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Tuesday, January 31, 2023

ChatGPT owner launches 'imperfect' tool to detect AI-generated text

 OpenAI, the creator of the popular chatbot ChatGTP, has released a software tool to identify text generated by artificial intelligence, the company said in a blog post on Wednesday.

ChatGPT is a free program that generates textin response to a prompt, including articles, essays, jokes and even poetry, which has gained wide popularity since its debut in November, while raising concerns about copyright and plagiarism.

The AI classifier, a language model trained on the dataset of pairs of human-written and AI-written text on the same topic, aims to distinguish text that is written by AI. It uses a variety of providers to address issues such as automated misinformation campaigns and academic dishonesty, the company said.

In its public beta mode, OpenAI acknowledges the detection tool is very unreliable on texts under 1,000 characters, and AI-written text can be edited to trick the classifier.

"We’re making this classifier publicly available to get feedback on whether imperfect tools like this one are useful," OpenAI said.

“We recognize that identifying AI-written text has been an important point of discussion among educators, and equally important is recognizing the limits and impacts of AI generated text classifiers in the classroom."

Since ChatGPT debuted in November and gained wide popularity among millions of users, some of the largest U.S. school districts, including New York City, have banned the AI chatbot over concerns that students will use the text generator to cheat or plagiarize.

Others have created third-party detection tools including GPTZeroX to help educators detect AI-generated text.

OpenAI said it is engaging with educators to discuss ChatGPT's capabilities and limitations, and will continue to work on the detection of AI-generated text.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/chatgpt-owner-launches-imperfect-tool-222639232.html

Canadian province tries decriminalizing drugs to fight overdose crisis

 The western Canadian province of British Columbia on Tuesday began a three-year pilot program to stop prosecuting people for carrying small amounts of heroin, meth, ecstasy, or crack cocaine, as part of an effort to fight a drug overdose crisis.

B.C. accounts for about a third of the 32,000 deaths due to overdose and trafficking nationally since 2016, according to official data. The province declared drug overdose a public health emergency that year.

The problem worsened with the COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted illicit drug supply chains as well support services, leaving people with more toxic drugs that they used alone.

Preliminary data released Tuesday by the province showed there were 2,272 suspected illicit drug toxicity deaths in 2022, the second largest annual number ever recorded, behind 2021, which had 34 more deaths.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government said in May it would let B.C. decriminalize the drugs in a first-of-its-kind exemption in Canada. By not prosecuting people carrying small amounts of drugs, the B.C. government hopes to tackle the issue as a health problem rather than through the criminal justice system.

The province says the exemption is intended to reduce the stigma associated with substance use and to make it easier for people to approach authorities for guidance.

Robert Schwartz, a professor at the University of Toronto, said the measure was commendable as a first step, but that more needed to be done to tackle the drug problem.

"The problem that we have with these substances is that we have a huge, illicit supply that's causing great harm," Schwartz said. "To really deal with this, we need a comprehensive public health approach. This decriminalization, it's a first step."

The drugs on the exemption list, which also includes fentanyl and other opioids, remain illegal and the exemption from arrest is only for possession of up to 2.5 grams for personal use.

South Korea slides toward recession as Jan exports plunge

 South Korea's economy inched toward its first recession in three years as data on Wednesday showed its January trade deficit soared to a record thanks to a plunge in exports caused by a combination of long holidays and cooling global demand.

Asia's fourth-largest economy, which relies heavily on trade for growth, shrank by 0.4% in the October-December quarter and is now on the brink of falling into what would be its first recession since the middle of 2020 during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Exports fell 16.6% in January from a year earlier, trade ministry data showed, worse than an 11.3% decline predicted in a Reuters survey and the fastest drop in exports since May 2020.

Imports fell 2.6% compared with a year earlier, less than a 3.6% drop predicted in the survey. As a result, the country posted a monthly trade deficit of $12.69 billion, setting a record amount for any month.

"I have a zero percent forecast for the first-quarter growth but today's trade figures are definitely a minus to that," said Park Sang-hyun, economist at HI Investment and Securities.

The increasing chances of recession - two consecutive quarters of decline in gross domestic product - also underscore growing bets in markets that the central bank's campaign of raising interest rates since late 2021 has run its course.

Leading the sluggish trade performance in January were a 44.5% dive in semiconductor exports and a whopping 31.4% plunge in sales to China, the trade ministry data showed.

Both were the worst rates of decline since the 2008/2009 global financial crisis.

South Korean bond yields fell across the board on the growing bets for a less restrictive monetary policy ahead, while stock and currency investors largely shrugged off the monthly figures.

Finance Minister Choo Kyung-ho blamed long lunar New Year holidays in China and a steep fall in computer chip prices versus a year ago for the sharp declines in export values, adding China's reopening would help ease the situation over time.

"The government will mobilise all available policy resources to help support a drive to boost exports so that the timing of improvement in trade balance can be advanced," Choo said at a meeting of trade-related officials, without elaborating.

The government has forecast this year's exports would fall 4.5% after posting a 6.1% gain in 2022, and the trade ministry has said it would do what it can to avert a decline.

https://sports.yahoo.com/1-south-korea-jan-exports-001849763.html

U.S. readies $2 billion-plus Ukraine aid package with longer-range weapons -sources

 The United States is readying more than $2 billion worth of military aid for Ukraine that is expected to include longer-range rockets for the first time as well as other munitions and weapons, two U.S. officials briefed on the matter told Reuters on Tuesday.

