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Children and COVID: Decline in new cases comes to an end

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It was a good run while it lasted.

New COVID-19 cases in U.S. children had dropped for 11 consecutive weeks, but that streak has come to an end, as cases increased 28% during the week of April 8-14, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.

The number of reported pediatric cases for the week was 33,146, and the actual increase from the previous week was just 7,231 cases, the AAP and CHA said, but some reports suggest that the new COVID variants and subvariants are starting to have an effect on incidence in some areas while mask mandates continue to fall.

Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that, over the last week or two, the 7-day average for percentage of emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID has risen from 0.5% to 0.6% in children aged 0-11 years, from 0.3% to 0.5% among 12- to 15-year-olds, and from 0.3% to 0.4% in 16- and 17-year-olds. Small increases, to be sure, but increases nonetheless.

A somewhat similar scenario is playing out for new admissions of children aged 0-17, which have leveled out after dropping from a high of 1.25 per 100,000 population in mid-January to 0.13 per 100,000 in early April. Over the last 2 weeks, the rate has been alternating between 0.13 and 0.14 per 100,000, the CDC said on its COVID Data Tracker.

The latest news on the vaccination front came from Pfizer and BIoNTech, which announced that a third dose of its COVID-19 vaccine boosted immune protection in children aged 5-11 years in a phase 2/3 trial. Protection against the Omicron strain was 36 times higher than the two previous doses, the companies said, adding that they plan to submit a request for emergency use authorization of a booster dose in the near future.

The ongoing vaccination effort, however, produced mixed results in the last week. Initial vaccinations among children aged 5-11 years fell 14.5% to another new low while initial doses were up 9.3% for those aged 12-17, the AAP said. Overall, just 28.2% of the country’s 5- to 11-year-olds are fully vaccinated, compared with 58.7% of those aged 12-17, the CDC reported.

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It was a good run while it lasted.

New COVID-19 cases in U.S. children had dropped for 11 consecutive weeks, but that streak has come to an end, as cases increased 28% during the week of April 8-14, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.

The number of reported pediatric cases for the week was 33,146, and the actual increase from the previous week was just 7,231 cases, the AAP and CHA said, but some reports suggest that the new COVID variants and subvariants are starting to have an effect on incidence in some areas while mask mandates continue to fall.

Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that, over the last week or two, the 7-day average for percentage of emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID has risen from 0.5% to 0.6% in children aged 0-11 years, from 0.3% to 0.5% among 12- to 15-year-olds, and from 0.3% to 0.4% in 16- and 17-year-olds. Small increases, to be sure, but increases nonetheless.

A somewhat similar scenario is playing out for new admissions of children aged 0-17, which have leveled out after dropping from a high of 1.25 per 100,000 population in mid-January to 0.13 per 100,000 in early April. Over the last 2 weeks, the rate has been alternating between 0.13 and 0.14 per 100,000, the CDC said on its COVID Data Tracker.

The latest news on the vaccination front came from Pfizer and BIoNTech, which announced that a third dose of its COVID-19 vaccine boosted immune protection in children aged 5-11 years in a phase 2/3 trial. Protection against the Omicron strain was 36 times higher than the two previous doses, the companies said, adding that they plan to submit a request for emergency use authorization of a booster dose in the near future.

The ongoing vaccination effort, however, produced mixed results in the last week. Initial vaccinations among children aged 5-11 years fell 14.5% to another new low while initial doses were up 9.3% for those aged 12-17, the AAP said. Overall, just 28.2% of the country’s 5- to 11-year-olds are fully vaccinated, compared with 58.7% of those aged 12-17, the CDC reported.

It was a good run while it lasted.

New COVID-19 cases in U.S. children had dropped for 11 consecutive weeks, but that streak has come to an end, as cases increased 28% during the week of April 8-14, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.

The number of reported pediatric cases for the week was 33,146, and the actual increase from the previous week was just 7,231 cases, the AAP and CHA said, but some reports suggest that the new COVID variants and subvariants are starting to have an effect on incidence in some areas while mask mandates continue to fall.

Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that, over the last week or two, the 7-day average for percentage of emergency department visits with diagnosed COVID has risen from 0.5% to 0.6% in children aged 0-11 years, from 0.3% to 0.5% among 12- to 15-year-olds, and from 0.3% to 0.4% in 16- and 17-year-olds. Small increases, to be sure, but increases nonetheless.

A somewhat similar scenario is playing out for new admissions of children aged 0-17, which have leveled out after dropping from a high of 1.25 per 100,000 population in mid-January to 0.13 per 100,000 in early April. Over the last 2 weeks, the rate has been alternating between 0.13 and 0.14 per 100,000, the CDC said on its COVID Data Tracker.

The latest news on the vaccination front came from Pfizer and BIoNTech, which announced that a third dose of its COVID-19 vaccine boosted immune protection in children aged 5-11 years in a phase 2/3 trial. Protection against the Omicron strain was 36 times higher than the two previous doses, the companies said, adding that they plan to submit a request for emergency use authorization of a booster dose in the near future.

The ongoing vaccination effort, however, produced mixed results in the last week. Initial vaccinations among children aged 5-11 years fell 14.5% to another new low while initial doses were up 9.3% for those aged 12-17, the AAP said. Overall, just 28.2% of the country’s 5- to 11-year-olds are fully vaccinated, compared with 58.7% of those aged 12-17, the CDC reported.

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Med school to pay $1.2 million to students in refunds and debt cancellation in FTC settlement

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Although it disputed the allegations, Saint James School of Medicine has settled a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission that the school used deceptive marketing tactics to lure students. The complaint referenced the school’s medical license exam test pass rate and residency matches along with violations of rules that protect consumers, including those dealing with credit contracts.

The school, based in the Caribbean with operations in Illinois, agreed to pay $1.2 million toward refunds and debt cancellation for students harmed by the marketing in the past 5 years.

“While we strongly disagree with the FTC’s approach to this matter, we did not want a lengthy legal process to distract from our mission of providing a quality medical education at an affordable cost,” Kaushik Guha, executive vice president of the parent of the school, Human Resources Development Services, said in a YouTube statement posted on the school’s website.

“Saint James lured students by lying about their chances of success,” Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a press release. The settlement agreement was with HRDS, which bills itself as providing students from “non-traditional backgrounds the opportunity to pursue a medical degree and practice in the U.S. or Canada,” according to the school’s statement.

The complaint alleges that, since at least April 2018, the school, HRDS, and its operator Mr. Guha has lured students using “phony claims about the standardized test pass rate and students’ residency or job prospects. They lured consumers with false guarantees of student success at passing a critical medical school standardized test, the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1 Exam.”

For example, a brochure distributed at open houses claimed a first-time Step 1 pass rate of about 96.8%. The brochure further claimed: “Saint James is the first and only medical school to offer a USMLE Step 1 Pass Guarantee,” according to the FTC complaint.

The FTC said the USMLE rate is lower than touted and lower than reported by other U.S. and Canadian medical schools. “Since 2017, only 35% of Saint James students who have completed the necessary coursework to take the USMLE Step 1 exam passed the test.”

The school also misrepresented the residency match rate as “the same” as American medical schools, according to the complaint. For example, the school instructed telemarketers to tell consumers that the match rate for the school’s students was 85%-90%. The school stated on its website that the residency match rate for Saint James students was 83%. “In fact, the match rate for SJSM students is lower than touted and lower than that reported by U.S. medical schools. Since 2018, defendants’ average match rate has been 63%.”

The FTC also claims the school used illegal credit contracts when marketing financing for tuition and living expenses for students. “The financing contracts contained language attempting to waive consumers’ rights under federal law and omit legally mandated disclosures.”

Saint James’ tuition ranges from about $6,650 to $9,859 per trimester, depending on campus and course study, the complaint states. Between 2016 and 2020, about 1,300 students were enrolled each year in Saint James’ schools. Students who attended the schools between 2016 and 2022 are eligible for a refund under the settlement.

Saint James is required to notify consumers whose debts are being canceled through Delta Financial Solutions, Saint James’ financing partner. The debt will also be deleted from consumers’ credit reports.

“We have chosen to settle with the FTC over its allegations that disclosures on our website and in Delta’s loan agreements were insufficient,” Mr. Guha stated on the school website. “However, we have added additional language and clarifications any time the USMLE pass rate and placement rates are mentioned.”

He said he hopes the school will be “an industry leader for transparency and accountability” and that the school’s “efforts will lead to lasting change throughout the for-profit educational industry.”

Mr. Guha added that more than 600 of the school’s alumni are serving as doctors, including many “working to bridge the health equity gap in underserved areas in North America.”

The FTC has been cracking down on deceptive practices by for-profit institutions. In October, the FTC put 70 for-profit colleges on notice that it would investigate false promises the schools make about their graduates’ job prospects, expected earnings, and other educational outcomes and would levy significant financial penalties against violators. Saint James was not on that list, which included several of the largest for-profit universities in the nation, including Capella University, DeVry University, Strayer University, and Walden University.

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

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Although it disputed the allegations, Saint James School of Medicine has settled a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission that the school used deceptive marketing tactics to lure students. The complaint referenced the school’s medical license exam test pass rate and residency matches along with violations of rules that protect consumers, including those dealing with credit contracts.

The school, based in the Caribbean with operations in Illinois, agreed to pay $1.2 million toward refunds and debt cancellation for students harmed by the marketing in the past 5 years.

“While we strongly disagree with the FTC’s approach to this matter, we did not want a lengthy legal process to distract from our mission of providing a quality medical education at an affordable cost,” Kaushik Guha, executive vice president of the parent of the school, Human Resources Development Services, said in a YouTube statement posted on the school’s website.

“Saint James lured students by lying about their chances of success,” Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a press release. The settlement agreement was with HRDS, which bills itself as providing students from “non-traditional backgrounds the opportunity to pursue a medical degree and practice in the U.S. or Canada,” according to the school’s statement.

The complaint alleges that, since at least April 2018, the school, HRDS, and its operator Mr. Guha has lured students using “phony claims about the standardized test pass rate and students’ residency or job prospects. They lured consumers with false guarantees of student success at passing a critical medical school standardized test, the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1 Exam.”

For example, a brochure distributed at open houses claimed a first-time Step 1 pass rate of about 96.8%. The brochure further claimed: “Saint James is the first and only medical school to offer a USMLE Step 1 Pass Guarantee,” according to the FTC complaint.

The FTC said the USMLE rate is lower than touted and lower than reported by other U.S. and Canadian medical schools. “Since 2017, only 35% of Saint James students who have completed the necessary coursework to take the USMLE Step 1 exam passed the test.”

The school also misrepresented the residency match rate as “the same” as American medical schools, according to the complaint. For example, the school instructed telemarketers to tell consumers that the match rate for the school’s students was 85%-90%. The school stated on its website that the residency match rate for Saint James students was 83%. “In fact, the match rate for SJSM students is lower than touted and lower than that reported by U.S. medical schools. Since 2018, defendants’ average match rate has been 63%.”

The FTC also claims the school used illegal credit contracts when marketing financing for tuition and living expenses for students. “The financing contracts contained language attempting to waive consumers’ rights under federal law and omit legally mandated disclosures.”

Saint James’ tuition ranges from about $6,650 to $9,859 per trimester, depending on campus and course study, the complaint states. Between 2016 and 2020, about 1,300 students were enrolled each year in Saint James’ schools. Students who attended the schools between 2016 and 2022 are eligible for a refund under the settlement.

Saint James is required to notify consumers whose debts are being canceled through Delta Financial Solutions, Saint James’ financing partner. The debt will also be deleted from consumers’ credit reports.

“We have chosen to settle with the FTC over its allegations that disclosures on our website and in Delta’s loan agreements were insufficient,” Mr. Guha stated on the school website. “However, we have added additional language and clarifications any time the USMLE pass rate and placement rates are mentioned.”

He said he hopes the school will be “an industry leader for transparency and accountability” and that the school’s “efforts will lead to lasting change throughout the for-profit educational industry.”

Mr. Guha added that more than 600 of the school’s alumni are serving as doctors, including many “working to bridge the health equity gap in underserved areas in North America.”

The FTC has been cracking down on deceptive practices by for-profit institutions. In October, the FTC put 70 for-profit colleges on notice that it would investigate false promises the schools make about their graduates’ job prospects, expected earnings, and other educational outcomes and would levy significant financial penalties against violators. Saint James was not on that list, which included several of the largest for-profit universities in the nation, including Capella University, DeVry University, Strayer University, and Walden University.

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

Although it disputed the allegations, Saint James School of Medicine has settled a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission that the school used deceptive marketing tactics to lure students. The complaint referenced the school’s medical license exam test pass rate and residency matches along with violations of rules that protect consumers, including those dealing with credit contracts.

The school, based in the Caribbean with operations in Illinois, agreed to pay $1.2 million toward refunds and debt cancellation for students harmed by the marketing in the past 5 years.

“While we strongly disagree with the FTC’s approach to this matter, we did not want a lengthy legal process to distract from our mission of providing a quality medical education at an affordable cost,” Kaushik Guha, executive vice president of the parent of the school, Human Resources Development Services, said in a YouTube statement posted on the school’s website.

