168 Health Research Report WHITE PAPER /ROUGH COPY 168th Issue Date 16 NOV 2013 Compiled By Ralph Turchiano http://www.vit.bz www.youtube.com/vhfilmhttp://www.engineeringevil.comhttp://www.healthresearchreport.me In this Issue: 1. The most commonly prescribed treatment for Colds and Sore Throats offers no benefit and… Read More ›
A long road lies ahead of Joe Biden as he decides how to address the COVID pandemic.
USA TODAY
Opinion columnists
The USA TODAY Opinion section asked members of our Board of Contributors, What is the most important step Joe Biden can immediately take to address COVID?
Stand firm and lead
Biden pandemic relief package is a strong starting point signaling that his administration plans to do not only what it can but what is necessary to curb this crisis. He also has to send a strong signal to Congress and the nation that these vital solutions won’t be politicized or picked apart, holding firm on his proposal and bringing along every Democrat and maybe even some Republicans in support. The last president divided us while exploiting and exacerbating the virus of political motives. This president can indeed unite us around our common suffering and competent solutions if he stands firm and leads.
E-Mail
Suppose Smokey the Bear were to go on a tear and start setting forest fires instead of putting them out. That roughly describes the behavior of certain cells of our immune system that become increasingly irascible as we grow older. Instead of stamping out embers, they stoke the flames of chronic inflammation.
Biologists have long theorized that reducing this inflammation could slow the aging process and delay the onset of age-associated conditions, such as heart disease, Alzheimer s disease, cancer and frailty, and perhaps even forestall the gradual loss of mental acuity that happens to nearly everyone.
Yet the question of what, exactly, causes particular cells of the immune system to kick into inflammatory overdrive has lacked a definitive answer.
Conventional wisdom suggests that pregnant mothers should have a healthier lifestyle for their babies.
During pregnancy, the mother s medical conditions and pre-existing conditions are observed to know these conditions can impact their baby.
The recent study
A pregnant mother s health condition is important during pregnancy. However, a recent study says that miscarriage or stillbirth is influenced by the father s health as much as the mother s health does.
The study was led by an associate professor from Stanford University School of Medicine, Michael Eisenberg. It was published in the journal Human Reproduction.
Before determining that a father s health is related to stillbirth and miscarriages, the study observed millions of pregnancies in the United States.
Washington, DC – Over the past 10 months of despair and hardship wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, the prospect of an effective vaccine was always seen as the light at the end of the tunnel.
That hope appeared to materialise last month when US health authorities approved two vaccines for emergency use across the country.
But weeks after the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) cleared the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, public health experts say immunisation efforts have been glacially slow and haphazard.
“The roll-out of the vaccine has been slower than expected, but it’s also frankly been chaotic,” said Kevin Schulman, a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine in California.