The aid is expected to be announced as soon as this week, the officials said. It is also expected to include support equipment for Patriot air defense systems, precision-guided munitions and Javelin anti-tank weapons, they added.

One of the officials said a portion of the package, expected to be $1.725 billion, would come from a fund known as the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI), which allows President Joe Biden's administration to get weapons from industry rather than from U.S. weapons stocks.

The USAI funds would go toward the purchase of a new weapon, the Ground Launched Small Diameter Bomb (GLSDB) made by Boeing Co, which have a range of 94 miles (150 km). The United States has rebuffed Ukraine's requests for the 185-mile (297-km) range ATACMS missile.

The longer range of the GLSDB glide bomb could allow Ukraine to hit targets that have been out of reach and help it continue pressing its counterattacks by disrupting Russia further behind its lines.

Reuters first reported on Boeing's proposal to field GLSDB for Ukraine in November. At the time it was expected GLSDB could be in Ukraine by spring.

GLSDB is made jointly by SAAB AB and Boeing. It combines the GBU-39 Small Diameter Bomb (SDB) with the M26 rocket motor, both of which are common in U.S. inventories.

GLSDB is GPS-guided, can defeat some electronic jamming, is usable in all weather conditions, and can be used against armored vehicles, according to SAAB's website. The GBU-39 - which would function as the GLSDB's warhead - has small, folding wings that allow it to glide more than 100km if dropped from an aircraft and hit targets as small as 3 feet (1 meter) in diameter.


Hedge Funds Push Chinese Holdings Close to Record

 By Ye Xie, Bloomberg Markets Live reporter and analyst

Despite the world-beating rally in Chinese assets, positioning data show a clear dichotomy among investors’ views on the nation.

While hedge funds have boosted their exposure to Chinese stocks to near an all-time high again, mutual funds – which tend to have a longer-term investment horizon — remain significantly underweight, according to Goldman Sachs. Such a divergence shows that Chinese assets are viewed only as a three-month “trade,” rather than a three-year “investment.”

China’s manufacturing and services survey data Tuesday confirmed that the economy is bouncing back. The International Monetary Fund also raised China’s growth forecast this year by 0.8 percentage point to 5.2%, making it one of few major economies that may see growth accelerate this year.

With the economy healing, it’s not surprising that foreign investors are scooping up Chinese stocks hand over fist. The inflow into equities via the stock connect in January reached a record $21 billion, already exceeding the influx for the whole year of 2022.

But a closer look under the hood suggests a deep split between different types of investors. Hedge funds, who tend to be nimble, have increased their net exposure to Chinese stocks to 13%, from about 7% late last year, according to data from Goldman Sachs’s Prime Services unit. That isn’t far away from a peak of 15% in 2020, just before Beijing started cracking down on tech companies.

In comparison, while global mutual funds’ holding of Chinese stocks has increased to 8% from 6%, they still are  underweight China by 420 basis points relative to their benchmarks, as of December. The current position ranks in the 19th percentile over the past decade, analysts including Sunil Koul wrote in a note.

Source: Goldman Sachs

There’s also a divergence between investors in different regions: the further away from China, the more cautious they are.

The divergence, perhaps, comes down to cyclical versus structural views. After all, China can only “re-open” once. It’s a nice trade that fast money is willing to chase. But as life returns to normal, Beijing needs to grapple with the same long-term problems, including a bloated real estate industry, a shrinking population and increasing geopolitical tensions.

On Tuesday, Bloomberg reported that Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan has halted direct investing in private assets in China. Separately, the Biden administration is considering cutting off Huawei Technologies from all of its American suppliers.

Hedge funds are enjoying the reopening party, for now. For deep-pocketed, long-term investors, though, China remains “uninvestable.”


'Time For The Scientific Community To Admit We Were Wrong About COVID & It Cost Lives'

 Real "mea culpa", ongoing and rapid revision of history, or further narrative management with regard 'amnesty' over what "the others" did to those who thought for themselves over the last few years..

In no less a liberal rag than Newsweek, Kevin Bass (MS MD/PHD Student, Medical School) has penned a quite surprising (and 'brave') op-ed saying that "it's time for the scientific community to admit we were wrong about COVID and it cost lives..."

[ZH: emphasis ours]

As a medical student and researcher, I staunchly supported the efforts of the public health authorities when it came to COVID-19.

I believed that the authorities responded to the largest public health crisis of our lives with compassion, diligence, and scientific expertise. I was with them when they called for lockdowns, vaccines, and boosters.

I was wrong. We in the scientific community were wrong. And it cost lives.

I can see now that the scientific community from the CDC to the WHO to the FDA and their representatives, repeatedly overstated the evidence and misled the public about its own views and policies, including on natural vs. artificial immunityschool closures and disease transmissionaerosol spreadmask mandates, and vaccine effectiveness and safety, especially among the young. All of these were scientific mistakes at the time, not in hindsight. Amazingly, some of these obfuscations continue to the present day.