“Saint James lured students by lying about their chances of success,” Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a press release. The settlement agreement was with HRDS, which bills itself as providing students from “non-traditional backgrounds the opportunity to pursue a medical degree and practice in the U.S. or Canada,” according to the school’s statement.

The complaint alleges that, since at least April 2018, the school, HRDS, and its operator Mr. Guha has lured students using “phony claims about the standardized test pass rate and students’ residency or job prospects. They lured consumers with false guarantees of student success at passing a critical medical school standardized test, the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 1 Exam.”

For example, a brochure distributed at open houses claimed a first-time Step 1 pass rate of about 96.8%. The brochure further claimed: “Saint James is the first and only medical school to offer a USMLE Step 1 Pass Guarantee,” according to the FTC complaint.

The FTC said the USMLE rate is lower than touted and lower than reported by other U.S. and Canadian medical schools. “Since 2017, only 35% of Saint James students who have completed the necessary coursework to take the USMLE Step 1 exam passed the test.”

The school also misrepresented the residency match rate as “the same” as American medical schools, according to the complaint. For example, the school instructed telemarketers to tell consumers that the match rate for the school’s students was 85%-90%. The school stated on its website that the residency match rate for Saint James students was 83%. “In fact, the match rate for SJSM students is lower than touted and lower than that reported by U.S. medical schools. Since 2018, defendants’ average match rate has been 63%.”

The FTC also claims the school used illegal credit contracts when marketing financing for tuition and living expenses for students. “The financing contracts contained language attempting to waive consumers’ rights under federal law and omit legally mandated disclosures.”

Saint James’ tuition ranges from about $6,650 to $9,859 per trimester, depending on campus and course study, the complaint states. Between 2016 and 2020, about 1,300 students were enrolled each year in Saint James’ schools. Students who attended the schools between 2016 and 2022 are eligible for a refund under the settlement.

Saint James is required to notify consumers whose debts are being canceled through Delta Financial Solutions, Saint James’ financing partner. The debt will also be deleted from consumers’ credit reports.

“We have chosen to settle with the FTC over its allegations that disclosures on our website and in Delta’s loan agreements were insufficient,” Mr. Guha stated on the school website. “However, we have added additional language and clarifications any time the USMLE pass rate and placement rates are mentioned.”

He said he hopes the school will be “an industry leader for transparency and accountability” and that the school’s “efforts will lead to lasting change throughout the for-profit educational industry.”

Mr. Guha added that more than 600 of the school’s alumni are serving as doctors, including many “working to bridge the health equity gap in underserved areas in North America.”

The FTC has been cracking down on deceptive practices by for-profit institutions. In October, the FTC put 70 for-profit colleges on notice that it would investigate false promises the schools make about their graduates’ job prospects, expected earnings, and other educational outcomes and would levy significant financial penalties against violators. Saint James was not on that list, which included several of the largest for-profit universities in the nation, including Capella University, DeVry University, Strayer University, and Walden University.

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

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Age and ferritin levels may predict MIS-C severity

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Older age and higher ferritin levels at hospital admission predict severe illness in COVID-related multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), according to a Canadian multicenter cohort study.

The adjusted absolute risk for admission to an intensive care unit was 43.6% among children aged 6 years and older and 46.2% in children aged 13 to 17 years, compared with 18.4% in children aged 5 years or younger.

“We do not understand why teens get more severe MIS-C than younger children,” senior author Joan Robinson, MD, of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, told this news organization. “It is possible that more exposures to other coronaviruses in the past result in them having a more robust immune response to SARS-CoV-2, which results in more inflammation.”

The data were published  in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
 

A multinational study

The study included data on 232 children admitted with probable or confirmed MIS-C at 15 hospitals in Canada, Iran, and Costa Rica between March 1, 2020, and March 7, 2021. The median age of the children was 5.8 years, 56.0% were boys, and 21.6% had comorbidities.

Although cardiac involvement was common (58.6%), and almost one-third of the cohort (31.5%) was admitted to an ICU, “recovery was typically rapid, with 85% of patients discharged within 10 days,” said Dr. Robinson, for the Pediatric Investigators Collaborative Network on Infections in Canada (PICNIC).
 

Older age as a risk

The results suggest that older age is associated with increased risk of severe MIS-C. “However, one would then predict that adults would be at even higher risk than teens, whereas the same syndrome in adults (MIS-A) is very, very rare,” said Dr. Robinson.

The study also found that children admitted with ferritin levels greater than 500 μg/L, signaling greater inflammation, also had an increased risk for ICU admission, compared with those with lower levels (adjusted risk difference, 18.4%; relative risk, 1.69). “This is presumably because the more inflammation that the child has, the more likely they are to have inflammation of the heart, which can lead to low blood pressure,” said Dr. Robinson.
 

Features of MIS-C

Among all patients with MIS-C, gastrointestinal involvement was common (89.2%), as were mucocutaneous findings (84.5%). Children with MIS-C had fever for a median duration of 6 days. “Clinicians who see children in their practice commonly have to determine why a child is febrile. Our study shows that one mainly has to consider MIS-C if febrile children have a rash and one or more of vomiting, diarrhea, or abdominal pain,” said Dr. Robinson. 

The study also found that patients with MIS-C who were admitted to the hospital in the latter part of the study period (Nov. 1, 2020, to March 7, 2021) were slightly more likely to require ICU admission, compared with those admitted between March 1 and Oct. 31, 2020. “We cannot provide a clear explanation [for this],” the authors noted. “The features of severe MIS-C were widely publicized by May 2020, so it seems unlikely that severe cases were missed early in the study period. SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern have replaced the wild-type virus. It is possible that the immune response to circulating variants alters the severity of COVID-19 and MIS-C, when compared with wild-type virus.”

Despite initial concerns that pediatric COVID-19 vaccines might cause MIS-C, Dr. Robinson says data suggest this is rarely, if ever, the case, and that vaccines actually prevent the syndrome. She says further studies will be needed to assess MIS-C risk following reinfection with SARS-CoV-2. “I am an optimistic person, and it is my hope that MIS-C following reinfection is rare,” she said. “If this is the case, perhaps we will see very few cases once almost all children have been immunized and/or had SARS-CoV-2 infection.”  
 

 

 

‘Differences across countries’

Adrienne Randolph, MD, a pediatrician at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and senior author of a large case series of patients with MIS-C, said that the Canadian study is valuable because it includes children from three countries. “It’s very interesting that there are differences across countries,” she said. “The patients in Iran had the highest percentage (58.7%) going into the ICU, whereas Costa Rica had the lowest percentage (9.2%), and the percentage going to the ICU in Canada (34.7%) was less than the percentages we see in the U.S. – which is pretty consistently about 60% to 70% of MIS-C patients going into the ICU.” Dr. Randolph was not involved in the current study.

Reasons for differences in the rates of ICU visits will be important to explore in the effort to standardize diagnostic criteria, stratification of severity, and recommendations for treatment of MIS-C, said Dr. Randolph.

“What is consistent is that the younger kids, zero to 5 years, in general are less ill,” she said. “That’s been consistent across multiple countries.” It’s unclear whether the cause of this difference is that parents observe younger patients more closely than they do teenagers, or whether other aspects of adolescence, such as prevalence of obesity and attendant inflammation, are at work, said Dr. Randolph.

What is also unclear is why hospitalized patients with MIS-C had higher percentages of ICU admission in the latter part of the study period, compared with the earlier period. “Did the patients change, or did practice change as we got to understand the disease process?” asked Dr. Randolph. “It could be that they got better at the diagnosis and were weeding out some of the patients who they realized didn’t need to be hospitalized. At the very beginning, we had a very low threshold to admit patients, because we didn’t know, and then, over time, people understood what was going on and felt more comfortable monitoring them as outpatients.”

This study was partially funded by a Janeway Foundation Research Grant to support data collection. Dr. Robinson disclosed no conflicts of interest. Dr. Randolph reported receiving royalties from UpToDate and personal fees from the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company.

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

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Older age and higher ferritin levels at hospital admission predict severe illness in COVID-related multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), according to a Canadian multicenter cohort study.

The adjusted absolute risk for admission to an intensive care unit was 43.6% among children aged 6 years and older and 46.2% in children aged 13 to 17 years, compared with 18.4% in children aged 5 years or younger.

“We do not understand why teens get more severe MIS-C than younger children,” senior author Joan Robinson, MD, of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, told this news organization. “It is possible that more exposures to other coronaviruses in the past result in them having a more robust immune response to SARS-CoV-2, which results in more inflammation.”

The data were published  in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
 

A multinational study

The study included data on 232 children admitted with probable or confirmed MIS-C at 15 hospitals in Canada, Iran, and Costa Rica between March 1, 2020, and March 7, 2021. The median age of the children was 5.8 years, 56.0% were boys, and 21.6% had comorbidities.

Although cardiac involvement was common (58.6%), and almost one-third of the cohort (31.5%) was admitted to an ICU, “recovery was typically rapid, with 85% of patients discharged within 10 days,” said Dr. Robinson, for the Pediatric Investigators Collaborative Network on Infections in Canada (PICNIC).
 

Older age as a risk

The results suggest that older age is associated with increased risk of severe MIS-C. “However, one would then predict that adults would be at even higher risk than teens, whereas the same syndrome in adults (MIS-A) is very, very rare,” said Dr. Robinson.

The study also found that children admitted with ferritin levels greater than 500 μg/L, signaling greater inflammation, also had an increased risk for ICU admission, compared with those with lower levels (adjusted risk difference, 18.4%; relative risk, 1.69). “This is presumably because the more inflammation that the child has, the more likely they are to have inflammation of the heart, which can lead to low blood pressure,” said Dr. Robinson.
 

Features of MIS-C

Among all patients with MIS-C, gastrointestinal involvement was common (89.2%), as were mucocutaneous findings (84.5%). Children with MIS-C had fever for a median duration of 6 days. “Clinicians who see children in their practice commonly have to determine why a child is febrile. Our study shows that one mainly has to consider MIS-C if febrile children have a rash and one or more of vomiting, diarrhea, or abdominal pain,” said Dr. Robinson. 

The study also found that patients with MIS-C who were admitted to the hospital in the latter part of the study period (Nov. 1, 2020, to March 7, 2021) were slightly more likely to require ICU admission, compared with those admitted between March 1 and Oct. 31, 2020. “We cannot provide a clear explanation [for this],” the authors noted. “The features of severe MIS-C were widely publicized by May 2020, so it seems unlikely that severe cases were missed early in the study period. SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern have replaced the wild-type virus. It is possible that the immune response to circulating variants alters the severity of COVID-19 and MIS-C, when compared with wild-type virus.”

Despite initial concerns that pediatric COVID-19 vaccines might cause MIS-C, Dr. Robinson says data suggest this is rarely, if ever, the case, and that vaccines actually prevent the syndrome. She says further studies will be needed to assess MIS-C risk following reinfection with SARS-CoV-2. “I am an optimistic person, and it is my hope that MIS-C following reinfection is rare,” she said. “If this is the case, perhaps we will see very few cases once almost all children have been immunized and/or had SARS-CoV-2 infection.”  
 

 

 

‘Differences across countries’

Adrienne Randolph, MD, a pediatrician at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and senior author of a large case series of patients with MIS-C, said that the Canadian study is valuable because it includes children from three countries. “It’s very interesting that there are differences across countries,” she said. “The patients in Iran had the highest percentage (58.7%) going into the ICU, whereas Costa Rica had the lowest percentage (9.2%), and the percentage going to the ICU in Canada (34.7%) was less than the percentages we see in the U.S. – which is pretty consistently about 60% to 70% of MIS-C patients going into the ICU.” Dr. Randolph was not involved in the current study.

Reasons for differences in the rates of ICU visits will be important to explore in the effort to standardize diagnostic criteria, stratification of severity, and recommendations for treatment of MIS-C, said Dr. Randolph.

“What is consistent is that the younger kids, zero to 5 years, in general are less ill,” she said. “That’s been consistent across multiple countries.” It’s unclear whether the cause of this difference is that parents observe younger patients more closely than they do teenagers, or whether other aspects of adolescence, such as prevalence of obesity and attendant inflammation, are at work, said Dr. Randolph.

What is also unclear is why hospitalized patients with MIS-C had higher percentages of ICU admission in the latter part of the study period, compared with the earlier period. “Did the patients change, or did practice change as we got to understand the disease process?” asked Dr. Randolph. “It could be that they got better at the diagnosis and were weeding out some of the patients who they realized didn’t need to be hospitalized. At the very beginning, we had a very low threshold to admit patients, because we didn’t know, and then, over time, people understood what was going on and felt more comfortable monitoring them as outpatients.”

This study was partially funded by a Janeway Foundation Research Grant to support data collection. Dr. Robinson disclosed no conflicts of interest. Dr. Randolph reported receiving royalties from UpToDate and personal fees from the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company.

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

Older age and higher ferritin levels at hospital admission predict severe illness in COVID-related multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), according to a Canadian multicenter cohort study.

The adjusted absolute risk for admission to an intensive care unit was 43.6% among children aged 6 years and older and 46.2% in children aged 13 to 17 years, compared with 18.4% in children aged 5 years or younger.

