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Doctors and dating: There’s an app (or three) for that
Pounding heart, sweating, insomnia. Surges of dopamine, norepinephrine, and adrenaline. All symptoms of a very common yet frustrating condition: Falling in love.
The prognosis is vague. A prescription pad and knowledge of biochemistry aren’t helpful when it comes to relationships.
Medical training can consume decades when others are exploring relationships and starting families. There are few recent data on this, but
But there is hope! By age 36, the number of doctors in long-term relationships had overtaken everyone else by more than 10% for women and 20% for men. The Medscape 2022 Physician Happiness & Lifestyle Report found that 83% were in committed relationships, and even better, happy ones. At least three-quarters of doctors in every specialty described their partnerships as “very good” or “good.”
How should a single medical student, resident, or attending physician find happiness ever after in 2023? Sometimes Mr./Ms. Right can be found in the anatomy lab or hospital, with sparks flying between students or colleagues. But for many in health care, along with millions of others looking for love, the solution is dating apps.
When ‘MD’ is a turnoff
Dr. M, a psychiatry resident in California who prefers not to give her name, hadn’t found a life partner during college, grad school, or medical school. When she passed her final Step 3 board exam, she decided it was time to take the plunge. She signed up for popular dating apps like Hinge, Bumble, and Coffee Meets Bagel, but her dates seemed to follow a disappointing pattern.
“I met lots of guys, but it was incredibly rare to find another physician,” said Dr. M. “I found myself always wanting to talk about my life as a resident. More often than not, the guys would give me this blank stare as I complained about being on call or spoke about spending 12 hours a day studying for a board exam, or even the process of The Match and how I ended up in California.”
Both of Dr. M’s parents are physicians, and she grew up watching how they supported each other through residency, exams, and exhausting schedules. A relationship with another physician, her parents told her, would give both partners the best chance to understand each other’s lives. The problem was how to find one.
That was when Dr. M saw an ad for a dating app with a cute medical name: DownToDate, a play on the clinical evidence resource UpToDate. “I thought it was a meme,” she said. “It was this doctors-only app. I remember thinking, ‘this has to be a joke,’ but then it was very real.”
She signed up and was required to provide a photo of her ID and her NPI number. Immediately, men began “requesting a consult,” the app’s form of “liking” her profile, and sending her “pages” (messages).
DownToDate was created by another physician, Robin Boyer, MD, MBA, a pediatrics resident in Loma Linda, Calif. The inspiration came in 2020 during the initial COVID crisis. Exhausted from long and often heartbreaking shifts, Dr. Boyer was grateful for her husband’s unwavering support. But many of her coresidents weren’t so lucky. The women in particular talked about their dating struggles, and there was a recurring theme. They didn’t feel confident putting “physician” on a dating site profile.
“If you’re male and you tell people you’re a doctor, it seems like it really attracts people,” Dr. Boyer said. “But if you’re female, it brings up a lot of stereotypes where you’re perceived as too intimidating either as the breadwinner, being more educated, or having a [demanding] career. It does make it more difficult.”
Dr. Boyer met her husband in high school, and she had never used a dating app. She convinced a coresident, Celestine Odigwe, MD, to pursue the idea as partners. They began researching the market within their network and heard from over a thousand interested physicians, both men and women, heterosexual and LGBTQ+. They even created fake accounts on other sites to gauge how easy it is to falsify a profile. From these insights, the app took shape. It launched in 2021 and currently has more than 5000 verified users.
Branches from the same tree
Around the same time that DownToDate began, Shivani Shah, DO, a pediatric neurology resident at Duke University, Durham, N.C., and her brother, Sagar Shah, an entrepreneur, had a similar idea.
At the time, Dr. Shah was a fourth-year medical student about to move from New Jersey to North Carolina. Friends who were internal medicine residents described the grueling reality of the early COVID pandemic.
“It was just horrible,” said Dr. Shah. “You were isolated from your family, your support system, everything. ... I think the pandemic really pushed us into realizing that this is a very important need, and sometimes it feels like community is lacking in the health care field.”
The sibling duo developed ForeverX, an app for health care workers to find meaningful and long-term romantic connections. It launched in 2021.
Concerned that the medical field was “siloed,” the Shahs chose to open the app to physicians, dentists, nurses, physical therapists, and other health care professionals. “Opening up the doors to more communication” between the health care branches was a priority.
To prevent catfishing, the app uses a twofold vetting system. Each user submits a photo of their driver’s license and a selfie that must match. There is also health care verification through an NPI number, nurse’s ID, or a manual process for those without either. None of the information is stored.
Through personal experience with dating apps, Dr. Shah hopes ForeverX can improve on some of their flaws, particularly the problem of matches being overly filtered by preferences. The “natural way” of meeting people is not filtered. And while most people have a dating checklist in mind, meeting someone face to face might send some of those prerequisites “out the window.”
“You can’t really put into words how you feel with someone ... the vibe,” Dr. Shah said. That is why her goal is to get people off the app and on an actual date IRL. “Something we’ve discussed internally is, how do we make this experience that’s virtual more human?”
She acknowledged that certain requirements, like a desire for children, might be crucial to some users. Many female doctors in their 30’s feel the “time crunch” of a ticking biological clock.
Optimize your date-ability
“I think people either love or hate dating apps, and I love them,” said Kevin Jubbal, MD. “I get to meet cool people and schedule dates from the comfort of my home.”
Dr. Jubbal, a former plastic surgery resident who left medicine to become an entrepreneur, is the founder of Med School Insiders, a tutoring and advising resource for premeds, medical students, and residents. His YouTube channel has more than 1.5 million subscribers, and he often receives questions about whether dating is feasible in medical school and how to balance a personal and academic/professional life.
Those who hate dating apps or receive few matches would do well to look inward instead of blaming the process, he said. It helps to view the experience as a learning tool that provides feedback very quickly.
“If you want to find a really amazing person, then you need to be what you want to find,” said Dr. Jubbal. “If you want to find someone who’s fit and intelligent and well read and well traveled, you need to be that. Otherwise, you’re probably not going to attract that person.”
An app designed to help single female MDs
Ifie Williams, MD, a psychiatrist in Washington, D.C., believes a wider dating pool is key – provided everyone understands the situation up front. When Dr. Williams started residency in 2014, she was “as single as can be.” She tried many dating apps, but they were extremely time consuming. Even when she set specific preferences, she found herself sifting through “matches” that didn’t fit her criteria.
“Dating nowadays has become almost like a second job,” said Dr. Williams. “Just the amount of time that people are having to spend on apps, swiping left and right and then meeting people. You think they’re interested and then you deal with all these games.”
By 2017, Dr. Williams had invented Miss Doctor, a dating app that would connect female physicians and other doctoral-level professionals with men or women on a similar achievement level.
By definition, these people would not be intimidated by ambitious, busy women. They would be heavily screened and vetted. And one other proviso: they would have to pay for “likes.”
Most dating apps charge a subscription fee. Users are allowed to “like” numerous profiles and perhaps not bother responding to many matches. By contrast, Miss Doctor accounts are free and include a limited number of “likes” to indicate interest. Beyond that, there’s a price.
“We wanted to find a way to make people a little more intentional with how they like people on the app, so they give a little more thought to it,” Dr. Williams said. “So, we monetize it and use that to change behavior.”
After an initial launch in 2017, the app had to take a back seat while Dr. Williams started her psychiatry practice and got married herself. She plans to relaunch it in spring 2023.
Male or female, there is general agreement that finding time to date as a young physician isn’t easy. While DownToDate has had “doctor meets doctor” success stories, many users are still searching for “the one.”
Dr. Boyer believes that career challenges are not a reason to give up. “There are so many single and available people out there,” she said. “And everyone’s deserving of love. Even if you only have an hour a week.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pounding heart, sweating, insomnia. Surges of dopamine, norepinephrine, and adrenaline. All symptoms of a very common yet frustrating condition: Falling in love.
The prognosis is vague. A prescription pad and knowledge of biochemistry aren’t helpful when it comes to relationships.
Medical training can consume decades when others are exploring relationships and starting families. There are few recent data on this, but
But there is hope! By age 36, the number of doctors in long-term relationships had overtaken everyone else by more than 10% for women and 20% for men. The Medscape 2022 Physician Happiness & Lifestyle Report found that 83% were in committed relationships, and even better, happy ones. At least three-quarters of doctors in every specialty described their partnerships as “very good” or “good.”
How should a single medical student, resident, or attending physician find happiness ever after in 2023? Sometimes Mr./Ms. Right can be found in the anatomy lab or hospital, with sparks flying between students or colleagues. But for many in health care, along with millions of others looking for love, the solution is dating apps.
When ‘MD’ is a turnoff
Dr. M, a psychiatry resident in California who prefers not to give her name, hadn’t found a life partner during college, grad school, or medical school. When she passed her final Step 3 board exam, she decided it was time to take the plunge. She signed up for popular dating apps like Hinge, Bumble, and Coffee Meets Bagel, but her dates seemed to follow a disappointing pattern.
“I met lots of guys, but it was incredibly rare to find another physician,” said Dr. M. “I found myself always wanting to talk about my life as a resident. More often than not, the guys would give me this blank stare as I complained about being on call or spoke about spending 12 hours a day studying for a board exam, or even the process of The Match and how I ended up in California.”
Both of Dr. M’s parents are physicians, and she grew up watching how they supported each other through residency, exams, and exhausting schedules. A relationship with another physician, her parents told her, would give both partners the best chance to understand each other’s lives. The problem was how to find one.
That was when Dr. M saw an ad for a dating app with a cute medical name: DownToDate, a play on the clinical evidence resource UpToDate. “I thought it was a meme,” she said. “It was this doctors-only app. I remember thinking, ‘this has to be a joke,’ but then it was very real.”
She signed up and was required to provide a photo of her ID and her NPI number. Immediately, men began “requesting a consult,” the app’s form of “liking” her profile, and sending her “pages” (messages).
DownToDate was created by another physician, Robin Boyer, MD, MBA, a pediatrics resident in Loma Linda, Calif. The inspiration came in 2020 during the initial COVID crisis. Exhausted from long and often heartbreaking shifts, Dr. Boyer was grateful for her husband’s unwavering support. But many of her coresidents weren’t so lucky. The women in particular talked about their dating struggles, and there was a recurring theme. They didn’t feel confident putting “physician” on a dating site profile.
“If you’re male and you tell people you’re a doctor, it seems like it really attracts people,” Dr. Boyer said. “But if you’re female, it brings up a lot of stereotypes where you’re perceived as too intimidating either as the breadwinner, being more educated, or having a [demanding] career. It does make it more difficult.”
Dr. Boyer met her husband in high school, and she had never used a dating app. She convinced a coresident, Celestine Odigwe, MD, to pursue the idea as partners. They began researching the market within their network and heard from over a thousand interested physicians, both men and women, heterosexual and LGBTQ+. They even created fake accounts on other sites to gauge how easy it is to falsify a profile. From these insights, the app took shape. It launched in 2021 and currently has more than 5000 verified users.
Branches from the same tree
Around the same time that DownToDate began, Shivani Shah, DO, a pediatric neurology resident at Duke University, Durham, N.C., and her brother, Sagar Shah, an entrepreneur, had a similar idea.
At the time, Dr. Shah was a fourth-year medical student about to move from New Jersey to North Carolina. Friends who were internal medicine residents described the grueling reality of the early COVID pandemic.
“It was just horrible,” said Dr. Shah. “You were isolated from your family, your support system, everything. ... I think the pandemic really pushed us into realizing that this is a very important need, and sometimes it feels like community is lacking in the health care field.”
The sibling duo developed ForeverX, an app for health care workers to find meaningful and long-term romantic connections. It launched in 2021.
Concerned that the medical field was “siloed,” the Shahs chose to open the app to physicians, dentists, nurses, physical therapists, and other health care professionals. “Opening up the doors to more communication” between the health care branches was a priority.
To prevent catfishing, the app uses a twofold vetting system. Each user submits a photo of their driver’s license and a selfie that must match. There is also health care verification through an NPI number, nurse’s ID, or a manual process for those without either. None of the information is stored.
Through personal experience with dating apps, Dr. Shah hopes ForeverX can improve on some of their flaws, particularly the problem of matches being overly filtered by preferences. The “natural way” of meeting people is not filtered. And while most people have a dating checklist in mind, meeting someone face to face might send some of those prerequisites “out the window.”
“You can’t really put into words how you feel with someone ... the vibe,” Dr. Shah said. That is why her goal is to get people off the app and on an actual date IRL. “Something we’ve discussed internally is, how do we make this experience that’s virtual more human?”
She acknowledged that certain requirements, like a desire for children, might be crucial to some users. Many female doctors in their 30’s feel the “time crunch” of a ticking biological clock.
Optimize your date-ability
“I think people either love or hate dating apps, and I love them,” said Kevin Jubbal, MD. “I get to meet cool people and schedule dates from the comfort of my home.”
Dr. Jubbal, a former plastic surgery resident who left medicine to become an entrepreneur, is the founder of Med School Insiders, a tutoring and advising resource for premeds, medical students, and residents. His YouTube channel has more than 1.5 million subscribers, and he often receives questions about whether dating is feasible in medical school and how to balance a personal and academic/professional life.
Those who hate dating apps or receive few matches would do well to look inward instead of blaming the process, he said. It helps to view the experience as a learning tool that provides feedback very quickly.
“If you want to find a really amazing person, then you need to be what you want to find,” said Dr. Jubbal. “If you want to find someone who’s fit and intelligent and well read and well traveled, you need to be that. Otherwise, you’re probably not going to attract that person.”
An app designed to help single female MDs
Ifie Williams, MD, a psychiatrist in Washington, D.C., believes a wider dating pool is key – provided everyone understands the situation up front. When Dr. Williams started residency in 2014, she was “as single as can be.” She tried many dating apps, but they were extremely time consuming. Even when she set specific preferences, she found herself sifting through “matches” that didn’t fit her criteria.
“Dating nowadays has become almost like a second job,” said Dr. Williams. “Just the amount of time that people are having to spend on apps, swiping left and right and then meeting people. You think they’re interested and then you deal with all these games.”
By 2017, Dr. Williams had invented Miss Doctor, a dating app that would connect female physicians and other doctoral-level professionals with men or women on a similar achievement level.
By definition, these people would not be intimidated by ambitious, busy women. They would be heavily screened and vetted. And one other proviso: they would have to pay for “likes.”
Most dating apps charge a subscription fee. Users are allowed to “like” numerous profiles and perhaps not bother responding to many matches. By contrast, Miss Doctor accounts are free and include a limited number of “likes” to indicate interest. Beyond that, there’s a price.
“We wanted to find a way to make people a little more intentional with how they like people on the app, so they give a little more thought to it,” Dr. Williams said. “So, we monetize it and use that to change behavior.”
After an initial launch in 2017, the app had to take a back seat while Dr. Williams started her psychiatry practice and got married herself. She plans to relaunch it in spring 2023.
Male or female, there is general agreement that finding time to date as a young physician isn’t easy. While DownToDate has had “doctor meets doctor” success stories, many users are still searching for “the one.”
Dr. Boyer believes that career challenges are not a reason to give up. “There are so many single and available people out there,” she said. “And everyone’s deserving of love. Even if you only have an hour a week.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pounding heart, sweating, insomnia. Surges of dopamine, norepinephrine, and adrenaline. All symptoms of a very common yet frustrating condition: Falling in love.
The prognosis is vague. A prescription pad and knowledge of biochemistry aren’t helpful when it comes to relationships.
Medical training can consume decades when others are exploring relationships and starting families. There are few recent data on this, but
But there is hope! By age 36, the number of doctors in long-term relationships had overtaken everyone else by more than 10% for women and 20% for men. The Medscape 2022 Physician Happiness & Lifestyle Report found that 83% were in committed relationships, and even better, happy ones. At least three-quarters of doctors in every specialty described their partnerships as “very good” or “good.”
How should a single medical student, resident, or attending physician find happiness ever after in 2023? Sometimes Mr./Ms. Right can be found in the anatomy lab or hospital, with sparks flying between students or colleagues. But for many in health care, along with millions of others looking for love, the solution is dating apps.
When ‘MD’ is a turnoff
Dr. M, a psychiatry resident in California who prefers not to give her name, hadn’t found a life partner during college, grad school, or medical school. When she passed her final Step 3 board exam, she decided it was time to take the plunge. She signed up for popular dating apps like Hinge, Bumble, and Coffee Meets Bagel, but her dates seemed to follow a disappointing pattern.
“I met lots of guys, but it was incredibly rare to find another physician,” said Dr. M. “I found myself always wanting to talk about my life as a resident. More often than not, the guys would give me this blank stare as I complained about being on call or spoke about spending 12 hours a day studying for a board exam, or even the process of The Match and how I ended up in California.”
Both of Dr. M’s parents are physicians, and she grew up watching how they supported each other through residency, exams, and exhausting schedules. A relationship with another physician, her parents told her, would give both partners the best chance to understand each other’s lives. The problem was how to find one.
That was when Dr. M saw an ad for a dating app with a cute medical name: DownToDate, a play on the clinical evidence resource UpToDate. “I thought it was a meme,” she said. “It was this doctors-only app. I remember thinking, ‘this has to be a joke,’ but then it was very real.”
She signed up and was required to provide a photo of her ID and her NPI number. Immediately, men began “requesting a consult,” the app’s form of “liking” her profile, and sending her “pages” (messages).
DownToDate was created by another physician, Robin Boyer, MD, MBA, a pediatrics resident in Loma Linda, Calif. The inspiration came in 2020 during the initial COVID crisis. Exhausted from long and often heartbreaking shifts, Dr. Boyer was grateful for her husband’s unwavering support. But many of her coresidents weren’t so lucky. The women in particular talked about their dating struggles, and there was a recurring theme. They didn’t feel confident putting “physician” on a dating site profile.
“If you’re male and you tell people you’re a doctor, it seems like it really attracts people,” Dr. Boyer said. “But if you’re female, it brings up a lot of stereotypes where you’re perceived as too intimidating either as the breadwinner, being more educated, or having a [demanding] career. It does make it more difficult.”
Dr. Boyer met her husband in high school, and she had never used a dating app. She convinced a coresident, Celestine Odigwe, MD, to pursue the idea as partners. They began researching the market within their network and heard from over a thousand interested physicians, both men and women, heterosexual and LGBTQ+. They even created fake accounts on other sites to gauge how easy it is to falsify a profile. From these insights, the app took shape. It launched in 2021 and currently has more than 5000 verified users.
Branches from the same tree
Around the same time that DownToDate began, Shivani Shah, DO, a pediatric neurology resident at Duke University, Durham, N.C., and her brother, Sagar Shah, an entrepreneur, had a similar idea.
At the time, Dr. Shah was a fourth-year medical student about to move from New Jersey to North Carolina. Friends who were internal medicine residents described the grueling reality of the early COVID pandemic.
“It was just horrible,” said Dr. Shah. “You were isolated from your family, your support system, everything. ... I think the pandemic really pushed us into realizing that this is a very important need, and sometimes it feels like community is lacking in the health care field.”
The sibling duo developed ForeverX, an app for health care workers to find meaningful and long-term romantic connections. It launched in 2021.
Concerned that the medical field was “siloed,” the Shahs chose to open the app to physicians, dentists, nurses, physical therapists, and other health care professionals. “Opening up the doors to more communication” between the health care branches was a priority.
To prevent catfishing, the app uses a twofold vetting system. Each user submits a photo of their driver’s license and a selfie that must match. There is also health care verification through an NPI number, nurse’s ID, or a manual process for those without either. None of the information is stored.
Through personal experience with dating apps, Dr. Shah hopes ForeverX can improve on some of their flaws, particularly the problem of matches being overly filtered by preferences. The “natural way” of meeting people is not filtered. And while most people have a dating checklist in mind, meeting someone face to face might send some of those prerequisites “out the window.”
“You can’t really put into words how you feel with someone ... the vibe,” Dr. Shah said. That is why her goal is to get people off the app and on an actual date IRL. “Something we’ve discussed internally is, how do we make this experience that’s virtual more human?”
She acknowledged that certain requirements, like a desire for children, might be crucial to some users. Many female doctors in their 30’s feel the “time crunch” of a ticking biological clock.
Optimize your date-ability
“I think people either love or hate dating apps, and I love them,” said Kevin Jubbal, MD. “I get to meet cool people and schedule dates from the comfort of my home.”
Dr. Jubbal, a former plastic surgery resident who left medicine to become an entrepreneur, is the founder of Med School Insiders, a tutoring and advising resource for premeds, medical students, and residents. His YouTube channel has more than 1.5 million subscribers, and he often receives questions about whether dating is feasible in medical school and how to balance a personal and academic/professional life.
Those who hate dating apps or receive few matches would do well to look inward instead of blaming the process, he said. It helps to view the experience as a learning tool that provides feedback very quickly.
“If you want to find a really amazing person, then you need to be what you want to find,” said Dr. Jubbal. “If you want to find someone who’s fit and intelligent and well read and well traveled, you need to be that. Otherwise, you’re probably not going to attract that person.”
