Search This Blog

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Outbreak reported at RI hospital after Covid-positive, asymptomatic staff asked to work

 A Rhode Island hospital is dealing with a Covid-19 outbreak with patients after it asked staff who had tested positive, but were asymptomatic, to come in due to a staffing shortage.

Eleanor Slater Hospital, a state-run facility with campuses in Cranston and Burrillville, reported it had 28 infected patients as of Thursday, according to the Boston Globe. The hospital has roughly 200 patients.

On Saturday, the hospital had two Covid-positive staff members come into work and three on Monday, according to a memo posted on the official Rhode Island state website.

"The decision to utilize covid-positive staff who are asymptomatic is consistent with CDC guidance that allows hospitals facing significant staffing challenges to utilize asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic workers," the memo reads.

The infected staff worked with Covid-positive patients, with one exception, according to the state’s Department of Behavioral Healthcare, Developmental Disabilities and Hospitals.

"In the one instance, an asymptomatic staff member did work with patients who did not have COVID, but there have been no COVID positive cases reported in the area where this work took place," said spokesperson Randal Edgar.

Edgar said the outbreak at the hospital is not connected to the asymptomatic staff members.

Joseph Wendelken, with the state's Department of Health, told the Boston Globe that the infected staff remained masked.

Wendelken said the hospital did not use any Covid-positive workers on Monday.

The wife of a man hospitalized with ALS at the Cranston location told the Boston Globe that she was concerned about "potential serious consequences" of Covid-positive staff being around at-risk patients.

"This is not a reassuring plan while administration leadership at Slater Hospital is under serious scrutiny and in flux," Mary Sicco said.

The Respiratory and Rehabilitation Center of Rhode Island said it was also affected by a staff shortage after a number of employees called out sick after testing positive for the virus. All staff at the center are vaccinated.

The rehab center said because it was short-staffed, one asymptomatic employee was asked to provide care on the Covid unit.

"A number of staff members were out with COVID but have since recovered and returned to work. The facility is no longer using COVID+ staff," spokesperson Lori Mayer said.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/outbreak-reported-rhode-island-hospital-covid-positive-asymptomatic-st-rcna11376

Racial Essentialism Corrupts Medicine

 The progressive Left is openly attempting to codify racial categories into education, culture, law—and now medicine. New York State has authorized health-care providers to include race in a set of risk factors to determine who qualifies for the limited quantity of life-saving Covid-19 treatments. New York City’s official guidance to providers also reads: “Longstanding systemic health and social inequities may contribute to an increased risk of getting sick and dying from COVID-19.” As a result, health-care providers in the city will now “consider race and ethnicity when assessing individual risk,” prioritizing nonwhite patients over their white counterparts.

Skin color is far too broad a category to offer any meaningful insight at the individual level. Using race as a proxy to assess an individual’s risk would make sense only if there were evidence that it genetically puts one at higher risk of severe Covid. No such evidence exists. The virus does not appear to selectively target those of African descent, for example. African countries generally have far lower Covid death rates than Western ones.

Of course, the New York Health Department is not claiming otherwise. Under the influence of woke ideology, it is using oversimplified racial categories to correct for alleged systemic inequities that fall along racial lines. On progressive thinking, this compromising of medical practice allegedly achieves a greater social good. Racial prioritization is not perfect, say progressives, but it is justified on a group level since whites have better outcomes than “people of color” in the aggregate.

But even this rationale doesn’t hold up under scrutiny. Not all nonwhite groups suffer more than whites on average from Covid. According to CDC data last updated on November 22, Asian-Americans have a 20 percent lower rate of Covid hospitalizations and a 10 percent lower rate of Covid deaths. There is no justification for prioritizing Asians over whites for Covid therapeutics.