But perhaps more important than any individual error was how inherently flawed the overall approach of the scientific community was, and continues to be. It was flawed in a way that undermined its efficacy and resulted in thousands if not millions of preventable deaths.

What we did not properly appreciate is that preferences determine how scientific expertise is used, and that our preferences might be—indeed, our preferences were—very different from many of the people that we serve. We created policy based on our preferences, then justified it using data. And then we portrayed those opposing our efforts as misguided, ignorant, selfish, and evil.

We made science a team sport, and in so doing, we made it no longer science. It became us versus them, and "they" responded the only way anyone might expect them to: by resisting.

We excluded important parts of the population from policy development and castigated critics, which meant that we deployed a monolithic response across an exceptionally diverse nation, forged a society more fractured than ever, and exacerbated longstanding heath and economic disparities.

A students adjusts her facemask at St. Joseph Catholic School in La Puente, California on November 16, 2020, where pre-kindergarten to Second Grade students in need of special services returned to the classroom today for in-person instruction. - The campus is the second Catholic school in Los Angeles County to receive a waiver approval to reopen as the coronavirus pandemic rages on. The US surpassed 11 million coronavirus cases Sunday, adding one million new cases in less than a week, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.FREDERIC J. BROWN / AFP

Our emotional response and ingrained partisanship prevented us from seeing the full impact of our actions on the people we are supposed to serve. We systematically minimized the downsides of the interventions we imposed—imposed without the input, consent, and recognition of those forced to live with them. In so doing, we violated the autonomy of those who would be most negatively impacted by our policies: the poor, the working class, small business owners, Blacks and Latinos, and children. These populations were overlooked because they were made invisible to us by their systematic exclusion from the dominant, corporatized media machine that presumed omniscience.

Most of us did not speak up in support of alternative views, and many of us tried to suppress them. When strong scientific voices like world-renowned Stanford professors John Ioannidis, Jay Bhattacharya, and Scott Atlas, or University of California San Francisco professors Vinay Prasad and Monica Gandhi, sounded the alarm on behalf of vulnerable communities, they faced severe censure by relentless mobs of critics and detractors in the scientific community—often not on the basis of fact but solely on the basis of differences in scientific opinion.

When former President Trump pointed out the downsides of intervention, he was dismissed publicly as a buffoon. And when Dr. Antony Fauci opposed Trump and became the hero of the public health community, we gave him our support to do and say what he wanted, even when he was wrong.

Trump was not remotely perfect, nor were the academic critics of consensus policy. But the scorn that we laid on them was a disaster for public trust in the pandemic response. Our approach alienated large segments of the population from what should have been a national, collaborative project.

And we paid the price. The rage of the those marginalized by the expert class exploded onto and dominated social media. Lacking the scientific lexicon to express their disagreement, many dissidents turned to conspiracy theories and a cottage industry of scientific contortionists to make their case against the expert class consensus that dominated the pandemic mainstream. Labeling this speech "misinformation" and blaming it on "scientific illiteracy" and "ignorance," the government conspired with Big Tech to aggressively suppress it, erasing the valid political concerns of the government's opponents.

And this despite the fact that pandemic policy was created by a razor-thin sliver of American society who anointed themselves to preside over the working class—members of academia, government, medicine, journalism, tech, and public health, who are highly educated and privileged. From the comfort of their privilege, this elite prizes paternalism, as opposed to average Americans who laud self-reliance and whose daily lives routinely demand that they reckon with risk. That many of our leaders neglected to consider the lived experience of those across the class divide is unconscionable.

Incomprehensible to us due to this class divide, we severely judged lockdown critics as lazy, backwards, even evil. We dismissed as "grifters" those who represented their interests. We believed "misinformation" energized the ignorant, and we refused to accept that such people simply had a different, valid point of view.

We crafted policy for the people without consulting them. If our public health officials had led with less hubris, the course of the pandemic in the United States might have had a very different outcome, with far fewer lost lives.

Instead, we have witnessed a massive and ongoing loss of life in America due to distrust of vaccines and the healthcare systema massive concentration in wealth by already wealthy elitesa rise in suicides and gun violence especially among the poor; a near-doubling of the rate of depression and anxiety disorders especially among the younga catastrophic loss of educational attainment among already disadvantaged children; and among those most vulnerable, a massive loss of trust in healthcarescience, scientific authorities, and political leaders more broadly.

My motivation for writing this is simple:

It's clear to me that for public trust to be restored in science, scientists should publicly discuss what went right and what went wrong during the pandemic, and where we could have done better.

It's OK to be wrong and admit where one was wrong and what one learned. That's a central part of the way science works. Yet I fear that many are too entrenched in groupthink—and too afraid to publicly take responsibility—to do this.

Solving these problems in the long term requires a greater commitment to pluralism and tolerance in our institutions, including the inclusion of critical if unpopular voices.

Intellectual elitism, credentialism, and classism must end. Restoring trust in public health—and our democracy—depends on it.

The problem was not people's ignorance of the facts, it was the organized antagonism and censorship against anyone presenting data that was contradictory to the mandate agenda. This is setting aside proclamations like those from the LA Times, which argued that mocking the deaths of "anti-vaxxers" might be necessary and justified.  After two years of this type of arrogant nonsense it's hard to imagine people will be willing to pretend as if all is well.