An app designed to help single female MDs
Ifie Williams, MD, a psychiatrist in Washington, D.C., believes a wider dating pool is key – provided everyone understands the situation up front. When Dr. Williams started residency in 2014, she was “as single as can be.” She tried many dating apps, but they were extremely time consuming. Even when she set specific preferences, she found herself sifting through “matches” that didn’t fit her criteria.
“Dating nowadays has become almost like a second job,” said Dr. Williams. “Just the amount of time that people are having to spend on apps, swiping left and right and then meeting people. You think they’re interested and then you deal with all these games.”
By 2017, Dr. Williams had invented Miss Doctor, a dating app that would connect female physicians and other doctoral-level professionals with men or women on a similar achievement level.
By definition, these people would not be intimidated by ambitious, busy women. They would be heavily screened and vetted. And one other proviso: they would have to pay for “likes.”
Most dating apps charge a subscription fee. Users are allowed to “like” numerous profiles and perhaps not bother responding to many matches. By contrast, Miss Doctor accounts are free and include a limited number of “likes” to indicate interest. Beyond that, there’s a price.
“We wanted to find a way to make people a little more intentional with how they like people on the app, so they give a little more thought to it,” Dr. Williams said. “So, we monetize it and use that to change behavior.”
After an initial launch in 2017, the app had to take a back seat while Dr. Williams started her psychiatry practice and got married herself. She plans to relaunch it in spring 2023.
Male or female, there is general agreement that finding time to date as a young physician isn’t easy. While DownToDate has had “doctor meets doctor” success stories, many users are still searching for “the one.”
Dr. Boyer believes that career challenges are not a reason to give up. “There are so many single and available people out there,” she said. “And everyone’s deserving of love. Even if you only have an hour a week.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Vibrating pill can help treat constipation
The drug-free solution is designed for daily use. In a trial, the pill produced at least one additional weekly bowel movement for 41% of participants, compared with at least one additional bowel movement for 23% of participants who took a placebo pill.
Vibrant was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in August but is just now becoming available for doctors to prescribe, the company announced Wednesday.
Because it is not a drug, Vibrant is considered a class 2 medical device by the FDA, which is the same class as contact lenses.
Here’s how it works: Around bedtime, the pill is inserted in a pod to activate it, then swallowed. It travels the digestive tract and reaches the large intestine about 14 hours later.
“Then it goes to work,” the company explained in a news release. “After it’s swallowed, it is active for about 2 hours, goes quiet for around 6, hours and then activates again for another 2 hours.”
“There are little vibrations for 3 seconds on, 3 seconds off,” said Cathy Collis, chief commercial officer for Israel-based Vibrant Gastro, in a statement.
The vibrations help trigger peristalsis, the wave-like muscle contractions that move food through the gastrointestinal tract, the company said. Decreased peristalsis is a cause of constipation, which is defined as having less than three bowel movements per week, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
About 2.5 million people see their doctor each year for constipation. The pills are made of what the company called “medical-grade material” that is the same as what’s used to make gastroenterology cameras.
In the trial, most people did not report feeling the pill inside of them.
“A minority could feel it,” said Eamonn Quigley, MD, chief of gastroenterology at Houston Methodist Hospital, in a statement. “None of them felt it was being uncomfortable. And none of them stopped taking it because of that.”
Dr. Quigley helped test the capsules and does not have a financial stake in the company, according to Vibrant.
The pills do not dissolve inside a person’s body. Rather, “after they’ve done their job, the person’s body poops them out, and they’re flushed away,” the company said.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
The drug-free solution is designed for daily use. In a trial, the pill produced at least one additional weekly bowel movement for 41% of participants, compared with at least one additional bowel movement for 23% of participants who took a placebo pill.
Vibrant was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in August but is just now becoming available for doctors to prescribe, the company announced Wednesday.
Because it is not a drug, Vibrant is considered a class 2 medical device by the FDA, which is the same class as contact lenses.
Here’s how it works: Around bedtime, the pill is inserted in a pod to activate it, then swallowed. It travels the digestive tract and reaches the large intestine about 14 hours later.
“Then it goes to work,” the company explained in a news release. “After it’s swallowed, it is active for about 2 hours, goes quiet for around 6, hours and then activates again for another 2 hours.”
“There are little vibrations for 3 seconds on, 3 seconds off,” said Cathy Collis, chief commercial officer for Israel-based Vibrant Gastro, in a statement.
The vibrations help trigger peristalsis, the wave-like muscle contractions that move food through the gastrointestinal tract, the company said. Decreased peristalsis is a cause of constipation, which is defined as having less than three bowel movements per week, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
About 2.5 million people see their doctor each year for constipation. The pills are made of what the company called “medical-grade material” that is the same as what’s used to make gastroenterology cameras.
In the trial, most people did not report feeling the pill inside of them.
“A minority could feel it,” said Eamonn Quigley, MD, chief of gastroenterology at Houston Methodist Hospital, in a statement. “None of them felt it was being uncomfortable. And none of them stopped taking it because of that.”
Dr. Quigley helped test the capsules and does not have a financial stake in the company, according to Vibrant.
The pills do not dissolve inside a person’s body. Rather, “after they’ve done their job, the person’s body poops them out, and they’re flushed away,” the company said.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
The drug-free solution is designed for daily use. In a trial, the pill produced at least one additional weekly bowel movement for 41% of participants, compared with at least one additional bowel movement for 23% of participants who took a placebo pill.
Vibrant was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in August but is just now becoming available for doctors to prescribe, the company announced Wednesday.
Because it is not a drug, Vibrant is considered a class 2 medical device by the FDA, which is the same class as contact lenses.
Here’s how it works: Around bedtime, the pill is inserted in a pod to activate it, then swallowed. It travels the digestive tract and reaches the large intestine about 14 hours later.
“Then it goes to work,” the company explained in a news release. “After it’s swallowed, it is active for about 2 hours, goes quiet for around 6, hours and then activates again for another 2 hours.”
“There are little vibrations for 3 seconds on, 3 seconds off,” said Cathy Collis, chief commercial officer for Israel-based Vibrant Gastro, in a statement.
The vibrations help trigger peristalsis, the wave-like muscle contractions that move food through the gastrointestinal tract, the company said. Decreased peristalsis is a cause of constipation, which is defined as having less than three bowel movements per week, according to the Cleveland Clinic.
About 2.5 million people see their doctor each year for constipation. The pills are made of what the company called “medical-grade material” that is the same as what’s used to make gastroenterology cameras.
In the trial, most people did not report feeling the pill inside of them.
“A minority could feel it,” said Eamonn Quigley, MD, chief of gastroenterology at Houston Methodist Hospital, in a statement. “None of them felt it was being uncomfortable. And none of them stopped taking it because of that.”
Dr. Quigley helped test the capsules and does not have a financial stake in the company, according to Vibrant.
The pills do not dissolve inside a person’s body. Rather, “after they’ve done their job, the person’s body poops them out, and they’re flushed away,” the company said.
A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.
How a concussion led a former football player/WWE star to a pioneering neuroscience career
On Oct. 5, 2022, at 10:24 a.m., Chris Nowinski, PhD, cofounder of the Boston-based Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF), was in his home office when the email came through.
“I pounded my desk, shouted YES! and went to find my wife so I could pick her up and give her a big hug,” he recalled. “It was the culmination of 15 years of research and hard work.”
Robert Cantu, MD, who has been studying head trauma for 50+ years and has published more than 500 papers about it, compares the announcement to the 1964 Surgeon General’s report that linked cigarette smoking with lung cancer and heart disease. With the NIH and the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now in agreement about the risks of participating in impact sports and activities, he said, “We’ve reached a tipping point that should finally prompt deniers such as the NHL, NCAA, FIFA, World Rugby, the International Olympic Committee, and other [sports organizations] to remove all unnecessary head trauma from their sports.”
“A lot of the credit for this must go to Chris,” added Dr. Cantu, medical director and director of clinical research at the Cantu Concussion Center at Emerson Hospital in Concord, Mass. “Clinicians like myself can reach only so many people by writing papers and giving speeches at medical conferences. For this to happen, the message needed to get out to parents, athletes, and society in general. And Chris was the vehicle for doing that.”
Dr. Nowinski didn’t set out to be the messenger. He played football at Harvard in the late 1990s, making second-team All-Ivy as a defensive tackle his senior year. In 2000, he enrolled in Killer Kowalski’s Wrestling Institute and eventually joined Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE).
There he played the role of 295-pound villain “Chris Harvard,” an intellectual snob who dressed in crimson tights and insulted the crowd’s IQ. “Roses are red. Violets are blue. The reason I’m talking so slowly is because no one in [insert name of town he was appearing in] has passed grade 2!”
“I’d often apply my education during a match,” he wrote in his book, “Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis.“ In a match in Bridgeport, Conn., I assaulted [my opponent] with a human skeleton, ripped off the skull, got down on bended knee, and began reciting Hamlet. Those were good times.”
Those good times ended abruptly, however, during a match with Bubba Ray Dudley at the Hartford Civic Center in Connecticut in 2003. Even though pro wrestling matches are rehearsed, and the blows aren’t real, accidents happen. Mr. Dudley mistakenly kicked Dr. Nowinski in the jaw with enough force to put him on his back and make the whole ring shake.
“Holy shit, kid! You okay?” asked the referee. Before a foggy Dr. Nowinski could reply, 300-pound Mr. Dudley crashed down on him, hooked his leg, and the ref began counting, “One! Two! …” Dr. Nowinski instinctively kicked out but had forgotten the rest of the script. He managed to finish the match and stagger backstage.
His coherence and awareness gradually returned, but a “throbbing headache” persisted. A locker room doctor said he might have a concussion and recommended he wait to see how he felt before wrestling in Albany, N.Y., the next evening.
The following day the headache had subsided, but he still felt “a little strange.” Nonetheless, he told the doctor he was fine and strutted out to again battle Bubba Ray, this time in a match where he eventually got thrown through a ringside table and suffered the Dudley Death Drop. Afterward, “I crawled backstage and laid down. The headache was much, much worse.”
An event and a process
Dr. Nowinski continued to insist he was “fine” and wrestled a few more matches in the following days before finally acknowledging something was wrong. He’d had his bell rung numerous times in football, but this was different. Even more worrisome, none of the doctors he consulted could give him any definitive answers. He finally found his way to Emerson Hospital, where Dr. Cantu was the chief of neurosurgery.
“I remember that day vividly,” said Dr. Cantu. “Chris was this big, strapping, handsome guy – a hell of an athlete whose star was rising. He didn’t realize that he’d suffered a series of concussions and that trying to push through them was the worst thing he could be doing.”
Concussions and their effects were misunderstood by many athletes, coaches, and even physicians back then. It was assumed that the quarter inch of bone surrounding the adult brain provided adequate protection from common sports impacts and that any aftereffects were temporary. A common treatment was smelling salts and a pat on the back as the athlete returned to action.
However, the brain floats inside the skull in a bath of cerebral fluid. Any significant impact causes it to slosh violently from side to side, damaging tissue, synapses, and cells resulting in inflammation that can manifest as confusion and brain fog.
“A concussion is actually not defined by a physical injury,” explained Dr. Nowinski, “but by a loss of brain function that is induced by trauma. Concussion is not just an event, but also a process.” It’s almost as if the person has suffered a small seizure.
Fortunately, most concussion symptoms resolve within 2 weeks, but in some cases, especially if there’s been additional head trauma, they can persist, causing anxiety, depression, anger, and/or sleep disorders. Known as postconcussion syndrome (PCS), this is what Dr. Nowinski was unknowingly suffering from when he consulted Dr. Cantu.
In fact, one night it an Indianapolis hotel, weeks after his initial concussion, he awoke to find himself on the floor and the room in shambles. His girlfriend was yelling his name and shaking him. She told him he’d been having a nightmare and had suddenly started screaming and tearing up the room. “I didn’t remember any of it,” he said.
Dr. Cantu eventually advised Dr. Nowinski against ever returning to the ring or any activity with the risk for head injury. Research shows that sustaining a single significant concussion increases the risk of subsequent more-severe brain injuries.
“My diagnosis could have sent Chris off the deep end because he could no longer do what he wanted to do with this life,” said Dr. Cantu. “But instead, he used it as a tool to find meaning for his life.”
Dr. Nowinski decided to use his experience as a teaching opportunity, not just for other athletes but also for sports organizations and the medical community.
His book, which focused on the NFL’s “tobacco-industry-like refusal to acknowledge the depths of the problem,” was published in 2006. A year later, Dr. Nowinski partnered with Dr. Cantu to found the Sports Legacy Institute, which eventually became the Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF).
Cold calling for brain donations
Robert Stern, PhD, is another highly respected authority in the study of neurodegenerative disease. In 2007, he was directing the clinical core of Boston University’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center. After giving a lecture to a group of financial planners and elder-law attorneys one morning, he got a request for a private meeting from a fellow named Chris Nowinski.
“I’d never heard of him, but I agreed,” recalled Dr. Stern, a professor of neurology, neurosurgery, anatomy, and neurobiology at Boston University. “A few days later, this larger-than-life guy walked into our conference room at the BU School of Medicine, exuding a great deal of passion, intellect, and determination. He told me his story and then started talking about the long-term consequences of concussions in sports.”
Dr. Stern had seen patients with dementia pugilistica, the old-school term for CTE. These were mostly boxers with cognitive and behavioral impairment. “But I had not heard about football players,” he said. “I hadn’t put the two together. And as I was listening to Chris, I realized if what he was saying was true then it was not only a potentially huge public health issue, but it was also a potentially huge scientific issue in the field of neurodegenerative disease.”
Dr. Nowinski introduced Dr. Stern to Dr. Cantu, and together with Ann McKee, MD, professor of neurology and pathology at BU, they cofounded the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) in 2008. It was the first center of its kind devoted to the study of CTE in the world.
One of Dr. Nowinski’s first jobs at the CSTE was soliciting and procuring brain donations. Since CTE is generally a progressive condition that can take decades to manifest, autopsy was the only way to detect it.
The brains of two former Pittsburgh Steelers, Mike Webster and Terry Long, had been examined after their untimely deaths. After immunostaining, investigators found both former NFL players had “protein misfolds” characteristic of CTE.
This finding drew a lot of public and scientific attention, given that Mr. Long died by suicide and Mr. Webster was homeless when he died of a heart attack. But more scientific evidence was needed to prove a causal link between the head trauma and CTE.
Dr. Nowinski scoured obituaries looking for potential brains to study. When he found one, he would cold call the family and try to convince them to donate it to science. The first brain he secured for the center belonged to John Grimsley, a former NFL linebacker who in 2008 died at age 45 of an accidental gunshot wound. Often, Dr. Nowinski would even be the courier, traveling to pick up the brain after it had been harvested.
Over the next 10 years, Dr. Nowinski and his research team secured 500 brain donations. The research that resulted was staggering. In the beginning only 45 cases of CTE had been identified in the world, but in the first 111 NFL players who were autopsied, 110 had the disorder.
Of the first 53 college football players autopsied, 48 had CTE. Although Dr. Nowinski’s initial focus was football, evidence of CTE was soon detected among athletes in boxing, hockey, soccer, and rugby, as well as in combat veterans. However, the National Football League and other governing sports bodies initially denied any connection between sport-related head trauma and CTE.
Cumulative damage
In 2017, after 7 years of study, Dr. Nowinski earned a PhD in neurology. As the scientific evidence continued to accumulate, two shifts occurred that Dr. Stern said represent Dr. Nowinski’s greatest contributions. First, concussion is now widely recognized as an acute brain injury with symptoms that need to be immediately diagnosed and addressed.
“This is a completely different story from where things were just 10 years ago,” said Dr. Stern, “and Chris played a central role, if not the central role, in raising awareness about that.”
All 50 states and the District of Columbia now have laws regarding sports-related concussion. And there are brain banks in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Brazil, and the United Kingdom studying CTE. More than 2,500 athletes in a variety of sports, including NASCAR’s Dale Earnhardt Jr. and NFL hall of famer Nick Buoniconti, have publicly pledged to donate their brains to science after their deaths.
Second, said Dr. Stern, we now know that although concussions can contribute to CTE, they are not the sole cause. It’s repetitive subconcussive trauma, without symptoms of concussion, that do the most damage.
“These happen during every practice and in every game,” said Dr. Stern. In fact, it’s estimated that pro football players suffer thousands of subconcussive incidents over the course of their careers. So, a player doesn’t have to see stars or lose consciousness to suffer brain damage; small impacts can accumulate over time.
Understanding this point is crucial for making youth sports safer. “Chris has played a critical role in raising awareness here, too,” said Dr. Stern. “Allowing our kids to get hit in the head over and over can put them at greater risk for later problems, plus it just doesn’t make common sense.”
“The biggest misconception surrounding head trauma in sports,” said Dr. Nowinski, “is the belief among players, coaches, and even the medical and scientific communities that if you get hit in the head and don’t have any symptoms then you’re okay and there hasn’t been any damage. That couldn’t be further from the truth. We now know that people are suffering serious brain injuries due to the accumulated effect of subconcussive impacts, and we need to get the word out about that.”
A major initiative from the Concussion Legacy Foundation called “Stop Hitting Kids in the Head” has the goal of convincing every sport to eliminate repetitive head impacts in players under age 14 – the time when the skull and brain are still developing and most vulnerable – by 2026. In fact, Dr. Nowinski wrote that “there could be a lot of kids who are misdiagnosed and medicated for various behavioral or emotional problems that may actually be head injury–related.”
Starting in 2009, the NFL adopted a series of rule changes designed to better protect its players against repeated head trauma. Among them is a ban on spearing or leading with the helmet, penalties for hitting defenseless players, and more stringent return-to-play guidelines, including concussion protocols.
The NFL has also put more emphasis on flag football options for youngsters and, for the first time, showcased this alternative in the 2023 Pro Bowl. But Dr. Nowinski is pressuring the league to go further. “While acknowledging that the game causes CTE, the NFL still underwrites recruiting 5-year-olds to play tackle football,” he said. “In my opinion, that’s unethical, and it needs to be addressed.”
WWE one of the most responsive organizations
Dr. Nowinski said WWE has been one of the most responsive sports organizations for protecting athletes. A doctor is now ringside at every match as is an observer who knows the script, thereby allowing for instant medical intervention if something goes wrong. “Since everyone is trying to look like they have a concussion all the time, it takes a deep understanding of the business to recognize a real one,” he said.
But this hasn’t been the case with other sports. “I am eternally disappointed in the response of the professional sports industry to the knowledge of CTE and long-term concussion symptoms,” said Dr. Nowinski.
“For example, FIFA [international soccer’s governing body] still doesn’t allow doctors to evaluate [potentially concussed] players on the sidelines and put them back in the game with a free substitution [if they’re deemed okay]. Not giving players proper medical care for a brain injury is unethical,” he said. BU’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy diagnosed the first CTE case in soccer in 2012, and in 2015 Dr. Nowinski successfully lobbied U.S. Soccer to ban heading the ball before age 11.
“Unfortunately, many governing bodies have circled the wagons in denying their sport causes CTE,” he continued. “FIFA, World Rugby, the NHL, even the NCAA and International Olympic Committee refuse to acknowledge it and, therefore, aren’t taking any steps to prevent it. They see it as a threat to their business model. Hopefully, now that the NIH and CDC are aligned about the risks of head impact in sports, this will begin to change.”
Meanwhile, research is continuing. Scientists are getting closer to being able to diagnose CTE in living humans, with ongoing studies using PET scans, blood markers, and spinal fluid markers. In 2019, researchers identified tau proteins specific to CTE that they believe are distinct from those of Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases. Next step would be developing a drug to slow the development of CTE once detected.
Nonetheless, athletes at all levels in impact sports still don’t fully appreciate the risks of repeated head trauma and especially subconcussive blows. “I talk to former NFL and college players every week,” said Dr. Stern. “Some tell me, ‘I love the sport, it gave me so much, and I would do it again, but I’m not letting my grandchildren play.’ But others say, ‘As long as they know the risks, they can make their own decision.’ “
Dr. Nowinski has a daughter who is 4 and a son who’s 2. Both play soccer but, thanks to dad, heading isn’t allowed in their age groups. If they continue playing sports, Dr. Nowinski said he’ll make sure they understand the risks and how to protect themselves. This is a conversation all parents should have with their kids at every level to make sure they play safe, he added.
Those in the medical community can also volunteer their time to explain head trauma to athletes, coaches, and school administrators to be sure they understand its seriousness and are doing everything to protect players.
As you watch this year’s Super Bowl, Dr. Nowinski and his team would like you to keep something in mind. Those young men on the field for your entertainment are receiving mild brain trauma repeatedly throughout the game.
Even if it’s not a huge hit that gets replayed and makes everyone gasp, even if no one gets ushered into the little sideline tent for a concussion screening, even if no one loses consciousness, brain damage is still occurring. Watch the heads of the players during every play and think about what’s going on inside their skulls regardless of how big and strong those helmets look.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
On Oct. 5, 2022, at 10:24 a.m., Chris Nowinski, PhD, cofounder of the Boston-based Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF), was in his home office when the email came through.
