in our pocket. Maybe what we need when we see friends is the equivalent of those PSAs before movies telling you to turn off your cell phones. Then you can all go down to the lobby and get yourselves a treat.
 

 

 

Who needs a vaccine when there’s horse paste?

It’s not the first time, and it won’t be the last, that some people think they know best when it comes to COVID-19 safety.

Mario Olaya/Pixabay

What is the newest “trend” for prevention and treatment? Enter, ivermectin, a Food and Drug Administration–approved drug for treating conditions caused by parasitic worms. The prescription form is hard to find these days, so some folks have been “raiding rural tractor supply stores in search of ivermectin horse paste (packed with ‘apple flavor’!) and [weighing] the benefits of taking ivermectin ‘sheep drench’,” according to the Daily Beast.

The FDA does not condone the use of ivermectin for COVID-19 and warns that the types meant for animals can be harmful to humans if taken in large doses. Facebook has played its part, as groups are forming to share conflicting information about how the drug can be used for COVID-19. The medication often comes from sketchy sources, and it’s seemingly causing more harm than good. Pharmacies are even starting to treat ivermectin as if it’s an opioid.

“My ‘horse’ had no negative side effects, and now he tells me he feels like a million bucks and is now COVID free,” one social media poster wrote in code, according to the Daily Beast.
 

When the card fits, COVID-19 will take a hit

Good news! We have figured out the problem behind the whole COVID-19 vaccine-denial business.

Richard Franki/MDedge

And by “we,” of course, we mean someone else. But we’re telling you about it, and isn’t that really the important part?

Anyway, back to the problem. It’s not the vaccines themselves, it’s the vaccine cards. They’re the wrong size.

The Atlantic’s Amanda Mull explains: “When I got my first shot, in late February, I sat in the mandatory waiting area, holding my new card in one hand and my wallet in the other, trying to understand why the two objects weren’t compatible.”

She didn’t get very far with the CDC, but Chelsea Cirruzzo, a public-health reporter at U.S. News & World Report who has been tweeting about the vaccine cards, suggested that “someone just printed out a bunch of cards that are easy to write your name and vaccine brand on, without thinking about wallets.”

The evidence does fit the nobody-really-gave-it-any-thought argument. The template was available to the public on some state government websites when the vaccine was approved and can still be found on Florida’s, Ms. Mull notes. “Try to imagine governments freely distributing their templates for driver’s licenses, passports, or other documents intended to certify a particular identity or status.” The FBI, we understand, frowns upon this sort of thing.

Well, there you have it, America. When the card fits in a wallet, the vaccine problem will go away. Just remember where you read it, not where we read it.

 

Killer babies and their aging mommies

The joys of new parenthood are endless, like the long nights and functioning on 4 hours of sleep. But those babies sure are sweet, and deadly. That’s right, little Johnny junior is shaving years off of your life.

LWA/Dann Tardif/Getty Images

Investigators at the University of California, Los Angeles, found that new mothers who slept less than 7 hours a night 6 months after giving birth were, biologically, 3-7 years older than were those who slept 7 or more hours. But hold on, that doesn’t mean mothers need to update their driver licenses. There’s a difference between biological and chronological age.

Biological aging is measured by epigenetics, which analyzes changes in DNA over time by determining whether coding for certain proteins is turned on or off. The process acts as a sort of clock, lead author Judith E. Carroll, PhD, said in a separate statement, allowing scientists to estimate a person’s biological age.

Although loss of sleep may accelerate biological aging and increase health risks, the researchers don’t want people to think that lack of sleep during infant care is going to automatically cause permanent damage. The jury is still out on whether the effects are long lasting. Instead, they emphasized the importance of prioritizing sleep needs and getting some help from others to do it.

“With every hour of additional sleep, the mother’s biological age was younger,” Dr. Carroll said. “I, and many other sleep scientists, consider sleep health to be just as vital to overall health as diet and exercise.”

So, new moms, fix that gourmet dinner after you go for that run because you’re already up at 4 a.m. anyway. It’s all about balance.
 

Me and my phone-y phriends

It’s been months since you’ve seen your friends in person. You got your vaccine and so, after all this time, you can finally meet with your friends in real life. No more Zoom. It’s a strange dream come true.

nemke/E+

The problem is that half your friends barely seem interested, spending much of your time together staring at their phones. Naturally, there’s a clever term for this: You’ve just been the victim of phubbing, specifically friend phubbing or fphubbing (we’re not sure there are enough “f” sounds at the beginning of that word), and it’s been the focus of a new study from the University of Georgia.