The active effort to shut down any opposing data is the root crime, though, and no, it can never be forgotten or forgiven.

People are still livid...

One cannot help but notice that the timing of the Atlantic's appeal for passive forgetfulness and now this op-ed mea culpa coincides with the swiftly approaching end of the COVID emergency declarations, amid a growing political backlash to the last two years of meaningless lockdowns and mandates, and Democrats were instrumental in the implementation of both.  A large swath of the population sees one party as the cause of much of their covid era strife.  

Perhaps the mainstream media is suddenly realizing that they may have to face some payback for their covid zealotry?  “We didn't know! We were just following orders!”  It all sounds rather familiar.

https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/its-time-scientific-community-admit-we-were-wrong-about-covid-it-cost-lives

Similar Brain Atrophy in Obesity and Alzheimer's Disease

 Brain atrophy patterns are similar in individuals with obesity and those with Alzheimer's disease (AD), a new study shows.

Comparisons of MRI scans for more than 1000 participants indicate correlations between the two conditions, especially in areas of gray matter thinning, suggesting that managing excess weight might slow cognitive decline and lower the risk for AD, according to the researchers.

However, brain maps of obesity did not correlate with maps of amyloid or tau protein accumulation.

Dr Filip Morys

"The fact that obesity-related brain atrophy did not correlate with the distribution of amyloid and tau proteins in AD was not what we expected," study author Filip Morys, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, told Medscape Medical News. "But it might just show that the specific mechanisms underpinning obesity- and Alzheimer's-disease-related neurodegeneration are different. This remains to be confirmed."

The study was published today in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.

Cortical Thinning

The current study was prompted by the team's earlier study, which showed that obesity-related neurodegeneration patterns were visually similar to those of AD, said Morys. "It was known previously that obesity is a risk factor for AD, but we wanted to directly compare brain atrophy patterns in both, which is what we did in this new study."

The researchers analyzed data from a pooled sample of more than 1300 participants. From the ADNI database, the researchers selected participants with AD and age- and sex-matched cognitively healthy controls. From the UK Biobank, the researchers drew a sample of lean, overweight, and obese participants without neurologic disease.

To determine how the weight status of patients with AD affects the correspondence between AD and obesity maps, they categorized participants with AD and healthy controls from the ADNI database into lean, overweight, and obese subgroups.

Then, to investigate mechanisms that might drive the similarities between obesity-related brain atrophy and AD-related amyloid-beta accumulation, they looked for overlapping areas in PET brain maps between patients with these outcomes.

The investigations showed that obesity maps were highly correlated with AD maps, but not with amyloid-beta or tau protein maps. The researchers also found significant correlations between obesity and the lean individuals with AD.

Brain regions with the highest similarities between obesity and AD were located mainly in the left temporal and bilateral prefrontal cortices.

"Our research confirms that obesity-related grey matter atrophy resembles that of AD," the authors conclude. "Excess weight management could lead to improved health outcomes, slow down cognitive decline in aging, and lower the risk for AD."

Upcoming research "will focus on investigating how weight loss can affect the risk for AD, other dementias, and cognitive decline in general," said Morys. "At this point, our study suggests that obesity prevention, weight loss, but also decreasing other metabolic risk factors related to obesity, such as type-2 diabetes or hypertension, might reduce the risk for AD and have beneficial effects on cognition."

Lifestyle Habits

Dr Claire Sexton

Commenting on the findings for Medscape, Claire Sexton, DPhil, vice president of scientific programs and outreach at the Alzheimer's Association, cautioned that a single cross-sectional study isn't conclusive. "Previous studies have illustrated that the relationship between obesity and dementia is complex. Growing evidence indicates that people can reduce their risk of cognitive decline by adopting key lifestyle habits, like regular exercise, a heart-healthy diet and staying socially and cognitively engaged."

The Alzheimer's Association is leading a 2-year clinical trial, U.S. Pointer, to study how targeting these risk factors in combination may reduce risk for cognitive decline in older adults.

The work was supported by a Foundation Scheme award from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Morys received a postdoctoral fellowship from Fonds de Recherche du Quebec – Santé. Data collection and sharing were funded by the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, the National Institute on Aging, the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, and multiple pharmaceutical companies and other private sector organizations. Morys and Sexton reported no relevant financial relationships.

J Alz Dis. Published online January 31, 2022. Full text

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/987704

It's 'Telehealth vs No Care'

 When the covid-19 pandemic hit, Dr. Corey Siegel was more prepared than most of his peers.

Half of Siegel's patients — many with private insurance and Medicaid — were already using telehealth, logging onto appointments through phones or computers. "You get to meet their family members; you get to meet their pets," Siegel said. "You see more into their lives than you do when they come to you."

Siegel's Medicare patients weren't covered for telehealth visits until the pandemic drove Congress and regulators to temporarily pay for remote medical treatment just as they would in-person care.

Siegel, section chief for gastroenterology and hepatology at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, is licensed in three states and many of his Medicare patients were frequently driving two to three hours round trip for appointments, "which isn't a small feat," he said.

The $1.7 trillion spending package Congress passed in December included a two-year extension of key telehealth provisions, such as coverage for Medicare beneficiaries to have phone or video medical appointments at home. But it also signaled political reluctance to make the payment changes permanent, requiring federal regulators to study how Medicare enrollees use telehealth.