“I pounded my desk, shouted YES! and went to find my wife so I could pick her up and give her a big hug,” he recalled. “It was the culmination of 15 years of research and hard work.”
Robert Cantu, MD, who has been studying head trauma for 50+ years and has published more than 500 papers about it, compares the announcement to the 1964 Surgeon General’s report that linked cigarette smoking with lung cancer and heart disease. With the NIH and the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now in agreement about the risks of participating in impact sports and activities, he said, “We’ve reached a tipping point that should finally prompt deniers such as the NHL, NCAA, FIFA, World Rugby, the International Olympic Committee, and other [sports organizations] to remove all unnecessary head trauma from their sports.”
“A lot of the credit for this must go to Chris,” added Dr. Cantu, medical director and director of clinical research at the Cantu Concussion Center at Emerson Hospital in Concord, Mass. “Clinicians like myself can reach only so many people by writing papers and giving speeches at medical conferences. For this to happen, the message needed to get out to parents, athletes, and society in general. And Chris was the vehicle for doing that.”
Dr. Nowinski didn’t set out to be the messenger. He played football at Harvard in the late 1990s, making second-team All-Ivy as a defensive tackle his senior year. In 2000, he enrolled in Killer Kowalski’s Wrestling Institute and eventually joined Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE).
There he played the role of 295-pound villain “Chris Harvard,” an intellectual snob who dressed in crimson tights and insulted the crowd’s IQ. “Roses are red. Violets are blue. The reason I’m talking so slowly is because no one in [insert name of town he was appearing in] has passed grade 2!”
“I’d often apply my education during a match,” he wrote in his book, “Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis.“ In a match in Bridgeport, Conn., I assaulted [my opponent] with a human skeleton, ripped off the skull, got down on bended knee, and began reciting Hamlet. Those were good times.”
Those good times ended abruptly, however, during a match with Bubba Ray Dudley at the Hartford Civic Center in Connecticut in 2003. Even though pro wrestling matches are rehearsed, and the blows aren’t real, accidents happen. Mr. Dudley mistakenly kicked Dr. Nowinski in the jaw with enough force to put him on his back and make the whole ring shake.
“Holy shit, kid! You okay?” asked the referee. Before a foggy Dr. Nowinski could reply, 300-pound Mr. Dudley crashed down on him, hooked his leg, and the ref began counting, “One! Two! …” Dr. Nowinski instinctively kicked out but had forgotten the rest of the script. He managed to finish the match and stagger backstage.
His coherence and awareness gradually returned, but a “throbbing headache” persisted. A locker room doctor said he might have a concussion and recommended he wait to see how he felt before wrestling in Albany, N.Y., the next evening.
The following day the headache had subsided, but he still felt “a little strange.” Nonetheless, he told the doctor he was fine and strutted out to again battle Bubba Ray, this time in a match where he eventually got thrown through a ringside table and suffered the Dudley Death Drop. Afterward, “I crawled backstage and laid down. The headache was much, much worse.”
An event and a process
Dr. Nowinski continued to insist he was “fine” and wrestled a few more matches in the following days before finally acknowledging something was wrong. He’d had his bell rung numerous times in football, but this was different. Even more worrisome, none of the doctors he consulted could give him any definitive answers. He finally found his way to Emerson Hospital, where Dr. Cantu was the chief of neurosurgery.
“I remember that day vividly,” said Dr. Cantu. “Chris was this big, strapping, handsome guy – a hell of an athlete whose star was rising. He didn’t realize that he’d suffered a series of concussions and that trying to push through them was the worst thing he could be doing.”
Concussions and their effects were misunderstood by many athletes, coaches, and even physicians back then. It was assumed that the quarter inch of bone surrounding the adult brain provided adequate protection from common sports impacts and that any aftereffects were temporary. A common treatment was smelling salts and a pat on the back as the athlete returned to action.
However, the brain floats inside the skull in a bath of cerebral fluid. Any significant impact causes it to slosh violently from side to side, damaging tissue, synapses, and cells resulting in inflammation that can manifest as confusion and brain fog.
“A concussion is actually not defined by a physical injury,” explained Dr. Nowinski, “but by a loss of brain function that is induced by trauma. Concussion is not just an event, but also a process.” It’s almost as if the person has suffered a small seizure.
Fortunately, most concussion symptoms resolve within 2 weeks, but in some cases, especially if there’s been additional head trauma, they can persist, causing anxiety, depression, anger, and/or sleep disorders. Known as postconcussion syndrome (PCS), this is what Dr. Nowinski was unknowingly suffering from when he consulted Dr. Cantu.
In fact, one night it an Indianapolis hotel, weeks after his initial concussion, he awoke to find himself on the floor and the room in shambles. His girlfriend was yelling his name and shaking him. She told him he’d been having a nightmare and had suddenly started screaming and tearing up the room. “I didn’t remember any of it,” he said.
Dr. Cantu eventually advised Dr. Nowinski against ever returning to the ring or any activity with the risk for head injury. Research shows that sustaining a single significant concussion increases the risk of subsequent more-severe brain injuries.
“My diagnosis could have sent Chris off the deep end because he could no longer do what he wanted to do with this life,” said Dr. Cantu. “But instead, he used it as a tool to find meaning for his life.”
Dr. Nowinski decided to use his experience as a teaching opportunity, not just for other athletes but also for sports organizations and the medical community.
His book, which focused on the NFL’s “tobacco-industry-like refusal to acknowledge the depths of the problem,” was published in 2006. A year later, Dr. Nowinski partnered with Dr. Cantu to found the Sports Legacy Institute, which eventually became the Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF).
Cold calling for brain donations
Robert Stern, PhD, is another highly respected authority in the study of neurodegenerative disease. In 2007, he was directing the clinical core of Boston University’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center. After giving a lecture to a group of financial planners and elder-law attorneys one morning, he got a request for a private meeting from a fellow named Chris Nowinski.
“I’d never heard of him, but I agreed,” recalled Dr. Stern, a professor of neurology, neurosurgery, anatomy, and neurobiology at Boston University. “A few days later, this larger-than-life guy walked into our conference room at the BU School of Medicine, exuding a great deal of passion, intellect, and determination. He told me his story and then started talking about the long-term consequences of concussions in sports.”
Dr. Stern had seen patients with dementia pugilistica, the old-school term for CTE. These were mostly boxers with cognitive and behavioral impairment. “But I had not heard about football players,” he said. “I hadn’t put the two together. And as I was listening to Chris, I realized if what he was saying was true then it was not only a potentially huge public health issue, but it was also a potentially huge scientific issue in the field of neurodegenerative disease.”
Dr. Nowinski introduced Dr. Stern to Dr. Cantu, and together with Ann McKee, MD, professor of neurology and pathology at BU, they cofounded the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) in 2008. It was the first center of its kind devoted to the study of CTE in the world.
One of Dr. Nowinski’s first jobs at the CSTE was soliciting and procuring brain donations. Since CTE is generally a progressive condition that can take decades to manifest, autopsy was the only way to detect it.
The brains of two former Pittsburgh Steelers, Mike Webster and Terry Long, had been examined after their untimely deaths. After immunostaining, investigators found both former NFL players had “protein misfolds” characteristic of CTE.
This finding drew a lot of public and scientific attention, given that Mr. Long died by suicide and Mr. Webster was homeless when he died of a heart attack. But more scientific evidence was needed to prove a causal link between the head trauma and CTE.
Dr. Nowinski scoured obituaries looking for potential brains to study. When he found one, he would cold call the family and try to convince them to donate it to science. The first brain he secured for the center belonged to John Grimsley, a former NFL linebacker who in 2008 died at age 45 of an accidental gunshot wound. Often, Dr. Nowinski would even be the courier, traveling to pick up the brain after it had been harvested.
Over the next 10 years, Dr. Nowinski and his research team secured 500 brain donations. The research that resulted was staggering. In the beginning only 45 cases of CTE had been identified in the world, but in the first 111 NFL players who were autopsied, 110 had the disorder.
Of the first 53 college football players autopsied, 48 had CTE. Although Dr. Nowinski’s initial focus was football, evidence of CTE was soon detected among athletes in boxing, hockey, soccer, and rugby, as well as in combat veterans. However, the National Football League and other governing sports bodies initially denied any connection between sport-related head trauma and CTE.
Cumulative damage
In 2017, after 7 years of study, Dr. Nowinski earned a PhD in neurology. As the scientific evidence continued to accumulate, two shifts occurred that Dr. Stern said represent Dr. Nowinski’s greatest contributions. First, concussion is now widely recognized as an acute brain injury with symptoms that need to be immediately diagnosed and addressed.
“This is a completely different story from where things were just 10 years ago,” said Dr. Stern, “and Chris played a central role, if not the central role, in raising awareness about that.”
All 50 states and the District of Columbia now have laws regarding sports-related concussion. And there are brain banks in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Brazil, and the United Kingdom studying CTE. More than 2,500 athletes in a variety of sports, including NASCAR’s Dale Earnhardt Jr. and NFL hall of famer Nick Buoniconti, have publicly pledged to donate their brains to science after their deaths.
Second, said Dr. Stern, we now know that although concussions can contribute to CTE, they are not the sole cause. It’s repetitive subconcussive trauma, without symptoms of concussion, that do the most damage.
“These happen during every practice and in every game,” said Dr. Stern. In fact, it’s estimated that pro football players suffer thousands of subconcussive incidents over the course of their careers. So, a player doesn’t have to see stars or lose consciousness to suffer brain damage; small impacts can accumulate over time.
Understanding this point is crucial for making youth sports safer. “Chris has played a critical role in raising awareness here, too,” said Dr. Stern. “Allowing our kids to get hit in the head over and over can put them at greater risk for later problems, plus it just doesn’t make common sense.”
“The biggest misconception surrounding head trauma in sports,” said Dr. Nowinski, “is the belief among players, coaches, and even the medical and scientific communities that if you get hit in the head and don’t have any symptoms then you’re okay and there hasn’t been any damage. That couldn’t be further from the truth. We now know that people are suffering serious brain injuries due to the accumulated effect of subconcussive impacts, and we need to get the word out about that.”
A major initiative from the Concussion Legacy Foundation called “Stop Hitting Kids in the Head” has the goal of convincing every sport to eliminate repetitive head impacts in players under age 14 – the time when the skull and brain are still developing and most vulnerable – by 2026. In fact, Dr. Nowinski wrote that “there could be a lot of kids who are misdiagnosed and medicated for various behavioral or emotional problems that may actually be head injury–related.”
Starting in 2009, the NFL adopted a series of rule changes designed to better protect its players against repeated head trauma. Among them is a ban on spearing or leading with the helmet, penalties for hitting defenseless players, and more stringent return-to-play guidelines, including concussion protocols.
The NFL has also put more emphasis on flag football options for youngsters and, for the first time, showcased this alternative in the 2023 Pro Bowl. But Dr. Nowinski is pressuring the league to go further. “While acknowledging that the game causes CTE, the NFL still underwrites recruiting 5-year-olds to play tackle football,” he said. “In my opinion, that’s unethical, and it needs to be addressed.”
WWE one of the most responsive organizations
Dr. Nowinski said WWE has been one of the most responsive sports organizations for protecting athletes. A doctor is now ringside at every match as is an observer who knows the script, thereby allowing for instant medical intervention if something goes wrong. “Since everyone is trying to look like they have a concussion all the time, it takes a deep understanding of the business to recognize a real one,” he said.
But this hasn’t been the case with other sports. “I am eternally disappointed in the response of the professional sports industry to the knowledge of CTE and long-term concussion symptoms,” said Dr. Nowinski.
“For example, FIFA [international soccer’s governing body] still doesn’t allow doctors to evaluate [potentially concussed] players on the sidelines and put them back in the game with a free substitution [if they’re deemed okay]. Not giving players proper medical care for a brain injury is unethical,” he said. BU’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy diagnosed the first CTE case in soccer in 2012, and in 2015 Dr. Nowinski successfully lobbied U.S. Soccer to ban heading the ball before age 11.
“Unfortunately, many governing bodies have circled the wagons in denying their sport causes CTE,” he continued. “FIFA, World Rugby, the NHL, even the NCAA and International Olympic Committee refuse to acknowledge it and, therefore, aren’t taking any steps to prevent it. They see it as a threat to their business model. Hopefully, now that the NIH and CDC are aligned about the risks of head impact in sports, this will begin to change.”
Meanwhile, research is continuing. Scientists are getting closer to being able to diagnose CTE in living humans, with ongoing studies using PET scans, blood markers, and spinal fluid markers. In 2019, researchers identified tau proteins specific to CTE that they believe are distinct from those of Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases. Next step would be developing a drug to slow the development of CTE once detected.
Nonetheless, athletes at all levels in impact sports still don’t fully appreciate the risks of repeated head trauma and especially subconcussive blows. “I talk to former NFL and college players every week,” said Dr. Stern. “Some tell me, ‘I love the sport, it gave me so much, and I would do it again, but I’m not letting my grandchildren play.’ But others say, ‘As long as they know the risks, they can make their own decision.’ “
Dr. Nowinski has a daughter who is 4 and a son who’s 2. Both play soccer but, thanks to dad, heading isn’t allowed in their age groups. If they continue playing sports, Dr. Nowinski said he’ll make sure they understand the risks and how to protect themselves. This is a conversation all parents should have with their kids at every level to make sure they play safe, he added.
Those in the medical community can also volunteer their time to explain head trauma to athletes, coaches, and school administrators to be sure they understand its seriousness and are doing everything to protect players.
As you watch this year’s Super Bowl, Dr. Nowinski and his team would like you to keep something in mind. Those young men on the field for your entertainment are receiving mild brain trauma repeatedly throughout the game.
Even if it’s not a huge hit that gets replayed and makes everyone gasp, even if no one gets ushered into the little sideline tent for a concussion screening, even if no one loses consciousness, brain damage is still occurring. Watch the heads of the players during every play and think about what’s going on inside their skulls regardless of how big and strong those helmets look.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
On Oct. 5, 2022, at 10:24 a.m., Chris Nowinski, PhD, cofounder of the Boston-based Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF), was in his home office when the email came through.
“I pounded my desk, shouted YES! and went to find my wife so I could pick her up and give her a big hug,” he recalled. “It was the culmination of 15 years of research and hard work.”
Robert Cantu, MD, who has been studying head trauma for 50+ years and has published more than 500 papers about it, compares the announcement to the 1964 Surgeon General’s report that linked cigarette smoking with lung cancer and heart disease. With the NIH and the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) now in agreement about the risks of participating in impact sports and activities, he said, “We’ve reached a tipping point that should finally prompt deniers such as the NHL, NCAA, FIFA, World Rugby, the International Olympic Committee, and other [sports organizations] to remove all unnecessary head trauma from their sports.”
“A lot of the credit for this must go to Chris,” added Dr. Cantu, medical director and director of clinical research at the Cantu Concussion Center at Emerson Hospital in Concord, Mass. “Clinicians like myself can reach only so many people by writing papers and giving speeches at medical conferences. For this to happen, the message needed to get out to parents, athletes, and society in general. And Chris was the vehicle for doing that.”
Dr. Nowinski didn’t set out to be the messenger. He played football at Harvard in the late 1990s, making second-team All-Ivy as a defensive tackle his senior year. In 2000, he enrolled in Killer Kowalski’s Wrestling Institute and eventually joined Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE).
There he played the role of 295-pound villain “Chris Harvard,” an intellectual snob who dressed in crimson tights and insulted the crowd’s IQ. “Roses are red. Violets are blue. The reason I’m talking so slowly is because no one in [insert name of town he was appearing in] has passed grade 2!”
“I’d often apply my education during a match,” he wrote in his book, “Head Games: Football’s Concussion Crisis.“ In a match in Bridgeport, Conn., I assaulted [my opponent] with a human skeleton, ripped off the skull, got down on bended knee, and began reciting Hamlet. Those were good times.”
Those good times ended abruptly, however, during a match with Bubba Ray Dudley at the Hartford Civic Center in Connecticut in 2003. Even though pro wrestling matches are rehearsed, and the blows aren’t real, accidents happen. Mr. Dudley mistakenly kicked Dr. Nowinski in the jaw with enough force to put him on his back and make the whole ring shake.
“Holy shit, kid! You okay?” asked the referee. Before a foggy Dr. Nowinski could reply, 300-pound Mr. Dudley crashed down on him, hooked his leg, and the ref began counting, “One! Two! …” Dr. Nowinski instinctively kicked out but had forgotten the rest of the script. He managed to finish the match and stagger backstage.
His coherence and awareness gradually returned, but a “throbbing headache” persisted. A locker room doctor said he might have a concussion and recommended he wait to see how he felt before wrestling in Albany, N.Y., the next evening.
The following day the headache had subsided, but he still felt “a little strange.” Nonetheless, he told the doctor he was fine and strutted out to again battle Bubba Ray, this time in a match where he eventually got thrown through a ringside table and suffered the Dudley Death Drop. Afterward, “I crawled backstage and laid down. The headache was much, much worse.”
An event and a process
Dr. Nowinski continued to insist he was “fine” and wrestled a few more matches in the following days before finally acknowledging something was wrong. He’d had his bell rung numerous times in football, but this was different. Even more worrisome, none of the doctors he consulted could give him any definitive answers. He finally found his way to Emerson Hospital, where Dr. Cantu was the chief of neurosurgery.
“I remember that day vividly,” said Dr. Cantu. “Chris was this big, strapping, handsome guy – a hell of an athlete whose star was rising. He didn’t realize that he’d suffered a series of concussions and that trying to push through them was the worst thing he could be doing.”
Concussions and their effects were misunderstood by many athletes, coaches, and even physicians back then. It was assumed that the quarter inch of bone surrounding the adult brain provided adequate protection from common sports impacts and that any aftereffects were temporary. A common treatment was smelling salts and a pat on the back as the athlete returned to action.
However, the brain floats inside the skull in a bath of cerebral fluid. Any significant impact causes it to slosh violently from side to side, damaging tissue, synapses, and cells resulting in inflammation that can manifest as confusion and brain fog.
“A concussion is actually not defined by a physical injury,” explained Dr. Nowinski, “but by a loss of brain function that is induced by trauma. Concussion is not just an event, but also a process.” It’s almost as if the person has suffered a small seizure.
Fortunately, most concussion symptoms resolve within 2 weeks, but in some cases, especially if there’s been additional head trauma, they can persist, causing anxiety, depression, anger, and/or sleep disorders. Known as postconcussion syndrome (PCS), this is what Dr. Nowinski was unknowingly suffering from when he consulted Dr. Cantu.
In fact, one night it an Indianapolis hotel, weeks after his initial concussion, he awoke to find himself on the floor and the room in shambles. His girlfriend was yelling his name and shaking him. She told him he’d been having a nightmare and had suddenly started screaming and tearing up the room. “I didn’t remember any of it,” he said.
Dr. Cantu eventually advised Dr. Nowinski against ever returning to the ring or any activity with the risk for head injury. Research shows that sustaining a single significant concussion increases the risk of subsequent more-severe brain injuries.
“My diagnosis could have sent Chris off the deep end because he could no longer do what he wanted to do with this life,” said Dr. Cantu. “But instead, he used it as a tool to find meaning for his life.”
Dr. Nowinski decided to use his experience as a teaching opportunity, not just for other athletes but also for sports organizations and the medical community.
His book, which focused on the NFL’s “tobacco-industry-like refusal to acknowledge the depths of the problem,” was published in 2006. A year later, Dr. Nowinski partnered with Dr. Cantu to found the Sports Legacy Institute, which eventually became the Concussion Legacy Foundation (CLF).
Cold calling for brain donations
Robert Stern, PhD, is another highly respected authority in the study of neurodegenerative disease. In 2007, he was directing the clinical core of Boston University’s Alzheimer’s Disease Center. After giving a lecture to a group of financial planners and elder-law attorneys one morning, he got a request for a private meeting from a fellow named Chris Nowinski.
“I’d never heard of him, but I agreed,” recalled Dr. Stern, a professor of neurology, neurosurgery, anatomy, and neurobiology at Boston University. “A few days later, this larger-than-life guy walked into our conference room at the BU School of Medicine, exuding a great deal of passion, intellect, and determination. He told me his story and then started talking about the long-term consequences of concussions in sports.”
Dr. Stern had seen patients with dementia pugilistica, the old-school term for CTE. These were mostly boxers with cognitive and behavioral impairment. “But I had not heard about football players,” he said. “I hadn’t put the two together. And as I was listening to Chris, I realized if what he was saying was true then it was not only a potentially huge public health issue, but it was also a potentially huge scientific issue in the field of neurodegenerative disease.”
Dr. Nowinski introduced Dr. Stern to Dr. Cantu, and together with Ann McKee, MD, professor of neurology and pathology at BU, they cofounded the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy (CSTE) in 2008. It was the first center of its kind devoted to the study of CTE in the world.
One of Dr. Nowinski’s first jobs at the CSTE was soliciting and procuring brain donations. Since CTE is generally a progressive condition that can take decades to manifest, autopsy was the only way to detect it.