“We do not understand why teens get more severe MIS-C than younger children,” senior author Joan Robinson, MD, of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, told this news organization. “It is possible that more exposures to other coronaviruses in the past result in them having a more robust immune response to SARS-CoV-2, which results in more inflammation.”

The data were published  in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
 

A multinational study

The study included data on 232 children admitted with probable or confirmed MIS-C at 15 hospitals in Canada, Iran, and Costa Rica between March 1, 2020, and March 7, 2021. The median age of the children was 5.8 years, 56.0% were boys, and 21.6% had comorbidities.

Although cardiac involvement was common (58.6%), and almost one-third of the cohort (31.5%) was admitted to an ICU, “recovery was typically rapid, with 85% of patients discharged within 10 days,” said Dr. Robinson, for the Pediatric Investigators Collaborative Network on Infections in Canada (PICNIC).
 

Older age as a risk

The results suggest that older age is associated with increased risk of severe MIS-C. “However, one would then predict that adults would be at even higher risk than teens, whereas the same syndrome in adults (MIS-A) is very, very rare,” said Dr. Robinson.

The study also found that children admitted with ferritin levels greater than 500 μg/L, signaling greater inflammation, also had an increased risk for ICU admission, compared with those with lower levels (adjusted risk difference, 18.4%; relative risk, 1.69). “This is presumably because the more inflammation that the child has, the more likely they are to have inflammation of the heart, which can lead to low blood pressure,” said Dr. Robinson.
 

Features of MIS-C

Among all patients with MIS-C, gastrointestinal involvement was common (89.2%), as were mucocutaneous findings (84.5%). Children with MIS-C had fever for a median duration of 6 days. “Clinicians who see children in their practice commonly have to determine why a child is febrile. Our study shows that one mainly has to consider MIS-C if febrile children have a rash and one or more of vomiting, diarrhea, or abdominal pain,” said Dr. Robinson. 

The study also found that patients with MIS-C who were admitted to the hospital in the latter part of the study period (Nov. 1, 2020, to March 7, 2021) were slightly more likely to require ICU admission, compared with those admitted between March 1 and Oct. 31, 2020. “We cannot provide a clear explanation [for this],” the authors noted. “The features of severe MIS-C were widely publicized by May 2020, so it seems unlikely that severe cases were missed early in the study period. SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern have replaced the wild-type virus. It is possible that the immune response to circulating variants alters the severity of COVID-19 and MIS-C, when compared with wild-type virus.”

Despite initial concerns that pediatric COVID-19 vaccines might cause MIS-C, Dr. Robinson says data suggest this is rarely, if ever, the case, and that vaccines actually prevent the syndrome. She says further studies will be needed to assess MIS-C risk following reinfection with SARS-CoV-2. “I am an optimistic person, and it is my hope that MIS-C following reinfection is rare,” she said. “If this is the case, perhaps we will see very few cases once almost all children have been immunized and/or had SARS-CoV-2 infection.”  
 

 

 

‘Differences across countries’

Adrienne Randolph, MD, a pediatrician at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and senior author of a large case series of patients with MIS-C, said that the Canadian study is valuable because it includes children from three countries. “It’s very interesting that there are differences across countries,” she said. “The patients in Iran had the highest percentage (58.7%) going into the ICU, whereas Costa Rica had the lowest percentage (9.2%), and the percentage going to the ICU in Canada (34.7%) was less than the percentages we see in the U.S. – which is pretty consistently about 60% to 70% of MIS-C patients going into the ICU.” Dr. Randolph was not involved in the current study.

Reasons for differences in the rates of ICU visits will be important to explore in the effort to standardize diagnostic criteria, stratification of severity, and recommendations for treatment of MIS-C, said Dr. Randolph.

“What is consistent is that the younger kids, zero to 5 years, in general are less ill,” she said. “That’s been consistent across multiple countries.” It’s unclear whether the cause of this difference is that parents observe younger patients more closely than they do teenagers, or whether other aspects of adolescence, such as prevalence of obesity and attendant inflammation, are at work, said Dr. Randolph.

What is also unclear is why hospitalized patients with MIS-C had higher percentages of ICU admission in the latter part of the study period, compared with the earlier period. “Did the patients change, or did practice change as we got to understand the disease process?” asked Dr. Randolph. “It could be that they got better at the diagnosis and were weeding out some of the patients who they realized didn’t need to be hospitalized. At the very beginning, we had a very low threshold to admit patients, because we didn’t know, and then, over time, people understood what was going on and felt more comfortable monitoring them as outpatients.”

This study was partially funded by a Janeway Foundation Research Grant to support data collection. Dr. Robinson disclosed no conflicts of interest. Dr. Randolph reported receiving royalties from UpToDate and personal fees from the La Jolla Pharmaceutical Company.

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

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Judge strikes down Biden mask mandate for planes, transit

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A federal judge in Florida has struck down the Biden administration’s mandate that travelers on airlines, buses, trains, and other public transit wear masks.

The mandate, enacted in February 2021, is unconstitutional because Congress never granted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the power to create such a requirement, U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle said in her order issued April 18.

“Congress addressed whether the CDC may enact preventative measures that condition the interstate travel of an entire population to CDC dictates. It may not,” the order says.

While the government argued that the definition of “sanitation” in federal law allows it to create travel restrictions like the use of masks, Judge Mizelle disagreed.

“A power to improve ‘sanitation’ would easily extend to requiring vaccinations against COVID-19, the seasonal flu, or other diseases. Or to mandatory social distancing, coughing-into-elbows, and daily multivitamins,” she wrote.

The Biden administration has extended the mask mandate several times since it was first announced. Most recently, the mandate was extended last week and was set to end May 3.

The rule has been alternately praised and criticized by airlines, pilots, and flight attendants. Lawsuits have been filed over the mandate, but Judge Mizelle ruled in favor of two people and the Health Freedom Defense Fund, who filed suit in July 2021.

It is not yet clear if the Biden administration will appeal the decision.

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

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A federal judge in Florida has struck down the Biden administration’s mandate that travelers on airlines, buses, trains, and other public transit wear masks.

The mandate, enacted in February 2021, is unconstitutional because Congress never granted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the power to create such a requirement, U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle said in her order issued April 18.

“Congress addressed whether the CDC may enact preventative measures that condition the interstate travel of an entire population to CDC dictates. It may not,” the order says.

While the government argued that the definition of “sanitation” in federal law allows it to create travel restrictions like the use of masks, Judge Mizelle disagreed.

“A power to improve ‘sanitation’ would easily extend to requiring vaccinations against COVID-19, the seasonal flu, or other diseases. Or to mandatory social distancing, coughing-into-elbows, and daily multivitamins,” she wrote.

The Biden administration has extended the mask mandate several times since it was first announced. Most recently, the mandate was extended last week and was set to end May 3.

The rule has been alternately praised and criticized by airlines, pilots, and flight attendants. Lawsuits have been filed over the mandate, but Judge Mizelle ruled in favor of two people and the Health Freedom Defense Fund, who filed suit in July 2021.

It is not yet clear if the Biden administration will appeal the decision.

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

A federal judge in Florida has struck down the Biden administration’s mandate that travelers on airlines, buses, trains, and other public transit wear masks.

The mandate, enacted in February 2021, is unconstitutional because Congress never granted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the power to create such a requirement, U.S. District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle said in her order issued April 18.

“Congress addressed whether the CDC may enact preventative measures that condition the interstate travel of an entire population to CDC dictates. It may not,” the order says.

While the government argued that the definition of “sanitation” in federal law allows it to create travel restrictions like the use of masks, Judge Mizelle disagreed.

“A power to improve ‘sanitation’ would easily extend to requiring vaccinations against COVID-19, the seasonal flu, or other diseases. Or to mandatory social distancing, coughing-into-elbows, and daily multivitamins,” she wrote.

The Biden administration has extended the mask mandate several times since it was first announced. Most recently, the mandate was extended last week and was set to end May 3.

The rule has been alternately praised and criticized by airlines, pilots, and flight attendants. Lawsuits have been filed over the mandate, but Judge Mizelle ruled in favor of two people and the Health Freedom Defense Fund, who filed suit in July 2021.

It is not yet clear if the Biden administration will appeal the decision.

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

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Pediatric hepatitis cases may be linked to adenovirus, CDC says

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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a health alert regarding severe hepatitis in young children after several cases have been reported in Alabama. Public health officials in the United Kingdom are also investigating more than 100 cases. While the source of the infections is unknown, “a possible association between pediatric hepatitis and adenovirus infection is currently under investigation,” according to the CDC alert.

Internationally, 108 cases have been reported in the United Kingdom, with 79 cases occurring in England. There are three documented cases in Spain, and similar cases are being reported in Denmark and the Netherlands, according to an article in Science. In the United Kingdom, cases have been reported in children up to 16 years old, but most affected children are between 2 and 5 years old. Eight children in the United Kingdom have required liver transplants.

On April 14, the CDC said that nine cases have been recorded in Alabama since the fall of 2021. All of these cases have been in children between 1 and 6 years old, and two children have needed liver transplants. Two additional cases have been reported in North Carolina, according to Stat News, and both children have since recovered.

Hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E viruses—common causes of hepatitis—have been ruled out in the U.K. and Spanish cases. More than three-fourths (77%) of the children sickened in the United Kingdom and all nine cases in Alabama have tested positive for a form of the adenovirus. While adenovirus can cause hepatitis in children, it is usually in those who are immunocompromised.

The CDC health alert advises clinicians who have cases of unexplained hepatitis in children to test for adenovirus and report these cases to the CDC as well as state public health authorities. The agency recommends nucleic acid amplification testing to detect adenovirus using respiratory swabs, stool samples or rectal swabs, or blood.

Officials are exploring whether these cases are linked to a version of the virus called adenovirus 41, which is associated with gut inflammation. The most recent case in Alabama was reported in February, and five of the nine children in the state with these puzzling cases of hepatitis have tested positive for adenovirus 41.

There have yet to be any links among the cases in Alabama or North Carolina, and investigators in the United Kingdom have also not found any connections in their cases, STAT News reports.

“CDC is working with state health departments to see if there are additional U.S. cases and what may be causing these cases,” said Kristen Nordlund, a CDC spokesperson, in a statement to STAT News. “At this time, adenovirus may be the cause for these, but investigators are still learning more – including ruling out the more common causes of hepatitis.”

Looking for other explanations

None of the children in the United States with hepatitis had COVID-19, but a few children in the United Kingdom have tested positive for the virus; none of these children have received the COVID-19 vaccine.

While the U.K. Health Security Agency says their investigation “continues to point toward a link to adenovirus infection,” they are also considering other contributing factors such as an environmental cause or COVID-19.

“COVID has been consistently shown to increase liver test numbers,” Nancy Reau, MD, the section chief of hepatology at Rush University in Chicago, said in an interview with this news organization. “It has been shown to cause other organ involvement besides just pulmonary symptoms and respiratory failure. As this virus evolves, it might be that in children, it is more able to present as hepatitis.”
 

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

This article was updated 4/22/22.

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The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a health alert regarding severe hepatitis in young children after several cases have been reported in Alabama. Public health officials in the United Kingdom are also investigating more than 100 cases. While the source of the infections is unknown, “a possible association between pediatric hepatitis and adenovirus infection is currently under investigation,” according to the CDC alert.

Internationally, 108 cases have been reported in the United Kingdom, with 79 cases occurring in England. There are three documented cases in Spain, and similar cases are being reported in Denmark and the Netherlands, according to an article in Science. In the United Kingdom, cases have been reported in children up to 16 years old, but most affected children are between 2 and 5 years old. Eight children in the United Kingdom have required liver transplants.

On April 14, the CDC said that nine cases have been recorded in Alabama since the fall of 2021. All of these cases have been in children between 1 and 6 years old, and two children have needed liver transplants. Two additional cases have been reported in North Carolina, according to Stat News, and both children have since recovered.

Hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E viruses—common causes of hepatitis—have been ruled out in the U.K. and Spanish cases. More than three-fourths (77%) of the children sickened in the United Kingdom and all nine cases in Alabama have tested positive for a form of the adenovirus. While adenovirus can cause hepatitis in children, it is usually in those who are immunocompromised.

The CDC health alert advises clinicians who have cases of unexplained hepatitis in children to test for adenovirus and report these cases to the CDC as well as state public health authorities. The agency recommends nucleic acid amplification testing to detect adenovirus using respiratory swabs, stool samples or rectal swabs, or blood.

Officials are exploring whether these cases are linked to a version of the virus called adenovirus 41, which is associated with gut inflammation. The most recent case in Alabama was reported in February, and five of the nine children in the state with these puzzling cases of hepatitis have tested positive for adenovirus 41.

There have yet to be any links among the cases in Alabama or North Carolina, and investigators in the United Kingdom have also not found any connections in their cases, STAT News reports.

“CDC is working with state health departments to see if there are additional U.S. cases and what may be causing these cases,” said Kristen Nordlund, a CDC spokesperson, in a statement to STAT News. “At this time, adenovirus may be the cause for these, but investigators are still learning more – including ruling out the more common causes of hepatitis.”

Looking for other explanations

None of the children in the United States with hepatitis had COVID-19, but a few children in the United Kingdom have tested positive for the virus; none of these children have received the COVID-19 vaccine.