The federal extension "basically just kicked the can down the road for two years," said Julia Harris, associate director for the health program at the D.C.-based Bipartisan Policy Center think tank. At issue are questions about the value and cost of telehealth, who will benefit from its use, and whether audio and video appointments should continue to be reimbursed at the same rate as face-to-face care.

Before the pandemic, Medicare paid for only narrow uses of remote medicine, such as emergency stroke care provided at hospitals. Medicare also covered telehealth for patients in rural areas but not in their homes — patients were required to travel to a designated site such as a hospital or doctor's office.

But the pandemic brought a "seismic change in perception" and telehealth "became a household term," said Kyle Zebley, senior vice president of public policy at the American Telemedicine Association.

The omnibus bill's provisions include: paying for audio-only and home care; allowing for a variety of doctors and others, such as occupational therapists, to use telehealth; delaying in-person requirements for mental health patients; and continuing existing telehealth services for federally qualified health clinics and rural health clinics.

Telehealth use among Medicare beneficiaries grew from less than 1% before the pandemic to more than 32% in April 2020. By July 2021, the use of remote appointments retreated somewhat, settling at 13% to 17% of claims submitted, according to a fee-for-service claims analysis by McKinsey & Co.

Fears over potential fraud and the cost of expanding telehealth have made politicians hesitant, said Josh LaRosa, vice president at the Wynne Health Group, which focuses on payment and care delivery reform. The report required in the omnibus package "is really going to help to provide more clarity," LaRosa said.

In a 2021 report, the Government Accountability Office warned that using telehealth could increase spending in Medicare and Medicaid, and historically the Congressional Budget Office has said telehealth could make it easier for people to use more health care, which would lead to more spending.

Advocates like Zebley counter that remote care doesn't necessarily cost more. "If the priority is preventative care and expanding access, that should be taken into account when considering costs," Zebley said, explaining that increased use of preventative care could drive down more expensive spending.

Siegel and his colleagues at Dartmouth see remote care as a tool for helping chronically ill patients receive ongoing care and preventing expensive emergency episodes. It "allows patients to not be burdened by their illnesses," he said. "It's critical that we keep this going."

Some of Seigel's work is funded by The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust. (The Helmsley Charitable Trust also contributes to KHN.)

For the past nine months, Dartmouth Health's telehealth visits plateaued at more than 500 per day. That's 10% to 15% of all outpatient visits, said Katelyn Darling, director of operations for Dartmouth's virtual care center.

"Patients like it and they want to continue doing it," Darling said, adding that doctors — especially psychologists — like telehealth too. If Congress decides not to continue funding for remote at-home visits after 2024, Darling said, she fears patients will have to drive again for appointments that could have been handled remotely.

The same fears are worrying leaders at Sanford Health, which provides services across the Upper Midwest.

"We absolutely need those provisions to become permanent," said Brad Schipper, president of virtual care at Sanford, which has health plan members, hospitals, clinics, and other facilities in the Dakotas, Iowa, and Minnesota. In addition to the provisions, Sanford is closely watching whether physicians will continue to get paid for providing care across state lines.

During the pandemic, licensing requirements in states were often relaxed to enable doctors to practice in other states and many of those requirements are set to expire at the end of the public health emergency.

Licensing requirements were not addressed in the omnibus, and to ensure telehealth access, states need to allow physicians to treat patients across state lines, said Dr. Jeremy Cauwels, Sanford Health's chief physician. This has been particularly important in providing mental health care, he said; virtual visits now account for about 20% of Sanford's appointments.

Sanford is based in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, and Cauwels recalled one case in which a patient lived four hours from the closest child-adolescent psychiatrist and was "on the wrong side of the border." Because of the current licensing waivers, Cauwels said, the patient's wait for an appointment was cut from several weeks to six days.

"We were able to get that kid seen without Mom taking a day off to drive back and forth, without a six-week delay, and we were able to do all the things virtually for that family," Cauwels said.

Psychiatrist Dr. Sara Gibson has used telehealth for decades in rural Apache County, Arizona. "There are some people who have no access to care without telehealth," she said. "That has to be added into the equation."

Gibson, who is also medical director for Little Colorado Behavioral Health Centers in Arizona, said one key question for policymakers as they look ahead is not whether telehealth is better than face-to-face. It's "telehealth vs. no care," she said.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/987720

White House COVID Chief on 'Why Paxlovid Is Underused'

 This transcript has been edited for clarity. This interview was conducted on January 24, 2023.

Eric J. Topol, MD: Hello. I'm Eric Topol, editor-in-chief of Medscape. I'm really privileged today to be joined by Dr Ashish Jha, the White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator, who has weathered a tough pandemic era since he joined the administration. Welcome. It's great to have a chance to speak with you.

Ashish K. Jha, MD, MPH: Thanks for having me here. I'm really excited to spend some time with you.

Topol: Several weeks ago, you called attention to the Paxlovid issue, whereby a lot of people of advanced age (65 or older) were not the people who were most frequently getting Paxlovid. You called it out. Could you review where we stand on that?

Jha: You've written and talked about this. Paxlovid is extraordinarily effective at keeping people out of the hospital, preventing death and serious illness. With SARS-CoV-2, older people are at highest risk.