The brains of two former Pittsburgh Steelers, Mike Webster and Terry Long, had been examined after their untimely deaths. After immunostaining, investigators found both former NFL players had “protein misfolds” characteristic of CTE.
This finding drew a lot of public and scientific attention, given that Mr. Long died by suicide and Mr. Webster was homeless when he died of a heart attack. But more scientific evidence was needed to prove a causal link between the head trauma and CTE.
Dr. Nowinski scoured obituaries looking for potential brains to study. When he found one, he would cold call the family and try to convince them to donate it to science. The first brain he secured for the center belonged to John Grimsley, a former NFL linebacker who in 2008 died at age 45 of an accidental gunshot wound. Often, Dr. Nowinski would even be the courier, traveling to pick up the brain after it had been harvested.
Over the next 10 years, Dr. Nowinski and his research team secured 500 brain donations. The research that resulted was staggering. In the beginning only 45 cases of CTE had been identified in the world, but in the first 111 NFL players who were autopsied, 110 had the disorder.
Of the first 53 college football players autopsied, 48 had CTE. Although Dr. Nowinski’s initial focus was football, evidence of CTE was soon detected among athletes in boxing, hockey, soccer, and rugby, as well as in combat veterans. However, the National Football League and other governing sports bodies initially denied any connection between sport-related head trauma and CTE.
Cumulative damage
In 2017, after 7 years of study, Dr. Nowinski earned a PhD in neurology. As the scientific evidence continued to accumulate, two shifts occurred that Dr. Stern said represent Dr. Nowinski’s greatest contributions. First, concussion is now widely recognized as an acute brain injury with symptoms that need to be immediately diagnosed and addressed.
“This is a completely different story from where things were just 10 years ago,” said Dr. Stern, “and Chris played a central role, if not the central role, in raising awareness about that.”
All 50 states and the District of Columbia now have laws regarding sports-related concussion. And there are brain banks in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Brazil, and the United Kingdom studying CTE. More than 2,500 athletes in a variety of sports, including NASCAR’s Dale Earnhardt Jr. and NFL hall of famer Nick Buoniconti, have publicly pledged to donate their brains to science after their deaths.
Second, said Dr. Stern, we now know that although concussions can contribute to CTE, they are not the sole cause. It’s repetitive subconcussive trauma, without symptoms of concussion, that do the most damage.
“These happen during every practice and in every game,” said Dr. Stern. In fact, it’s estimated that pro football players suffer thousands of subconcussive incidents over the course of their careers. So, a player doesn’t have to see stars or lose consciousness to suffer brain damage; small impacts can accumulate over time.
Understanding this point is crucial for making youth sports safer. “Chris has played a critical role in raising awareness here, too,” said Dr. Stern. “Allowing our kids to get hit in the head over and over can put them at greater risk for later problems, plus it just doesn’t make common sense.”
“The biggest misconception surrounding head trauma in sports,” said Dr. Nowinski, “is the belief among players, coaches, and even the medical and scientific communities that if you get hit in the head and don’t have any symptoms then you’re okay and there hasn’t been any damage. That couldn’t be further from the truth. We now know that people are suffering serious brain injuries due to the accumulated effect of subconcussive impacts, and we need to get the word out about that.”
A major initiative from the Concussion Legacy Foundation called “Stop Hitting Kids in the Head” has the goal of convincing every sport to eliminate repetitive head impacts in players under age 14 – the time when the skull and brain are still developing and most vulnerable – by 2026. In fact, Dr. Nowinski wrote that “there could be a lot of kids who are misdiagnosed and medicated for various behavioral or emotional problems that may actually be head injury–related.”
Starting in 2009, the NFL adopted a series of rule changes designed to better protect its players against repeated head trauma. Among them is a ban on spearing or leading with the helmet, penalties for hitting defenseless players, and more stringent return-to-play guidelines, including concussion protocols.
The NFL has also put more emphasis on flag football options for youngsters and, for the first time, showcased this alternative in the 2023 Pro Bowl. But Dr. Nowinski is pressuring the league to go further. “While acknowledging that the game causes CTE, the NFL still underwrites recruiting 5-year-olds to play tackle football,” he said. “In my opinion, that’s unethical, and it needs to be addressed.”
WWE one of the most responsive organizations
Dr. Nowinski said WWE has been one of the most responsive sports organizations for protecting athletes. A doctor is now ringside at every match as is an observer who knows the script, thereby allowing for instant medical intervention if something goes wrong. “Since everyone is trying to look like they have a concussion all the time, it takes a deep understanding of the business to recognize a real one,” he said.
But this hasn’t been the case with other sports. “I am eternally disappointed in the response of the professional sports industry to the knowledge of CTE and long-term concussion symptoms,” said Dr. Nowinski.
“For example, FIFA [international soccer’s governing body] still doesn’t allow doctors to evaluate [potentially concussed] players on the sidelines and put them back in the game with a free substitution [if they’re deemed okay]. Not giving players proper medical care for a brain injury is unethical,” he said. BU’s Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy diagnosed the first CTE case in soccer in 2012, and in 2015 Dr. Nowinski successfully lobbied U.S. Soccer to ban heading the ball before age 11.
“Unfortunately, many governing bodies have circled the wagons in denying their sport causes CTE,” he continued. “FIFA, World Rugby, the NHL, even the NCAA and International Olympic Committee refuse to acknowledge it and, therefore, aren’t taking any steps to prevent it. They see it as a threat to their business model. Hopefully, now that the NIH and CDC are aligned about the risks of head impact in sports, this will begin to change.”
Meanwhile, research is continuing. Scientists are getting closer to being able to diagnose CTE in living humans, with ongoing studies using PET scans, blood markers, and spinal fluid markers. In 2019, researchers identified tau proteins specific to CTE that they believe are distinct from those of Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases. Next step would be developing a drug to slow the development of CTE once detected.
Nonetheless, athletes at all levels in impact sports still don’t fully appreciate the risks of repeated head trauma and especially subconcussive blows. “I talk to former NFL and college players every week,” said Dr. Stern. “Some tell me, ‘I love the sport, it gave me so much, and I would do it again, but I’m not letting my grandchildren play.’ But others say, ‘As long as they know the risks, they can make their own decision.’ “
Dr. Nowinski has a daughter who is 4 and a son who’s 2. Both play soccer but, thanks to dad, heading isn’t allowed in their age groups. If they continue playing sports, Dr. Nowinski said he’ll make sure they understand the risks and how to protect themselves. This is a conversation all parents should have with their kids at every level to make sure they play safe, he added.
Those in the medical community can also volunteer their time to explain head trauma to athletes, coaches, and school administrators to be sure they understand its seriousness and are doing everything to protect players.
As you watch this year’s Super Bowl, Dr. Nowinski and his team would like you to keep something in mind. Those young men on the field for your entertainment are receiving mild brain trauma repeatedly throughout the game.
Even if it’s not a huge hit that gets replayed and makes everyone gasp, even if no one gets ushered into the little sideline tent for a concussion screening, even if no one loses consciousness, brain damage is still occurring. Watch the heads of the players during every play and think about what’s going on inside their skulls regardless of how big and strong those helmets look.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Doc never met patient who died from insect bite, but negligence suit moves forward; more
On-call specialist incurred a clear ‘duty of care,’ court rules
a state appeals court ruled late in January.
The appeals decision is the result of a case involving the late Dennis Blagden.
On July 26, 2017, Mr. Blagden arrived at the Graham Hospital ED, in Canton, Ill., complaining of neck pain and an insect bite that had resulted in a swollen elbow. His ED doctor, Matthew McMillin, MD, who worked for Coleman Medical Associates, ordered tests and prescribed an anti-inflammatory pain medication and a muscle relaxant.
Dr. McMillin consulted via telephone with Kenneth Krock, MD, an internal medicine specialist and pediatrician, who was on call that day and who enjoyed admitting privileges at Graham. (Krock was also an employee of Coleman Medical Associates, which provided clinical staffing for the hospital.)
Dr. Krock had final admitting authority in this instance. Court records show that Dr. McMillin and he agreed that the patient could be discharged from the ED, despite Krock’s differential diagnosis indicating a possible infection.
Three days later, now with “hypercapnic respiratory failure, sepsis, and an altered mental state,” Mr. Blagden was again seen at the Graham Hospital ED. Mr. Blagden underwent intubation by Dr. McMillin, his original ED doctor, and was airlifted to Methodist Medical Center, in Peoria, 30 miles away. There, an MRI showed that he’d developed a spinal epidural abscess. On Aug. 7, 2017, a little over a week after his admission to Methodist, Mr. Blagden died from complications of his infection.
In January 2019, Mr. Blagden’s wife, Judy, filed a suit against Dr. McMillin, his practice, and Graham Hospital, which is a part of Graham Health System. Her suit alleged medical negligence in the death of her husband.
About 6 months later, Mr.s Blagden amended her original complaint, adding a second count of medical negligence against Dr. Krock; his practice and employer, Coleman Medical Associates; and Graham Hospital. In her amended complaint, Mrs. Blagden alleged that although Krock hadn’t actually seen her husband Dennis, his consultation with Dr. McMillin was sufficient to establish a doctor-patient relationship and thus a legal duty of care. That duty, Mrs. Blagden further alleged, was breached when Dr. Krock failed both to rule out her husband’s “infectious process” and to admit him for proper follow-up monitoring.
In July 2021, after the case had been transferred from Peoria County to Fulton County, Dr. Krock cried foul. In a motion to the court for summary judgment – that is, a ruling prior to an actual trial – he and his practice put forth the following argument: As a mere on-call consultant that day in 2017, he had neither seen the patient nor established a relationship with him, thereby precluding his legal duty of care.
The trial court judge agreed and granted both Dr. Krock and Dr. Coleman the summary judgment they had sought.
Mrs. Blagden then appealed to the Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District, which is located in Springfield.
In its unanimous decision, the three-judge panel reversed the lower court’s ruling. Taking direct aim at Dr. Krock’s earlier motion, Justice Eugene Doherty, who wrote the panel’s opinion, said that state law had long established that “the special relationship giving rise to a duty of care may exist even in the absence of any meeting between the physician and the patient where the physician performs specific services for the benefit of the patient.”
As Justice Doherty explained, Dr. Krock’s status that day as both the on-call doctor and the one with final admitting authority undermined his argument for summary judgment. Also undermining it, Justice Doherty added, was the fact that the conversation between the two doctors that day in 2017 was a formal exchange “contemplated by hospital bylaws.”
“While public policy should encourage informal consultations between physicians,” the justice continued, “it must not ignore actual physician involvement in decisions that directly affect a patient’s care.”
Following the Fourth District decision, the suit against Dr. McMillin, Dr. Krock, and the other defendants has now been tossed back to the trial court for further proceedings. At press time, no trial date had been set.
Will this proposed damages cap help retain more physicians?
Fear of a doctor shortage, triggered in part by a recent history of large payouts, has prompted Iowa lawmakers to push for new state caps on medical malpractice awards, as a story in the Des Moines Register reports.
Currently, Iowa caps most noneconomic damages – including those for pain and suffering – at $250,000, which is among the lowest such caps in the nation.
Under existing Iowa law, however, the limit doesn’t apply in extraordinary cases – that is, those involving “substantial or permanent loss of body function, substantial disfigurement, or death.” It also isn’t applicable in cases in which a jury decides that a defendant acted with intentional malice.
Lawmakers and Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds would like to change this.
Under a Senate bill that has now passed out of committee and is awaiting debate on the Senate floor, even plaintiffs involved in extreme cases would receive no more than $1 million to compensate for their pain, suffering, or emotional distress. (The bill also includes a 2.1% annual hike to compensate for inflation. A similar bill, which adds “loss of pregnancy” to the list of extreme cases, has advanced to the House floor.)
Supporters say the proposed cap would help to limit mega awards. In Johnson County in March 2022, for instance, a jury awarded $97.4 million to the parents of a young boy who sustained severe brain injuries during his delivery, causing the clinic that had been involved in the case to file for bankruptcy. This award was nearly three times the total payouts ($35 million) in the entire state of Iowa in all of 2021, a year in which there were 192 closed claims, including at least a dozen that resulted in payouts of $1 million or more.
Supporters also think the proposed cap will mitigate what they see as a looming doctor shortage, especially among ob.gyns. in eastern Iowa. “I just cannot overstate how much this is affecting our workforce, and that turns into effects for the women and the children, the babies, in our state,” Shannon Leveridge, MD, an obstetrician in Davenport said. “In order to keep these women and their babies safe, we need doctors.”
But critics of the bill, including some lawmakers and the trial bar, say it overreaches, even in the case of the $97.4 million award.
“They don’t want to talk about the actual damages that are caused by medical negligence,” explained a spokesman for the trial lawyers. “So, you don’t hear about the fact that, of the $50 million of economic damages ... most of that is going to go to the 24/7 care for this child for the rest of his life.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
On-call specialist incurred a clear ‘duty of care,’ court rules
a state appeals court ruled late in January.
The appeals decision is the result of a case involving the late Dennis Blagden.
On July 26, 2017, Mr. Blagden arrived at the Graham Hospital ED, in Canton, Ill., complaining of neck pain and an insect bite that had resulted in a swollen elbow. His ED doctor, Matthew McMillin, MD, who worked for Coleman Medical Associates, ordered tests and prescribed an anti-inflammatory pain medication and a muscle relaxant.
Dr. McMillin consulted via telephone with Kenneth Krock, MD, an internal medicine specialist and pediatrician, who was on call that day and who enjoyed admitting privileges at Graham. (Krock was also an employee of Coleman Medical Associates, which provided clinical staffing for the hospital.)
Dr. Krock had final admitting authority in this instance. Court records show that Dr. McMillin and he agreed that the patient could be discharged from the ED, despite Krock’s differential diagnosis indicating a possible infection.
Three days later, now with “hypercapnic respiratory failure, sepsis, and an altered mental state,” Mr. Blagden was again seen at the Graham Hospital ED. Mr. Blagden underwent intubation by Dr. McMillin, his original ED doctor, and was airlifted to Methodist Medical Center, in Peoria, 30 miles away. There, an MRI showed that he’d developed a spinal epidural abscess. On Aug. 7, 2017, a little over a week after his admission to Methodist, Mr. Blagden died from complications of his infection.
In January 2019, Mr. Blagden’s wife, Judy, filed a suit against Dr. McMillin, his practice, and Graham Hospital, which is a part of Graham Health System. Her suit alleged medical negligence in the death of her husband.
About 6 months later, Mr.s Blagden amended her original complaint, adding a second count of medical negligence against Dr. Krock; his practice and employer, Coleman Medical Associates; and Graham Hospital. In her amended complaint, Mrs. Blagden alleged that although Krock hadn’t actually seen her husband Dennis, his consultation with Dr. McMillin was sufficient to establish a doctor-patient relationship and thus a legal duty of care. That duty, Mrs. Blagden further alleged, was breached when Dr. Krock failed both to rule out her husband’s “infectious process” and to admit him for proper follow-up monitoring.
In July 2021, after the case had been transferred from Peoria County to Fulton County, Dr. Krock cried foul. In a motion to the court for summary judgment – that is, a ruling prior to an actual trial – he and his practice put forth the following argument: As a mere on-call consultant that day in 2017, he had neither seen the patient nor established a relationship with him, thereby precluding his legal duty of care.
The trial court judge agreed and granted both Dr. Krock and Dr. Coleman the summary judgment they had sought.
Mrs. Blagden then appealed to the Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District, which is located in Springfield.
In its unanimous decision, the three-judge panel reversed the lower court’s ruling. Taking direct aim at Dr. Krock’s earlier motion, Justice Eugene Doherty, who wrote the panel’s opinion, said that state law had long established that “the special relationship giving rise to a duty of care may exist even in the absence of any meeting between the physician and the patient where the physician performs specific services for the benefit of the patient.”
As Justice Doherty explained, Dr. Krock’s status that day as both the on-call doctor and the one with final admitting authority undermined his argument for summary judgment. Also undermining it, Justice Doherty added, was the fact that the conversation between the two doctors that day in 2017 was a formal exchange “contemplated by hospital bylaws.”
“While public policy should encourage informal consultations between physicians,” the justice continued, “it must not ignore actual physician involvement in decisions that directly affect a patient’s care.”
Following the Fourth District decision, the suit against Dr. McMillin, Dr. Krock, and the other defendants has now been tossed back to the trial court for further proceedings. At press time, no trial date had been set.
Will this proposed damages cap help retain more physicians?
Fear of a doctor shortage, triggered in part by a recent history of large payouts, has prompted Iowa lawmakers to push for new state caps on medical malpractice awards, as a story in the Des Moines Register reports.
Currently, Iowa caps most noneconomic damages – including those for pain and suffering – at $250,000, which is among the lowest such caps in the nation.
Under existing Iowa law, however, the limit doesn’t apply in extraordinary cases – that is, those involving “substantial or permanent loss of body function, substantial disfigurement, or death.” It also isn’t applicable in cases in which a jury decides that a defendant acted with intentional malice.
Lawmakers and Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds would like to change this.
Under a Senate bill that has now passed out of committee and is awaiting debate on the Senate floor, even plaintiffs involved in extreme cases would receive no more than $1 million to compensate for their pain, suffering, or emotional distress. (The bill also includes a 2.1% annual hike to compensate for inflation. A similar bill, which adds “loss of pregnancy” to the list of extreme cases, has advanced to the House floor.)
Supporters say the proposed cap would help to limit mega awards. In Johnson County in March 2022, for instance, a jury awarded $97.4 million to the parents of a young boy who sustained severe brain injuries during his delivery, causing the clinic that had been involved in the case to file for bankruptcy. This award was nearly three times the total payouts ($35 million) in the entire state of Iowa in all of 2021, a year in which there were 192 closed claims, including at least a dozen that resulted in payouts of $1 million or more.
Supporters also think the proposed cap will mitigate what they see as a looming doctor shortage, especially among ob.gyns. in eastern Iowa. “I just cannot overstate how much this is affecting our workforce, and that turns into effects for the women and the children, the babies, in our state,” Shannon Leveridge, MD, an obstetrician in Davenport said. “In order to keep these women and their babies safe, we need doctors.”
But critics of the bill, including some lawmakers and the trial bar, say it overreaches, even in the case of the $97.4 million award.
“They don’t want to talk about the actual damages that are caused by medical negligence,” explained a spokesman for the trial lawyers. “So, you don’t hear about the fact that, of the $50 million of economic damages ... most of that is going to go to the 24/7 care for this child for the rest of his life.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
On-call specialist incurred a clear ‘duty of care,’ court rules
a state appeals court ruled late in January.
The appeals decision is the result of a case involving the late Dennis Blagden.
On July 26, 2017, Mr. Blagden arrived at the Graham Hospital ED, in Canton, Ill., complaining of neck pain and an insect bite that had resulted in a swollen elbow. His ED doctor, Matthew McMillin, MD, who worked for Coleman Medical Associates, ordered tests and prescribed an anti-inflammatory pain medication and a muscle relaxant.
Dr. McMillin consulted via telephone with Kenneth Krock, MD, an internal medicine specialist and pediatrician, who was on call that day and who enjoyed admitting privileges at Graham. (Krock was also an employee of Coleman Medical Associates, which provided clinical staffing for the hospital.)
Dr. Krock had final admitting authority in this instance. Court records show that Dr. McMillin and he agreed that the patient could be discharged from the ED, despite Krock’s differential diagnosis indicating a possible infection.
Three days later, now with “hypercapnic respiratory failure, sepsis, and an altered mental state,” Mr. Blagden was again seen at the Graham Hospital ED. Mr. Blagden underwent intubation by Dr. McMillin, his original ED doctor, and was airlifted to Methodist Medical Center, in Peoria, 30 miles away. There, an MRI showed that he’d developed a spinal epidural abscess. On Aug. 7, 2017, a little over a week after his admission to Methodist, Mr. Blagden died from complications of his infection.
In January 2019, Mr. Blagden’s wife, Judy, filed a suit against Dr. McMillin, his practice, and Graham Hospital, which is a part of Graham Health System. Her suit alleged medical negligence in the death of her husband.
About 6 months later, Mr.s Blagden amended her original complaint, adding a second count of medical negligence against Dr. Krock; his practice and employer, Coleman Medical Associates; and Graham Hospital. In her amended complaint, Mrs. Blagden alleged that although Krock hadn’t actually seen her husband Dennis, his consultation with Dr. McMillin was sufficient to establish a doctor-patient relationship and thus a legal duty of care. That duty, Mrs. Blagden further alleged, was breached when Dr. Krock failed both to rule out her husband’s “infectious process” and to admit him for proper follow-up monitoring.
In July 2021, after the case had been transferred from Peoria County to Fulton County, Dr. Krock cried foul. In a motion to the court for summary judgment – that is, a ruling prior to an actual trial – he and his practice put forth the following argument: As a mere on-call consultant that day in 2017, he had neither seen the patient nor established a relationship with him, thereby precluding his legal duty of care.
