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Bullying in academic medicine rife, underreported

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Bullying in academic medicine, especially among women, is rife, underreported, and remains largely unaddressed, new research suggests.

Investigators reviewed close to 70 studies, encompassing over 82,000 medical consultants or trainees in academic medical settings, and found that men were identified as the most common perpetrators – close to 70% of respondents – whereas women were the most common victims (56%).

Collectively, respondents in all of the studies identified the most common bullies to be consultants (54%), followed by residents (22%), and nurses (15%).

Disturbingly, less than one-third of victims overall reported that they were bullied, and close to 60% who formally reported the abuse said they did not have a positive outcome.

“We found that bullies are commonly men and senior consultants, while more than half of their victims are women,” senior author Harriette G.C. Van Spall, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and director of e-health and virtual care, Division of Cardiology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., said in an interview.

“The greatest barriers to addressing academic bullying are the fear of reprisal, lack of impact of reporting, and non-enforcement of anti-bullying policies,” she added.

The study was published online July 12 in BMJ Open.
 

Personal experience

The study was “inspired by experiences that I endured over a period of time and am grateful to have survived,” said Dr. Van Spall.

“Some behaviors were excruciating to deal with, protesting against them would bring more on, and every day was filled with dread. It took sheer will to show up at work to care for patients, to complete research I was leading, and to have hope, and my academic output, income, and personal well-being dropped during those years,” she added.

Dr. Van Spall thought the subject “merited research because our performance as clinicians, researchers, and educators relies on our work environment.”

To investigate, the researchers reviewed 68 studies (n = 82,349 respondents) conducted between 1999 and 2021 in academic medical settings, in which victims were either consultants or trainees. Many of the studies (31) were conducted in the U.S.

Other countries included the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, Turkey, New Zealand, Lithuania, Greece, India, Germany, Nigeria, Oman, and Finland.

Studies were required to describe the method and impact of bullying; characteristics of the perpetrators and victims; or interventions that were used to address the bullying.

“Bullying” was defined as “the abuse of authority by a perpetrator who targets the victim in an academic setting through punishing behaviors that include overwork, destabilization, and isolation in order to impede the education or career of the target.”
 

Systemic sexism

Bullying behaviors, reported in 28 studies (n = 35,779 respondents), were grouped into destabilization, threats to professional status, overwork, and isolation, with overwork found to be the most common form of bullying.

The most common impact of being bullied was psychological distress, reported by 39.1% of respondents in 14 studies, followed by considerations of quitting (35.9%; 7 studies), and worsening of clinical performance (34.6%, 8 studies).

“Among demographic groups, men were identified as the most common perpetrators (67.2% of 4,722 respondents in 5 studies) and women the most common victims (56.2% of 15,246 respondents in 27 studies),” the authors report.

“Academic medicine in many institutions is encumbered by systemic sexism that is evident in processes around remuneration, recognition, opportunities for advancement, and leadership positions,” said Dr. Van Spall.

“There are fewer women at decision-making tables in academic medicine, the climb is uphill at the best of times, and women are likely easier targets for bullies, as their voices are easier to drown out,” she added.

She noted that many men do “exhibit wonderful attributes of professionalism and decency,” but “some in positions of power are given impunity by virtue of other accomplishments.”
 

 

 

Multiple deterrents

Thirty-one studies (n = 15,868) described characteristics of the bullies and showed the most common to be consultants (53.6% [30 studies]), residents (22% [22 studies]), and nurses (14.9% [21 studies]).

Only a minority of victims (28.9% of 9,410 victims [10 studies]) formally reported the bullying. The researchers identified multiple deterrents to reporting.

When a formal complaint was submitted (n = 1,139 respondents), it most frequently had no perceived effect (35.6%); more than one-fifth (21.9%) experienced worsening of the bullying, and only 13.7% reported improvement.

The common institutional facilitators of bullying, described in 25 studies, included lack of enforcement of anti-bullying policies (13 studies), the hierarchical structure of medicine (7 studies), and normalization of bullying (10 studies).

Forty-nine studies looked at strategies to address academic bullying, including anti-bullying policies, mandatory workshops on mistreatment, establishing an anti-bullying oversight committee, and institutional support for victims. However, the studies testing the effectiveness of these interventions “had a high risk of bias.”
 