So who are these fphubbers? Researchers found that neurotic and depressed individuals are more likely to fphub, as were those with social anxiety, since they may actually prefer online interaction over face-to-face conversation. On the flip side, people with agreeable traits were less likely to fphub, as they felt doing so would be rude and impolite. Quite a bold stance right there, we know.

The researchers noted the complete ordinariness of people pulling their phones out while with friends, and the rapid acceptance of something many people may still consider rude. It could speak to casual smartphone addiction and the urge we all get when we hear that notification in our pocket. Maybe what we need when we see friends is the equivalent of those PSAs before movies telling you to turn off your cell phones. Then you can all go down to the lobby and get yourselves a treat.
 

 

 

Who needs a vaccine when there’s horse paste?

It’s not the first time, and it won’t be the last, that some people think they know best when it comes to COVID-19 safety.

Mario Olaya/Pixabay

What is the newest “trend” for prevention and treatment? Enter, ivermectin, a Food and Drug Administration–approved drug for treating conditions caused by parasitic worms. The prescription form is hard to find these days, so some folks have been “raiding rural tractor supply stores in search of ivermectin horse paste (packed with ‘apple flavor’!) and [weighing] the benefits of taking ivermectin ‘sheep drench’,” according to the Daily Beast.

The FDA does not condone the use of ivermectin for COVID-19 and warns that the types meant for animals can be harmful to humans if taken in large doses. Facebook has played its part, as groups are forming to share conflicting information about how the drug can be used for COVID-19. The medication often comes from sketchy sources, and it’s seemingly causing more harm than good. Pharmacies are even starting to treat ivermectin as if it’s an opioid.

“My ‘horse’ had no negative side effects, and now he tells me he feels like a million bucks and is now COVID free,” one social media poster wrote in code, according to the Daily Beast.
 

When the card fits, COVID-19 will take a hit

Good news! We have figured out the problem behind the whole COVID-19 vaccine-denial business.

Richard Franki/MDedge

And by “we,” of course, we mean someone else. But we’re telling you about it, and isn’t that really the important part?

Anyway, back to the problem. It’s not the vaccines themselves, it’s the vaccine cards. They’re the wrong size.

The Atlantic’s Amanda Mull explains: “When I got my first shot, in late February, I sat in the mandatory waiting area, holding my new card in one hand and my wallet in the other, trying to understand why the two objects weren’t compatible.”

She didn’t get very far with the CDC, but Chelsea Cirruzzo, a public-health reporter at U.S. News & World Report who has been tweeting about the vaccine cards, suggested that “someone just printed out a bunch of cards that are easy to write your name and vaccine brand on, without thinking about wallets.”

The evidence does fit the nobody-really-gave-it-any-thought argument. The template was available to the public on some state government websites when the vaccine was approved and can still be found on Florida’s, Ms. Mull notes. “Try to imagine governments freely distributing their templates for driver’s licenses, passports, or other documents intended to certify a particular identity or status.” The FBI, we understand, frowns upon this sort of thing.

Well, there you have it, America. When the card fits in a wallet, the vaccine problem will go away. Just remember where you read it, not where we read it.

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Opioid prescribing laws having an impact

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Changed
Thu, 08/12/2021 - 12:55

State laws capping initial opioid prescriptions to 7 days or less have led to a reduction in opioid prescribing, a new analysis of Medicare data shows.

While overall opioid prescribing has decreased, the reduction in states with legislation restricting opioid prescribing was “significantly greater than in states without such legislation,” study investigator Michael Brenner, MD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, said in an interview.

The study was published online August 9 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
 

Significant but limited effect

Because of rising concern around the opioid crisis, 23 states representing 43% of the U.S. population passed laws from 2016 through 2018 limiting initial opioid prescription to 7 days or less.

Using Medicare data from 2013 through 2018, Dr. Brenner and colleagues conducted a before-and-after study to assess the effect of these laws.

They found that on average, the number of days an opioid was prescribed for each Medicare beneficiary decreased by 11.6 days (from 44.2 days in 2013 to 32.7 days in 2018) in states that imposed duration limits, compared with 10.1 days in states without these laws (from 43.4 days in 2013 to 33.3 days in 2018).

Prior to the start of duration limits in 2016, days an opioid was prescribed were comparable among states.

After adjusting for state-level differences in race, urbanization, median income, tobacco and alcohol use, serious mental illness, and other factors, state laws limiting opioid prescriptions to 7 days or less were associated with a reduction in prescribing of 1.7 days per enrollee, “suggesting a significant but limited outcome” for these laws, the researchers note.