The trial court judge agreed and granted both Dr. Krock and Dr. Coleman the summary judgment they had sought.
Mrs. Blagden then appealed to the Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District, which is located in Springfield.
In its unanimous decision, the three-judge panel reversed the lower court’s ruling. Taking direct aim at Dr. Krock’s earlier motion, Justice Eugene Doherty, who wrote the panel’s opinion, said that state law had long established that “the special relationship giving rise to a duty of care may exist even in the absence of any meeting between the physician and the patient where the physician performs specific services for the benefit of the patient.”
As Justice Doherty explained, Dr. Krock’s status that day as both the on-call doctor and the one with final admitting authority undermined his argument for summary judgment. Also undermining it, Justice Doherty added, was the fact that the conversation between the two doctors that day in 2017 was a formal exchange “contemplated by hospital bylaws.”
“While public policy should encourage informal consultations between physicians,” the justice continued, “it must not ignore actual physician involvement in decisions that directly affect a patient’s care.”
Following the Fourth District decision, the suit against Dr. McMillin, Dr. Krock, and the other defendants has now been tossed back to the trial court for further proceedings. At press time, no trial date had been set.
Will this proposed damages cap help retain more physicians?
Fear of a doctor shortage, triggered in part by a recent history of large payouts, has prompted Iowa lawmakers to push for new state caps on medical malpractice awards, as a story in the Des Moines Register reports.
Currently, Iowa caps most noneconomic damages – including those for pain and suffering – at $250,000, which is among the lowest such caps in the nation.
Under existing Iowa law, however, the limit doesn’t apply in extraordinary cases – that is, those involving “substantial or permanent loss of body function, substantial disfigurement, or death.” It also isn’t applicable in cases in which a jury decides that a defendant acted with intentional malice.
Lawmakers and Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds would like to change this.
Under a Senate bill that has now passed out of committee and is awaiting debate on the Senate floor, even plaintiffs involved in extreme cases would receive no more than $1 million to compensate for their pain, suffering, or emotional distress. (The bill also includes a 2.1% annual hike to compensate for inflation. A similar bill, which adds “loss of pregnancy” to the list of extreme cases, has advanced to the House floor.)
Supporters say the proposed cap would help to limit mega awards. In Johnson County in March 2022, for instance, a jury awarded $97.4 million to the parents of a young boy who sustained severe brain injuries during his delivery, causing the clinic that had been involved in the case to file for bankruptcy. This award was nearly three times the total payouts ($35 million) in the entire state of Iowa in all of 2021, a year in which there were 192 closed claims, including at least a dozen that resulted in payouts of $1 million or more.
Supporters also think the proposed cap will mitigate what they see as a looming doctor shortage, especially among ob.gyns. in eastern Iowa. “I just cannot overstate how much this is affecting our workforce, and that turns into effects for the women and the children, the babies, in our state,” Shannon Leveridge, MD, an obstetrician in Davenport said. “In order to keep these women and their babies safe, we need doctors.”
But critics of the bill, including some lawmakers and the trial bar, say it overreaches, even in the case of the $97.4 million award.
“They don’t want to talk about the actual damages that are caused by medical negligence,” explained a spokesman for the trial lawyers. “So, you don’t hear about the fact that, of the $50 million of economic damages ... most of that is going to go to the 24/7 care for this child for the rest of his life.”
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Dapagliflozin gets expanded heart failure indication in Europe
The European Commission has expanded the indication for dapagliflozin (Forxiga) to include heart failure across the full spectrum of left ventricular ejection fraction – including HF with mildly reduced and preserved ejection fraction, AstraZeneca has announced.
The EC nod for the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor (known as Farxiga in the United States) follows the positive opinion of the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency in December 2022.
The committee’s decision was based on results from the DELIVER phase 3 trial, which showed clear clinical benefits of the SGLT2 inhibitor in patients with HF regardless of their left ventricular function.
The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual congress.
The data support the use of SGLT2 inhibitors as “foundational agents for virtually all patients with heart failure” regardless of their ejection fraction or whether or not they have type 2 diabetes, said study presenter Scott D. Solomon, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, both in Boston.
The Food and Drug Administration is currently reviewing AstraZeneca’s application to expand the HF indication for dapagliflozin in the United States.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The European Commission has expanded the indication for dapagliflozin (Forxiga) to include heart failure across the full spectrum of left ventricular ejection fraction – including HF with mildly reduced and preserved ejection fraction, AstraZeneca has announced.
The EC nod for the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor (known as Farxiga in the United States) follows the positive opinion of the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency in December 2022.
The committee’s decision was based on results from the DELIVER phase 3 trial, which showed clear clinical benefits of the SGLT2 inhibitor in patients with HF regardless of their left ventricular function.
The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual congress.
The data support the use of SGLT2 inhibitors as “foundational agents for virtually all patients with heart failure” regardless of their ejection fraction or whether or not they have type 2 diabetes, said study presenter Scott D. Solomon, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, both in Boston.
The Food and Drug Administration is currently reviewing AstraZeneca’s application to expand the HF indication for dapagliflozin in the United States.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
The European Commission has expanded the indication for dapagliflozin (Forxiga) to include heart failure across the full spectrum of left ventricular ejection fraction – including HF with mildly reduced and preserved ejection fraction, AstraZeneca has announced.
The EC nod for the sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitor (known as Farxiga in the United States) follows the positive opinion of the Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use of the European Medicines Agency in December 2022.
The committee’s decision was based on results from the DELIVER phase 3 trial, which showed clear clinical benefits of the SGLT2 inhibitor in patients with HF regardless of their left ventricular function.
The study was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented at the European Society of Cardiology’s annual congress.
The data support the use of SGLT2 inhibitors as “foundational agents for virtually all patients with heart failure” regardless of their ejection fraction or whether or not they have type 2 diabetes, said study presenter Scott D. Solomon, MD, of Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, both in Boston.
The Food and Drug Administration is currently reviewing AstraZeneca’s application to expand the HF indication for dapagliflozin in the United States.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Cardiac monitoring company settles DOJ false claims allegations
Beyond Reps (dba IronRod Health and Cardiac Monitoring Services) has agreed to pay $673,200 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs relating to remote cardiac monitoring services.
The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 30, 2021, IronRod, with headquarters in Phoenix, used technicians who lacked required credentials to conduct remote cardiac monitoring readings.
The government further alleges that between June 1, 2018, and Aug. 20, 2018, the company misrepresented that it performed services in New York state in order to get higher reimbursements from Medicare for remote cardiac monitoring services.
“Providers that seek payment from federal health programs are required to follow laws meant to protect beneficiaries, as well as to protect the integrity of those programs,” U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said in a statement.
“Our office is committed to pursuing cases against any provider that cuts corners or seeks to obtain payments for which they are not entitled,” Ms. Ross said.
A request to Beyond Reps for comment was not returned.
The civil settlement resolves claims brought under the qui tam (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act by Coleen DeGroat.
Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Ms. DeGroat will receive a share of the settlement.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Beyond Reps (dba IronRod Health and Cardiac Monitoring Services) has agreed to pay $673,200 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs relating to remote cardiac monitoring services.
The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 30, 2021, IronRod, with headquarters in Phoenix, used technicians who lacked required credentials to conduct remote cardiac monitoring readings.
The government further alleges that between June 1, 2018, and Aug. 20, 2018, the company misrepresented that it performed services in New York state in order to get higher reimbursements from Medicare for remote cardiac monitoring services.
“Providers that seek payment from federal health programs are required to follow laws meant to protect beneficiaries, as well as to protect the integrity of those programs,” U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said in a statement.
“Our office is committed to pursuing cases against any provider that cuts corners or seeks to obtain payments for which they are not entitled,” Ms. Ross said.
A request to Beyond Reps for comment was not returned.
The civil settlement resolves claims brought under the qui tam (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act by Coleen DeGroat.
Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Ms. DeGroat will receive a share of the settlement.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Beyond Reps (dba IronRod Health and Cardiac Monitoring Services) has agreed to pay $673,200 to resolve allegations that it submitted false claims to federal health care programs relating to remote cardiac monitoring services.
The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that between Jan. 1, 2018, and April 30, 2021, IronRod, with headquarters in Phoenix, used technicians who lacked required credentials to conduct remote cardiac monitoring readings.
The government further alleges that between June 1, 2018, and Aug. 20, 2018, the company misrepresented that it performed services in New York state in order to get higher reimbursements from Medicare for remote cardiac monitoring services.
“Providers that seek payment from federal health programs are required to follow laws meant to protect beneficiaries, as well as to protect the integrity of those programs,” U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross said in a statement.
“Our office is committed to pursuing cases against any provider that cuts corners or seeks to obtain payments for which they are not entitled,” Ms. Ross said.
A request to Beyond Reps for comment was not returned.
The civil settlement resolves claims brought under the qui tam (whistleblower) provisions of the False Claims Act by Coleen DeGroat.
Under those provisions, a private party can file an action on behalf of the United States and receive a portion of any recovery. Ms. DeGroat will receive a share of the settlement.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
Pound of flesh buys less prison time
Pound of flesh buys less prison time
We should all have more Shakespeare in our lives. Yeah, yeah, Shakespeare is meant to be played, not read, and it can be a struggle to herd teenagers through the Bard’s interesting and bloody tragedies, but even a perfunctory reading of “The Merchant of Venice” would hopefully have prevented the dystopian nightmare Massachusetts has presented us with today.
The United States has a massive shortage of donor organs. This is an unfortunate truth. So, to combat this issue, a pair of Massachusetts congresspeople have proposed HD 3822, which would allow prisoners to donate organs and/or bone marrow (a pound of flesh, so to speak) in exchange for up to a year in reduced prison time. Yes, that’s right. Give up pieces of yourself and the state of Massachusetts will deign to reduce your long prison sentence.
Oh, and before you dismiss this as typical Republican antics, the bill was sponsored by two Democrats, and in a statement one of them hoped to address racial disparities in organ donation, as people of color are much less likely to receive organs. Never mind that Black people are imprisoned at a much higher rate than Whites.
Yeah, this whole thing is what people in the business like to call an ethical disaster.
Fortunately, the bill will likely never be passed and it’s probably illegal anyway. A federal law from 1984 (how’s that for a coincidence) prevents people from donating organs for use in human transplantation in exchange for “valuable consideration.” In other words, you can’t sell your organs for profit, and in this case, reducing prison time would probably count as valuable consideration in the eyes of the courts.
Oh, and in case you’ve never read Merchant of Venice, Shylock, the character looking for the pound of flesh as payment for a debt? He’s the villain. In fact, it’s pretty safe to say that anyone looking to extract payment from human dismemberment is probably the bad guy of the story. Apparently that wasn’t clear.
How do you stop a fungi? With a deadly guy
Thanks to the new HBO series “The Last of Us,” there’s been a lot of talk about the upcoming fungi-pocalypse, as the show depicts the real-life “zombie fungus” Cordyceps turning humans into, you know, zombies.
No need to worry, ladies and gentleman, because science has discovered a way to turn back the fungal horde. A heroic, and environmentally friendly, alternative to chemical pesticides “in the fight against resistant fungi [that] are now resistant to antimycotics – partly because they are used in large quantities in agricultural fields,” investigators at the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology in Jena, Germany, said in a written statement.
We are, of course, talking about Keanu Reeves. Wait a second. He’s not even in “The Last of Us.” Sorry folks, we are being told that it really is Keanu Reeves. Our champion in the inevitable fungal pandemic is movie star Keanu Reeves. Sort of. It’s actually keanumycin, a substance produced by bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas.
Really? Keanumycin? “The lipopeptides kill so efficiently that we named them after Keanu Reeves because he, too, is extremely deadly in his roles,” lead author Sebastian Götze, PhD, explained.
Dr. Götze and his associates had been working with pseudomonads for quite a while before they were able to isolate the toxins responsible for their ability to kill amoebae, which resemble fungi in some characteristics. When then finally tried the keanumycin against gray mold rot on hydrangea leaves, the intensely contemplative star of “The Matrix” and “John Wick” – sorry, wrong Keanu – the bacterial derivative significantly inhibited growth of the fungus, they said.
Additional testing has shown that keanumycin is not highly toxic to human cells and is effective against fungi such as Candida albicans in very low concentrations, which makes it a good candidate for future pharmaceutical development.
To that news there can be only one response from the substance’s namesake.
High fat, bye parasites
Fat. Fat. Fat. Seems like everyone is trying to avoid it these days, but fat may be good thing when it comes to weaseling out a parasite.
The parasite in this case is the whipworm, aka Trichuris trichiura. You can find this guy in the intestines of millions of people, where it causes long-lasting infections. Yikes … Researchers have found that the plan of attack to get rid of this invasive species is to boost the immune system, but instead of vitamin C and zinc it’s fat they’re pumping in. Yes, fat.
The developing countries with poor sewage that are at the highest risk for contracting parasites such as this also are among those where people ingest cheaper diets that are generally higher in fat. The investigators were interested to see how a high-fat diet would affect immune responses to the whipworms.
And, as with almost everything else, the researchers turned to mice, which were introduced to a closely related species, Trichuris muris.
A high-fat diet, rather than obesity itself, increases a molecule on T-helper cells called ST2, and this allows an increased T-helper 2 response, effectively giving eviction notices to the parasites in the intestinal lining.
To say the least, the researchers were surprised since “high-fat diets are mostly associated with increased pathology during disease,” said senior author Richard Grencis, PhD, of the University of Manchester (England), who noted that ST2 is not normally triggered with a standard diet in mice but the high-fat diet gave it a boost and an “alternate pathway” out.
Now before you start ordering extra-large fries at the drive-through to keep the whipworms away, the researchers added that they “have previously published that weight loss can aid the expulsion of a different gut parasite worm.” Figures.
Once again, though, signs are pointing to the gut for improved health.
Pound of flesh buys less prison time
We should all have more Shakespeare in our lives. Yeah, yeah, Shakespeare is meant to be played, not read, and it can be a struggle to herd teenagers through the Bard’s interesting and bloody tragedies, but even a perfunctory reading of “The Merchant of Venice” would hopefully have prevented the dystopian nightmare Massachusetts has presented us with today.
The United States has a massive shortage of donor organs. This is an unfortunate truth. So, to combat this issue, a pair of Massachusetts congresspeople have proposed HD 3822, which would allow prisoners to donate organs and/or bone marrow (a pound of flesh, so to speak) in exchange for up to a year in reduced prison time. Yes, that’s right. Give up pieces of yourself and the state of Massachusetts will deign to reduce your long prison sentence.
Oh, and before you dismiss this as typical Republican antics, the bill was sponsored by two Democrats, and in a statement one of them hoped to address racial disparities in organ donation, as people of color are much less likely to receive organs. Never mind that Black people are imprisoned at a much higher rate than Whites.
Yeah, this whole thing is what people in the business like to call an ethical disaster.
Fortunately, the bill will likely never be passed and it’s probably illegal anyway. A federal law from 1984 (how’s that for a coincidence) prevents people from donating organs for use in human transplantation in exchange for “valuable consideration.” In other words, you can’t sell your organs for profit, and in this case, reducing prison time would probably count as valuable consideration in the eyes of the courts.
Oh, and in case you’ve never read Merchant of Venice, Shylock, the character looking for the pound of flesh as payment for a debt? He’s the villain. In fact, it’s pretty safe to say that anyone looking to extract payment from human dismemberment is probably the bad guy of the story. Apparently that wasn’t clear.
How do you stop a fungi? With a deadly guy
Thanks to the new HBO series “The Last of Us,” there’s been a lot of talk about the upcoming fungi-pocalypse, as the show depicts the real-life “zombie fungus” Cordyceps turning humans into, you know, zombies.
No need to worry, ladies and gentleman, because science has discovered a way to turn back the fungal horde. A heroic, and environmentally friendly, alternative to chemical pesticides “in the fight against resistant fungi [that] are now resistant to antimycotics – partly because they are used in large quantities in agricultural fields,” investigators at the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology in Jena, Germany, said in a written statement.
We are, of course, talking about Keanu Reeves. Wait a second. He’s not even in “The Last of Us.” Sorry folks, we are being told that it really is Keanu Reeves. Our champion in the inevitable fungal pandemic is movie star Keanu Reeves. Sort of. It’s actually keanumycin, a substance produced by bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas.
Really? Keanumycin? “The lipopeptides kill so efficiently that we named them after Keanu Reeves because he, too, is extremely deadly in his roles,” lead author Sebastian Götze, PhD, explained.
Dr. Götze and his associates had been working with pseudomonads for quite a while before they were able to isolate the toxins responsible for their ability to kill amoebae, which resemble fungi in some characteristics. When then finally tried the keanumycin against gray mold rot on hydrangea leaves, the intensely contemplative star of “The Matrix” and “John Wick” – sorry, wrong Keanu – the bacterial derivative significantly inhibited growth of the fungus, they said.
Additional testing has shown that keanumycin is not highly toxic to human cells and is effective against fungi such as Candida albicans in very low concentrations, which makes it a good candidate for future pharmaceutical development.
To that news there can be only one response from the substance’s namesake.
High fat, bye parasites
Fat. Fat. Fat. Seems like everyone is trying to avoid it these days, but fat may be good thing when it comes to weaseling out a parasite.
The parasite in this case is the whipworm, aka Trichuris trichiura. You can find this guy in the intestines of millions of people, where it causes long-lasting infections. Yikes … Researchers have found that the plan of attack to get rid of this invasive species is to boost the immune system, but instead of vitamin C and zinc it’s fat they’re pumping in. Yes, fat.
The developing countries with poor sewage that are at the highest risk for contracting parasites such as this also are among those where people ingest cheaper diets that are generally higher in fat. The investigators were interested to see how a high-fat diet would affect immune responses to the whipworms.
And, as with almost everything else, the researchers turned to mice, which were introduced to a closely related species, Trichuris muris.
A high-fat diet, rather than obesity itself, increases a molecule on T-helper cells called ST2, and this allows an increased T-helper 2 response, effectively giving eviction notices to the parasites in the intestinal lining.
To say the least, the researchers were surprised since “high-fat diets are mostly associated with increased pathology during disease,” said senior author Richard Grencis, PhD, of the University of Manchester (England), who noted that ST2 is not normally triggered with a standard diet in mice but the high-fat diet gave it a boost and an “alternate pathway” out.
Now before you start ordering extra-large fries at the drive-through to keep the whipworms away, the researchers added that they “have previously published that weight loss can aid the expulsion of a different gut parasite worm.” Figures.
Once again, though, signs are pointing to the gut for improved health.
Pound of flesh buys less prison time
We should all have more Shakespeare in our lives. Yeah, yeah, Shakespeare is meant to be played, not read, and it can be a struggle to herd teenagers through the Bard’s interesting and bloody tragedies, but even a perfunctory reading of “The Merchant of Venice” would hopefully have prevented the dystopian nightmare Massachusetts has presented us with today.
The United States has a massive shortage of donor organs. This is an unfortunate truth. So, to combat this issue, a pair of Massachusetts congresspeople have proposed HD 3822, which would allow prisoners to donate organs and/or bone marrow (a pound of flesh, so to speak) in exchange for up to a year in reduced prison time. Yes, that’s right. Give up pieces of yourself and the state of Massachusetts will deign to reduce your long prison sentence.
Oh, and before you dismiss this as typical Republican antics, the bill was sponsored by two Democrats, and in a statement one of them hoped to address racial disparities in organ donation, as people of color are much less likely to receive organs. Never mind that Black people are imprisoned at a much higher rate than Whites.
Yeah, this whole thing is what people in the business like to call an ethical disaster.
Fortunately, the bill will likely never be passed and it’s probably illegal anyway. A federal law from 1984 (how’s that for a coincidence) prevents people from donating organs for use in human transplantation in exchange for “valuable consideration.” In other words, you can’t sell your organs for profit, and in this case, reducing prison time would probably count as valuable consideration in the eyes of the courts.
Oh, and in case you’ve never read Merchant of Venice, Shylock, the character looking for the pound of flesh as payment for a debt? He’s the villain. In fact, it’s pretty safe to say that anyone looking to extract payment from human dismemberment is probably the bad guy of the story. Apparently that wasn’t clear.
How do you stop a fungi? With a deadly guy
Thanks to the new HBO series “The Last of Us,” there’s been a lot of talk about the upcoming fungi-pocalypse, as the show depicts the real-life “zombie fungus” Cordyceps turning humans into, you know, zombies.
No need to worry, ladies and gentleman, because science has discovered a way to turn back the fungal horde. A heroic, and environmentally friendly, alternative to chemical pesticides “in the fight against resistant fungi [that] are now resistant to antimycotics – partly because they are used in large quantities in agricultural fields,” investigators at the Leibniz Institute for Natural Product Research and Infection Biology in Jena, Germany, said in a written statement.
We are, of course, talking about Keanu Reeves. Wait a second. He’s not even in “The Last of Us.” Sorry folks, we are being told that it really is Keanu Reeves. Our champion in the inevitable fungal pandemic is movie star Keanu Reeves. Sort of. It’s actually keanumycin, a substance produced by bacteria of the genus Pseudomonas.