Support available

Commenting on the research for this news organization, Roberta Gebhard, DO, past president of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA) and a member of the advisory board for Physician Just Equity, called it a “good study, large, international, and well-written.”

Dr. Gebhard, a member of the Governing Council for the American Medical Association Women Physician Section, was not associated with this study but said she is currently researching women who left medical school and residency.

“A common reason for leaving is being bullied. Bullying is often not reported and if reported, often not addressed. Or, if addressed, the person who reports it is often retaliated against, which is a common experience, especially in women.”

She advised female physicians who are bullied to get support from other female physicians – for example, by joining the AMWA, which has an online women’s leadership group.

“Having other women physicians throughout the country you can call for advice and support can be helpful,” said Dr. Gebhard, a family practice physician based in Grand Island, New York.

Dr. Van Spall receives support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Heart and Stroke Foundation, the Women As One Escalator Award, and McMaster Department of Medicine. The study authors and Dr. Gebhard have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Bullying in academic medicine, especially among women, is rife, underreported, and remains largely unaddressed, new research suggests.

Investigators reviewed close to 70 studies, encompassing over 82,000 medical consultants or trainees in academic medical settings, and found that men were identified as the most common perpetrators – close to 70% of respondents – whereas women were the most common victims (56%).

Collectively, respondents in all of the studies identified the most common bullies to be consultants (54%), followed by residents (22%), and nurses (15%).

Disturbingly, less than one-third of victims overall reported that they were bullied, and close to 60% who formally reported the abuse said they did not have a positive outcome.

“We found that bullies are commonly men and senior consultants, while more than half of their victims are women,” senior author Harriette G.C. Van Spall, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and director of e-health and virtual care, Division of Cardiology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., said in an interview.

“The greatest barriers to addressing academic bullying are the fear of reprisal, lack of impact of reporting, and non-enforcement of anti-bullying policies,” she added.

The study was published online July 12 in BMJ Open.
 

Personal experience

The study was “inspired by experiences that I endured over a period of time and am grateful to have survived,” said Dr. Van Spall.

“Some behaviors were excruciating to deal with, protesting against them would bring more on, and every day was filled with dread. It took sheer will to show up at work to care for patients, to complete research I was leading, and to have hope, and my academic output, income, and personal well-being dropped during those years,” she added.

Dr. Van Spall thought the subject “merited research because our performance as clinicians, researchers, and educators relies on our work environment.”

To investigate, the researchers reviewed 68 studies (n = 82,349 respondents) conducted between 1999 and 2021 in academic medical settings, in which victims were either consultants or trainees. Many of the studies (31) were conducted in the U.S.

Other countries included the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, Turkey, New Zealand, Lithuania, Greece, India, Germany, Nigeria, Oman, and Finland.

Studies were required to describe the method and impact of bullying; characteristics of the perpetrators and victims; or interventions that were used to address the bullying.

“Bullying” was defined as “the abuse of authority by a perpetrator who targets the victim in an academic setting through punishing behaviors that include overwork, destabilization, and isolation in order to impede the education or career of the target.”
 

Systemic sexism

Bullying behaviors, reported in 28 studies (n = 35,779 respondents), were grouped into destabilization, threats to professional status, overwork, and isolation, with overwork found to be the most common form of bullying.

The most common impact of being bullied was psychological distress, reported by 39.1% of respondents in 14 studies, followed by considerations of quitting (35.9%; 7 studies), and worsening of clinical performance (34.6%, 8 studies).

“Among demographic groups, men were identified as the most common perpetrators (67.2% of 4,722 respondents in 5 studies) and women the most common victims (56.2% of 15,246 respondents in 27 studies),” the authors report.

“Academic medicine in many institutions is encumbered by systemic sexism that is evident in processes around remuneration, recognition, opportunities for advancement, and leadership positions,” said Dr. Van Spall.

“There are fewer women at decision-making tables in academic medicine, the climb is uphill at the best of times, and women are likely easier targets for bullies, as their voices are easier to drown out,” she added.

She noted that many men do “exhibit wonderful attributes of professionalism and decency,” but “some in positions of power are given impunity by virtue of other accomplishments.”
 

 

 

Multiple deterrents

Thirty-one studies (n = 15,868) described characteristics of the bullies and showed the most common to be consultants (53.6% [30 studies]), residents (22% [22 studies]), and nurses (14.9% [21 studies]).