That's always been true in this pandemic. Right now, when we look at the 400-500 people who are dying every day, almost all of them are over 75. What is interesting to me — and not in a great way — is that when you look at Paxlovid use, it certainly goes up with age. But once you get to about age 75 or so, it actually starts declining very rapidly.

Many of the people who are dying today did not receive Paxlovid. It's a major problem. We can talk about what the issues might be, but people in their 70s and 80s should not be denied treatments. Too many of them are not being treated when they become infected with SARS-CoV-2.

Topol: As you underscored, the studies — not just the randomized trial, but also subsequent effectiveness studies — have shown a 90% reduction in hospitalizations and deaths in high-risk groups treated with Paxlovid.

After you pointed this out, Medscape conducted a survey to try to find out from clinicians, including physicians, pharmacists, and nurses, why people of advanced age aren't getting Paxlovid.

They had over 1500 respondents. Number one on the list was fear of drug interactions. There's a lot of data to suggest that for the vast majority of drugs, there are no interactions of concern because you can just stop the statin or other medication for 5 days.

What do you think about that reason for not prescribing Paxlovid? People of advanced age are frequently taking other medications. Do you think that's a reason to withhold Paxlovid?

Jha: It's a really interesting question. When Paxlovid first came out about a year ago, there was a lot of confusion about how serious these drug-drug interactions were. As you know, Eric, over the past year, a whole bunch of clinical societies — organizations such as the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and others — have put out guidance for physicians on how to think about drug-drug interactions with Paxlovid.

The truth is that almost everyone can take Paxlovid no matter what medicines they're already taking. In fact, the IDSA identifies only two drugs that could lead to serious drug interactions: rivaroxaban and salmeterol.

For other medications the patient is taking, you might just have to make modifications, such as lowering the dose or stopping the medication for the 5 days of Paxlovid treatment. We do that all the time clinically. For example, for a patient scheduled for a dental procedure, we often stop their blood thinner temporarily. If a patient becomes dehydrated for some reason, we will often stop their blood pressure medicine for a short period of time.

These are not unusual situations for clinicians to manage. It's another way of saying there is no good reason for patients to be denied treatment. For patients taking rivaroxaban or salmeterol, we have other options for COVID-19 treatment, such as Lagevrio (molnupiravir) and intravenous remdesivir.

In my mind, there is no good reason not to treat older and higher-risk patients who have COVID-19. Most of the time, you can use Paxlovid.

Topol: The second most common concern in the Paxlovid survey was rebound. Physicians were saying they don't prescribe Paxlovid because the patient will rebound. And some high-profile people have experienced COVID rebound.

We did a systematic study with Michael Mina and the group at Scripps, doing PCR and rapid testing of hundreds of people over the course of several weeks. Compared with people who didn't take Paxlovid, we saw rebound (defined as a positive COVID test or symptoms) in only about 10% of those who took Paxlovid.

Although some people in the Twitterverse and other places believe that Paxlovid rebound is really common, when you look at it carefully, the rates of rebound aren't that high. And we also see rebound in people who were not treated with Paxlovid.

What do you think about rebound as a reason for not giving treatment?

Jha: Unfortunately, it has become a bit of lore. It didn't help when very high-profile folks like Dr Fauci and the President of the United States got rebound. But I always say, anecdote aside, you have to go to the evidence. And in that study, you pointed out some of the best evidence we have in a contemporary population.

I want to reemphasize for clinicians what you saw among people who did not get Paxlovid: About 9% of those people also got rebound. Among people who took Paxlovid, that number was higher, at 14%. It's a very small difference and not statistically significant, so there was no statistical difference in rebound between those two groups.

So it's not even clear that there is more rebound with Paxlovid than with no treatment at all. But when rebound occurs after Paxlovid, which is infrequent, it doesn't lead to people getting super-sick and being hospitalized. You have to ask yourself, why aren't you giving Paxlovid?

If your number-one goal is to make sure that high-risk patients don't end up getting sick or admitted to the hospital, you tolerate a tiny bit more rebound for the massive benefit of preventing serious illness. It is the biggest clinical no-brainer. Rebound has gotten a little bit overemphasized, and social media is not helpful.

Every time somebody has rebound, they report it. The millions of people who have not had rebound are not on Twitter saying, "I didn't get rebound." That is classic bias in information ascertainment. And as clinicians, we ought to look beyond that and go to the evidence.

Topol: I certainly thought that, when we did the study, the rebound rate was going to be at least 30%-40%, based on the bias of reporting, as you rightly highlighted. The other thing that's interesting about Paxlovid, which we didn't expect, is that because of the inactivation of the virus, basically stopping replication soon after the drug is taken, there might be a reduction of long COVID.

And the study from Veterans Affairs suggested that Paxlovid treatment could reduce long COVID by at least 25%-26%. That seems like a bonus factor, but it doesn't get adequate attention. Do you buy into that possibility?

Jha: It's an observational study, so we're always going to be thoughtful about not overinterpreting it. But it's an observational study in the context of logic and reason about what causes long COVID. Now, we think there are multiple factors that contribute to long COVID.

It stands to reason that if you shut down viral replication, you're going to get a different kind of immune response. You may get less immune dysfunction. One thing we think may be causing some long COVID is persistence of the virus. If you shut down viral replication with a really powerful antiviral, you're going to get less persistence of virus.