Really? Keanumycin? “The lipopeptides kill so efficiently that we named them after Keanu Reeves because he, too, is extremely deadly in his roles,” lead author Sebastian Götze, PhD, explained.
Dr. Götze and his associates had been working with pseudomonads for quite a while before they were able to isolate the toxins responsible for their ability to kill amoebae, which resemble fungi in some characteristics. When then finally tried the keanumycin against gray mold rot on hydrangea leaves, the intensely contemplative star of “The Matrix” and “John Wick” – sorry, wrong Keanu – the bacterial derivative significantly inhibited growth of the fungus, they said.
Additional testing has shown that keanumycin is not highly toxic to human cells and is effective against fungi such as Candida albicans in very low concentrations, which makes it a good candidate for future pharmaceutical development.
To that news there can be only one response from the substance’s namesake.
High fat, bye parasites
Fat. Fat. Fat. Seems like everyone is trying to avoid it these days, but fat may be good thing when it comes to weaseling out a parasite.
The parasite in this case is the whipworm, aka Trichuris trichiura. You can find this guy in the intestines of millions of people, where it causes long-lasting infections. Yikes … Researchers have found that the plan of attack to get rid of this invasive species is to boost the immune system, but instead of vitamin C and zinc it’s fat they’re pumping in. Yes, fat.
The developing countries with poor sewage that are at the highest risk for contracting parasites such as this also are among those where people ingest cheaper diets that are generally higher in fat. The investigators were interested to see how a high-fat diet would affect immune responses to the whipworms.
And, as with almost everything else, the researchers turned to mice, which were introduced to a closely related species, Trichuris muris.
A high-fat diet, rather than obesity itself, increases a molecule on T-helper cells called ST2, and this allows an increased T-helper 2 response, effectively giving eviction notices to the parasites in the intestinal lining.
To say the least, the researchers were surprised since “high-fat diets are mostly associated with increased pathology during disease,” said senior author Richard Grencis, PhD, of the University of Manchester (England), who noted that ST2 is not normally triggered with a standard diet in mice but the high-fat diet gave it a boost and an “alternate pathway” out.
Now before you start ordering extra-large fries at the drive-through to keep the whipworms away, the researchers added that they “have previously published that weight loss can aid the expulsion of a different gut parasite worm.” Figures.
Once again, though, signs are pointing to the gut for improved health.
What is the psychological cost of performing CPR?
One year ago, as the sun was setting on a late fall day, Andrés Snitcofsky, a 40-year-old designer from Buenos Aires, Argentina, heard harrowing cries for help. It was the niece and the wife of one of his neighbors: a man in his 60s who the women had found “passed out” in the bedroom. “I did CPR for 5 minutes straight until a friend of the victim came in and asked me to stop, telling me that the man had probably been dead for 2 or 3 hours already. But I had no idea because I’d never seen a dead body before,” Mr. Snitcofsky told this news organization. A few minutes later, the ambulance arrived. The doctor confirmed that there was nothing more that could be done.
Mr. Snitcofsky went home. Nobody had asked for his name or address or phone number. … And it wasn’t because they already knew who he was. In fact, there wasn’t any sort of relationship there. Mr. Snitcofsky had only known his neighbors by sight. His actions that day, however, “did not come without a cost. It took me weeks – months, actually – to put myself together again,” he said. The things he saw, the things he heard, everything about that night played over and over in his head. “I had trouble sleeping. I would play out different scenarios in my head. I questioned myself. I second-guessed myself, criticized myself. It’s like some taboo subject. There’s no one to share the experience with, no one who gets it. But with time, I was able to process the event.
“For 2 months, I talked to my psychologist about it all,” he continued. “That really helped me a lot. In addition to therapy, I reached out to a couple I know – they’re both physicians – and to a firefighter who teaches CPR. Their insight and guidance allowed me to get to a point where I was able to understand that what I did was a good thing and that what I did was all that could have been done. But anyone who finds themselves in the position of having to do CPR – they’re going to be affected in many, many ways. It goes beyond the euphoria of seeing a person come back to life. Of that, I’m quite certain.”
We’ve all seen campaigns encouraging people to learn CPR and to be prepared if the need arises. But in training the public (and even health care professionals), not much, if anything, is said about the “collateral damage”: the psychological and emotional consequences of carrying out the procedure. These especially come into play when you don’t know whether the person survived, when your efforts weren’t able to reverse the sudden cardiac arrest, or when the person you gave CPR to was a loved one – a case that may entail immediate therapeutic interventions to minimize or prevent the risk of suffering long-lasting trauma.
In May 2020, popular American activist and educator Kristin Flanary saw someone suffering cardiac arrest. She stepped in and started doing CPR. And she continued doing CPR … for 10 long minutes. The person she was trying to save was her 34-year-old husband, ophthalmologist and comedian Will Flanary. On Twitter, where she’s known as Lady Glaucomflecken, Ms. Flanary recently shared the following message, putting the topic of CPR and automated external defibrillator training front and center.
“Yes, everyone should learn #CPRandAED. But if we are going to ask people to perform such a brutal task, it’s imperative that we also provide them with the info and resources they need to process it mentally and emotionally. It’s traumatic and life changing. It’s irresponsible and unethical to ask people to help in such a brutal and traumatic way and then neglect to help them in return.” In less than a month, the tweet has racked up over 200,000 views.
Doing one’s duty
There are many people who work to promote CPR and strengthen the other links in the chain of survival for out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest, such as prompt access to and delivery of early defibrillation. According to them, any negative psychological impact of intervening is temporary and, when compared with the satisfaction of having done one’s duty, quite insignificant – even if the efforts to save a person’s life are not successful.
“In 99.9% of cases, people who have performed CPR feel a sense of satisfaction, even happiness, knowing that they’ve helped. The individuals I’ve spoken with, I’ve never heard any of them say that they felt worse after the event or that they needed to see a psychologist,” said Mario Fitz Maurice, MD, director of the Arrhythmia Council of the Argentine Society of Cardiology and head of Electrophysiology at Rivadavia Hospital in Buenos Aires. He went on to tell this news organization, “Of course, some degree of fear, sadness, or melancholy can remain afterward. But it seems to me, and there are reports saying as much, that, in the end, what stands out in the person’s mind is the fact that they tried to save a life. And for them, there’s joy in knowing this.”
Dr. Fitz Maurice, who is also the director of the National Arrhythmia Institute in Buenos Aires, pointed out that the kind of person who takes CPR classes “has a profile that’s going to allow them to be psychologically involved; they’re the caring person, the one who’s ready and willing to help people.” And he added that, at his hospital, if they can identify the individuals or first responders who have done CPR on a patient, the protocol is to always contact them to offer psychological care and assistance. “But in 99% of cases, they don’t even understand why we’re calling them, they’re extremely happy to have taken part.”
Some studies, though, paint a much different picture, one that shows that providing CPR can be emotionally challenging and have consequences in terms of one’s family and work life. A qualitative study published in 2016 looked into the experiences of 20 lay rescuers in Norway – five were health educated – who had provided CPR to 18 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) victims, 66% of whom survived. The time from experiencing the OHCA incident to participating in the interview ranged from 6 days to 13 years (median 5.5 years). Several participants reported the OHCA incident as a “shocking and terrifying” experience. Tiredness, exhaustion, confusion, and feeling alone about the OHCA experience were individual reactions that could vary in time from days to months. Anxiety and insomnia were also experienced following the incident.
Some lay rescuers described the influence on work and family life, and a few of them described deep sorrow, even several years after the incident. Overall, they reported repetitive self-criticism regarding whether they could have carried out anything else to achieve a better outcome for the cardiac arrest victim. All of them wanted to be informed about the outcome. And four of the lay rescuers needed professional counseling to process the OHCA experience.
In 2020, another qualitative study was conducted, this time in Taiwan. There were nine participants, none of whom were health professionals. Each had provided initial CPR and defibrillation with AED in public locations. Event-to-interview duration was within 1 year and 1-2 years. The major findings from the study were the following:
- The lay rescuers possessed helping traits and high motivation.
- The lay rescuers reported certain aspects of rescue reality that differed much from prior training and expectations, including difficulty in the depth of chest compression, and uncertainties in real emergency situations.
- The lay rescuers gained positive personal fulfillment in sharing their experience and receiving positive feedback from others, and were willing to help next time, although they experienced a short-term negative psychological impact from the event. “Measures should be taken to increase [a] layperson’s confidence and situation awareness, to reduce training-reality discrepancy, and to build up a support system to avoid negative psychological effects.” This was the conclusion of the study team, which was led by Matthew Huei-Ming Ma, MD, PhD. A professor in the department of emergency medicine at National Taiwan University in Taipei, he is also on the board of directors of the Resuscitation Council of Asia.
Potential trauma
In recalling his experience, Mr. Snitcofsky said, “The hardest part of it all was the moment that I stopped giving CPR, that moment of letting go. This became the image that kept coming back to me, the traumatic moment I hadn’t thought about.”
Psychiatrist Daniel Mosca, MD, is the founder and former president of the Argentine Society of Trauma Psychology. He is also the coordinator of the human factors team at the City of Buenos Aires Emergency Medical Care System. “Any event has the potential to be traumatic, all the more so when it’s an event where you come face to face with death and uncertainty. But how a rescuer reacts will depend on their psychological makeup.” Of the individuals who were held for months or years in the jungle as hostages of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, “only” half developed symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
Dr. Mosca believes that a comment by Frank Ochberg, MD, speaks to this finding. “In many cases, peritraumatic symptoms are a normal person’s normal response to an abnormal situation.” For a lot of people who have found themselves having to perform CPR, the symptoms associated with the initial acute stress reaction will resolve on their own in 30-90 days. “But if this doesn’t happen, and those symptoms persist, psychotherapeutic or pharmacological intervention will be necessary,” he noted.
“In CPR classes, it would be good for the instructors to talk about the warning signs that people should look out for in themselves and their fellow rescuers. So, for example, insomnia, anxiety, a heightened state of alertness, feeling disconnected from reality,” Dr. Mosca told this news organization.
“Another thing that can help rescuers is letting them know what happened to the person they gave CPR to. This way, they can get closure,” suggested Manlio Márquez Murillo, MD, a cardiologist and electrophysiologist in Mexico. He is also the coordinator of the Alliance Against Sudden Cardiac Death at the Interamerican Society of Cardiology.
“Medical and nursing societies would have to develop a brief protocol or performance standard. The goal would be to ensure that rescuers are asked for their contact information and that someone gets in touch to debrief them and to offer them care. Next would come the treatment part, to resolve any remaining aftereffects,” said in an interview.
For example, a three-stage Lay Responder Support Model (LRSM) was developed and implemented as part of a lay responder support program established in 2014 by the Peel Regional Council in Ontario. The LRSM identifies and engages individuals who witnessed or participated directly or indirectly in an OHCA, inviting them to participate in a debriefing session facilitated by a trained practitioner. Held 24-48 hours post event, the debriefing allows lay responders to contextualize their reaction to the event. The conversation also serves as an opportunity for them to fully articulate their concerns, questions, and thoughts. The facilitator can communicate stress reduction techniques and address psychological first aid needs as they emerge. Approximately 1 week post event, a secondary follow-up occurs. If the lay responder communicates a continuing struggle with symptoms impacting and interfering with everyday life, the facilitator offers a coordinated or facilitated referral for mental health support.
In an article published in the Journal of Cardiac Failure. Ms. Flanary speaks about the three kinds of language that anyone who was either forced to or inspired to perform CPR can use to help process their trauma: words that explain what happened, words that name (eg, “forgotten patients”), and words that validate the experience and allow the person to articulate their feelings. The tools and technologies that organizations and health care professionals provide can help the healing process. Empathy and compassion, too, have a place.
But there are virtually no standardized and proactive initiatives of this kind in much of the world, including Latin America. So, most people who just happened to be in the right place at the right time find that they have to navigate the “after” part all on their own.
Other obstacles
Dr. Márquez Murillo finds it unfortunate that countries in the region have yet to enact “Good Samaritan” laws. If individuals render aid to someone suffering cardiac arrest, then these laws would ensure that they will not be held liable in any way. This is the case in Argentina and Uruguay. So, the fear of things turning into a legal matter may be holding people back from taking action; that fear could also create additional stress for those who end up stepping in to help.
Even with the legal safeguards, exceptional circumstances may arise where rescuers find themselves facing unexpected emotional challenges. In Argentina, Virginia Pérez Antonelli, the 17-year-old who tried in vain to save the life of Fernando Báez Sosa, had to testify at the trial of the eight defendants accused of brutally beating him in January 2020. The press, the public – the attention of an entire country – was focused on her. She had to respond to the defense attorneys who were able to ask whether she was sure that she performed the CPR maneuvers correctly. And a few weeks ago, a medical examiner hired by the defense suggested that “the CPR may have made the situation worse” for the victim. An indignant Dr. Fitz Maurice responded on Twitter: “CPR SAVES LIVES!! Let’s not let a CHEAP AND BASELESS argument destroy all the work that’s been done…!”
Of course, there are consequences that are beyond our control and others that can, in fact, be anticipated and planned for. Dr. Fitz Maurice brought up a preventive approach: Make CPR second nature, teach it in schools, help people overcome their fears. “Cardiac deaths are 200 times more frequent than deaths resulting from fires – and we practice fire drills a lot more than we practice CPR,” he told this news organization. In a society where there is widespread training on the procedure, where people regularly practice the technique, those who have had the experience of giving someone CPR will feel less alone, will be better understood by others.
“On the other hand, beyond the initial impact and the lack of a formal support system, the medium- and long-term outcome for those who acted is also psychologically and emotionally favorable,” said Jorge Bombau, MD, an obstetrician/gynecologist in Buenos Aires. After Dr. Bombau’s 14-year-old son Beltrán suddenly died during a school sports tournament, Dr. Bombau became a prominent advocate spreading the word about CPR.
“I don’t know anyone who regrets doing CPR,” he told this news organization. “There may be a brief period when the person feels distressed or depressed, when they have trouble sleeping. But it’s been proven that doing a good deed improves one’s mood. And what better deed is there than trying to save someone’s life? Whether their efforts were successful or in vain, that person has, at the end of the day, done something meaningful and worthwhile.”
Mr. Snitcofsky shares this sentiment. For several months now, he’s been feeling he’s “in a good place.” And he’s been actively promoting CPR on social media. As he recently posted on Twitter, “I’m here to retweet everything that has to do with getting us all to become familiar with how to do CPR and working up the courage to do it. The training takes no more than a few hours.
“I want to know that, if I ever have an out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest, there will be neighbors, friends, or family members around who know how to do CPR. Every person who knows how to do CPR can persuade others, and those of us who’ve had to do CPR in real life are even better candidates for persuading others. And if one day a person ends up needing CPR, I want to step in again and make up for lost time. Here’s hoping it’ll do the job,” he concluded.
It’s the same for Matías Alonso, a journalist in Buenos Aires. On New Year’s Eve 15 years ago, he was at a family dinner when, a few minutes before midnight, he found himself giving CPR to his stepmother’s father. “Unfortunately, he passed away, but I continued doing CPR on him until the ambulance arrived. For some time, I felt a little guilty for not taking charge of the situation from the beginning, and because I had this idea in my head that more people pulled through and recovered. But afterwards, they really thanked me a lot. And that helped me realize that I’d done something. I didn’t stand still when faced with the inevitability of death. I understood that it was good to have tried,” Mr. Alonso told this news organization. “And next time … hopefully there won’t be a next time … but I’m more prepared, and I now know how I can do better.”
Mr. Alonso, Mr. Snitcofsky, Dr. Fitz Maurice, Dr. Mosca, Dr. Bombau, and Dr. Márquez Murillo disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com. This article was translated from Medscape Spanish.
One year ago, as the sun was setting on a late fall day, Andrés Snitcofsky, a 40-year-old designer from Buenos Aires, Argentina, heard harrowing cries for help. It was the niece and the wife of one of his neighbors: a man in his 60s who the women had found “passed out” in the bedroom. “I did CPR for 5 minutes straight until a friend of the victim came in and asked me to stop, telling me that the man had probably been dead for 2 or 3 hours already. But I had no idea because I’d never seen a dead body before,” Mr. Snitcofsky told this news organization. A few minutes later, the ambulance arrived. The doctor confirmed that there was nothing more that could be done.
Mr. Snitcofsky went home. Nobody had asked for his name or address or phone number. … And it wasn’t because they already knew who he was. In fact, there wasn’t any sort of relationship there. Mr. Snitcofsky had only known his neighbors by sight. His actions that day, however, “did not come without a cost. It took me weeks – months, actually – to put myself together again,” he said. The things he saw, the things he heard, everything about that night played over and over in his head. “I had trouble sleeping. I would play out different scenarios in my head. I questioned myself. I second-guessed myself, criticized myself. It’s like some taboo subject. There’s no one to share the experience with, no one who gets it. But with time, I was able to process the event.
“For 2 months, I talked to my psychologist about it all,” he continued. “That really helped me a lot. In addition to therapy, I reached out to a couple I know – they’re both physicians – and to a firefighter who teaches CPR. Their insight and guidance allowed me to get to a point where I was able to understand that what I did was a good thing and that what I did was all that could have been done. But anyone who finds themselves in the position of having to do CPR – they’re going to be affected in many, many ways. It goes beyond the euphoria of seeing a person come back to life. Of that, I’m quite certain.”
We’ve all seen campaigns encouraging people to learn CPR and to be prepared if the need arises. But in training the public (and even health care professionals), not much, if anything, is said about the “collateral damage”: the psychological and emotional consequences of carrying out the procedure. These especially come into play when you don’t know whether the person survived, when your efforts weren’t able to reverse the sudden cardiac arrest, or when the person you gave CPR to was a loved one – a case that may entail immediate therapeutic interventions to minimize or prevent the risk of suffering long-lasting trauma.
In May 2020, popular American activist and educator Kristin Flanary saw someone suffering cardiac arrest. She stepped in and started doing CPR. And she continued doing CPR … for 10 long minutes. The person she was trying to save was her 34-year-old husband, ophthalmologist and comedian Will Flanary. On Twitter, where she’s known as Lady Glaucomflecken, Ms. Flanary recently shared the following message, putting the topic of CPR and automated external defibrillator training front and center.
“Yes, everyone should learn #CPRandAED. But if we are going to ask people to perform such a brutal task, it’s imperative that we also provide them with the info and resources they need to process it mentally and emotionally. It’s traumatic and life changing. It’s irresponsible and unethical to ask people to help in such a brutal and traumatic way and then neglect to help them in return.” In less than a month, the tweet has racked up over 200,000 views.
Doing one’s duty
There are many people who work to promote CPR and strengthen the other links in the chain of survival for out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest, such as prompt access to and delivery of early defibrillation. According to them, any negative psychological impact of intervening is temporary and, when compared with the satisfaction of having done one’s duty, quite insignificant – even if the efforts to save a person’s life are not successful.
“In 99.9% of cases, people who have performed CPR feel a sense of satisfaction, even happiness, knowing that they’ve helped. The individuals I’ve spoken with, I’ve never heard any of them say that they felt worse after the event or that they needed to see a psychologist,” said Mario Fitz Maurice, MD, director of the Arrhythmia Council of the Argentine Society of Cardiology and head of Electrophysiology at Rivadavia Hospital in Buenos Aires. He went on to tell this news organization, “Of course, some degree of fear, sadness, or melancholy can remain afterward. But it seems to me, and there are reports saying as much, that, in the end, what stands out in the person’s mind is the fact that they tried to save a life. And for them, there’s joy in knowing this.”
Dr. Fitz Maurice, who is also the director of the National Arrhythmia Institute in Buenos Aires, pointed out that the kind of person who takes CPR classes “has a profile that’s going to allow them to be psychologically involved; they’re the caring person, the one who’s ready and willing to help people.” And he added that, at his hospital, if they can identify the individuals or first responders who have done CPR on a patient, the protocol is to always contact them to offer psychological care and assistance. “But in 99% of cases, they don’t even understand why we’re calling them, they’re extremely happy to have taken part.”
Some studies, though, paint a much different picture, one that shows that providing CPR can be emotionally challenging and have consequences in terms of one’s family and work life. A qualitative study published in 2016 looked into the experiences of 20 lay rescuers in Norway – five were health educated – who had provided CPR to 18 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) victims, 66% of whom survived. The time from experiencing the OHCA incident to participating in the interview ranged from 6 days to 13 years (median 5.5 years). Several participants reported the OHCA incident as a “shocking and terrifying” experience. Tiredness, exhaustion, confusion, and feeling alone about the OHCA experience were individual reactions that could vary in time from days to months. Anxiety and insomnia were also experienced following the incident.
Some lay rescuers described the influence on work and family life, and a few of them described deep sorrow, even several years after the incident. Overall, they reported repetitive self-criticism regarding whether they could have carried out anything else to achieve a better outcome for the cardiac arrest victim. All of them wanted to be informed about the outcome. And four of the lay rescuers needed professional counseling to process the OHCA experience.