While the U.K. Health Security Agency says their investigation “continues to point toward a link to adenovirus infection,” they are also considering other contributing factors such as an environmental cause or COVID-19.

“COVID has been consistently shown to increase liver test numbers,” Nancy Reau, MD, the section chief of hepatology at Rush University in Chicago, said in an interview with this news organization. “It has been shown to cause other organ involvement besides just pulmonary symptoms and respiratory failure. As this virus evolves, it might be that in children, it is more able to present as hepatitis.”
 

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

This article was updated 4/22/22.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a health alert regarding severe hepatitis in young children after several cases have been reported in Alabama. Public health officials in the United Kingdom are also investigating more than 100 cases. While the source of the infections is unknown, “a possible association between pediatric hepatitis and adenovirus infection is currently under investigation,” according to the CDC alert.

Internationally, 108 cases have been reported in the United Kingdom, with 79 cases occurring in England. There are three documented cases in Spain, and similar cases are being reported in Denmark and the Netherlands, according to an article in Science. In the United Kingdom, cases have been reported in children up to 16 years old, but most affected children are between 2 and 5 years old. Eight children in the United Kingdom have required liver transplants.

On April 14, the CDC said that nine cases have been recorded in Alabama since the fall of 2021. All of these cases have been in children between 1 and 6 years old, and two children have needed liver transplants. Two additional cases have been reported in North Carolina, according to Stat News, and both children have since recovered.

Hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E viruses—common causes of hepatitis—have been ruled out in the U.K. and Spanish cases. More than three-fourths (77%) of the children sickened in the United Kingdom and all nine cases in Alabama have tested positive for a form of the adenovirus. While adenovirus can cause hepatitis in children, it is usually in those who are immunocompromised.

The CDC health alert advises clinicians who have cases of unexplained hepatitis in children to test for adenovirus and report these cases to the CDC as well as state public health authorities. The agency recommends nucleic acid amplification testing to detect adenovirus using respiratory swabs, stool samples or rectal swabs, or blood.

Officials are exploring whether these cases are linked to a version of the virus called adenovirus 41, which is associated with gut inflammation. The most recent case in Alabama was reported in February, and five of the nine children in the state with these puzzling cases of hepatitis have tested positive for adenovirus 41.

There have yet to be any links among the cases in Alabama or North Carolina, and investigators in the United Kingdom have also not found any connections in their cases, STAT News reports.

“CDC is working with state health departments to see if there are additional U.S. cases and what may be causing these cases,” said Kristen Nordlund, a CDC spokesperson, in a statement to STAT News. “At this time, adenovirus may be the cause for these, but investigators are still learning more – including ruling out the more common causes of hepatitis.”

Looking for other explanations

None of the children in the United States with hepatitis had COVID-19, but a few children in the United Kingdom have tested positive for the virus; none of these children have received the COVID-19 vaccine.

While the U.K. Health Security Agency says their investigation “continues to point toward a link to adenovirus infection,” they are also considering other contributing factors such as an environmental cause or COVID-19.

“COVID has been consistently shown to increase liver test numbers,” Nancy Reau, MD, the section chief of hepatology at Rush University in Chicago, said in an interview with this news organization. “It has been shown to cause other organ involvement besides just pulmonary symptoms and respiratory failure. As this virus evolves, it might be that in children, it is more able to present as hepatitis.”
 

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

This article was updated 4/22/22.

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Who doesn’t text in 2022? Most state Medicaid programs

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West Virginia will use the U.S. Postal Service and an online account in the summer of 2022 to connect with Medicaid enrollees about the expected end of the COVID public health emergency, which will put many recipients at risk of losing their coverage.

What West Virginia won’t do is use a form of communication that’s ubiquitous worldwide: text messaging.

“West Virginia isn’t set up to text its members,” Allison Adler, the state’s Medicaid spokesperson, wrote to KHN in an email.

Indeed, most states’ Medicaid programs won’t text enrollees despite the urgency to reach them about renewing their coverage. A KFF report published in March found just 11 states said they would use texting to alert Medicaid recipients about the end of the COVID public health emergency. In contrast, 33 states plan to use snail mail and at least 20 will reach out with individual or automated phone calls.

“It doesn’t make any sense when texting is how most people communicate today,” said Kinda Serafi, a partner with the consulting firm Manatt Health.

State Medicaid agencies for months have been preparing for the end of the public health emergency. As part of a COVID relief law approved in March 2020, Congress prohibited states from dropping anyone from Medicaid coverage unless they moved out of state during the public health emergency. When the emergency ends, state Medicaid officials must reevaluate each enrollee’s eligibility. Millions of people could lose their coverage if they earn too much or fail to provide the information needed to verify income or residency.

As of November, about 86 million people were enrolled in Medicaid, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That’s up from 71 million in February 2020, before COVID began to ravage the nation.

West Virginia has more than 600,000 Medicaid enrollees. Adler said about 100,000 of them could lose their eligibility at the end of the public health emergency because either the state has determined they’re ineligible or they’ve failed to respond to requests that they update their income information.

“It’s frustrating that texting is a means to meet people where they are and that this has not been picked up more by states,” said Jennifer Wagner, director of Medicaid eligibility and enrollment for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington-based research group.

The problem with relying on the Postal Service is that a letter can get hidden in “junk” mail or can fail to reach people who have moved or are homeless, Ms. Serafi said. And email, if people have an account, can end up in spam folders.

In contrast, surveys show lower-income Americans are just as likely to have smartphones and cellphones as the general population. And most people regularly use texting.

In Michigan, Medicaid officials started using text messaging to communicate with enrollees in 2020 after building a system with the help of federal COVID relief funding. They said texting is an economical way to reach enrollees.

“It costs us 2 cents per text message, which is incredibly cheap,” said Steph White, an enrollment coordinator for the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services. “It’s a great return on investment.”

CMS officials have told states they should consider texting, along with other communication methods, when trying to reach enrollees when the public health emergency ends. But many states don’t have the technology or information about enrollees to do it.

Efforts to add texting also face legal barriers, including a federal law that bars texting people without their consent. The Federal Communications Commission ruled in 2021 that state agencies are exempt from the law, but whether counties that handle Medicaid duties for some states and Medicaid managed-care organizations that work in more than 40 states are exempt as well is unclear, said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.

CMS spokesperson Beth Lynk said the agency is trying to figure out how Medicaid agencies, counties, and health plans can text enrollees within the constraints of federal law.

Several states told KHN that Medicaid health plans will be helping connect with enrollees and that they expect the plans to use text messaging. But the requirement to get consent from enrollees before texting could limit that effort.

That’s the situation in Virginia, where only about 30,000 Medicaid enrollees – out of more than a million – have agreed to receive text messages directly from the state, said spokesperson Christina Nuckols.

In an effort to boost that number, the state plans to ask enrollees if they want to opt out of receiving text messages, rather than ask them to opt in, she said. This way enrollees would contact the state only if they don’t want to be texted. The state is reviewing its legal options to make that happen.

Meanwhile, Ms. Nuckols added, the state expects Medicaid health plans to contact enrollees about updating their contact information. Four of Virginia’s six Medicaid plans, which serve the bulk of the state’s enrollees, have permission to text about 316,000.

Craig Kennedy, CEO of Medicaid Health Plans of America, a trade group, said that most plans are using texting and that Medicaid officials will use multiple strategies to connect with enrollees. “I do not see this as a detriment, that states are not texting information about reenrollment,” he said. “I know we will be helping with that.”

California officials in March directed Medicaid health plans to use a variety of communication methods, including texting, to ensure that members can retain coverage if they remain eligible. The officials told health plans they could ask for consent through an initial text.

California officials say they also plan to ask enrollees for consent to be texted on the enrollment application, although federal approval for the change is not expected until the fall.

A few state Medicaid programs have experimented in recent years with pilot programs that included texting enrollees.

In 2019, Louisiana worked with the nonprofit group Code for America to send text messages that reminded people about renewing coverage and providing income information for verification. Compared with traditional communication methods, the texts led to a 67% increase in enrollees being renewed for coverage and a 56% increase in enrollees verifying their income in response to inquiries, said Medicaid spokesperson Alyson Neel.

Nonetheless, the state isn’t planning to text Medicaid enrollees about the end of the public health emergency because it hasn’t set up a system for that. “Medicaid has not yet been able to implement a text messaging system of its own due to other agency priorities,” Ms. Neel said.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

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West Virginia will use the U.S. Postal Service and an online account in the summer of 2022 to connect with Medicaid enrollees about the expected end of the COVID public health emergency, which will put many recipients at risk of losing their coverage.

What West Virginia won’t do is use a form of communication that’s ubiquitous worldwide: text messaging.

“West Virginia isn’t set up to text its members,” Allison Adler, the state’s Medicaid spokesperson, wrote to KHN in an email.

Indeed, most states’ Medicaid programs won’t text enrollees despite the urgency to reach them about renewing their coverage. A KFF report published in March found just 11 states said they would use texting to alert Medicaid recipients about the end of the COVID public health emergency. In contrast, 33 states plan to use snail mail and at least 20 will reach out with individual or automated phone calls.

“It doesn’t make any sense when texting is how most people communicate today,” said Kinda Serafi, a partner with the consulting firm Manatt Health.

State Medicaid agencies for months have been preparing for the end of the public health emergency. As part of a COVID relief law approved in March 2020, Congress prohibited states from dropping anyone from Medicaid coverage unless they moved out of state during the public health emergency. When the emergency ends, state Medicaid officials must reevaluate each enrollee’s eligibility. Millions of people could lose their coverage if they earn too much or fail to provide the information needed to verify income or residency.

As of November, about 86 million people were enrolled in Medicaid, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That’s up from 71 million in February 2020, before COVID began to ravage the nation.

West Virginia has more than 600,000 Medicaid enrollees. Adler said about 100,000 of them could lose their eligibility at the end of the public health emergency because either the state has determined they’re ineligible or they’ve failed to respond to requests that they update their income information.

“It’s frustrating that texting is a means to meet people where they are and that this has not been picked up more by states,” said Jennifer Wagner, director of Medicaid eligibility and enrollment for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington-based research group.

The problem with relying on the Postal Service is that a letter can get hidden in “junk” mail or can fail to reach people who have moved or are homeless, Ms. Serafi said. And email, if people have an account, can end up in spam folders.

In contrast, surveys show lower-income Americans are just as likely to have smartphones and cellphones as the general population. And most people regularly use texting.

In Michigan, Medicaid officials started using text messaging to communicate with enrollees in 2020 after building a system with the help of federal COVID relief funding. They said texting is an economical way to reach enrollees.

“It costs us 2 cents per text message, which is incredibly cheap,” said Steph White, an enrollment coordinator for the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services. “It’s a great return on investment.”

CMS officials have told states they should consider texting, along with other communication methods, when trying to reach enrollees when the public health emergency ends. But many states don’t have the technology or information about enrollees to do it.

Efforts to add texting also face legal barriers, including a federal law that bars texting people without their consent. The Federal Communications Commission ruled in 2021 that state agencies are exempt from the law, but whether counties that handle Medicaid duties for some states and Medicaid managed-care organizations that work in more than 40 states are exempt as well is unclear, said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.

CMS spokesperson Beth Lynk said the agency is trying to figure out how Medicaid agencies, counties, and health plans can text enrollees within the constraints of federal law.

Several states told KHN that Medicaid health plans will be helping connect with enrollees and that they expect the plans to use text messaging. But the requirement to get consent from enrollees before texting could limit that effort.

That’s the situation in Virginia, where only about 30,000 Medicaid enrollees – out of more than a million – have agreed to receive text messages directly from the state, said spokesperson Christina Nuckols.

In an effort to boost that number, the state plans to ask enrollees if they want to opt out of receiving text messages, rather than ask them to opt in, she said. This way enrollees would contact the state only if they don’t want to be texted. The state is reviewing its legal options to make that happen.

Meanwhile, Ms. Nuckols added, the state expects Medicaid health plans to contact enrollees about updating their contact information. Four of Virginia’s six Medicaid plans, which serve the bulk of the state’s enrollees, have permission to text about 316,000.

Craig Kennedy, CEO of Medicaid Health Plans of America, a trade group, said that most plans are using texting and that Medicaid officials will use multiple strategies to connect with enrollees. “I do not see this as a detriment, that states are not texting information about reenrollment,” he said. “I know we will be helping with that.”

California officials in March directed Medicaid health plans to use a variety of communication methods, including texting, to ensure that members can retain coverage if they remain eligible. The officials told health plans they could ask for consent through an initial text.

California officials say they also plan to ask enrollees for consent to be texted on the enrollment application, although federal approval for the change is not expected until the fall.

A few state Medicaid programs have experimented in recent years with pilot programs that included texting enrollees.

In 2019, Louisiana worked with the nonprofit group Code for America to send text messages that reminded people about renewing coverage and providing income information for verification. Compared with traditional communication methods, the texts led to a 67% increase in enrollees being renewed for coverage and a 56% increase in enrollees verifying their income in response to inquiries, said Medicaid spokesperson Alyson Neel.