There are a lot of mechanisms by which it makes sense to me that Paxlovid would reduce long COVID. We're going to get more data on this. But it's one more reason to use it. At the end of the day, when you have a powerful antiviral like Paxlovid, you should begin with the question, why am I not giving it to the patient, as opposed to, why should I give it to the patient?

I'm 52 and, thankfully, relatively healthy. I would take it. I'm eligible. And I have encouraged my family and friends to take it. I've been saying to my clinician friends, with every patient over age 50 with chronic conditions, you have to ask yourself why you are not treating this patient's COVID-19 infection.

And if there's a very good reason to not treat them, fine. But other than that, your default — the standard of care — should be to treat people with infections. You've got a viral infection, you've got a very good antiviral — you should treat that person.

Topol: When you took over leading the coronavirus response, you had limited tools. You weren't getting billions of dollars of support from the government, so you did something with your colleagues that was actually pretty much unprecedented. You gave pharmacists the power to prescribe Paxlovid to avoid the hangup of getting hold of a physician. What was surprising in the Medscape survey is that pharmacists are reluctant to prescribe Paxlovid. Comments about that?

Jha: This was a decision made by the FDA. First of all, I'll take a step back and say I think pharmacists are among the most underutilized healthcare providers in our healthcare system. They have a lot of capability. When you think about a drug like Paxlovid, where the main concern may be around drug-drug interactions, well, guess who understands drug-drug interactions really well? It's pharmacists.

That said, for some pharmacists, because they're not used to prescribing, often to complicated patients, there may still be a learning curve. I was also surprised to see the low rates of prescribing among pharmacists. My hope is that over time, with more comfort and experience, we will see more pharmacists prescribing Paxlovid.

It's a really important access point for a lot of Americans, particularly poor Americans who often don't have a regular source of care. But they go to the pharmacist twice a week or a couple of times every month to pick up medicines. They know their pharmacist. The pharmacist knows them. It's an important access point that we have to figure out how to bolster and support.

Topol: As the pandemic has gone along, we've lost the ability to use monoclonal antibodies that were initially quite potent. We had different choices, but eventually, the more recent variants have outrun our ability to have effective antibody treatments. We're left with a pill rather than an infusion of an antibody or Evusheld, which is a preventive tactic for people who are immunocompromised.

We are left with a drug that eventually could develop resistance — mutations in the enzyme responsible for replication in some strains of the virus. What are your thoughts about the fact that we have little else to offer people at high risk?

Jha: This is one of the really unfortunate side effects of congressional inaction and lack of funding. We want to have an expanding toolbox, with more treatment options, but what we actually have is a shrinking toolbox.

Two years ago, we had monoclonals. When one monoclonal stopped working, we had two more in our toolbox and one of them could get pulled out. That existed because we had funding and we could work with companies and say, "If you build it, we'll buy it." And that created the incentive for companies to build it. We had a nice number of monoclonals. And if we lost one or two, we could manage.

Once the funding ran out, the companies stopped investing in new monoclonals. No new monoclonals have come onto the market or have been made by a company in almost the past year. And so now when we lose it, we've got nothing to replace it. We're finding ourselves in a worse place in terms of therapeutic options.

It's fantastic that Paxlovid is working as well as it is. We do have Lagevrio, which the clinical data suggest is not as good, but it has some benefit. And then, obviously, we have remdesivir. But the truth is that the mainstay now is Paxlovid. We don't want to be so reliant on one medicine, especially when in the laboratory we've seen the emergence of resistance.

We worry about what happens if that becomes clinically widespread. We will find ourselves in real trouble. We're trying to figure out what we can do in the administration to try to encourage development of more therapeutic options. It's not where we should be as we start our fourth year of this virus. We should have more tools in our toolbox, not fewer, over time.

Topol: That gets us to what you have touched on, which is the lack of support, the recognition that we're not done with this virus. We need other treatments and ways to prevent infection. You've been a champion. You have tried everything you can, as far as I know, to get backing for nasal vaccines and vaccines that would achieve mucosal immunity, whether that is oral vaccines or next-generation vaccines that would be more durable and variant proof, with fewer side effects.

But you've hit obstacles — a lack of support. What is the basis for this?

Jha: In some ways, we've been the victim of our own success. The mRNA vaccines that we have right now are extraordinarily good at preventing serious illness and death. We have had a 10-month period where death numbers have been relatively low. They are still too high, but relative to the earlier part of the pandemic, they are much lower.

This changes the discourse on making the case for more support. It becomes harder because people say, "Well, our hospitals are not overwhelmed. We're not seeing 2000-3000 people dying every day." Well, thank goodness. We don't want to be seeing that.

But the numbers of people dying each day (400-500) are still too high. I think we can dramatically lower that. We can do much better, but we're going to need more tools in our toolbox. We have made that case pretty aggressively to Congress.

We're not done. We're going to look in every place we can within the federal government and go back to Congress as we need to. We've got to keep fighting this fight because a lot of people are dying unnecessarily of this virus. The virus is going to be with us for a very long time, probably for the rest of our lives.

