Dora Anne Mills, MD, MPH The View from Maine Sept 17, 2023 Respiratory Viral Season: Fall 2023 Edition Below is an overview, recommendations, and common questions related to this year’s respiratory viral season. At the very end are links to references with more information, in order by topic as they appear below. Last week, the US FDA and US CDC issued approvals and recommendations for the updated fall 2023 COVID-19 vaccine. Everyone 6 months of age and older is recommended to receive the updated COVID-19 vaccine as well as an annual influenza vaccine. Both vaccines are updated and formulated to protect against the strains that are circulating and/or predicted to circulate this fall and winter. One of the main lessons we’ve learned from the pandemic has been the importance of taking some simple steps during respiratory viral season, which is the fall and winter, when we more commonly see influenza, RSV, and other respiratory viruses. Although we don’...
from the Pioneer Woman 36 Best New Year's Traditions to Ring in 2024 Raise your glass to new beginnings! BY REBECCA NORRIS Published: Dec 15, 2023 New Year's Eve is a time to reflect on the past year, embrace the present, and look forward to the year ahead. Folks all over the world have New Year's traditions they enjoy each year alongside family and friends—whether it's watching the New Year's Eve ball drop in Times Square, coming up with New Year's resolutions , or whipping up a traditional meal of good luck foods . There are so many ways to celebrate, and many of them can even be done from the comfort of your couch. If you're not feeling up to attending or hosting a New Year's Eve party , you could always take a cue from Ree and Ladd Drummond—one year, they ditched their fancy New Year's Eve dinner plans in lieu of staying home and watching movies and football. That doesn't sound like a bad way to spend an evening! For m...
Thanks to Carolyn Elliott-Farino for this contribution! Trump won. Is NIH in for a major shake-up? Congress might serve as a bulwark, but some changes may be coming by Joeclyn Kaiser Former President Donald Trump’s win in yesterday’s U.S. presidential election—along with major changes in the makeup of Congress—will mean sweeping policy actions on everything from immigration to trade. For many U.S. scientists, one big question is whether the new administration will dramatically retool the world’s largest biomedical research agency, the $47 billion National Institutes of Health (NIH), which is responsible for roughly half of all federal spending on basic science. Republicans had NIH in their sights even before the election, with proposals to restructure it and restrict some areas of research. Trump’s embrace of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. , a vaccine skeptic, has also unsettled researchers. Trump has said he will let Kennedy “go wild on” health, medicines, and food policy. “We’re de...
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