At the individual level, prioritizing race makes no sense, either, because it is irrelevant to Covid risk. Vaccination status, health condition, and age are far greater risk factors. The greatest of all these is age, as Joel Zinberg has observed. It’s true that black Americans have the highest prevalence of obesity and therefore heightened risk of Covid disease in the aggregate. But race-neutral medical assessments targeting obesity and other medical risk factors will naturally lead to these populations disproportionately moving to the head of the line, without any need to discriminate on the basis of race.

Unfortunately, other states have begun to follow New York’s lead. Guidelines from Minnesota’s Department of Health now declare that medical facilities should use race as a factor in determining who receives the limited supplies of highly effective monoclonal antibody treatments. According to the document, those who are not of “BIPOC [black, indigenous, and people of color] status” will be “deprioritize[d].” Theoretically, an affluent Asian-American would enjoy priority over a poor Lebanese immigrant with roughly the same age and health condition.

Ironically, such policies perpetuate a hidden anti-minority racism: that a healthy black person, for example, belongs by definition to a sick, diseased group. All “people of color” are seemingly not capable of maintaining their health and therefore should be privileged in the process for distributing lifesaving Covid drugs.

The growing ideological capture of medicine is consistent with the Left’s efforts to establish race as a marker of a host of attributes such as societal victimization, moral worth, economic status, agency, health, and now Covid risk. As long as institutions continue to assign meaning to skin color, the quest to transcend racial divisions will never be realized.

UK officials decide against fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose

 The U.K. Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunization advised against a fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose for elderly and at-risk populations after evidence suggested that a third shot gave them enough immunity. 

The committee recommended against the fourth vaccine dose after data showed the third vaccine dose, or booster shot, still gave adequate protection against the coronavirus after three months, The Associated Press reported. Instead, the panel recommended that as many people as possible get their third booster shot to protect against infection. 

“The current data show the booster dose is continuing to provide high levels of protection against severe disease, even for the most vulnerable older age groups,” Wei Shen Lim, the committee’s chair, said. 

“For this reason, the committee has concluded there is no immediate need to introduce a second booster dose, though this will continue to be reviewed,” Lim added.

Consideration for the fourth booster shot comes amid a significant surge of coronavirus infections in the U.K., in part due to the omicron variant. The U.K., like many countries experiencing an uptick of infections, has also experienced a staff shortage in hospitals due to the disease's spread. 

The military has had to provide resources and support to hospitals as cases rose to 18,454 on Thursday.

In December, infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci said it was “too premature” to be discussing a fourth COVID-19 shot in the U.S.

“One of the things that we're gonna be following very carefully is what the durability of the protection is following the third dose of an mRNA vaccine. If the protection is much more durable than the two dose non-boosted group, and we may go a significant period of time without requiring a fourth dose,” he said.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/588861-uk-officials-decide-against-fourth-covid-19-vaccine-dose

FAA Will Impose Restrictions On Some Flight Operations Over 5G

 by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times,

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) updated information Thursday, maintaining that U.S. 5G deployment will require the FAA to impose flight restrictions on flight operations using certain types of safety equipment that will perform in proximity to the 5G networks.

AT&T and Verizon agreed to delay the use of C-Band spectrum until Jan. 19, a move that was endorsed by the White House. This extension would give the FAA more time to study and evaluate how to minimize the disruption to radar altimeters, while preparing airline companies for any changes.

The telecom companies, which won access to almost all the C-Band spectrum in an $80-billion auction, had earlier agreed to adopt 5G deployment with similar precautions as that of France.

The crux of the issue lies in the fact that radar altimeters, an important piece of safety equipment used in aircraft, use frequencies close to C-band. 5G services use C-band radio spectrum frequencies between 3.7 and 4.2 GHz that may prove hazardous to flight safety. Altimeters assess the airplane’s height above the ground and inform other safety sensors within the craft like collision-avoidance systems and navigation instruments.

As the situation currently stands, the proposed 5G deployment would result in modifying flight schedules and altering other aspects of the aviation network. The FAA is working towards mitigating these disruptions as they investigate the precautionary measures needed to move forward.