Nonetheless, the state isn’t planning to text Medicaid enrollees about the end of the public health emergency because it hasn’t set up a system for that. “Medicaid has not yet been able to implement a text messaging system of its own due to other agency priorities,” Ms. Neel said.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

West Virginia will use the U.S. Postal Service and an online account in the summer of 2022 to connect with Medicaid enrollees about the expected end of the COVID public health emergency, which will put many recipients at risk of losing their coverage.

What West Virginia won’t do is use a form of communication that’s ubiquitous worldwide: text messaging.

“West Virginia isn’t set up to text its members,” Allison Adler, the state’s Medicaid spokesperson, wrote to KHN in an email.

Indeed, most states’ Medicaid programs won’t text enrollees despite the urgency to reach them about renewing their coverage. A KFF report published in March found just 11 states said they would use texting to alert Medicaid recipients about the end of the COVID public health emergency. In contrast, 33 states plan to use snail mail and at least 20 will reach out with individual or automated phone calls.

“It doesn’t make any sense when texting is how most people communicate today,” said Kinda Serafi, a partner with the consulting firm Manatt Health.

State Medicaid agencies for months have been preparing for the end of the public health emergency. As part of a COVID relief law approved in March 2020, Congress prohibited states from dropping anyone from Medicaid coverage unless they moved out of state during the public health emergency. When the emergency ends, state Medicaid officials must reevaluate each enrollee’s eligibility. Millions of people could lose their coverage if they earn too much or fail to provide the information needed to verify income or residency.

As of November, about 86 million people were enrolled in Medicaid, according to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. That’s up from 71 million in February 2020, before COVID began to ravage the nation.

West Virginia has more than 600,000 Medicaid enrollees. Adler said about 100,000 of them could lose their eligibility at the end of the public health emergency because either the state has determined they’re ineligible or they’ve failed to respond to requests that they update their income information.

“It’s frustrating that texting is a means to meet people where they are and that this has not been picked up more by states,” said Jennifer Wagner, director of Medicaid eligibility and enrollment for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington-based research group.

The problem with relying on the Postal Service is that a letter can get hidden in “junk” mail or can fail to reach people who have moved or are homeless, Ms. Serafi said. And email, if people have an account, can end up in spam folders.

In contrast, surveys show lower-income Americans are just as likely to have smartphones and cellphones as the general population. And most people regularly use texting.

In Michigan, Medicaid officials started using text messaging to communicate with enrollees in 2020 after building a system with the help of federal COVID relief funding. They said texting is an economical way to reach enrollees.

“It costs us 2 cents per text message, which is incredibly cheap,” said Steph White, an enrollment coordinator for the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services. “It’s a great return on investment.”

CMS officials have told states they should consider texting, along with other communication methods, when trying to reach enrollees when the public health emergency ends. But many states don’t have the technology or information about enrollees to do it.

Efforts to add texting also face legal barriers, including a federal law that bars texting people without their consent. The Federal Communications Commission ruled in 2021 that state agencies are exempt from the law, but whether counties that handle Medicaid duties for some states and Medicaid managed-care organizations that work in more than 40 states are exempt as well is unclear, said Matt Salo, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.

CMS spokesperson Beth Lynk said the agency is trying to figure out how Medicaid agencies, counties, and health plans can text enrollees within the constraints of federal law.

Several states told KHN that Medicaid health plans will be helping connect with enrollees and that they expect the plans to use text messaging. But the requirement to get consent from enrollees before texting could limit that effort.

That’s the situation in Virginia, where only about 30,000 Medicaid enrollees – out of more than a million – have agreed to receive text messages directly from the state, said spokesperson Christina Nuckols.

In an effort to boost that number, the state plans to ask enrollees if they want to opt out of receiving text messages, rather than ask them to opt in, she said. This way enrollees would contact the state only if they don’t want to be texted. The state is reviewing its legal options to make that happen.

Meanwhile, Ms. Nuckols added, the state expects Medicaid health plans to contact enrollees about updating their contact information. Four of Virginia’s six Medicaid plans, which serve the bulk of the state’s enrollees, have permission to text about 316,000.

Craig Kennedy, CEO of Medicaid Health Plans of America, a trade group, said that most plans are using texting and that Medicaid officials will use multiple strategies to connect with enrollees. “I do not see this as a detriment, that states are not texting information about reenrollment,” he said. “I know we will be helping with that.”

California officials in March directed Medicaid health plans to use a variety of communication methods, including texting, to ensure that members can retain coverage if they remain eligible. The officials told health plans they could ask for consent through an initial text.

California officials say they also plan to ask enrollees for consent to be texted on the enrollment application, although federal approval for the change is not expected until the fall.

A few state Medicaid programs have experimented in recent years with pilot programs that included texting enrollees.

In 2019, Louisiana worked with the nonprofit group Code for America to send text messages that reminded people about renewing coverage and providing income information for verification. Compared with traditional communication methods, the texts led to a 67% increase in enrollees being renewed for coverage and a 56% increase in enrollees verifying their income in response to inquiries, said Medicaid spokesperson Alyson Neel.

Nonetheless, the state isn’t planning to text Medicaid enrollees about the end of the public health emergency because it hasn’t set up a system for that. “Medicaid has not yet been able to implement a text messaging system of its own due to other agency priorities,” Ms. Neel said.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

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Omicron BA.2: What do we know so far?

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Since November 2021, the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 has quickly become the most dominant variant worldwide. Early sequencing of Omicron in South Africa alerted researchers to the possibility that Omicron could be a cause for concern because of extensive mutations of the spike protein. Omicron has 30 mutations of the spike protein, compared with the original Wuhan-Hu-1 variant, with 15 mutations of the receptor-binding domain (which are linked to a decrease in antibody binding), mutations at the furin S1/S2 site (which improves furin binding and increases infectiousness), and mutations of the amino terminal domain (which is the main binding site for some of the therapeutic antibodies used to treat COVID-19 infections).

Omicron’s functional characteristics

Non–peer-reviewed studies have shown a replication of Omicron in pulmonary epithelial cells, which was shown to be less efficient, when compared with Delta and Wuhan-Hu-1. The number of viral copies from an Omicron infection in pulmonary epithelial cells was significantly lower, compared with infection with the Delta or Wuhan-Hu-1 variants. The association of these characteristics found an increase in the number of viral copies in human epithelial cells (taken from the nasal airways) infected with Omicron. This supports the understanding that Omicron is more transmissible but results in a less severe manifestation of the disease.

As for the phenotypic expression of the infection, attention has been focused on Omicron’s reduced capacity to cause syncytia in pulmonary tissue cultures, information which is relevant to its clinical significance, if we consider that the formation of syncytia has been associated with a more severe manifestation of the disease. Furthermore, it has emerged that Omicron can use different cellular entry routes, with a preference for endosomal fusion over superficial cellular fusion. This characteristic allows Omicron to significantly increase the number of types of cells it can infect.
 

Omicron BA.2 evolves

Between November and December 2021, Omicron progressed, evolving into a variant with characteristics similar to those of its predecessors (that is, it underwent a gradual and progressive increase in transmissibility). Early studies on the Omicron variant were mainly based on the BA.1 subvariant. Since the start of January 2022, there has been an unexpected increase in BA.2 in Europe and Asia. Since then, continued surveillance on the evolution of Omicron has shown an increased prevalence of two subvariants: BA.1 with a R346K mutation (BA.1 + R346K) and B.1.1.529.2 (BA.2), with the latter containing eight unique spike mutations and 13 missing spike mutations, compared with those found in BA.1.

From these differences, we cannot presume that their antigenic properties are similar or different, but they seem to be antigenically equidistant from wild-type SARS-CoV-2, likely jeopardizing in equal measures the efficacy of current COVID-19 vaccines. Furthermore, BA.2 shows significant resistance to 17 out of 19 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies tested in this study, demonstrating that current monoclonal antibody therapy may have significant limitations in terms of adequate coverage for all subvariants of the Omicron variant.
 

Omicron BA.2 and reinfection

BA.2 initially represented only 13% of Omicron sequences at a global level, quickly becoming the dominant form in some countries, such as Denmark. At the end of 2021, BA.2 represented around 20% of all Danish cases of SARS-CoV-2. Halfway through January 2022, this had increased to around 45%, data that indicate that BA.2 carries an advantage over BA.1 within the highly vaccinated population of Denmark.

BA.2 is associated with an increased susceptibility of infection for unvaccinated individuals (odds ratio, 2.19; 95% confidence interval, 1.58-3.04), fully vaccinated individuals (OR, 2.45; 95% CI, 1.77-3.40), and booster-vaccinated individuals (OR, 2.99; 95% CI, 2.11-4.24), compared with BA.1. The pattern of increased transmissibility in BA.2 households was not observed for fully vaccinated and booster-vaccinated primary cases, where the OR of transmission was below 1 for BA.2, compared with BA.1. These data confirm the immune-evasive properties of BA.2 that further reduce the protective effect of vaccination against infection, but do not increase its transmissibility from vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections.
 

Omicron, BA.2, and vaccination

The understanding of serum neutralizing activity, in correlation to the efficacy of a vaccine, is a priority of research because of the growing epidemiological significance of BA.2. There is evidence to support the claim that the immune-evasive nature of BA.2 doesn›t seem to be as severe as that of BA.1, and it is possible that there are other viral or host factors that are enabling the rapid diffusion of BA.2. A study published in Science Immunology investigated humoral and cellular immune responses to Omicron and other variants of concern (VOCs), looking to understand how, and to what degree, vaccinated individuals are protected against Omicron. From the results, a very low level of antibody cross-neutralization of Omicron, or a lack thereof, was seen when compared with wild type, Beta, and Delta variants, which could be partially restored by a third booster vaccination. Furthermore, T lymphocytes were shown to recognize Omicron with the same efficacy as seen for the other VOCs, suggesting that vaccinated individuals maintain T lymphocyte immunity, an element that is capable of providing protection in the absence of neutralizing antibodies, limiting the chance of serious disease.

These results are consistent with those available from a study performed in a population from Qatar made up of 2,239,193 people who had received at least two doses of a BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 vaccine. The efficacy of the booster against a symptomatic Omicron infection, compared with that from the primary series, was 49.4% (95% CI, 47.1-51.6). The efficacy of the booster against hospitalization for COVID-19 and the death rate from Omicron infection, compared with the primary series, was 76.5% (95% CI, 55.9-87.5). The efficacy of the BNT162b2 booster against a symptomatic Delta variant infection (or B.1.617.2), compared with the primary series, was 86.1% (95% CI, 67.3-94.1).

To summarize, the constant increase in the prevalence of BA.2 in more countries over the world has confirmed the growth advantage that this variant has compared with others. BA.2 reduces the protective effect of vaccination against infection. Omicron antibody cross-neutralization can be partially restored by a third booster vaccination, an aspect that becomes problematic in the context of a low vaccination rate, where peaks of Omicron may increase the likelihood of infection in the elderly and in other groups at a higher risk of severe disease. Omicron BA.2 opens up new evolution channels, but what do the experts think will happen?

A version of this article was originally published in Italian on Univadis.

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Since November 2021, the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 has quickly become the most dominant variant worldwide. Early sequencing of Omicron in South Africa alerted researchers to the possibility that Omicron could be a cause for concern because of extensive mutations of the spike protein. Omicron has 30 mutations of the spike protein, compared with the original Wuhan-Hu-1 variant, with 15 mutations of the receptor-binding domain (which are linked to a decrease in antibody binding), mutations at the furin S1/S2 site (which improves furin binding and increases infectiousness), and mutations of the amino terminal domain (which is the main binding site for some of the therapeutic antibodies used to treat COVID-19 infections).

Omicron’s functional characteristics

Non–peer-reviewed studies have shown a replication of Omicron in pulmonary epithelial cells, which was shown to be less efficient, when compared with Delta and Wuhan-Hu-1. The number of viral copies from an Omicron infection in pulmonary epithelial cells was significantly lower, compared with infection with the Delta or Wuhan-Hu-1 variants. The association of these characteristics found an increase in the number of viral copies in human epithelial cells (taken from the nasal airways) infected with Omicron. This supports the understanding that Omicron is more transmissible but results in a less severe manifestation of the disease.

As for the phenotypic expression of the infection, attention has been focused on Omicron’s reduced capacity to cause syncytia in pulmonary tissue cultures, information which is relevant to its clinical significance, if we consider that the formation of syncytia has been associated with a more severe manifestation of the disease. Furthermore, it has emerged that Omicron can use different cellular entry routes, with a preference for endosomal fusion over superficial cellular fusion. This characteristic allows Omicron to significantly increase the number of types of cells it can infect.
 

Omicron BA.2 evolves

Between November and December 2021, Omicron progressed, evolving into a variant with characteristics similar to those of its predecessors (that is, it underwent a gradual and progressive increase in transmissibility). Early studies on the Omicron variant were mainly based on the BA.1 subvariant. Since the start of January 2022, there has been an unexpected increase in BA.2 in Europe and Asia. Since then, continued surveillance on the evolution of Omicron has shown an increased prevalence of two subvariants: BA.1 with a R346K mutation (BA.1 + R346K) and B.1.1.529.2 (BA.2), with the latter containing eight unique spike mutations and 13 missing spike mutations, compared with those found in BA.1.