The largest decrease in opioid prescribing occurred in primary care, but this was not significantly different in states with limit laws versus those without. However, state laws limiting duration led to a significant reduction in days of opioid prescribed among surgeons, dentists, pain specialists, and other specialists.
 

Inadequate pain control?

The researchers note the study was limited to Medicare beneficiaries; however, excess opioid prescribing is prevalent across all patient populations.

In addition, it’s not possible to tell from the data whether acute pain was adequately controlled with fewer pills.

“The question of adequacy of pain control is a crucial one that has been investigated extensively in prior work but was not possible to evaluate in this particular study,” said Dr. Brenner.

However, “ample evidence supports a role for reducing opioid prescribing and that such reduction can be achieved while ensuring that pain is adequately controlled with fewer pills,” he noted.

“A persistent misconception is that opioids are uniquely powerful and effective for controlling pain. Patients may perceive that effective analgesia is being withheld when opioids are not included in a regimen,” Dr. Brenner added.

“Yet, the evidence from meta-analyses derived from large numbers of randomized clinical trials finds that [nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs] NSAIDS combined with acetaminophen provide similar or improved acute pain when compared to commonly prescribed opioid regimens, based on number-needed-to-treat analyses,” he added.

In a related editorial, Deborah Grady, MD, MPH, with University of California, San Francisco, and Mitchell H. Katz, MD, president and CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals, say the decrease in opioid prescribing with duration limits was “small but probably meaningful.” 

Restricting initial prescriptions to seven or fewer days is “reasonable because patients with new onset of pain should be re-evaluated in a week if the pain continues,” they write. 

However, Dr. Grady and Dr. Katz “worry” that restricting initial prescriptions to shorter periods, such as 3 or 5 days, as has occurred in six states, “may result in patients with acute pain going untreated or having to go to extraordinary effort to obtain adequate pain relief.”

In their view, the data from this study suggest that limiting initial prescriptions to seven or fewer days is “helpful, but we would not restrict any further given that we do not know how it affected patients with acute pain.”

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Brenner, Dr. Grady, and Dr. Katz have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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State laws capping initial opioid prescriptions to 7 days or less have led to a reduction in opioid prescribing, a new analysis of Medicare data shows.

While overall opioid prescribing has decreased, the reduction in states with legislation restricting opioid prescribing was “significantly greater than in states without such legislation,” study investigator Michael Brenner, MD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, said in an interview.

The study was published online August 9 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
 

Significant but limited effect

Because of rising concern around the opioid crisis, 23 states representing 43% of the U.S. population passed laws from 2016 through 2018 limiting initial opioid prescription to 7 days or less.

Using Medicare data from 2013 through 2018, Dr. Brenner and colleagues conducted a before-and-after study to assess the effect of these laws.

They found that on average, the number of days an opioid was prescribed for each Medicare beneficiary decreased by 11.6 days (from 44.2 days in 2013 to 32.7 days in 2018) in states that imposed duration limits, compared with 10.1 days in states without these laws (from 43.4 days in 2013 to 33.3 days in 2018).

Prior to the start of duration limits in 2016, days an opioid was prescribed were comparable among states.

After adjusting for state-level differences in race, urbanization, median income, tobacco and alcohol use, serious mental illness, and other factors, state laws limiting opioid prescriptions to 7 days or less were associated with a reduction in prescribing of 1.7 days per enrollee, “suggesting a significant but limited outcome” for these laws, the researchers note.

The largest decrease in opioid prescribing occurred in primary care, but this was not significantly different in states with limit laws versus those without. However, state laws limiting duration led to a significant reduction in days of opioid prescribed among surgeons, dentists, pain specialists, and other specialists.
 

Inadequate pain control?

The researchers note the study was limited to Medicare beneficiaries; however, excess opioid prescribing is prevalent across all patient populations.

In addition, it’s not possible to tell from the data whether acute pain was adequately controlled with fewer pills.

“The question of adequacy of pain control is a crucial one that has been investigated extensively in prior work but was not possible to evaluate in this particular study,” said Dr. Brenner.

However, “ample evidence supports a role for reducing opioid prescribing and that such reduction can be achieved while ensuring that pain is adequately controlled with fewer pills,” he noted.

“A persistent misconception is that opioids are uniquely powerful and effective for controlling pain. Patients may perceive that effective analgesia is being withheld when opioids are not included in a regimen,” Dr. Brenner added.