Only a minority of victims (28.9% of 9,410 victims [10 studies]) formally reported the bullying. The researchers identified multiple deterrents to reporting.

When a formal complaint was submitted (n = 1,139 respondents), it most frequently had no perceived effect (35.6%); more than one-fifth (21.9%) experienced worsening of the bullying, and only 13.7% reported improvement.

The common institutional facilitators of bullying, described in 25 studies, included lack of enforcement of anti-bullying policies (13 studies), the hierarchical structure of medicine (7 studies), and normalization of bullying (10 studies).

Forty-nine studies looked at strategies to address academic bullying, including anti-bullying policies, mandatory workshops on mistreatment, establishing an anti-bullying oversight committee, and institutional support for victims. However, the studies testing the effectiveness of these interventions “had a high risk of bias.”
 

Support available

Commenting on the research for this news organization, Roberta Gebhard, DO, past president of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA) and a member of the advisory board for Physician Just Equity, called it a “good study, large, international, and well-written.”

Dr. Gebhard, a member of the Governing Council for the American Medical Association Women Physician Section, was not associated with this study but said she is currently researching women who left medical school and residency.

“A common reason for leaving is being bullied. Bullying is often not reported and if reported, often not addressed. Or, if addressed, the person who reports it is often retaliated against, which is a common experience, especially in women.”

She advised female physicians who are bullied to get support from other female physicians – for example, by joining the AMWA, which has an online women’s leadership group.

“Having other women physicians throughout the country you can call for advice and support can be helpful,” said Dr. Gebhard, a family practice physician based in Grand Island, New York.

Dr. Van Spall receives support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Heart and Stroke Foundation, the Women As One Escalator Award, and McMaster Department of Medicine. The study authors and Dr. Gebhard have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

Bullying in academic medicine, especially among women, is rife, underreported, and remains largely unaddressed, new research suggests.

Investigators reviewed close to 70 studies, encompassing over 82,000 medical consultants or trainees in academic medical settings, and found that men were identified as the most common perpetrators – close to 70% of respondents – whereas women were the most common victims (56%).

Collectively, respondents in all of the studies identified the most common bullies to be consultants (54%), followed by residents (22%), and nurses (15%).

Disturbingly, less than one-third of victims overall reported that they were bullied, and close to 60% who formally reported the abuse said they did not have a positive outcome.

“We found that bullies are commonly men and senior consultants, while more than half of their victims are women,” senior author Harriette G.C. Van Spall, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine and director of e-health and virtual care, Division of Cardiology, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., said in an interview.

“The greatest barriers to addressing academic bullying are the fear of reprisal, lack of impact of reporting, and non-enforcement of anti-bullying policies,” she added.

The study was published online July 12 in BMJ Open.
 

Personal experience

The study was “inspired by experiences that I endured over a period of time and am grateful to have survived,” said Dr. Van Spall.

“Some behaviors were excruciating to deal with, protesting against them would bring more on, and every day was filled with dread. It took sheer will to show up at work to care for patients, to complete research I was leading, and to have hope, and my academic output, income, and personal well-being dropped during those years,” she added.

Dr. Van Spall thought the subject “merited research because our performance as clinicians, researchers, and educators relies on our work environment.”

To investigate, the researchers reviewed 68 studies (n = 82,349 respondents) conducted between 1999 and 2021 in academic medical settings, in which victims were either consultants or trainees. Many of the studies (31) were conducted in the U.S.

Other countries included the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, Turkey, New Zealand, Lithuania, Greece, India, Germany, Nigeria, Oman, and Finland.

Studies were required to describe the method and impact of bullying; characteristics of the perpetrators and victims; or interventions that were used to address the bullying.

“Bullying” was defined as “the abuse of authority by a perpetrator who targets the victim in an academic setting through punishing behaviors that include overwork, destabilization, and isolation in order to impede the education or career of the target.”
 

Systemic sexism

Bullying behaviors, reported in 28 studies (n = 35,779 respondents), were grouped into destabilization, threats to professional status, overwork, and isolation, with overwork found to be the most common form of bullying.

The most common impact of being bullied was psychological distress, reported by 39.1% of respondents in 14 studies, followed by considerations of quitting (35.9%; 7 studies), and worsening of clinical performance (34.6%, 8 studies).

“Among demographic groups, men were identified as the most common perpetrators (67.2% of 4,722 respondents in 5 studies) and women the most common victims (56.2% of 15,246 respondents in 27 studies),” the authors report.

