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Renowned Catholic psychiatrist compares transgender movement to eugenics movement

Why Deadly Black Fungus Is Ravaging COVID Patients in India

Scientific American Standard treatments such as steroids, as well as illnesses such as diabetes, make the fungal infection worse Print A doctor examines a patient with black fungus, a deadly infection, at a civil hospital in Ahmedabad in India Credit: Sam Panthaky Advertisement The hospital of the Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences, a medical school in the town of Sevagram in the Indian state of Maharashtra, has been taking in patients afflicted with COVID since May 2020. But in the middle of last month something changed. Patients arrived with problems the physicians there had not yet seen in the pandemic: people were not only breathless and feverish but had pain and pressure behind their cheekbones and around their eyes.

India COVID-19 variant exhibits resistance; antibody drug shows promise

By Syndicated Content By Nancy Lapid (Reuters) – The following is a roundup of some of the latest scientific studies on the novel coronavirus and efforts to find treatments and vaccines for COVID-19, the illness caused by the virus. India variant shows resistance to antibody drugs, vaccines Antibody drugs and COVID-19 vaccines are less effective against a coronavirus variant that was first detected in India, according to researchers. The variant, known as B.1.617.2, has mutations that make it more transmissible. It is now predominant in some parts of India and has spread to many other countries. A multicenter team of scientists in France studied a B.1.617.2 variant isolated from a traveler returning from India. Compared to the B.1.1.7 variant first identified in Britain, the India variant was more resistant to antibody drugs, although three currently approved drugs still remained effective against it, they found. Antibodies in blood from unvaccinated COVID-19 surviv

Farmworker fairness, nasal spray fix: News from around our 50 states

From USA TODAY Network and wire reports Alabama Montgomery: Gov. Kay Ivey on Monday signed legislation banning so-called vaccine passports, making Alabama the latest state to try to prohibit requiring proof of a COVID-19 vaccination to enter a business, school or event. The legislation by Sen. Arthur Orr, R-Decatur, would prohibit government entities from issuing “vaccine or immunization passports” or other “standardized documentation for the purpose of certifying immunization status.” The bill makes exemptions for child immunization forms and “other applicable state law.” It would also prevent people from being denied entry to businesses, universities and state agencies if not vaccinated against COVID-19. The legislation does not specify a penalty for violations. The state House stripped language that would have exempted health offices and nursing homes and added that universities cannot require students to have vaccines developed after Jan. 1, 2021. “I am supportive

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