We need a long-term strategy for managing it that doesn't lead to 150,000-200,000 Americans dying every year. That is an unacceptable toll. We have the ability to do something about it. And certainly in the administration, we're not giving up.

Topol: What's sad here is that the science is pretty extraordinary. For example, you mentioned the monoclonals. So many potent, variant-proof monoclonals have been identified, most of them naturally occurring in certain treasure-chest people who have developed these antibodies. But they're not being pursued because of funding not being available.

It extends to nasal vaccines, which are being developed in India using licensed intellectual property from Washington University. We're seeing them developed in Mexico with licensing from Mount Sinai in New York, and, obviously, in China and other countries.

Where the science is solid but there's unwillingness to take on risk and put up the funding, does this fall under the complacency umbrella? Or is it just that people don't believe these reports? What's going on here?

Jha: I think it's complex. First of all, you're absolutely right. The science here is beautiful and has been moving in the right direction. A lot of that science is being done here in the United States. I remind our friends up on Capitol Hill that while these nasal vaccines and mucosal vaccines are good for COVID, that technology is going to help us with the next coronavirus outbreak. Because the truth is, three deadly coronaviruses have popped up in the past 15 years. Anyone who thinks that we're done with coronaviruses is kidding themselves. We may very well get a pandemic flu at some point. Knowing how to build intranasal vaccines can be incredibly powerful for any respiratory pathogen.

So there are some very important long-term investments here. I don't think it's anti-science. I just think people feel that we've made so many investments for COVID and we're in a better place. So we have been making the case that this goes well beyond COVID. This is really important for the long-term security of our nation. I'm finding more and more people beginning to understand and get motivated by that.

Topol: One thing that strikes me is that people tend to think of SARS-CoV-2 the same way they think of the flu. For example, the nasal vaccine FluMist is just not that potent. It's only useful in certain patient populations. Tamiflu is not a very strong pill. The flu vaccines don't work that well.

Now here we have a virus for which vaccines were — before Omicron set in — 95% effective against every outcome, including infections and transmission. We have Paxlovid, which makes Tamiflu look like a weak hitter. We have a completely different virus that is potentially much more susceptible to a nasal vaccine, and we've seen some success.

Do you think this idea that flu as a precursor is part of the reason why people have a defeatist attitude about coming up with better treatments, such as nasal vaccines?

Jha: It's a really interesting question, Eric. I hadn't thought of it that way. But you're absolutely right. First of all, flu becomes our kind of default comparison. People have done this from the beginning: Oh, it's just like the flu or it's not like the flu. When people say, "Oh, it's not any worse than getting the flu," I say, "If you've ever had the flu, it's pretty miserable."

A bad flu season kills 30,000-40,000 Americans. It is a bad virus. That isn't something we should be trying to achieve. But you're absolutely right that our tools against the flu have never been terrific. They're just not that great.

And our vaccines — some years are good, some years are a miss. Tamiflu is very weak. It doesn't have a large impact on hospitalizations or deaths, the outcomes that we really care about. We have the ability, with these investments, to make COVID far more manageable. We can tame this virus. But we're going to have to make those investments. But let's not use flu as some golden ideal. We should be able to do much better than that.

Topol: The FDA is meeting this week, basically to come up with a plan for boosters that was used this past year — picking a bivalent in June, rolling it out in September. That had a mixed response but particularly poor uptake among Americans.

Even among those who were at high risk and would benefit particularly from Paxlovid, less than 40% have had a booster. How are we going to just keep along with this booster plan when there's progressively less interest in getting these shots? There's obviously the reactogenicity and side effects that people don't want to sign up for, especially with boosters that don't block infection.

People want boosters that block the infection like they used to. Are we listening? Or are we going to basically continue to have a problem getting reception for more booster campaigns?

Jha: There are several really important questions embedded in that. Let me take them all on. First, there is no question that people want a vaccine that prevents infection and blocks transmission. And that's where we've got to invest in mucosal vaccines because that's our best bet there.

This is one of the reasons we've made this a priority in the administration. We've gone to Congress multiple times. We're actually doing a lot with the resources we have, and our hope is to do more. The American people want it. It's clearly scientifically important for public health. We've got to do that.

In terms of the booster campaign, it's been a long 3 years and people have had a lot of shots. People often say to me, "Well, this is my fifth shot or six shot; how many shots do I need?" And I always say, "I think I've probably gotten 28 shots of the flu vaccine." Sometime in my early 20s, I started getting the flu vaccine, and I get it every year. I don't go in the fall and say, "I think this is my 29th shot"; it's just my annual flu shot. I get it because it prevents me from getting seriously sick over the flu season. We need to move toward something like that, where it just becomes a routine part of how you keep yourself healthy. We'll see what FDA comes out with, but for a majority of Americans, you get it once a year.

If you're a 35-year-old, relatively healthy person, you get your COVID shot in the fall. And yes, you've got waning. You may not have as much protection against infection in the spring. But you're relatively healthy. And you're going to do fine. Maybe for higher-risk people it's a bit of a faster cadence. We'll have to see.

But the bottom line is that we have to routinize it and build the vaccine tools that allow us to get out of the cycle that we're in right now. In the short to medium run, if we can get people vaccinated once a year, maybe high-risk people a bit more often than that, it will drive deaths way down. And that's what we need to stay focused on.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/987439