In 2020, another qualitative study was conducted, this time in Taiwan. There were nine participants, none of whom were health professionals. Each had provided initial CPR and defibrillation with AED in public locations. Event-to-interview duration was within 1 year and 1-2 years. The major findings from the study were the following:
- The lay rescuers possessed helping traits and high motivation.
- The lay rescuers reported certain aspects of rescue reality that differed much from prior training and expectations, including difficulty in the depth of chest compression, and uncertainties in real emergency situations.
- The lay rescuers gained positive personal fulfillment in sharing their experience and receiving positive feedback from others, and were willing to help next time, although they experienced a short-term negative psychological impact from the event. “Measures should be taken to increase [a] layperson’s confidence and situation awareness, to reduce training-reality discrepancy, and to build up a support system to avoid negative psychological effects.” This was the conclusion of the study team, which was led by Matthew Huei-Ming Ma, MD, PhD. A professor in the department of emergency medicine at National Taiwan University in Taipei, he is also on the board of directors of the Resuscitation Council of Asia.
Potential trauma
In recalling his experience, Mr. Snitcofsky said, “The hardest part of it all was the moment that I stopped giving CPR, that moment of letting go. This became the image that kept coming back to me, the traumatic moment I hadn’t thought about.”
Psychiatrist Daniel Mosca, MD, is the founder and former president of the Argentine Society of Trauma Psychology. He is also the coordinator of the human factors team at the City of Buenos Aires Emergency Medical Care System. “Any event has the potential to be traumatic, all the more so when it’s an event where you come face to face with death and uncertainty. But how a rescuer reacts will depend on their psychological makeup.” Of the individuals who were held for months or years in the jungle as hostages of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, “only” half developed symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
Dr. Mosca believes that a comment by Frank Ochberg, MD, speaks to this finding. “In many cases, peritraumatic symptoms are a normal person’s normal response to an abnormal situation.” For a lot of people who have found themselves having to perform CPR, the symptoms associated with the initial acute stress reaction will resolve on their own in 30-90 days. “But if this doesn’t happen, and those symptoms persist, psychotherapeutic or pharmacological intervention will be necessary,” he noted.
“In CPR classes, it would be good for the instructors to talk about the warning signs that people should look out for in themselves and their fellow rescuers. So, for example, insomnia, anxiety, a heightened state of alertness, feeling disconnected from reality,” Dr. Mosca told this news organization.
“Another thing that can help rescuers is letting them know what happened to the person they gave CPR to. This way, they can get closure,” suggested Manlio Márquez Murillo, MD, a cardiologist and electrophysiologist in Mexico. He is also the coordinator of the Alliance Against Sudden Cardiac Death at the Interamerican Society of Cardiology.
“Medical and nursing societies would have to develop a brief protocol or performance standard. The goal would be to ensure that rescuers are asked for their contact information and that someone gets in touch to debrief them and to offer them care. Next would come the treatment part, to resolve any remaining aftereffects,” said in an interview.
For example, a three-stage Lay Responder Support Model (LRSM) was developed and implemented as part of a lay responder support program established in 2014 by the Peel Regional Council in Ontario. The LRSM identifies and engages individuals who witnessed or participated directly or indirectly in an OHCA, inviting them to participate in a debriefing session facilitated by a trained practitioner. Held 24-48 hours post event, the debriefing allows lay responders to contextualize their reaction to the event. The conversation also serves as an opportunity for them to fully articulate their concerns, questions, and thoughts. The facilitator can communicate stress reduction techniques and address psychological first aid needs as they emerge. Approximately 1 week post event, a secondary follow-up occurs. If the lay responder communicates a continuing struggle with symptoms impacting and interfering with everyday life, the facilitator offers a coordinated or facilitated referral for mental health support.
In an article published in the Journal of Cardiac Failure. Ms. Flanary speaks about the three kinds of language that anyone who was either forced to or inspired to perform CPR can use to help process their trauma: words that explain what happened, words that name (eg, “forgotten patients”), and words that validate the experience and allow the person to articulate their feelings. The tools and technologies that organizations and health care professionals provide can help the healing process. Empathy and compassion, too, have a place.
But there are virtually no standardized and proactive initiatives of this kind in much of the world, including Latin America. So, most people who just happened to be in the right place at the right time find that they have to navigate the “after” part all on their own.
Other obstacles
Dr. Márquez Murillo finds it unfortunate that countries in the region have yet to enact “Good Samaritan” laws. If individuals render aid to someone suffering cardiac arrest, then these laws would ensure that they will not be held liable in any way. This is the case in Argentina and Uruguay. So, the fear of things turning into a legal matter may be holding people back from taking action; that fear could also create additional stress for those who end up stepping in to help.
Even with the legal safeguards, exceptional circumstances may arise where rescuers find themselves facing unexpected emotional challenges. In Argentina, Virginia Pérez Antonelli, the 17-year-old who tried in vain to save the life of Fernando Báez Sosa, had to testify at the trial of the eight defendants accused of brutally beating him in January 2020. The press, the public – the attention of an entire country – was focused on her. She had to respond to the defense attorneys who were able to ask whether she was sure that she performed the CPR maneuvers correctly. And a few weeks ago, a medical examiner hired by the defense suggested that “the CPR may have made the situation worse” for the victim. An indignant Dr. Fitz Maurice responded on Twitter: “CPR SAVES LIVES!! Let’s not let a CHEAP AND BASELESS argument destroy all the work that’s been done…!”
Of course, there are consequences that are beyond our control and others that can, in fact, be anticipated and planned for. Dr. Fitz Maurice brought up a preventive approach: Make CPR second nature, teach it in schools, help people overcome their fears. “Cardiac deaths are 200 times more frequent than deaths resulting from fires – and we practice fire drills a lot more than we practice CPR,” he told this news organization. In a society where there is widespread training on the procedure, where people regularly practice the technique, those who have had the experience of giving someone CPR will feel less alone, will be better understood by others.
“On the other hand, beyond the initial impact and the lack of a formal support system, the medium- and long-term outcome for those who acted is also psychologically and emotionally favorable,” said Jorge Bombau, MD, an obstetrician/gynecologist in Buenos Aires. After Dr. Bombau’s 14-year-old son Beltrán suddenly died during a school sports tournament, Dr. Bombau became a prominent advocate spreading the word about CPR.
“I don’t know anyone who regrets doing CPR,” he told this news organization. “There may be a brief period when the person feels distressed or depressed, when they have trouble sleeping. But it’s been proven that doing a good deed improves one’s mood. And what better deed is there than trying to save someone’s life? Whether their efforts were successful or in vain, that person has, at the end of the day, done something meaningful and worthwhile.”
Mr. Snitcofsky shares this sentiment. For several months now, he’s been feeling he’s “in a good place.” And he’s been actively promoting CPR on social media. As he recently posted on Twitter, “I’m here to retweet everything that has to do with getting us all to become familiar with how to do CPR and working up the courage to do it. The training takes no more than a few hours.
“I want to know that, if I ever have an out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest, there will be neighbors, friends, or family members around who know how to do CPR. Every person who knows how to do CPR can persuade others, and those of us who’ve had to do CPR in real life are even better candidates for persuading others. And if one day a person ends up needing CPR, I want to step in again and make up for lost time. Here’s hoping it’ll do the job,” he concluded.
It’s the same for Matías Alonso, a journalist in Buenos Aires. On New Year’s Eve 15 years ago, he was at a family dinner when, a few minutes before midnight, he found himself giving CPR to his stepmother’s father. “Unfortunately, he passed away, but I continued doing CPR on him until the ambulance arrived. For some time, I felt a little guilty for not taking charge of the situation from the beginning, and because I had this idea in my head that more people pulled through and recovered. But afterwards, they really thanked me a lot. And that helped me realize that I’d done something. I didn’t stand still when faced with the inevitability of death. I understood that it was good to have tried,” Mr. Alonso told this news organization. “And next time … hopefully there won’t be a next time … but I’m more prepared, and I now know how I can do better.”
Mr. Alonso, Mr. Snitcofsky, Dr. Fitz Maurice, Dr. Mosca, Dr. Bombau, and Dr. Márquez Murillo disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com. This article was translated from Medscape Spanish.
One year ago, as the sun was setting on a late fall day, Andrés Snitcofsky, a 40-year-old designer from Buenos Aires, Argentina, heard harrowing cries for help. It was the niece and the wife of one of his neighbors: a man in his 60s who the women had found “passed out” in the bedroom. “I did CPR for 5 minutes straight until a friend of the victim came in and asked me to stop, telling me that the man had probably been dead for 2 or 3 hours already. But I had no idea because I’d never seen a dead body before,” Mr. Snitcofsky told this news organization. A few minutes later, the ambulance arrived. The doctor confirmed that there was nothing more that could be done.
Mr. Snitcofsky went home. Nobody had asked for his name or address or phone number. … And it wasn’t because they already knew who he was. In fact, there wasn’t any sort of relationship there. Mr. Snitcofsky had only known his neighbors by sight. His actions that day, however, “did not come without a cost. It took me weeks – months, actually – to put myself together again,” he said. The things he saw, the things he heard, everything about that night played over and over in his head. “I had trouble sleeping. I would play out different scenarios in my head. I questioned myself. I second-guessed myself, criticized myself. It’s like some taboo subject. There’s no one to share the experience with, no one who gets it. But with time, I was able to process the event.
“For 2 months, I talked to my psychologist about it all,” he continued. “That really helped me a lot. In addition to therapy, I reached out to a couple I know – they’re both physicians – and to a firefighter who teaches CPR. Their insight and guidance allowed me to get to a point where I was able to understand that what I did was a good thing and that what I did was all that could have been done. But anyone who finds themselves in the position of having to do CPR – they’re going to be affected in many, many ways. It goes beyond the euphoria of seeing a person come back to life. Of that, I’m quite certain.”
We’ve all seen campaigns encouraging people to learn CPR and to be prepared if the need arises. But in training the public (and even health care professionals), not much, if anything, is said about the “collateral damage”: the psychological and emotional consequences of carrying out the procedure. These especially come into play when you don’t know whether the person survived, when your efforts weren’t able to reverse the sudden cardiac arrest, or when the person you gave CPR to was a loved one – a case that may entail immediate therapeutic interventions to minimize or prevent the risk of suffering long-lasting trauma.
In May 2020, popular American activist and educator Kristin Flanary saw someone suffering cardiac arrest. She stepped in and started doing CPR. And she continued doing CPR … for 10 long minutes. The person she was trying to save was her 34-year-old husband, ophthalmologist and comedian Will Flanary. On Twitter, where she’s known as Lady Glaucomflecken, Ms. Flanary recently shared the following message, putting the topic of CPR and automated external defibrillator training front and center.
“Yes, everyone should learn #CPRandAED. But if we are going to ask people to perform such a brutal task, it’s imperative that we also provide them with the info and resources they need to process it mentally and emotionally. It’s traumatic and life changing. It’s irresponsible and unethical to ask people to help in such a brutal and traumatic way and then neglect to help them in return.” In less than a month, the tweet has racked up over 200,000 views.
Doing one’s duty
There are many people who work to promote CPR and strengthen the other links in the chain of survival for out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest, such as prompt access to and delivery of early defibrillation. According to them, any negative psychological impact of intervening is temporary and, when compared with the satisfaction of having done one’s duty, quite insignificant – even if the efforts to save a person’s life are not successful.
“In 99.9% of cases, people who have performed CPR feel a sense of satisfaction, even happiness, knowing that they’ve helped. The individuals I’ve spoken with, I’ve never heard any of them say that they felt worse after the event or that they needed to see a psychologist,” said Mario Fitz Maurice, MD, director of the Arrhythmia Council of the Argentine Society of Cardiology and head of Electrophysiology at Rivadavia Hospital in Buenos Aires. He went on to tell this news organization, “Of course, some degree of fear, sadness, or melancholy can remain afterward. But it seems to me, and there are reports saying as much, that, in the end, what stands out in the person’s mind is the fact that they tried to save a life. And for them, there’s joy in knowing this.”
Dr. Fitz Maurice, who is also the director of the National Arrhythmia Institute in Buenos Aires, pointed out that the kind of person who takes CPR classes “has a profile that’s going to allow them to be psychologically involved; they’re the caring person, the one who’s ready and willing to help people.” And he added that, at his hospital, if they can identify the individuals or first responders who have done CPR on a patient, the protocol is to always contact them to offer psychological care and assistance. “But in 99% of cases, they don’t even understand why we’re calling them, they’re extremely happy to have taken part.”
Some studies, though, paint a much different picture, one that shows that providing CPR can be emotionally challenging and have consequences in terms of one’s family and work life. A qualitative study published in 2016 looked into the experiences of 20 lay rescuers in Norway – five were health educated – who had provided CPR to 18 out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) victims, 66% of whom survived. The time from experiencing the OHCA incident to participating in the interview ranged from 6 days to 13 years (median 5.5 years). Several participants reported the OHCA incident as a “shocking and terrifying” experience. Tiredness, exhaustion, confusion, and feeling alone about the OHCA experience were individual reactions that could vary in time from days to months. Anxiety and insomnia were also experienced following the incident.
Some lay rescuers described the influence on work and family life, and a few of them described deep sorrow, even several years after the incident. Overall, they reported repetitive self-criticism regarding whether they could have carried out anything else to achieve a better outcome for the cardiac arrest victim. All of them wanted to be informed about the outcome. And four of the lay rescuers needed professional counseling to process the OHCA experience.
In 2020, another qualitative study was conducted, this time in Taiwan. There were nine participants, none of whom were health professionals. Each had provided initial CPR and defibrillation with AED in public locations. Event-to-interview duration was within 1 year and 1-2 years. The major findings from the study were the following:
- The lay rescuers possessed helping traits and high motivation.
- The lay rescuers reported certain aspects of rescue reality that differed much from prior training and expectations, including difficulty in the depth of chest compression, and uncertainties in real emergency situations.
- The lay rescuers gained positive personal fulfillment in sharing their experience and receiving positive feedback from others, and were willing to help next time, although they experienced a short-term negative psychological impact from the event. “Measures should be taken to increase [a] layperson’s confidence and situation awareness, to reduce training-reality discrepancy, and to build up a support system to avoid negative psychological effects.” This was the conclusion of the study team, which was led by Matthew Huei-Ming Ma, MD, PhD. A professor in the department of emergency medicine at National Taiwan University in Taipei, he is also on the board of directors of the Resuscitation Council of Asia.
Potential trauma
In recalling his experience, Mr. Snitcofsky said, “The hardest part of it all was the moment that I stopped giving CPR, that moment of letting go. This became the image that kept coming back to me, the traumatic moment I hadn’t thought about.”
Psychiatrist Daniel Mosca, MD, is the founder and former president of the Argentine Society of Trauma Psychology. He is also the coordinator of the human factors team at the City of Buenos Aires Emergency Medical Care System. “Any event has the potential to be traumatic, all the more so when it’s an event where you come face to face with death and uncertainty. But how a rescuer reacts will depend on their psychological makeup.” Of the individuals who were held for months or years in the jungle as hostages of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, “only” half developed symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder.
Dr. Mosca believes that a comment by Frank Ochberg, MD, speaks to this finding. “In many cases, peritraumatic symptoms are a normal person’s normal response to an abnormal situation.” For a lot of people who have found themselves having to perform CPR, the symptoms associated with the initial acute stress reaction will resolve on their own in 30-90 days. “But if this doesn’t happen, and those symptoms persist, psychotherapeutic or pharmacological intervention will be necessary,” he noted.
“In CPR classes, it would be good for the instructors to talk about the warning signs that people should look out for in themselves and their fellow rescuers. So, for example, insomnia, anxiety, a heightened state of alertness, feeling disconnected from reality,” Dr. Mosca told this news organization.
“Another thing that can help rescuers is letting them know what happened to the person they gave CPR to. This way, they can get closure,” suggested Manlio Márquez Murillo, MD, a cardiologist and electrophysiologist in Mexico. He is also the coordinator of the Alliance Against Sudden Cardiac Death at the Interamerican Society of Cardiology.
“Medical and nursing societies would have to develop a brief protocol or performance standard. The goal would be to ensure that rescuers are asked for their contact information and that someone gets in touch to debrief them and to offer them care. Next would come the treatment part, to resolve any remaining aftereffects,” said in an interview.
For example, a three-stage Lay Responder Support Model (LRSM) was developed and implemented as part of a lay responder support program established in 2014 by the Peel Regional Council in Ontario. The LRSM identifies and engages individuals who witnessed or participated directly or indirectly in an OHCA, inviting them to participate in a debriefing session facilitated by a trained practitioner. Held 24-48 hours post event, the debriefing allows lay responders to contextualize their reaction to the event. The conversation also serves as an opportunity for them to fully articulate their concerns, questions, and thoughts. The facilitator can communicate stress reduction techniques and address psychological first aid needs as they emerge. Approximately 1 week post event, a secondary follow-up occurs. If the lay responder communicates a continuing struggle with symptoms impacting and interfering with everyday life, the facilitator offers a coordinated or facilitated referral for mental health support.
In an article published in the Journal of Cardiac Failure. Ms. Flanary speaks about the three kinds of language that anyone who was either forced to or inspired to perform CPR can use to help process their trauma: words that explain what happened, words that name (eg, “forgotten patients”), and words that validate the experience and allow the person to articulate their feelings. The tools and technologies that organizations and health care professionals provide can help the healing process. Empathy and compassion, too, have a place.
But there are virtually no standardized and proactive initiatives of this kind in much of the world, including Latin America. So, most people who just happened to be in the right place at the right time find that they have to navigate the “after” part all on their own.
Other obstacles
Dr. Márquez Murillo finds it unfortunate that countries in the region have yet to enact “Good Samaritan” laws. If individuals render aid to someone suffering cardiac arrest, then these laws would ensure that they will not be held liable in any way. This is the case in Argentina and Uruguay. So, the fear of things turning into a legal matter may be holding people back from taking action; that fear could also create additional stress for those who end up stepping in to help.
Even with the legal safeguards, exceptional circumstances may arise where rescuers find themselves facing unexpected emotional challenges. In Argentina, Virginia Pérez Antonelli, the 17-year-old who tried in vain to save the life of Fernando Báez Sosa, had to testify at the trial of the eight defendants accused of brutally beating him in January 2020. The press, the public – the attention of an entire country – was focused on her. She had to respond to the defense attorneys who were able to ask whether she was sure that she performed the CPR maneuvers correctly. And a few weeks ago, a medical examiner hired by the defense suggested that “the CPR may have made the situation worse” for the victim. An indignant Dr. Fitz Maurice responded on Twitter: “CPR SAVES LIVES!! Let’s not let a CHEAP AND BASELESS argument destroy all the work that’s been done…!”
Of course, there are consequences that are beyond our control and others that can, in fact, be anticipated and planned for. Dr. Fitz Maurice brought up a preventive approach: Make CPR second nature, teach it in schools, help people overcome their fears. “Cardiac deaths are 200 times more frequent than deaths resulting from fires – and we practice fire drills a lot more than we practice CPR,” he told this news organization. In a society where there is widespread training on the procedure, where people regularly practice the technique, those who have had the experience of giving someone CPR will feel less alone, will be better understood by others.
“On the other hand, beyond the initial impact and the lack of a formal support system, the medium- and long-term outcome for those who acted is also psychologically and emotionally favorable,” said Jorge Bombau, MD, an obstetrician/gynecologist in Buenos Aires. After Dr. Bombau’s 14-year-old son Beltrán suddenly died during a school sports tournament, Dr. Bombau became a prominent advocate spreading the word about CPR.
“I don’t know anyone who regrets doing CPR,” he told this news organization. “There may be a brief period when the person feels distressed or depressed, when they have trouble sleeping. But it’s been proven that doing a good deed improves one’s mood. And what better deed is there than trying to save someone’s life? Whether their efforts were successful or in vain, that person has, at the end of the day, done something meaningful and worthwhile.”
Mr. Snitcofsky shares this sentiment. For several months now, he’s been feeling he’s “in a good place.” And he’s been actively promoting CPR on social media. As he recently posted on Twitter, “I’m here to retweet everything that has to do with getting us all to become familiar with how to do CPR and working up the courage to do it. The training takes no more than a few hours.
“I want to know that, if I ever have an out-of-hospital sudden cardiac arrest, there will be neighbors, friends, or family members around who know how to do CPR. Every person who knows how to do CPR can persuade others, and those of us who’ve had to do CPR in real life are even better candidates for persuading others. And if one day a person ends up needing CPR, I want to step in again and make up for lost time. Here’s hoping it’ll do the job,” he concluded.
It’s the same for Matías Alonso, a journalist in Buenos Aires. On New Year’s Eve 15 years ago, he was at a family dinner when, a few minutes before midnight, he found himself giving CPR to his stepmother’s father. “Unfortunately, he passed away, but I continued doing CPR on him until the ambulance arrived. For some time, I felt a little guilty for not taking charge of the situation from the beginning, and because I had this idea in my head that more people pulled through and recovered. But afterwards, they really thanked me a lot. And that helped me realize that I’d done something. I didn’t stand still when faced with the inevitability of death. I understood that it was good to have tried,” Mr. Alonso told this news organization. “And next time … hopefully there won’t be a next time … but I’m more prepared, and I now know how I can do better.”