From these differences, we cannot presume that their antigenic properties are similar or different, but they seem to be antigenically equidistant from wild-type SARS-CoV-2, likely jeopardizing in equal measures the efficacy of current COVID-19 vaccines. Furthermore, BA.2 shows significant resistance to 17 out of 19 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies tested in this study, demonstrating that current monoclonal antibody therapy may have significant limitations in terms of adequate coverage for all subvariants of the Omicron variant.
 

Omicron BA.2 and reinfection

BA.2 initially represented only 13% of Omicron sequences at a global level, quickly becoming the dominant form in some countries, such as Denmark. At the end of 2021, BA.2 represented around 20% of all Danish cases of SARS-CoV-2. Halfway through January 2022, this had increased to around 45%, data that indicate that BA.2 carries an advantage over BA.1 within the highly vaccinated population of Denmark.

BA.2 is associated with an increased susceptibility of infection for unvaccinated individuals (odds ratio, 2.19; 95% confidence interval, 1.58-3.04), fully vaccinated individuals (OR, 2.45; 95% CI, 1.77-3.40), and booster-vaccinated individuals (OR, 2.99; 95% CI, 2.11-4.24), compared with BA.1. The pattern of increased transmissibility in BA.2 households was not observed for fully vaccinated and booster-vaccinated primary cases, where the OR of transmission was below 1 for BA.2, compared with BA.1. These data confirm the immune-evasive properties of BA.2 that further reduce the protective effect of vaccination against infection, but do not increase its transmissibility from vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections.
 

Omicron, BA.2, and vaccination

The understanding of serum neutralizing activity, in correlation to the efficacy of a vaccine, is a priority of research because of the growing epidemiological significance of BA.2. There is evidence to support the claim that the immune-evasive nature of BA.2 doesn›t seem to be as severe as that of BA.1, and it is possible that there are other viral or host factors that are enabling the rapid diffusion of BA.2. A study published in Science Immunology investigated humoral and cellular immune responses to Omicron and other variants of concern (VOCs), looking to understand how, and to what degree, vaccinated individuals are protected against Omicron. From the results, a very low level of antibody cross-neutralization of Omicron, or a lack thereof, was seen when compared with wild type, Beta, and Delta variants, which could be partially restored by a third booster vaccination. Furthermore, T lymphocytes were shown to recognize Omicron with the same efficacy as seen for the other VOCs, suggesting that vaccinated individuals maintain T lymphocyte immunity, an element that is capable of providing protection in the absence of neutralizing antibodies, limiting the chance of serious disease.

These results are consistent with those available from a study performed in a population from Qatar made up of 2,239,193 people who had received at least two doses of a BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 vaccine. The efficacy of the booster against a symptomatic Omicron infection, compared with that from the primary series, was 49.4% (95% CI, 47.1-51.6). The efficacy of the booster against hospitalization for COVID-19 and the death rate from Omicron infection, compared with the primary series, was 76.5% (95% CI, 55.9-87.5). The efficacy of the BNT162b2 booster against a symptomatic Delta variant infection (or B.1.617.2), compared with the primary series, was 86.1% (95% CI, 67.3-94.1).

To summarize, the constant increase in the prevalence of BA.2 in more countries over the world has confirmed the growth advantage that this variant has compared with others. BA.2 reduces the protective effect of vaccination against infection. Omicron antibody cross-neutralization can be partially restored by a third booster vaccination, an aspect that becomes problematic in the context of a low vaccination rate, where peaks of Omicron may increase the likelihood of infection in the elderly and in other groups at a higher risk of severe disease. Omicron BA.2 opens up new evolution channels, but what do the experts think will happen?

A version of this article was originally published in Italian on Univadis.

Since November 2021, the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 has quickly become the most dominant variant worldwide. Early sequencing of Omicron in South Africa alerted researchers to the possibility that Omicron could be a cause for concern because of extensive mutations of the spike protein. Omicron has 30 mutations of the spike protein, compared with the original Wuhan-Hu-1 variant, with 15 mutations of the receptor-binding domain (which are linked to a decrease in antibody binding), mutations at the furin S1/S2 site (which improves furin binding and increases infectiousness), and mutations of the amino terminal domain (which is the main binding site for some of the therapeutic antibodies used to treat COVID-19 infections).

Omicron’s functional characteristics

Non–peer-reviewed studies have shown a replication of Omicron in pulmonary epithelial cells, which was shown to be less efficient, when compared with Delta and Wuhan-Hu-1. The number of viral copies from an Omicron infection in pulmonary epithelial cells was significantly lower, compared with infection with the Delta or Wuhan-Hu-1 variants. The association of these characteristics found an increase in the number of viral copies in human epithelial cells (taken from the nasal airways) infected with Omicron. This supports the understanding that Omicron is more transmissible but results in a less severe manifestation of the disease.

As for the phenotypic expression of the infection, attention has been focused on Omicron’s reduced capacity to cause syncytia in pulmonary tissue cultures, information which is relevant to its clinical significance, if we consider that the formation of syncytia has been associated with a more severe manifestation of the disease. Furthermore, it has emerged that Omicron can use different cellular entry routes, with a preference for endosomal fusion over superficial cellular fusion. This characteristic allows Omicron to significantly increase the number of types of cells it can infect.
 

Omicron BA.2 evolves

Between November and December 2021, Omicron progressed, evolving into a variant with characteristics similar to those of its predecessors (that is, it underwent a gradual and progressive increase in transmissibility). Early studies on the Omicron variant were mainly based on the BA.1 subvariant. Since the start of January 2022, there has been an unexpected increase in BA.2 in Europe and Asia. Since then, continued surveillance on the evolution of Omicron has shown an increased prevalence of two subvariants: BA.1 with a R346K mutation (BA.1 + R346K) and B.1.1.529.2 (BA.2), with the latter containing eight unique spike mutations and 13 missing spike mutations, compared with those found in BA.1.

From these differences, we cannot presume that their antigenic properties are similar or different, but they seem to be antigenically equidistant from wild-type SARS-CoV-2, likely jeopardizing in equal measures the efficacy of current COVID-19 vaccines. Furthermore, BA.2 shows significant resistance to 17 out of 19 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies tested in this study, demonstrating that current monoclonal antibody therapy may have significant limitations in terms of adequate coverage for all subvariants of the Omicron variant.
 

Omicron BA.2 and reinfection

BA.2 initially represented only 13% of Omicron sequences at a global level, quickly becoming the dominant form in some countries, such as Denmark. At the end of 2021, BA.2 represented around 20% of all Danish cases of SARS-CoV-2. Halfway through January 2022, this had increased to around 45%, data that indicate that BA.2 carries an advantage over BA.1 within the highly vaccinated population of Denmark.

BA.2 is associated with an increased susceptibility of infection for unvaccinated individuals (odds ratio, 2.19; 95% confidence interval, 1.58-3.04), fully vaccinated individuals (OR, 2.45; 95% CI, 1.77-3.40), and booster-vaccinated individuals (OR, 2.99; 95% CI, 2.11-4.24), compared with BA.1. The pattern of increased transmissibility in BA.2 households was not observed for fully vaccinated and booster-vaccinated primary cases, where the OR of transmission was below 1 for BA.2, compared with BA.1. These data confirm the immune-evasive properties of BA.2 that further reduce the protective effect of vaccination against infection, but do not increase its transmissibility from vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections.
 

Omicron, BA.2, and vaccination

The understanding of serum neutralizing activity, in correlation to the efficacy of a vaccine, is a priority of research because of the growing epidemiological significance of BA.2. There is evidence to support the claim that the immune-evasive nature of BA.2 doesn›t seem to be as severe as that of BA.1, and it is possible that there are other viral or host factors that are enabling the rapid diffusion of BA.2. A study published in Science Immunology investigated humoral and cellular immune responses to Omicron and other variants of concern (VOCs), looking to understand how, and to what degree, vaccinated individuals are protected against Omicron. From the results, a very low level of antibody cross-neutralization of Omicron, or a lack thereof, was seen when compared with wild type, Beta, and Delta variants, which could be partially restored by a third booster vaccination. Furthermore, T lymphocytes were shown to recognize Omicron with the same efficacy as seen for the other VOCs, suggesting that vaccinated individuals maintain T lymphocyte immunity, an element that is capable of providing protection in the absence of neutralizing antibodies, limiting the chance of serious disease.

These results are consistent with those available from a study performed in a population from Qatar made up of 2,239,193 people who had received at least two doses of a BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 vaccine. The efficacy of the booster against a symptomatic Omicron infection, compared with that from the primary series, was 49.4% (95% CI, 47.1-51.6). The efficacy of the booster against hospitalization for COVID-19 and the death rate from Omicron infection, compared with the primary series, was 76.5% (95% CI, 55.9-87.5). The efficacy of the BNT162b2 booster against a symptomatic Delta variant infection (or B.1.617.2), compared with the primary series, was 86.1% (95% CI, 67.3-94.1).

To summarize, the constant increase in the prevalence of BA.2 in more countries over the world has confirmed the growth advantage that this variant has compared with others. BA.2 reduces the protective effect of vaccination against infection. Omicron antibody cross-neutralization can be partially restored by a third booster vaccination, an aspect that becomes problematic in the context of a low vaccination rate, where peaks of Omicron may increase the likelihood of infection in the elderly and in other groups at a higher risk of severe disease. Omicron BA.2 opens up new evolution channels, but what do the experts think will happen?

A version of this article was originally published in Italian on Univadis.

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New York NPs join half of states with full practice authority

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With New York nurse practitioners recently gaining full practice authority (FPA), half of the country’s NPs now have the ability to provide patients with easier access to care, according to leading national nurse organizations.

New York joins 24 other states, the District of Columbia, and two U.S. territories that have adopted FPA legislation, as reported by the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP). Like other states, New York has been under an emergency order during the pandemic that allowed NPs to practice to their full authority because of staffing shortages. That order was extended multiple times and was expected to expire this month, AANP reports.

“This has been in the making for nurse practitioners in New York since 2014, trying to get full practice authority,” Michelle Jones, RN, MSN, ANP-C, director at large for the New York State Nurses Association, said in an interview.

NPs who were allowed to practice independently during the pandemic campaigned for that provision to become permanent once the emergency order expired, she said. Ms. Jones explained that the FPA law expands the scope of practice and “removes unnecessary barriers,” namely an agreement with doctors to oversee NPs’ actions.

FPA gives NPs the authority to evaluate patients; diagnose, order, and interpret diagnostic tests; and initiate and manage treatments – including prescribing medications – without oversight by a doctor or state medical board, according to AANP.

Before the pandemic, New York NPs had “reduced” practice authority with those who had more than 3,600 hours of experience required to maintain a collaborative practice agreement with doctors and those with less experience maintaining a written agreement. The change gives full practice authority to those with more than 3,600 hours of experience, Stephen A. Ferrara, DNP, FNP-BC, AANP regional director, said in an interview.

Ferrara, who practices in New York, said the state is the largest to change to FPA. He said the state and others that have moved to FPA have determined that there “has been no lapse in quality care” during the emergency order period and that the regulatory barriers kept NPs from providing access to care.

Jones said that the law also will allow NPs to open private practices and serve underserved patients in areas that lack access to health care. “This is a step to improve access to health care and health equity of the New York population.”

It’s been a while since another state passed FPA legislation, Massachusetts in January 2021 and Delaware in August 2021, according to AANP.

Earlier this month, AANP released new data showing a 9% increase in NPs licensed to practice in the United States, rising from 325,000 in May 2021 to 355,000.

The New York legislation “will help New York attract and retain nurse practitioners and provide New Yorkers better access to quality care,” AANP President April Kapu, DNP, APRN, said in a statement.

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

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With New York nurse practitioners recently gaining full practice authority (FPA), half of the country’s NPs now have the ability to provide patients with easier access to care, according to leading national nurse organizations.

New York joins 24 other states, the District of Columbia, and two U.S. territories that have adopted FPA legislation, as reported by the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP). Like other states, New York has been under an emergency order during the pandemic that allowed NPs to practice to their full authority because of staffing shortages. That order was extended multiple times and was expected to expire this month, AANP reports.

“This has been in the making for nurse practitioners in New York since 2014, trying to get full practice authority,” Michelle Jones, RN, MSN, ANP-C, director at large for the New York State Nurses Association, said in an interview.

NPs who were allowed to practice independently during the pandemic campaigned for that provision to become permanent once the emergency order expired, she said. Ms. Jones explained that the FPA law expands the scope of practice and “removes unnecessary barriers,” namely an agreement with doctors to oversee NPs’ actions.

FPA gives NPs the authority to evaluate patients; diagnose, order, and interpret diagnostic tests; and initiate and manage treatments – including prescribing medications – without oversight by a doctor or state medical board, according to AANP.

Before the pandemic, New York NPs had “reduced” practice authority with those who had more than 3,600 hours of experience required to maintain a collaborative practice agreement with doctors and those with less experience maintaining a written agreement. The change gives full practice authority to those with more than 3,600 hours of experience, Stephen A. Ferrara, DNP, FNP-BC, AANP regional director, said in an interview.

Ferrara, who practices in New York, said the state is the largest to change to FPA. He said the state and others that have moved to FPA have determined that there “has been no lapse in quality care” during the emergency order period and that the regulatory barriers kept NPs from providing access to care.

