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Tuesday, April 18, 2023

'Allergies, pollen could send you to ER this year,' Health Dept. warns

 You’ve got to be pollen our legs.

Allergy season is in full swing — and it could send some New Yorkers to the emergency room, according to a new bulletin from the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene geared toward medical professionals.

The notice warned that this upcoming pollen season will worsen symptoms in anyone allergic to tree pollen, causing asthma attacks and allergic rhinoconjunctivitis. The latter involves those pesky symptoms we all know and love — a runny nose, itchy eyes and congestion.

“Over-the-counter allergy medication sales and asthma emergency department (ED) visits (particularly in children) typically increase in April and May, coinciding with peak tree pollen concentrations,” the health agency cautioned.

From the department’s data, on average about 260 New Yorkers make the trip to the ER for their allergies every May. According to Gothamist, that’s the month when pollen is at its peak.

The May figure compares to the 218 ER visits made on average in April due to allergies.

It looks like allergy season will be extra-bad this year.
It looks like allergy season could be extra bad this year.
AFP via Getty Images
Data from the bulletin revealed that there could be more allergy-related hospitalizations in May.
Data from the bulletin revealed that allergy-related hospitalizations could rise in May.
NYC Department of Health

The department also noted that hospitalizations for allergies were lower in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“If you’re prone towards allergies, you develop an antibody called IGE to that particular allergen,” Dr. Arveen Bhasin, a Mayo Clinic allergy and immunology expert, said in a “Mayo Clinic Minute” earlier this month.

“When you’re exposed to that allergen, it causes the release of histamine and these other mediators,” says Dr. Bhasin.

Pollen usually comes out in the spring.
Pollen usually comes out in the spring.
AFP via Getty Images

One potential reason that allergy symptoms are even worse this year in cities like NYC could be due to something called “botanical sexism,” according to NBC4 Washington.

Horticulturist and author Tom Ogren, who came up with the term, told the outlet that it’s easier to plant male trees instead of female trees in urban areas, because they’re easier to look after.

Female trees might be better for your allergies, as they don’t produce pollen — but they are messier, as their seeds can leave more remnants on the street, which is why they have been avoided.

According to the NYC bulletin, grass pollen often starts in the late spring and peaks in the summer.

Statements from the Department of Health also explained that the increase in ER visits only lasts for a short timeframe, of about two to three weeks, but emphasized that it was important to prepare in advance.

Some of the precautions they recommended for doctors was to tell patients that anti-allergy medication should be taken before symptoms even begin.

“First-line treatment is what we call oral antihistamines that help with some of the itching, running, sneezing. And the nasal spray is really helping to focus on some of the congestion and the runny nose,” Bhasin said.

Hospitalizations for allergies are usually lower in April.
Hospitalizations for allergies are usually lower in April.
AFP via Getty Images

They also recommended allergy sufferers use a “simple nasal saline spray” to help ease congestion, and use artificial tears to help sore or itchy eyes.

However, they did note that any product that contains a vasoconstrictor — drugs like Visine that cause narrowing of the blood vessels — should not be used for more than two or three days.

Children in public schools can get albuterol or fluticasone for free, provided by the department; however, it can only be administered with an order from a primary care physician.

Bhasin also noted that an allergist should only be sought out as a last resort after you’ve tried readily available over-the-counter medications or environmental control measures like keeping your windows closed.

And you’re not alone in your allergy struggles — according to a recent poll, nearly one-third of people would take a pay cut in order to be allergy-free.

The poll also showed that around two in five people don’t look forward to the spring season and warmer weather due to their allergies.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/18/allergies-pollen-could-send-you-to-er-this-year-health-dept-warns/

Damar Hamlin ‘fully cleared’ to rejoin Bills as NFL miracle nearly complete

 Less than five months after his life was in jeopardy on the football field, Damar Hamlin is making the final steps of his miraculous comeback.

Bills GM Brandon Beane told reporters Hamlin has been “fully cleared” to resume football activities and is with the team as they begin their offseason program.