Telecom companies have also agreed on positioning the related antennas away from the airports where the interference would be greatest, while the FAA tests out how the radar altimeters work in a 5G C-band environment.

When altimeters are discovered to work without interference, the corresponding restrictions on aircraft operations will be removed. This process will go on until more altimeters are certified safe, retrofitted or replaced.

On Friday, the FAA released a list (pdf) of 50 airports that will have 5G buffer zones like Austin-Bergstrom Intl, Los Angeles Intl, Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood Intl, San Francisco Intl, and Chicago O’Hare Intl. These zones are expected to reduce risks when the wireless companies turn on their 5G services.

Many other airports are not affected by the rollout as they are not located in the same region where 5G is being implemented and some do not have the ability to allow low-visibility landings, according to the FAA.

AT&T and Verizon will adjust their operations like turning off transmitters near sensitive airports for a period of six months to minimize risk and avoid interfering with safety systems. However, it remains to be seen how the 5G networks will coexist safely with flight traffic systems in the coming days.

https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/faa-will-impose-flight-restrictions-some-flight-operations-over-5g

COVID-19 Rapid Antigen Tests Correlate With Short-term Infectiousness

 Rapid antigen tests for COVID-19 might yield false negative results when viral loads are low, but in those cases, the virus may not yet be transmissible, a new study suggests.

Researchers performed rapid antigen tests on swab samples from 181 individuals with PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections and then tried to culture the virus on the swabs. When viral loads were below the antigen tests' level of detection, the virus particles were often incapable of growing, according to a report posted on medRxiv ahead of peer review.

People with low viral loads and negative antigen tests may become infectious "a day or two or three days later," said Dr. James Kirby of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. "Therefore, to be most effective, antigen tests should be used immediately before an event or contact with those at greater risk from infection."

The swabs must be collected for testing carefully, following the instructions provided with the testing kits, he added. "In other words, you want a really good sampling of the inside of your nose."

SOURCE: https://bit.ly/33RrrXk medRxiv, online December 23, 2021.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/965623

Hospitals Recruit International Nurses to Fill Pandemic Shortages

 Before Mary Venus was offered a nursing job at a hospital here, she'd never heard of Billings or visited the United States. A native of the Philippines, she researched her prospective move via the internet, set aside her angst about the cold Montana winters and took the job, sight unseen.

Venus has been in Billings since mid-November, working in a surgical recovery unit at Billings Clinic, Montana's largest hospital in its most populous city. She and her husband moved into an apartment, bought a car and are settling in. They recently celebrated their first wedding anniversary. Maybe, she mused, this could be a "forever home."

"I am hoping to stay here," Venus said. "So far, so good. It's not easy, though. For me, it's like living on another planet."

Administrators at Billings Clinic hope she stays, too. The hospital has contracts with two dozen nurses from the Philippines, Thailand, Kenya, Ghana and Nigeria, all set to arrive in Montana by summer. More nurses from far-off places are likely.

Billings Clinic is just one of the scores of hospitals across the U.S. looking abroad to ease a shortage of nurses worsened by the pandemic. The national demand is so great that it's created a backlog of health care professionals awaiting clearance to work in the U.S. More than 5,000 international nurses are awaiting final visa approval, the American Association of International Healthcare Recruitment reported in September.

"We are seeing an absolute boom in requests for international nurses," said Lesley Hamilton-Powers, a board member of AAIHR and a vice president for Avant Healthcare Professionals in Florida.

Avant recruits nurses from other countries and then works to place them in U.S. hospitals, including Billings Clinic. Before the pandemic, Avant would typically have orders from hospitals for 800 nurses. It currently has more than 4,000 such requests, Hamilton-Powers said.

"And that's just us, a single organization," added Hamilton-Powers. "Hospitals all over the country are stretched and looking for alternatives to fill nursing vacancies."

Foreign-born workers make up about a sixth of the U.S. nursing workforce, and the need is increasing, nursing associations and staffing agencies report, as nurses increasingly leave the profession. Nursing schools have seen an increase in enrollment since the pandemic, but that staffing pipeline has done little to offset today's demand.