Jones said that the law also will allow NPs to open private practices and serve underserved patients in areas that lack access to health care. “This is a step to improve access to health care and health equity of the New York population.”

It’s been a while since another state passed FPA legislation, Massachusetts in January 2021 and Delaware in August 2021, according to AANP.

Earlier this month, AANP released new data showing a 9% increase in NPs licensed to practice in the United States, rising from 325,000 in May 2021 to 355,000.

The New York legislation “will help New York attract and retain nurse practitioners and provide New Yorkers better access to quality care,” AANP President April Kapu, DNP, APRN, said in a statement.

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

With New York nurse practitioners recently gaining full practice authority (FPA), half of the country’s NPs now have the ability to provide patients with easier access to care, according to leading national nurse organizations.

New York joins 24 other states, the District of Columbia, and two U.S. territories that have adopted FPA legislation, as reported by the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP). Like other states, New York has been under an emergency order during the pandemic that allowed NPs to practice to their full authority because of staffing shortages. That order was extended multiple times and was expected to expire this month, AANP reports.

“This has been in the making for nurse practitioners in New York since 2014, trying to get full practice authority,” Michelle Jones, RN, MSN, ANP-C, director at large for the New York State Nurses Association, said in an interview.

NPs who were allowed to practice independently during the pandemic campaigned for that provision to become permanent once the emergency order expired, she said. Ms. Jones explained that the FPA law expands the scope of practice and “removes unnecessary barriers,” namely an agreement with doctors to oversee NPs’ actions.

FPA gives NPs the authority to evaluate patients; diagnose, order, and interpret diagnostic tests; and initiate and manage treatments – including prescribing medications – without oversight by a doctor or state medical board, according to AANP.

Before the pandemic, New York NPs had “reduced” practice authority with those who had more than 3,600 hours of experience required to maintain a collaborative practice agreement with doctors and those with less experience maintaining a written agreement. The change gives full practice authority to those with more than 3,600 hours of experience, Stephen A. Ferrara, DNP, FNP-BC, AANP regional director, said in an interview.

Ferrara, who practices in New York, said the state is the largest to change to FPA. He said the state and others that have moved to FPA have determined that there “has been no lapse in quality care” during the emergency order period and that the regulatory barriers kept NPs from providing access to care.

Jones said that the law also will allow NPs to open private practices and serve underserved patients in areas that lack access to health care. “This is a step to improve access to health care and health equity of the New York population.”

It’s been a while since another state passed FPA legislation, Massachusetts in January 2021 and Delaware in August 2021, according to AANP.

Earlier this month, AANP released new data showing a 9% increase in NPs licensed to practice in the United States, rising from 325,000 in May 2021 to 355,000.

The New York legislation “will help New York attract and retain nurse practitioners and provide New Yorkers better access to quality care,” AANP President April Kapu, DNP, APRN, said in a statement.

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

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More medical schools build training in transgender care

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Klay Noto wants to be the kind of doctor he never had when he began to question his gender identity.

A second-year student at Tulane University in New Orleans, he wants to listen compassionately to patients’ concerns and recognize the hurt when they question who they are. He will be the kind of doctor who knows that a breast exam can be traumatizing if someone has been breast binding or that instructing a patient to take everything off and put on a gown can be triggering for someone with gender dysphoria.

Being in the room for hard conversations is part of why he pursued med school. “There aren’t many LGBT people in medicine and as I started to understand all the dynamics that go into it, I started to see that I could do it and I could be that different kind of doctor,” he told this news organization.

Mr. Noto, who transitioned after college, wants to see more transgender people like himself teaching gender medicine, and for all medical students to be trained in what it means to be transgender and how to give compassionate and comprehensive care to all patients.

Gains have been made in providing curriculum in transgender care that trains medical students in such concepts as how to approach gender identity with sensitivity and how to manage hormone therapy and surgery for transitioning patients who request that, according to those interviewed for this story.

But they agree there’s a long way to go to having widespread medical school integration of the health care needs of about 1.4 million transgender people in the United States.

According to the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Curriculum Inventory data collected from 131 U.S. medical schools, more than 65% offered some form of transgender-related education in 2018, and more than 80% of those provided such curriculum in required courses.
 

Lack of transgender, nonbinary faculty

Jason Klein, MD, is a pediatric endocrinologist and medical director of the Transgender Youth Health Program at New York (N.Y.) University.

He said in an interview that the number of programs nationally that have gender medicine as a structured part of their curriculum has increased over the last 5-10 years, but that education is not standardized from program to program.

Dr. Jason Klein

The program at NYU includes lecture-style learning, case presentations, real-world conversations with people in the community, group discussions, and patient care, Dr. Klein said. There are formal lectures as part of adolescent medicine where students learn the differences between gender and sexual identity, and education on medical treatment of transgender and nonbinary adolescents, starting with puberty blockers and moving into affirming hormones.

Doctors also learn to know their limits and decide when to refer patients to a specialist.

“The focus is really about empathic and supportive care,” said Dr. Klein, assistant professor in the department of pediatrics at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone Health. “It’s about communication and understanding and the language we use and how to deliver affirming care in a health care setting in general.”

Imagine the potential stressors, he said, of a transgender person entering a typical health care setting. The electronic health record may only have room for the legal name of a person and not the name a person may currently be using. The intake form typically asks patients to check either male or female. The bathrooms give the same two choices. 

“Every physician should know how to speak with, treat, emote with, and empathize with care for the trans and nonbinary individual,” Dr. Klein said.

Dr. Klein noted there is a glaring shortage of trans and nonbinary physicians to lead efforts to expand education on integrating the medical, psychological, and psychosocial care that patients will receive.

Currently, gender medicine is not included on board exams for adolescent medicine or endocrinology, he said.

“Adding formal training in gender medicine to board exams would really help solidify the importance of this arena of medicine,” he noted.
 

 

 

First AAMC standards

In 2014, the AAMC released the first standards to guide curricula across medical school and residency to support training doctors to be competent in caring for transgender patients.

The standards include recommending that all doctors be able to communicate with patients related to their gender identity and understand how to deliver high-quality care to transgender and gender-diverse patients within their specialty, Kristen L. Eckstrand, MD, a coauthor of the guidelines, told this news organization.

“Many medical schools have developed their own curricula to meet these standards,” said Dr. Eckstrand, medical director for LGBTQIA+ Health at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Norma Poll-Hunter, PhD, AAMC’s senior director for workforce diversity, noted that the organization recently released its diversity, equity, and inclusion competencies that guide the medical education of students, residents, and faculty.

Dr. Poll-Hunter told this news organization that AAMC partners with the Building the Next Generation of Academic Physicians LGBT Health Workforce Conference “to support safe spaces for scholarly efforts and mentorship to advance this area of work.”
 

Team approach at Rutgers

Among the medical schools that incorporate comprehensive transgender care into the curriculum is Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J.

Gloria Bachmann, MD, is professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the school and medical director of its partner, the PROUD Gender Center of New Jersey. PROUD stands for “Promoting Respect, Outreach, Understanding, and Dignity,” and the center provides comprehensive care for transgender and nonbinary patients in one location.

Courtesy Rutgers University
Dr. Gloria Bachmann

Dr. Bachmann said Rutgers takes a team approach with both instructors and learners teaching medical students about transgender care. The teachers are not only professors in traditional classroom lectures, but patient navigators and nurses at the PROUD center, established as part of the medical school in 2020. Students learn from the navigators, for instance, how to help patients through the spectrum of inpatient and outpatient care.

“All of our learners do get to care for individuals who identify as transgender,” said Dr. Bachmann.

Among the improvements in educating students on transgender care over the years, she said, is the emphasis on social determinants of health. In the transgender population, initial questions may include whether the person is able to access care through insurance as laws vary widely on what care and procedures are covered.

As another example, Dr. Bachmann cites: “If they are seen on an emergency basis and are sent home with medication and follow-up, can they afford it?”

Another consideration is whether there is a home to which they can return.

“Many individuals who are transgender may not have a home. Their family may not be accepting of them. Therefore, it’s the social determinants of health as well as their transgender identity that have to be put into the equation of best care,” she said.
 

Giving back to the trans community

Mr. Noto doesn’t know whether he will specialize in gender medicine, but he is committed to serving the transgender community in whatever physician path he chooses.

He said he realizes he is fortunate to have strong family support and good insurance and that he can afford fees, such as the copay to see transgender care specialists. Many in the community do not have those resources and are likely to get care “only if they have to.”

At Tulane, training in transgender care starts during orientation week and continues on different levels, with different options, throughout medical school and residency, he added.

Mr. Noto said he would like to see more mandatory learning such as a “queer-centered exam, where you have to give an organ inventory and you have to ask patients if it’s OK to talk about X, Y, and Z.” He’d also like more opportunities for clinical interaction with transgender patients, such as queer-centered rotations.

When physicians aren’t well trained in transgender care, you have patients educating the doctors, which, Mr. Noto said, should not be acceptable.

“People come to you on their worst day. And to not be informed about them in my mind is negligent. In what other population can you choose not to learn about someone just because you don’t want to?” he said.

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

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Klay Noto wants to be the kind of doctor he never had when he began to question his gender identity.

A second-year student at Tulane University in New Orleans, he wants to listen compassionately to patients’ concerns and recognize the hurt when they question who they are. He will be the kind of doctor who knows that a breast exam can be traumatizing if someone has been breast binding or that instructing a patient to take everything off and put on a gown can be triggering for someone with gender dysphoria.

Being in the room for hard conversations is part of why he pursued med school. “There aren’t many LGBT people in medicine and as I started to understand all the dynamics that go into it, I started to see that I could do it and I could be that different kind of doctor,” he told this news organization.

Mr. Noto, who transitioned after college, wants to see more transgender people like himself teaching gender medicine, and for all medical students to be trained in what it means to be transgender and how to give compassionate and comprehensive care to all patients.

Gains have been made in providing curriculum in transgender care that trains medical students in such concepts as how to approach gender identity with sensitivity and how to manage hormone therapy and surgery for transitioning patients who request that, according to those interviewed for this story.

But they agree there’s a long way to go to having widespread medical school integration of the health care needs of about 1.4 million transgender people in the United States.

According to the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Curriculum Inventory data collected from 131 U.S. medical schools, more than 65% offered some form of transgender-related education in 2018, and more than 80% of those provided such curriculum in required courses.
 

Lack of transgender, nonbinary faculty

Jason Klein, MD, is a pediatric endocrinologist and medical director of the Transgender Youth Health Program at New York (N.Y.) University.

He said in an interview that the number of programs nationally that have gender medicine as a structured part of their curriculum has increased over the last 5-10 years, but that education is not standardized from program to program.

Dr. Jason Klein

The program at NYU includes lecture-style learning, case presentations, real-world conversations with people in the community, group discussions, and patient care, Dr. Klein said. There are formal lectures as part of adolescent medicine where students learn the differences between gender and sexual identity, and education on medical treatment of transgender and nonbinary adolescents, starting with puberty blockers and moving into affirming hormones.

Doctors also learn to know their limits and decide when to refer patients to a specialist.

“The focus is really about empathic and supportive care,” said Dr. Klein, assistant professor in the department of pediatrics at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone Health. “It’s about communication and understanding and the language we use and how to deliver affirming care in a health care setting in general.”

Imagine the potential stressors, he said, of a transgender person entering a typical health care setting. The electronic health record may only have room for the legal name of a person and not the name a person may currently be using. The intake form typically asks patients to check either male or female. The bathrooms give the same two choices. 

“Every physician should know how to speak with, treat, emote with, and empathize with care for the trans and nonbinary individual,” Dr. Klein said.

Dr. Klein noted there is a glaring shortage of trans and nonbinary physicians to lead efforts to expand education on integrating the medical, psychological, and psychosocial care that patients will receive.

Currently, gender medicine is not included on board exams for adolescent medicine or endocrinology, he said.

“Adding formal training in gender medicine to board exams would really help solidify the importance of this arena of medicine,” he noted.
 

 

 

First AAMC standards

In 2014, the AAMC released the first standards to guide curricula across medical school and residency to support training doctors to be competent in caring for transgender patients.

The standards include recommending that all doctors be able to communicate with patients related to their gender identity and understand how to deliver high-quality care to transgender and gender-diverse patients within their specialty, Kristen L. Eckstrand, MD, a coauthor of the guidelines, told this news organization.

“Many medical schools have developed their own curricula to meet these standards,” said Dr. Eckstrand, medical director for LGBTQIA+ Health at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Norma Poll-Hunter, PhD, AAMC’s senior director for workforce diversity, noted that the organization recently released its diversity, equity, and inclusion competencies that guide the medical education of students, residents, and faculty.

Dr. Poll-Hunter told this news organization that AAMC partners with the Building the Next Generation of Academic Physicians LGBT Health Workforce Conference “to support safe spaces for scholarly efforts and mentorship to advance this area of work.”
 

Team approach at Rutgers

Among the medical schools that incorporate comprehensive transgender care into the curriculum is Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J.