“I don’t want to be done yet,” Hamlin said Tuesday.

Beane said Hamlin met with three specialists before getting the final go-ahead.

Damar Hamlin tackles Tee Higgins, leading to the cardiac arrest on Jan. 3, 2023.
Damar Hamlin tackles Tee Higgins, leading to the cardiac arrest on Jan. 3, 2023.
AP

”They’re all in agreement — it’s not two to one or three to one or anything like that — they’re all in lockstep of what this was and that he is cleared to resume full activities just like anyone else that was coming back from an injury,” Beane said.

“He’s fully cleared. He’s here. And he is of the mindset — he’s in a great headspace — to come back and make his return.”

Hamlin, 25, suffered cardiac arrest and was resuscitated on the field during a Jan. 3 game at the Bengals.

Damar Hamlin had to be resuscitated on the field.
Damar Hamlin had to be resuscitated on the field.
AP

The injury occurred while tackling Cincinnati receiver Tee Higgins on a routine play.

He was rushed to a local hospital and put on a ventilator — with his life hanging in the balance — before he was able to at least partially breathe on his own.

The second-year safety from Pittsburgh spent nearly 10 days recovering in hospitals in Cincinnati and Buffalo before being released.

He eventually began visiting the Bills’ facility and attended the team’s season-ending 27-10 loss to Cincinnati in the divisional round of the playoffs.

Damar Hamlin at the NFL Honors show on Feb. 9, 2023.
Damar Hamlin at the NFL Honors show on Feb. 9, 2023.
AP

Hamlin has since made numerous appearances around the country, including meeting with President Joe Biden last month.

During the Super Bowl festivities in Arizona in February, he received the NFLPA’s Alan Page Community Award.

He also took part in a pregame ceremony in which the NFL honored the Bills’ and Bengals’ training and medical staffs and first responders who treated the 24-year-old.

It is unclear how much Hamlin will participate in the Bills opening practice, but an NFL comeback is officially within reach.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/18/damar-hamlin-fully-cleared-to-rejoin-bills/

NYC ICE ‘mostly booked’ for migrants needing court dates — through 2033

 New York City’s worst-in-the-nation federal immigration office wait time continues to grow — with appointments for migrants waiting to get a court date after illegally crossing the southern border now “mostly booked” through March 2033.

The latest figure suggests new arrivals may have to wait a full decade just to get a date to go before a judge — then cool their heels an average of nearly four more years before proceedings are completed.

Tae Johnson, acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), claimed to a congressional panel Tuesday that he was working to tackle the stunning field office backlogs, including by trying to figure out how to use video conferencing to speed up the process.

“There is some request to the Hill to give us the authority [where] we can actually serve it virtually and have people agree to accept their documents electronically,” Johnson told the House Appropriations Committee during a hearing focused on budget requests.

“That is certainly something that we are continuing to work with the Congress to sort of get the authority for,” he added. “But we are working on the technological piece of it so that we can do these telephonic interviews or virtual interviews and have individuals not have to wait 10 years to have their charging documents issued.”

Tae added that ICE also is asking for congressional funding for 45 new agents to process the backlog.

Migrants with ICE appointments waiting outside of 26 Federal Plaza.
Migrants with ICE appointments waiting outside of 26 Federal Plaza.
William Farrington
Migrants with ICE appointments waiting outside of 26 Federal Plaza.
Many migrants are frustrated because they believe they have solid asylum claims and shouldn’t have to remain in limbo for such a long period of time.
William Farrington

In the meantime, the agency is working to borrow US Customs and Border Protection personnel to alleviate the crunch, as well as trying to get migrants to opt in to receiving their court dates via mail.

The Post exclusively reported last month that the NYC ICE office was “fully booked” through October 2032 as of Feb. 13, according to a non-public official document.

Immigration experts told The Post that the massive backlog makes the Big Apple the ideal place for migrants with dubious asylum claims to settle after being released at the southern border.