In fact, the American Nurses Association in September urged the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to declare the shortage of nurses a national crisis.

CGFNS International, which certifies the credentials of foreign-born health care workers to work in America, is the only such organization authorized by the federal government. Its president, Dr. Franklin Shaffer, said more hospitals are looking abroad to fill their staffing voids.

"We have a huge demand, a huge shortage," he said.

Billings Clinic would hire 120 more nurses today if it could, hospital officials said. The staffing shortage was significant before the pandemic. The added demands and stress of covid have made it untenable.

Greg Titensor, a registered nurse and the vice president of operations at Billings Clinic, noted that three of the hospital's most experienced nurses, all in the intensive care unit with at least 20 years of experience, recently announced their retirements.

"They are getting tired, and they are leaving," Titensor said.

Last fall's surge of covid cases resulted in Montana having the highest rate in the nation for a time, and Billings Clinics' ICU was bursting with patients. Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte sent the National Guard to Billings Clinic and other Montana hospitals; the federal government sent pharmacists and a naval medical team.

While the surge in Montana has subsided, active case numbers in Yellowstone County — home to the hospital — are among the state's highest. The Billings Clinic ICU still overflows, mostly with covid patients, and signs still warn visitors that "aggressive behavior will not be tolerated," a reminder of the threat of violence and abuse health care workers endure as the pandemic grinds on.

Like most hospitals, Billings Clinic has sought to abate its staffing shortage with traveling nurses — contract workers who typically go where the pandemic demands. The clinic has paid up to $200 an hour for their services, and, at last fall's peak, had as many as 200 traveling nurses as part of its workforce.

The scarcity of nurses nationally has driven those steep payments, prompting members of Congress to ask the Biden administration to investigate reported gouging by unscrupulous staffing agencies.

Whatever the cause, satisfying the hospital's personnel shortage with traveling nurses is not sustainable, said Priscilla Needham, Billings Clinic's chief financial officer. Medicare, she noted, doesn't pay the hospital more if it needs to hire more expensive nurses, nor does it pay enough when a covid patient needs to stay in the hospital longer than a typical covid patient.

From July to October, the hospital's nursing costs increased by $6 million, Needham said. Money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the CARES Act has helped, but she anticipated November and December would further drive up costs.

Dozens of agencies place international nurses in U.S. hospitals. The firm that Billings Clinic chose, Avant, first puts the nurses through instruction in Florida in hopes of easing their transition to the U.S., said Brian Hudson, a company senior vice president.

Venus, with nine years of experience as a nurse, said her stateside training included clearing cultural hurdles like how to do her taxes and obtain car insurance.

"Nursing is the same all over the world," Venus said, "but the culture is very different."

Shaffer, of CGFNS International, said foreign-born nurses are interested in the U.S. for a variety of reasons, including the opportunity to advance their education and careers, earn more money or perhaps get married. For some, said Avant's Hudson, the idea of living "the American dream" predominates.

The hitch so far has been getting the nurses into the country fast enough. After jobs are offered and accepted, foreign-born nurses require a final interview to obtain a visa from the State Department, and there is a backlog for those interviews. Powers explained that, because of the pandemic, many of the U.S. embassies where those interviews take place remain closed or are operating for fewer hours than usual.

While the backlog has receded in recent weeks, Powers described the delays as challenging. The nurses waiting in their home countries, she stressed, have passed all their necessary exams to work in the U.S.

"It's been very frustrating to have nurses poised to arrive, and we just can't bring them in," Powers said.

Once they arrive, the international nurses in Billings will remain employees of Avant, although after three years the clinic can offer them permanent positions. Clinic administrators stressed that the nurses are paid the same as its local nurses with equivalent experience. On top of that, the hospital pays a fee to Avant.

More than 90% of Avant's international nurses choose to stay in their new communities, Hudson said, but Billings Clinic hopes to better that mark. Welcoming them to the city will be critical, said Sara Agostinelli, the clinic's director of diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging. She has even offered winter driving lessons.