Gloria Bachmann, MD, is professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the school and medical director of its partner, the PROUD Gender Center of New Jersey. PROUD stands for “Promoting Respect, Outreach, Understanding, and Dignity,” and the center provides comprehensive care for transgender and nonbinary patients in one location.

Courtesy Rutgers University
Dr. Gloria Bachmann

Dr. Bachmann said Rutgers takes a team approach with both instructors and learners teaching medical students about transgender care. The teachers are not only professors in traditional classroom lectures, but patient navigators and nurses at the PROUD center, established as part of the medical school in 2020. Students learn from the navigators, for instance, how to help patients through the spectrum of inpatient and outpatient care.

“All of our learners do get to care for individuals who identify as transgender,” said Dr. Bachmann.

Among the improvements in educating students on transgender care over the years, she said, is the emphasis on social determinants of health. In the transgender population, initial questions may include whether the person is able to access care through insurance as laws vary widely on what care and procedures are covered.

As another example, Dr. Bachmann cites: “If they are seen on an emergency basis and are sent home with medication and follow-up, can they afford it?”

Another consideration is whether there is a home to which they can return.

“Many individuals who are transgender may not have a home. Their family may not be accepting of them. Therefore, it’s the social determinants of health as well as their transgender identity that have to be put into the equation of best care,” she said.
 

Giving back to the trans community

Mr. Noto doesn’t know whether he will specialize in gender medicine, but he is committed to serving the transgender community in whatever physician path he chooses.

He said he realizes he is fortunate to have strong family support and good insurance and that he can afford fees, such as the copay to see transgender care specialists. Many in the community do not have those resources and are likely to get care “only if they have to.”

At Tulane, training in transgender care starts during orientation week and continues on different levels, with different options, throughout medical school and residency, he added.

Mr. Noto said he would like to see more mandatory learning such as a “queer-centered exam, where you have to give an organ inventory and you have to ask patients if it’s OK to talk about X, Y, and Z.” He’d also like more opportunities for clinical interaction with transgender patients, such as queer-centered rotations.

When physicians aren’t well trained in transgender care, you have patients educating the doctors, which, Mr. Noto said, should not be acceptable.

“People come to you on their worst day. And to not be informed about them in my mind is negligent. In what other population can you choose not to learn about someone just because you don’t want to?” he said.

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

Klay Noto wants to be the kind of doctor he never had when he began to question his gender identity.

A second-year student at Tulane University in New Orleans, he wants to listen compassionately to patients’ concerns and recognize the hurt when they question who they are. He will be the kind of doctor who knows that a breast exam can be traumatizing if someone has been breast binding or that instructing a patient to take everything off and put on a gown can be triggering for someone with gender dysphoria.

Being in the room for hard conversations is part of why he pursued med school. “There aren’t many LGBT people in medicine and as I started to understand all the dynamics that go into it, I started to see that I could do it and I could be that different kind of doctor,” he told this news organization.

Mr. Noto, who transitioned after college, wants to see more transgender people like himself teaching gender medicine, and for all medical students to be trained in what it means to be transgender and how to give compassionate and comprehensive care to all patients.

Gains have been made in providing curriculum in transgender care that trains medical students in such concepts as how to approach gender identity with sensitivity and how to manage hormone therapy and surgery for transitioning patients who request that, according to those interviewed for this story.

But they agree there’s a long way to go to having widespread medical school integration of the health care needs of about 1.4 million transgender people in the United States.

According to the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) Curriculum Inventory data collected from 131 U.S. medical schools, more than 65% offered some form of transgender-related education in 2018, and more than 80% of those provided such curriculum in required courses.
 

Lack of transgender, nonbinary faculty

Jason Klein, MD, is a pediatric endocrinologist and medical director of the Transgender Youth Health Program at New York (N.Y.) University.

He said in an interview that the number of programs nationally that have gender medicine as a structured part of their curriculum has increased over the last 5-10 years, but that education is not standardized from program to program.

Dr. Jason Klein

The program at NYU includes lecture-style learning, case presentations, real-world conversations with people in the community, group discussions, and patient care, Dr. Klein said. There are formal lectures as part of adolescent medicine where students learn the differences between gender and sexual identity, and education on medical treatment of transgender and nonbinary adolescents, starting with puberty blockers and moving into affirming hormones.

Doctors also learn to know their limits and decide when to refer patients to a specialist.

“The focus is really about empathic and supportive care,” said Dr. Klein, assistant professor in the department of pediatrics at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone Health. “It’s about communication and understanding and the language we use and how to deliver affirming care in a health care setting in general.”

Imagine the potential stressors, he said, of a transgender person entering a typical health care setting. The electronic health record may only have room for the legal name of a person and not the name a person may currently be using. The intake form typically asks patients to check either male or female. The bathrooms give the same two choices. 

“Every physician should know how to speak with, treat, emote with, and empathize with care for the trans and nonbinary individual,” Dr. Klein said.

Dr. Klein noted there is a glaring shortage of trans and nonbinary physicians to lead efforts to expand education on integrating the medical, psychological, and psychosocial care that patients will receive.

Currently, gender medicine is not included on board exams for adolescent medicine or endocrinology, he said.

“Adding formal training in gender medicine to board exams would really help solidify the importance of this arena of medicine,” he noted.
 

 

 

First AAMC standards

In 2014, the AAMC released the first standards to guide curricula across medical school and residency to support training doctors to be competent in caring for transgender patients.

The standards include recommending that all doctors be able to communicate with patients related to their gender identity and understand how to deliver high-quality care to transgender and gender-diverse patients within their specialty, Kristen L. Eckstrand, MD, a coauthor of the guidelines, told this news organization.

“Many medical schools have developed their own curricula to meet these standards,” said Dr. Eckstrand, medical director for LGBTQIA+ Health at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Norma Poll-Hunter, PhD, AAMC’s senior director for workforce diversity, noted that the organization recently released its diversity, equity, and inclusion competencies that guide the medical education of students, residents, and faculty.

Dr. Poll-Hunter told this news organization that AAMC partners with the Building the Next Generation of Academic Physicians LGBT Health Workforce Conference “to support safe spaces for scholarly efforts and mentorship to advance this area of work.”
 

Team approach at Rutgers

Among the medical schools that incorporate comprehensive transgender care into the curriculum is Rutgers University’s Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Brunswick, N.J.

Gloria Bachmann, MD, is professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the school and medical director of its partner, the PROUD Gender Center of New Jersey. PROUD stands for “Promoting Respect, Outreach, Understanding, and Dignity,” and the center provides comprehensive care for transgender and nonbinary patients in one location.

Courtesy Rutgers University
Dr. Gloria Bachmann

Dr. Bachmann said Rutgers takes a team approach with both instructors and learners teaching medical students about transgender care. The teachers are not only professors in traditional classroom lectures, but patient navigators and nurses at the PROUD center, established as part of the medical school in 2020. Students learn from the navigators, for instance, how to help patients through the spectrum of inpatient and outpatient care.

“All of our learners do get to care for individuals who identify as transgender,” said Dr. Bachmann.

Among the improvements in educating students on transgender care over the years, she said, is the emphasis on social determinants of health. In the transgender population, initial questions may include whether the person is able to access care through insurance as laws vary widely on what care and procedures are covered.

As another example, Dr. Bachmann cites: “If they are seen on an emergency basis and are sent home with medication and follow-up, can they afford it?”

Another consideration is whether there is a home to which they can return.

“Many individuals who are transgender may not have a home. Their family may not be accepting of them. Therefore, it’s the social determinants of health as well as their transgender identity that have to be put into the equation of best care,” she said.
 

Giving back to the trans community

Mr. Noto doesn’t know whether he will specialize in gender medicine, but he is committed to serving the transgender community in whatever physician path he chooses.

He said he realizes he is fortunate to have strong family support and good insurance and that he can afford fees, such as the copay to see transgender care specialists. Many in the community do not have those resources and are likely to get care “only if they have to.”

At Tulane, training in transgender care starts during orientation week and continues on different levels, with different options, throughout medical school and residency, he added.

Mr. Noto said he would like to see more mandatory learning such as a “queer-centered exam, where you have to give an organ inventory and you have to ask patients if it’s OK to talk about X, Y, and Z.” He’d also like more opportunities for clinical interaction with transgender patients, such as queer-centered rotations.

When physicians aren’t well trained in transgender care, you have patients educating the doctors, which, Mr. Noto said, should not be acceptable.

“People come to you on their worst day. And to not be informed about them in my mind is negligent. In what other population can you choose not to learn about someone just because you don’t want to?” he said.

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

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U.S. life expectancy dropped by 2 years in 2020: Study

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The average life expectancy in the United States is expected to drop by 2.26 years from 2019 to 2021, the sharpest decrease during that time among high-income nations, according to a new study.

The study, published in medRxiv, said U.S. life expectancy went from 78.86 years in 2019 to 76.99 years in 2020, during the thick of the global COVID-19 pandemic. Though vaccines were widely available in 2021, the U.S. life expectancy was expected to keep going down, to 76.60 years.

In “peer countries” – Austria, Belgium, Denmark, England and Wales, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland – life expectancy went down only 0.57 years from 2019 to 2020 and increased by 0.28 years in 2021, the study said. The peer countries now have a life expectancy that’s 5 years longer than in the United States.

“The fact the U.S. lost so many more lives than other high-income countries speaks not only to how we managed the pandemic, but also to more deeply rooted problems that predated the pandemic,” said Steven H. Woolf, MD, one of the study authors and a professor of family medicine and population health at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, according to Reuters.

“U.S. life expectancy has been falling behind other countries since the 1980s, and the gap has widened over time, especially in the last decade.”

Lack of universal health care, income and educational inequality, and less-healthy physical and social environments helped lead to the decline in American life expectancy, according to Dr. Woolf.

The life expectancy drop from 2019 to 2020 hit Black and Hispanic people hardest, according to the study. But the drop from 2020 to 2021 affected White people the most, with average life expectancy among them going down about a third of a year.

Researchers looked at death data from the National Center for Health Statistics, the Human Mortality Database, and overseas statistical agencies. Life expectancy for 2021 was estimated “using a previously validated modeling method,” the study said.

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

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The average life expectancy in the United States is expected to drop by 2.26 years from 2019 to 2021, the sharpest decrease during that time among high-income nations, according to a new study.

The study, published in medRxiv, said U.S. life expectancy went from 78.86 years in 2019 to 76.99 years in 2020, during the thick of the global COVID-19 pandemic. Though vaccines were widely available in 2021, the U.S. life expectancy was expected to keep going down, to 76.60 years.

In “peer countries” – Austria, Belgium, Denmark, England and Wales, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland – life expectancy went down only 0.57 years from 2019 to 2020 and increased by 0.28 years in 2021, the study said. The peer countries now have a life expectancy that’s 5 years longer than in the United States.

“The fact the U.S. lost so many more lives than other high-income countries speaks not only to how we managed the pandemic, but also to more deeply rooted problems that predated the pandemic,” said Steven H. Woolf, MD, one of the study authors and a professor of family medicine and population health at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, according to Reuters.

“U.S. life expectancy has been falling behind other countries since the 1980s, and the gap has widened over time, especially in the last decade.”

Lack of universal health care, income and educational inequality, and less-healthy physical and social environments helped lead to the decline in American life expectancy, according to Dr. Woolf.

The life expectancy drop from 2019 to 2020 hit Black and Hispanic people hardest, according to the study. But the drop from 2020 to 2021 affected White people the most, with average life expectancy among them going down about a third of a year.

Researchers looked at death data from the National Center for Health Statistics, the Human Mortality Database, and overseas statistical agencies. Life expectancy for 2021 was estimated “using a previously validated modeling method,” the study said.

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

The average life expectancy in the United States is expected to drop by 2.26 years from 2019 to 2021, the sharpest decrease during that time among high-income nations, according to a new study.

The study, published in medRxiv, said U.S. life expectancy went from 78.86 years in 2019 to 76.99 years in 2020, during the thick of the global COVID-19 pandemic. Though vaccines were widely available in 2021, the U.S. life expectancy was expected to keep going down, to 76.60 years.

In “peer countries” – Austria, Belgium, Denmark, England and Wales, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Northern Ireland, Norway, Portugal, Scotland, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland – life expectancy went down only 0.57 years from 2019 to 2020 and increased by 0.28 years in 2021, the study said. The peer countries now have a life expectancy that’s 5 years longer than in the United States.

“The fact the U.S. lost so many more lives than other high-income countries speaks not only to how we managed the pandemic, but also to more deeply rooted problems that predated the pandemic,” said Steven H. Woolf, MD, one of the study authors and a professor of family medicine and population health at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, according to Reuters.

“U.S. life expectancy has been falling behind other countries since the 1980s, and the gap has widened over time, especially in the last decade.”

Lack of universal health care, income and educational inequality, and less-healthy physical and social environments helped lead to the decline in American life expectancy, according to Dr. Woolf.

The life expectancy drop from 2019 to 2020 hit Black and Hispanic people hardest, according to the study. But the drop from 2020 to 2021 affected White people the most, with average life expectancy among them going down about a third of a year.

Researchers looked at death data from the National Center for Health Statistics, the Human Mortality Database, and overseas statistical agencies. Life expectancy for 2021 was estimated “using a previously validated modeling method,” the study said.

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

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