“Academic medicine in many institutions is encumbered by systemic sexism that is evident in processes around remuneration, recognition, opportunities for advancement, and leadership positions,” said Dr. Van Spall.

“There are fewer women at decision-making tables in academic medicine, the climb is uphill at the best of times, and women are likely easier targets for bullies, as their voices are easier to drown out,” she added.

She noted that many men do “exhibit wonderful attributes of professionalism and decency,” but “some in positions of power are given impunity by virtue of other accomplishments.”
 

 

 

Multiple deterrents

Thirty-one studies (n = 15,868) described characteristics of the bullies and showed the most common to be consultants (53.6% [30 studies]), residents (22% [22 studies]), and nurses (14.9% [21 studies]).

Only a minority of victims (28.9% of 9,410 victims [10 studies]) formally reported the bullying. The researchers identified multiple deterrents to reporting.

When a formal complaint was submitted (n = 1,139 respondents), it most frequently had no perceived effect (35.6%); more than one-fifth (21.9%) experienced worsening of the bullying, and only 13.7% reported improvement.

The common institutional facilitators of bullying, described in 25 studies, included lack of enforcement of anti-bullying policies (13 studies), the hierarchical structure of medicine (7 studies), and normalization of bullying (10 studies).

Forty-nine studies looked at strategies to address academic bullying, including anti-bullying policies, mandatory workshops on mistreatment, establishing an anti-bullying oversight committee, and institutional support for victims. However, the studies testing the effectiveness of these interventions “had a high risk of bias.”
 

Support available

Commenting on the research for this news organization, Roberta Gebhard, DO, past president of the American Medical Women’s Association (AMWA) and a member of the advisory board for Physician Just Equity, called it a “good study, large, international, and well-written.”

Dr. Gebhard, a member of the Governing Council for the American Medical Association Women Physician Section, was not associated with this study but said she is currently researching women who left medical school and residency.

“A common reason for leaving is being bullied. Bullying is often not reported and if reported, often not addressed. Or, if addressed, the person who reports it is often retaliated against, which is a common experience, especially in women.”

She advised female physicians who are bullied to get support from other female physicians – for example, by joining the AMWA, which has an online women’s leadership group.

“Having other women physicians throughout the country you can call for advice and support can be helpful,” said Dr. Gebhard, a family practice physician based in Grand Island, New York.

Dr. Van Spall receives support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Heart and Stroke Foundation, the Women As One Escalator Award, and McMaster Department of Medicine. The study authors and Dr. Gebhard have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Dogs know their humans, but humans don’t know expiration dates

Article Type
Changed
Thu, 07/15/2021 - 10:13

 

An extreme price to pay for immortality

We know that men don’t live as long as women, but the reasons aren’t entirely clear. However, some New Zealand scientists have a thought on the subject, thanks to a sheep called Shrek.

Max Pixel

The researchers were inspired by a famous old sheep who escaped captivity, but was captured 6 years later at the age of 10. The sheep then lived 6 more years, far beyond the lifespan of a normal sheep, capturing the hearts and minds of Kiwis everywhere. Look, it’s New Zealand, sheep are life, so it’s only natural the country got attached. Scientists from the University of Otago suspected that Shrek lived such a long life because he was castrated.

So they undertook a study of sheep, and lo and behold, sheep that were castrated lived significantly longer than their uncastrated kin, thanks to a slowing of their epigenetic clocks – the DNA aged noticeably slower in the castrated sheep.

Although the research can most immediately be applied to the improvement of the New Zealand sheep industry, the implication for humanity is also apparent. Want to live longer? Get rid of the testosterone. An extreme solution to be sure. As previously reported in this column, researchers wanted to torture our mouths to get us to lose weight, and now they want to castrate people for longer life. What exactly is going on down there in New Zealand?

Man’s best mind reader

There are a lot of reasons why dogs are sometimes called “man’s best friend,” but the root of it may actually have something to do with how easily we communicate with each other. Researchers dug deeper and fetched something that Fido is born with, but his wild wolf cousin isn’t.

FreeImages.com/Boris Benko

That something is known as the “theory of mind” ability. Have you noticed that when you point and tell dogs to grab a leash or toy, they react as if they understood the language you spoke? Researchers from Duke University wondered if this ability is a canine thing or just a domesticated dog thing.