Migrants are entitled to work permits while their claims are pending.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers escort an arrestee in an apartment building, in the Bronx borough of New York, during a series of early-morning raids.
ICE officers escort an arrestee in an apartment building in the Bronx during a series of early-morning raids.
AP

Meanwhile, some migrants told The Post that they too were frustrated because they believe they have solid claims and shouldn’t have to remain in limbo for such a long period of time.

On Tuesday, Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) read aloud the latest data — which he said was updated on April 7 — at a hearing assessing ICE’s budget as illegal immigration stays at record highs along the southern frontier.

“Top 10 backlog locations: New York number one, mostly booked through March of 2033 — 2033. They got about 32,000-plus there [in line],” Cuellar said — suggesting that the raw number of pending appointments has fallen by about 7,000 over two months, even if they are pushed farther into the future. 

“Let’s take New York. They’ll report up to March of 2033. Then they get a notice to appear, an NTA… and then that’s another two to three years before they can go up to a judge,” the Democrat noted. “It’s a little concerning that some of them have to wait to 2033 just to appear before you and then they have to get another two to three years before they even go to an immigration judge.”

The extra step to get a court date is the result of a Biden administration policy change implemented to cope with a record-breaking surge at the southern border.

Undocumented immigrants wait in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), processing center after they were arrested.
Undocumented arrivals may have to wait a full decade to go before a judge.
Getty Images
Undocumented immigrants wait in a holding cell at a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), processing center on April 11, 2018 at the U.S. Federal Building in lower Manhattan.
Undocumented immigrants wait in a holding cell at an ICE processing center in lower Manhattan.
Getty Images

Historically, migrants with asylum claims were issued a so-called Notice to Appear (NTA) in immigration court.

But the Biden administration in early 2021 added a new step and issued migrants a Notice to Report (NTR) to the ICE office nearest their final destination to get placed into court proceedings.

The Biden administration released into the US 802,396 non-citizens who were apprehended after illegally crossing the southwest border in the 23-month period from late March 2021 through Feb. 13, according to a Feb. 18 document on ICE letterhead previously reported by The Post.

Rep. John Rutherford (R-Fla.) on Tuesday fumed about the ICE backlogs, noting that the field office in Jacksonville is booked through 2028, meaning it’s “five years just to be seen.”

The acting ICE director told Rutherford that the average ICE field office backlog is “probably two years,” with some field offices in places like Baltimore and St. Paul, Minn., having even shorter waits because “most of the offices aren’t nearly as inundated.”

fresh surge of migrants across the border is expected after May 11, when the Biden administration lifts the Title 42 policy that allowed for the rapid expulsion of migrants during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Critics blame the two-year-old border crisis on Biden’s pro-immigration rhetoric and policy changes, such as ending both construction of former President Donald Trump’s border wall as well as the “Remain in Mexico” policy that required asylum applicants to wait south of the border while their cases were adjudicated.

The White House blames the surge on other factors, such as the COVID-19 pandemic and poor economic conditions in developing Western Hemisphere countries.

Already, CBP data indicates a 4% increase in border-crossing encounters in fiscal 2023, despite a new “parole” program intended to slow illegal border-crossings by Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans seeking asylum by allowing them to enter the US at legal points of entry.

Nearly 2.4 million border-crossers were apprehended in fiscal 2022 after more than 1.7 million detentions during fiscal 2021 — which itself reflected a surge during Biden’s first year in office.

https://nypost.com/2023/04/18/nyc-ice-mostly-booked-through-2033-for-migrants-needing-court-dates/

AbbVie: FDA OKs QULIPTA® (atogepant) for Adults With Chronic Migraine

 

  • QULIPTA® now the first and only oral CGRP receptor antagonist approved to prevent migraine across frequencies, including episodic and chronic
  • Expanded indication provides an additional treatment option for those with chronic migraine whose frequent disabling attacks negatively impact performance of daily activities
  • Approval based on a clinical trial that demonstrated statistically significant reduction from baseline in mean monthly migraine days and improvements in function and reduction in activity impairment
  • AbbVie is the only company with three prescription treatments designed to meet patient needs across the full spectrum of migraine