The added diversity will benefit the city, Agostinelli said. Some nurses will bring their spouses; some will bring their children.

"We will help encourage what Billings looks like and who Billings is," she said.

Pae Junthanam, a nurse from Thailand, said he was initially worried about coming to Billings after learning that Montana's population is nearly 90% white and less than 1% Asian. The chance to advance his career, however, outweighed the concerns of moving. He also hopes his partner of 10 years will soon be able to join him.

Since his arrival in November, Junthanam said, his neighbors have greeted him warmly, and one shop owner, after learning he was a nurse newly arrived from Thailand, thanked him for his service.

"I am far from home, but I feel like this is like another home for me," he said.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/966256

Low Back Pain Yields to Water Aerobics

 A program of water exercises was more effective than infrared thermal therapy and transdermal electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) for relieving chronic lower back pain in a randomized trial with a full year of follow-up, researchers reported.

Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire scores, which can range from 0 to 24, were 3.61 points lower in the water exercise group at 12 months (95% CI -1.58 to -5.63) in the 113-patient trial, according to Meng-Si Peng, MSc, of Shanghai University of Sport in China, and colleagues writing in JAMA Network Open.

The difference actually grew during follow-up. At 3 months, immediately after the treatment period ended, it stood at -1.77 points in favor of the water exercises, reaching -2.42 points at 6 months. The P value for overall differences between groups over time was <0.001.

How much the watery aspect contributed is unclear. The main point, Peng and colleagues concluded, is that the results support "active exercise rather than relying on passive relaxation" as the best approach to low back pain.

But the trial is also the first to examine water exercises as a back pain therapy with this length of follow-up, the group asserted.

Peng and colleagues enrolled patients ages 18 to 65 with maximum pain intensities of at least 3 on a standard rating scale, localized in the area between the bottom rib and buttock band (with or without associated leg pain), of at least 3 months' duration. At baseline, mean Roland-Morris scores were 8.82 in the water exercise group and 8.37 among controls; mean average past-week pain scores were 3.96 and 4.02, respectively.

The researchers didn't label their exercises as "aerobics" but many of the seven that constituted the core program were of substantial intensity and were similar to those billed as "water aerobics" in the West. The program began with a 10-minute warm-up before proceeding to the main portion, which lasted 40 minutes and included the following:

  • Abdominal bracing
  • Three downward presses (vertical, downward, slant) with dumbbell and kickboard
  • Straight leg press with dumbbell and kickboard
  • Water treading with kickboard
  • Deep water running with swim belt

A 10-minute cooldown involving stretches and passive floating concluded the session. Participants underwent a total of 24 sessions over 12 weeks.

The comparator therapy was delivered on the same schedule and consisted of 30 minutes of TENS treatment plus 30 minutes of infrared therapy, both applied to pain points.

Of course, participants were not blinded to their assignments, but the investigators who analyzed results were.

Besides the primary outcome measure of Roland-Morris scores, evaluations included pain scores, the 36-item Short-Form Health Survey, self-ratings of anxiety and depression, scores on the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, and other instruments. Participants were also asked to provide overall assessments of their assigned intervention and whether they would recommend it to others.

In all cases, these favored the water exercises, and mostly with statistical significance. By month 12, mean average past-week pain scores had declined to 2.27 with exercises, versus 3.71 in the control group, for a between-group difference of 1.74 points (P<0.001). Findings were similar for maximum pain and pain as rated on the day of evaluation.

Just over half of the water exercise group achieved at least 2-point improvements in their worst pain -- considered the minimum for clinical significance -- compared with 21% of controls.

Limitations included the inability to determine whether specific components of the interventions were more effective than others, and the relatively small sample. Also, the choice of TENS and infrared therapy as the control could be seen as a limitation, as other forms of nondrug therapy such as passive stretching or acupuncture (among many others) are also commonly used.


Disclosures