“Yet, the evidence from meta-analyses derived from large numbers of randomized clinical trials finds that [nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs] NSAIDS combined with acetaminophen provide similar or improved acute pain when compared to commonly prescribed opioid regimens, based on number-needed-to-treat analyses,” he added.

In a related editorial, Deborah Grady, MD, MPH, with University of California, San Francisco, and Mitchell H. Katz, MD, president and CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals, say the decrease in opioid prescribing with duration limits was “small but probably meaningful.” 

Restricting initial prescriptions to seven or fewer days is “reasonable because patients with new onset of pain should be re-evaluated in a week if the pain continues,” they write. 

However, Dr. Grady and Dr. Katz “worry” that restricting initial prescriptions to shorter periods, such as 3 or 5 days, as has occurred in six states, “may result in patients with acute pain going untreated or having to go to extraordinary effort to obtain adequate pain relief.”

In their view, the data from this study suggest that limiting initial prescriptions to seven or fewer days is “helpful, but we would not restrict any further given that we do not know how it affected patients with acute pain.”

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Brenner, Dr. Grady, and Dr. Katz have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

State laws capping initial opioid prescriptions to 7 days or less have led to a reduction in opioid prescribing, a new analysis of Medicare data shows.

While overall opioid prescribing has decreased, the reduction in states with legislation restricting opioid prescribing was “significantly greater than in states without such legislation,” study investigator Michael Brenner, MD, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, said in an interview.

The study was published online August 9 in JAMA Internal Medicine.
 

Significant but limited effect

Because of rising concern around the opioid crisis, 23 states representing 43% of the U.S. population passed laws from 2016 through 2018 limiting initial opioid prescription to 7 days or less.

Using Medicare data from 2013 through 2018, Dr. Brenner and colleagues conducted a before-and-after study to assess the effect of these laws.

They found that on average, the number of days an opioid was prescribed for each Medicare beneficiary decreased by 11.6 days (from 44.2 days in 2013 to 32.7 days in 2018) in states that imposed duration limits, compared with 10.1 days in states without these laws (from 43.4 days in 2013 to 33.3 days in 2018).

Prior to the start of duration limits in 2016, days an opioid was prescribed were comparable among states.

After adjusting for state-level differences in race, urbanization, median income, tobacco and alcohol use, serious mental illness, and other factors, state laws limiting opioid prescriptions to 7 days or less were associated with a reduction in prescribing of 1.7 days per enrollee, “suggesting a significant but limited outcome” for these laws, the researchers note.

The largest decrease in opioid prescribing occurred in primary care, but this was not significantly different in states with limit laws versus those without. However, state laws limiting duration led to a significant reduction in days of opioid prescribed among surgeons, dentists, pain specialists, and other specialists.
 

Inadequate pain control?

The researchers note the study was limited to Medicare beneficiaries; however, excess opioid prescribing is prevalent across all patient populations.

In addition, it’s not possible to tell from the data whether acute pain was adequately controlled with fewer pills.

“The question of adequacy of pain control is a crucial one that has been investigated extensively in prior work but was not possible to evaluate in this particular study,” said Dr. Brenner.

However, “ample evidence supports a role for reducing opioid prescribing and that such reduction can be achieved while ensuring that pain is adequately controlled with fewer pills,” he noted.

“A persistent misconception is that opioids are uniquely powerful and effective for controlling pain. Patients may perceive that effective analgesia is being withheld when opioids are not included in a regimen,” Dr. Brenner added.

“Yet, the evidence from meta-analyses derived from large numbers of randomized clinical trials finds that [nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs] NSAIDS combined with acetaminophen provide similar or improved acute pain when compared to commonly prescribed opioid regimens, based on number-needed-to-treat analyses,” he added.

In a related editorial, Deborah Grady, MD, MPH, with University of California, San Francisco, and Mitchell H. Katz, MD, president and CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals, say the decrease in opioid prescribing with duration limits was “small but probably meaningful.” 

Restricting initial prescriptions to seven or fewer days is “reasonable because patients with new onset of pain should be re-evaluated in a week if the pain continues,” they write. 

However, Dr. Grady and Dr. Katz “worry” that restricting initial prescriptions to shorter periods, such as 3 or 5 days, as has occurred in six states, “may result in patients with acute pain going untreated or having to go to extraordinary effort to obtain adequate pain relief.”

In their view, the data from this study suggest that limiting initial prescriptions to seven or fewer days is “helpful, but we would not restrict any further given that we do not know how it affected patients with acute pain.”

The study had no specific funding. Dr. Brenner, Dr. Grady, and Dr. Katz have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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