Mr. Alonso, Mr. Snitcofsky, Dr. Fitz Maurice, Dr. Mosca, Dr. Bombau, and Dr. Márquez Murillo disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com. This article was translated from Medscape Spanish.
A technicality could keep RSV shots from kids in need
which has put an estimated 90,000 U.S. infants and small children in the hospital since the start of October.
But only one of the shots is designed to be given to babies, and a glitch in congressional language may make it difficult to allow children from low-income families to get it as readily as the well insured.
Since 1994, routine vaccination has been a childhood entitlement under the Vaccines for Children program, through which the federal government buys millions of vaccines and provides them free through pediatricians and clinics to children who are uninsured, underinsured, or on Medicaid – more than half of all American kids.
The 1993 law creating the program didn’t specifically include antibody shots, which were used only as rare emergency therapy at the time the bill was written.
But the first medication of its kind likely to be available to babies, called nirsevimab (it was approved in Europe in December, and Food and Drug Administration approval is expected in the summer of 2023), is not a vaccine but rather a monoclonal antibody that neutralizes RSV in the bloodstream.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is certain to recommend giving the antibody to infants, said Kelly Moore, MD, president of the advocacy group Immunize.org. The CDC is currently assessing whether nirsevimab would be eligible for the Vaccines for Children program, agency spokesperson Kristen Nordlund told KHN.
Failing to do so would “consign thousands upon thousands of infants to hospitalization and serious illness for semantic reasons despite existence of an immunization that functionally performs just like a seasonal vaccine,” Dr. Moore said.
Officials from Sanofi, which is producing the nirsevimab injection along with AstraZeneca, declined to state a price but said the range would be similar to that of a pediatric vaccine course. The CDC pays about $650 for the most expensive routine vaccine, the four shots against pneumococcal infection. In other words, FDA approval would make nirsevimab a blockbuster drug worth billions annually if it’s given to a large share of the 3.7 million or so children born in the U.S. each year.
Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline are making traditional vaccines against RSV and expect FDA approval later in 2023. Pfizer’s shot initially would be given to pregnant women – to shield their babies from the disease – while GSK’s would be given to the elderly.
Vaccines designed for infants are in the pipeline, but some experts are still nervous about them. A 1966 RSV vaccine trial failed spectacularly, killing two toddlers, and immunologists aren’t totally in agreement over the cause, said Barney Graham, MD, PhD, the retired National Institutes of Health scientist whose studies of the episode contributed to successful COVID-19 and RSV vaccines.
After 2 years of COVID lockdowns and masking slowed its transmission, RSV exploded across the United States in 2023, swamping pediatric intensive care units.
Sanofi and AstraZeneca hope to have nirsevimab approved by the FDA, recommended by the CDC, and deployed nationwide by fall to prevent future RSV epidemics.
Their product is designed to be provided before a baby’s first winter RSV season. In clinical trials, the antibodies provided up to 5 months of protection. Most children wouldn’t need a second dose because the virus is not a mortal danger to healthy kids over a year old, said Jon Heinrichs, a senior member of Sanofi’s vaccines division.
If the antibody treatment is not accepted for the Vaccines for Children program, that will limit access to the shot for the uninsured and those on Medicaid, the majority of whom represent racial or ethnic minorities, Dr. Moore said. The drugmakers would have to negotiate with each state’s Medicaid program to get it on their formularies.
Excluding the shot from Vaccines for Children “would only worsen existing health disparities,” said Sean O’Leary, MD, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, and chair of the infectious diseases committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
RSV affects babies of all social classes but tends to hit poor, crowded households hardest, said Dr. Graham. “Family history of asthma or allergy makes it worse,” he said, and premature babies are also at higher risk.
While 2%-3% of U.S. infants are hospitalized with RSV each year, only a few hundred don’t survive. But as many as 10,000 people 65 and older perish because of an infection every year, and a little-discussed legal change will make RSV and other vaccines more available to this group.
A section of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act that went into effect Jan. 1 ends out-of-pocket payments for all vaccines by Medicare patients – including RSV vaccines, if they are licensed for this group.
Before, “if you hadn’t met your deductible, it could be very expensive,” said Leonard Friedland, MD, vice president for scientific affairs and public health in GSK’s vaccines division, which also makes shingles and combination tetanus-diphtheria-whooping cough boosters covered by the new law. “It’s a tremendously important advance.”
Of course, high levels of vaccine hesitancy are likely to blunt uptake of the shots regardless of who pays, said Jennifer Reich, a sociologist at the University of Colorado who studies vaccination attitudes.
New types of shots, like the Sanofi-AstraZeneca antibodies, often alarm parents, and Pfizer’s shot for pregnant women is likely to push fear buttons as well, she said.
Public health officials “don’t seem very savvy about how to get ahead” of claims that vaccines undermine fertility or otherwise harm people, said Ms. Reich.
On the other hand, this winter’s RSV epidemic will be persuasive to many parents, said Heidi Larson, leader of the Vaccine Confidence Project and a professor of anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
“It’s a scary thing to have your kid hospitalized with RSV,” she said.
While unfortunate, “the high number of children who died or were admitted to the ICU in the past season with RSV – in some ways that’s helpful,” said Laura Riley, MD, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York.
Specialists in her field haven’t really started talking about how to communicate with women about the vaccine, said Dr. Riley, who chairs the immunization group at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
“Everyone’s been waiting to see if it gets approved,” she said. “The education has to start soon, but it’s hard to roll out education before you roll out the shot.”
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.
which has put an estimated 90,000 U.S. infants and small children in the hospital since the start of October.
But only one of the shots is designed to be given to babies, and a glitch in congressional language may make it difficult to allow children from low-income families to get it as readily as the well insured.
Since 1994, routine vaccination has been a childhood entitlement under the Vaccines for Children program, through which the federal government buys millions of vaccines and provides them free through pediatricians and clinics to children who are uninsured, underinsured, or on Medicaid – more than half of all American kids.
The 1993 law creating the program didn’t specifically include antibody shots, which were used only as rare emergency therapy at the time the bill was written.
But the first medication of its kind likely to be available to babies, called nirsevimab (it was approved in Europe in December, and Food and Drug Administration approval is expected in the summer of 2023), is not a vaccine but rather a monoclonal antibody that neutralizes RSV in the bloodstream.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is certain to recommend giving the antibody to infants, said Kelly Moore, MD, president of the advocacy group Immunize.org. The CDC is currently assessing whether nirsevimab would be eligible for the Vaccines for Children program, agency spokesperson Kristen Nordlund told KHN.
Failing to do so would “consign thousands upon thousands of infants to hospitalization and serious illness for semantic reasons despite existence of an immunization that functionally performs just like a seasonal vaccine,” Dr. Moore said.
Officials from Sanofi, which is producing the nirsevimab injection along with AstraZeneca, declined to state a price but said the range would be similar to that of a pediatric vaccine course. The CDC pays about $650 for the most expensive routine vaccine, the four shots against pneumococcal infection. In other words, FDA approval would make nirsevimab a blockbuster drug worth billions annually if it’s given to a large share of the 3.7 million or so children born in the U.S. each year.
Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline are making traditional vaccines against RSV and expect FDA approval later in 2023. Pfizer’s shot initially would be given to pregnant women – to shield their babies from the disease – while GSK’s would be given to the elderly.
Vaccines designed for infants are in the pipeline, but some experts are still nervous about them. A 1966 RSV vaccine trial failed spectacularly, killing two toddlers, and immunologists aren’t totally in agreement over the cause, said Barney Graham, MD, PhD, the retired National Institutes of Health scientist whose studies of the episode contributed to successful COVID-19 and RSV vaccines.
After 2 years of COVID lockdowns and masking slowed its transmission, RSV exploded across the United States in 2023, swamping pediatric intensive care units.
Sanofi and AstraZeneca hope to have nirsevimab approved by the FDA, recommended by the CDC, and deployed nationwide by fall to prevent future RSV epidemics.
Their product is designed to be provided before a baby’s first winter RSV season. In clinical trials, the antibodies provided up to 5 months of protection. Most children wouldn’t need a second dose because the virus is not a mortal danger to healthy kids over a year old, said Jon Heinrichs, a senior member of Sanofi’s vaccines division.
If the antibody treatment is not accepted for the Vaccines for Children program, that will limit access to the shot for the uninsured and those on Medicaid, the majority of whom represent racial or ethnic minorities, Dr. Moore said. The drugmakers would have to negotiate with each state’s Medicaid program to get it on their formularies.
Excluding the shot from Vaccines for Children “would only worsen existing health disparities,” said Sean O’Leary, MD, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, and chair of the infectious diseases committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
RSV affects babies of all social classes but tends to hit poor, crowded households hardest, said Dr. Graham. “Family history of asthma or allergy makes it worse,” he said, and premature babies are also at higher risk.
While 2%-3% of U.S. infants are hospitalized with RSV each year, only a few hundred don’t survive. But as many as 10,000 people 65 and older perish because of an infection every year, and a little-discussed legal change will make RSV and other vaccines more available to this group.
A section of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act that went into effect Jan. 1 ends out-of-pocket payments for all vaccines by Medicare patients – including RSV vaccines, if they are licensed for this group.
Before, “if you hadn’t met your deductible, it could be very expensive,” said Leonard Friedland, MD, vice president for scientific affairs and public health in GSK’s vaccines division, which also makes shingles and combination tetanus-diphtheria-whooping cough boosters covered by the new law. “It’s a tremendously important advance.”
Of course, high levels of vaccine hesitancy are likely to blunt uptake of the shots regardless of who pays, said Jennifer Reich, a sociologist at the University of Colorado who studies vaccination attitudes.
New types of shots, like the Sanofi-AstraZeneca antibodies, often alarm parents, and Pfizer’s shot for pregnant women is likely to push fear buttons as well, she said.
Public health officials “don’t seem very savvy about how to get ahead” of claims that vaccines undermine fertility or otherwise harm people, said Ms. Reich.
On the other hand, this winter’s RSV epidemic will be persuasive to many parents, said Heidi Larson, leader of the Vaccine Confidence Project and a professor of anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
“It’s a scary thing to have your kid hospitalized with RSV,” she said.
While unfortunate, “the high number of children who died or were admitted to the ICU in the past season with RSV – in some ways that’s helpful,” said Laura Riley, MD, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York.
Specialists in her field haven’t really started talking about how to communicate with women about the vaccine, said Dr. Riley, who chairs the immunization group at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
“Everyone’s been waiting to see if it gets approved,” she said. “The education has to start soon, but it’s hard to roll out education before you roll out the shot.”
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.
which has put an estimated 90,000 U.S. infants and small children in the hospital since the start of October.
But only one of the shots is designed to be given to babies, and a glitch in congressional language may make it difficult to allow children from low-income families to get it as readily as the well insured.
Since 1994, routine vaccination has been a childhood entitlement under the Vaccines for Children program, through which the federal government buys millions of vaccines and provides them free through pediatricians and clinics to children who are uninsured, underinsured, or on Medicaid – more than half of all American kids.
The 1993 law creating the program didn’t specifically include antibody shots, which were used only as rare emergency therapy at the time the bill was written.
But the first medication of its kind likely to be available to babies, called nirsevimab (it was approved in Europe in December, and Food and Drug Administration approval is expected in the summer of 2023), is not a vaccine but rather a monoclonal antibody that neutralizes RSV in the bloodstream.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is certain to recommend giving the antibody to infants, said Kelly Moore, MD, president of the advocacy group Immunize.org. The CDC is currently assessing whether nirsevimab would be eligible for the Vaccines for Children program, agency spokesperson Kristen Nordlund told KHN.
Failing to do so would “consign thousands upon thousands of infants to hospitalization and serious illness for semantic reasons despite existence of an immunization that functionally performs just like a seasonal vaccine,” Dr. Moore said.
Officials from Sanofi, which is producing the nirsevimab injection along with AstraZeneca, declined to state a price but said the range would be similar to that of a pediatric vaccine course. The CDC pays about $650 for the most expensive routine vaccine, the four shots against pneumococcal infection. In other words, FDA approval would make nirsevimab a blockbuster drug worth billions annually if it’s given to a large share of the 3.7 million or so children born in the U.S. each year.
Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline are making traditional vaccines against RSV and expect FDA approval later in 2023. Pfizer’s shot initially would be given to pregnant women – to shield their babies from the disease – while GSK’s would be given to the elderly.
Vaccines designed for infants are in the pipeline, but some experts are still nervous about them. A 1966 RSV vaccine trial failed spectacularly, killing two toddlers, and immunologists aren’t totally in agreement over the cause, said Barney Graham, MD, PhD, the retired National Institutes of Health scientist whose studies of the episode contributed to successful COVID-19 and RSV vaccines.
After 2 years of COVID lockdowns and masking slowed its transmission, RSV exploded across the United States in 2023, swamping pediatric intensive care units.
Sanofi and AstraZeneca hope to have nirsevimab approved by the FDA, recommended by the CDC, and deployed nationwide by fall to prevent future RSV epidemics.
Their product is designed to be provided before a baby’s first winter RSV season. In clinical trials, the antibodies provided up to 5 months of protection. Most children wouldn’t need a second dose because the virus is not a mortal danger to healthy kids over a year old, said Jon Heinrichs, a senior member of Sanofi’s vaccines division.
If the antibody treatment is not accepted for the Vaccines for Children program, that will limit access to the shot for the uninsured and those on Medicaid, the majority of whom represent racial or ethnic minorities, Dr. Moore said. The drugmakers would have to negotiate with each state’s Medicaid program to get it on their formularies.
Excluding the shot from Vaccines for Children “would only worsen existing health disparities,” said Sean O’Leary, MD, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, and chair of the infectious diseases committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
RSV affects babies of all social classes but tends to hit poor, crowded households hardest, said Dr. Graham. “Family history of asthma or allergy makes it worse,” he said, and premature babies are also at higher risk.
While 2%-3% of U.S. infants are hospitalized with RSV each year, only a few hundred don’t survive. But as many as 10,000 people 65 and older perish because of an infection every year, and a little-discussed legal change will make RSV and other vaccines more available to this group.
A section of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act that went into effect Jan. 1 ends out-of-pocket payments for all vaccines by Medicare patients – including RSV vaccines, if they are licensed for this group.
Before, “if you hadn’t met your deductible, it could be very expensive,” said Leonard Friedland, MD, vice president for scientific affairs and public health in GSK’s vaccines division, which also makes shingles and combination tetanus-diphtheria-whooping cough boosters covered by the new law. “It’s a tremendously important advance.”
Of course, high levels of vaccine hesitancy are likely to blunt uptake of the shots regardless of who pays, said Jennifer Reich, a sociologist at the University of Colorado who studies vaccination attitudes.
New types of shots, like the Sanofi-AstraZeneca antibodies, often alarm parents, and Pfizer’s shot for pregnant women is likely to push fear buttons as well, she said.
Public health officials “don’t seem very savvy about how to get ahead” of claims that vaccines undermine fertility or otherwise harm people, said Ms. Reich.
On the other hand, this winter’s RSV epidemic will be persuasive to many parents, said Heidi Larson, leader of the Vaccine Confidence Project and a professor of anthropology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
“It’s a scary thing to have your kid hospitalized with RSV,” she said.
While unfortunate, “the high number of children who died or were admitted to the ICU in the past season with RSV – in some ways that’s helpful,” said Laura Riley, MD, chair of obstetrics and gynecology at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York.
Specialists in her field haven’t really started talking about how to communicate with women about the vaccine, said Dr. Riley, who chairs the immunization group at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
“Everyone’s been waiting to see if it gets approved,” she said. “The education has to start soon, but it’s hard to roll out education before you roll out the shot.”
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.
FDA OKs sacituzumab govitecan for HR+ metastatic breast cancer
for patients with unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic hormone receptor (HR)–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer after endocrine-based therapy and at least two additional systemic therapies for metastatic disease.
Label expansion for the Trop-2–directed antibody-drug conjugate was based on the TROPICS-02 trial, which randomized 543 adults 1:1 to either sacituzumab govitecan 10 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle or single agent chemotherapy, most often eribulin but also vinorelbine, gemcitabine, or capecitabine.
Median progression free survival was 5.5 months with sacituzumab govitecan versus 4 months with single agent chemotherapy (hazard ratio, 0.66; P = .0003). Median overall survival was 14.4 months in the sacituzumab govitecan group versus 11.2 months with chemotherapy (HR, 0.79), according to an FDA press release announcing the approval.
In a Gilead press release, Hope Rugo, MD, a breast cancer specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, and principal investigator for TROPICS-02, said the approval “is significant for the breast cancer community. We have had limited options to offer patients after endocrine-based therapy and chemotherapy, and to see a clinically meaningful survival benefit of more than 3 months with a quality-of-life benefit for these women is exceptional.”
The most common adverse events associated with sacituzumab govitecan in the trial, occurring in a quarter or more of participants, were decreased leukocyte count, decreased neutrophil count, decreased hemoglobin, decreased lymphocyte count, diarrhea, fatigue, nausea, alopecia, glucose elevation, constipation, and decreased albumin.
Labeling for the agent carries a boxedwarning of severe or life-threatening neutropenia and severe diarrhea.
The recommended dose is the trial dose: 10 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 8 of 21-day cycles until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Sacituzumab govitecan was previously approved for unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer after two or more prior systemic therapies and locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer after platinum-based chemotherapy and either a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
for patients with unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic hormone receptor (HR)–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer after endocrine-based therapy and at least two additional systemic therapies for metastatic disease.
Label expansion for the Trop-2–directed antibody-drug conjugate was based on the TROPICS-02 trial, which randomized 543 adults 1:1 to either sacituzumab govitecan 10 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle or single agent chemotherapy, most often eribulin but also vinorelbine, gemcitabine, or capecitabine.
Median progression free survival was 5.5 months with sacituzumab govitecan versus 4 months with single agent chemotherapy (hazard ratio, 0.66; P = .0003). Median overall survival was 14.4 months in the sacituzumab govitecan group versus 11.2 months with chemotherapy (HR, 0.79), according to an FDA press release announcing the approval.
In a Gilead press release, Hope Rugo, MD, a breast cancer specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, and principal investigator for TROPICS-02, said the approval “is significant for the breast cancer community. We have had limited options to offer patients after endocrine-based therapy and chemotherapy, and to see a clinically meaningful survival benefit of more than 3 months with a quality-of-life benefit for these women is exceptional.”
The most common adverse events associated with sacituzumab govitecan in the trial, occurring in a quarter or more of participants, were decreased leukocyte count, decreased neutrophil count, decreased hemoglobin, decreased lymphocyte count, diarrhea, fatigue, nausea, alopecia, glucose elevation, constipation, and decreased albumin.
Labeling for the agent carries a boxedwarning of severe or life-threatening neutropenia and severe diarrhea.
The recommended dose is the trial dose: 10 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 8 of 21-day cycles until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Sacituzumab govitecan was previously approved for unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer after two or more prior systemic therapies and locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer after platinum-based chemotherapy and either a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.
for patients with unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic hormone receptor (HR)–positive, HER2-negative breast cancer after endocrine-based therapy and at least two additional systemic therapies for metastatic disease.
Label expansion for the Trop-2–directed antibody-drug conjugate was based on the TROPICS-02 trial, which randomized 543 adults 1:1 to either sacituzumab govitecan 10 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 8 of a 21-day cycle or single agent chemotherapy, most often eribulin but also vinorelbine, gemcitabine, or capecitabine.
Median progression free survival was 5.5 months with sacituzumab govitecan versus 4 months with single agent chemotherapy (hazard ratio, 0.66; P = .0003). Median overall survival was 14.4 months in the sacituzumab govitecan group versus 11.2 months with chemotherapy (HR, 0.79), according to an FDA press release announcing the approval.
In a Gilead press release, Hope Rugo, MD, a breast cancer specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, and principal investigator for TROPICS-02, said the approval “is significant for the breast cancer community. We have had limited options to offer patients after endocrine-based therapy and chemotherapy, and to see a clinically meaningful survival benefit of more than 3 months with a quality-of-life benefit for these women is exceptional.”
The most common adverse events associated with sacituzumab govitecan in the trial, occurring in a quarter or more of participants, were decreased leukocyte count, decreased neutrophil count, decreased hemoglobin, decreased lymphocyte count, diarrhea, fatigue, nausea, alopecia, glucose elevation, constipation, and decreased albumin.
Labeling for the agent carries a boxedwarning of severe or life-threatening neutropenia and severe diarrhea.
The recommended dose is the trial dose: 10 mg/kg IV on days 1 and 8 of 21-day cycles until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity.
Sacituzumab govitecan was previously approved for unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic triple-negative breast cancer after two or more prior systemic therapies and locally advanced or metastatic urothelial cancer after platinum-based chemotherapy and either a PD-1 or PD-L1 inhibitor.
A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.