They compared 44 canine puppies and 37 wolf pups between 5 and 18 weeks old. The wolf pups were taken into human homes and raised with a great amount of human interaction, while the dog pups were left with their mothers and raised with less human interaction.

All the puppies were then put through multiple tests. In one test, they were given clues to find a treat under a bowl. In another test, a block of wood was placed next to the treat as a physical marker. During yet another test, researchers pointed to the food directly.

The researchers discovered that the dog puppies knew where the treat was every time, while their wild relatives didn’t.

“This study really solidifies the evidence that the social genius of dogs is a product of domestication,” senior author Brian Hare said in a separate statement.

The domestication hypothesis theorizes that dogs picked up the human social cues through thousands of years of interaction. The more friendly and cooperative a wolf was with humans, the more likely it was to survive and pass on those same traits and practices. Even within the study, the dog puppies were 30 times more likely to approach a stranger than were the wolf pups.

You may think your dog understands everything you say, but it’s actually body language that Fido is most fluent in.

 

I’m not a dentist, but I play one on TikTok

In last week’s column, it was garlic cloves up the nose to treat a cold. This week, TikTok brings us a new way to whiten teeth.

pxfuel

Familiar with the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser? If not, we’ll save you the trouble of Googling it: Check it out here and here.

Have you heard anything about using it to clean your teeth? No, neither did we, and we did a lot of Googling. Proctor & Gamble, which makes the Magic Eraser, goes so far as to say on the package: “Do not use on skin or other parts of the body. Using on skin will likely cause abrasions.” (The warning is actually in all caps, but we are stylistically forbidden by our editorial overlords to do that.)

But it’s magic, right? How can you not use it on your teeth? Enter TikTok. Heather Dunn posted a video in which she rubbed a bit of a Magic Eraser on her teeth – being careful to avoid her gums, because you can never be too careful – “as the product squeaked back and forth,” the Miami Herald reported. The video has almost 256,000 likes so far.

“Yeah, your teeth are white because you scrubbed all the enamel off them. So don’t do this,” Dr. Benjamin Winters, aka the Bentist, said in a YouTube video that has 105,000 likes.

In this race for common sense, common sense is losing. Please help the Bentist restore sanity to the dental world by liking his video. It would make Mr. Clean happy.

Don’t let an expiration date boss you around

Surely you’ve been there: It’s Taco Tuesday and you’re rummaging through the refrigerator to find that shredded cheese you’re sure you have. Jackpot! You find it, but realize it’s probably been in the refrigerator for a while. You open the bag, it smells and looks fine, but the expiration date was 2 days ago. Now you have a decision to make. Maybe you’ll be fine, or maybe you’ll risk food poisoning right before your brother’s wedding.

Richard Franki/MDedge News

But here’s the truth: Americans throw away perfectly good food every day. The average American family throws out $1,365 to $2,275 worth of food a year, according to a 2013 study.

Truthfully, expiration dates are not for buyers, rather they’re for stores to have an idea of their stock’s freshness. Emily Broad Leib, director of the Harvard Law School Food and Policy Clinic and lead author of the 2013 study, told Vox that manufacturers use the dates as a way of “protecting the brand” to keep consumers from eating food that’s just a little past its peak.

With approximately 40 million people in the United States concerned about where their next meal is coming from, the Vox article noted, we need to reevaluate our system. Our national misunderstanding of expiration labels is hurting both suppliers and consumers because perfectly good food is wasted.

Sure, there is always that chance that something might be a little funky after a certain amount of time, but all in all, food probably stays fresh a lot longer than we think. Don’t always judge the shredded cheese by its expiration date.

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An extreme price to pay for immortality

We know that men don’t live as long as women, but the reasons aren’t entirely clear. However, some New Zealand scientists have a thought on the subject, thanks to a sheep called Shrek.

Max Pixel

The researchers were inspired by a famous old sheep who escaped captivity, but was captured 6 years later at the age of 10. The sheep then lived 6 more years, far beyond the lifespan of a normal sheep, capturing the hearts and minds of Kiwis everywhere. Look, it’s New Zealand, sheep are life, so it’s only natural the country got attached. Scientists from the University of Otago suspected that Shrek lived such a long life because he was castrated.

So they undertook a study of sheep, and lo and behold, sheep that were castrated lived significantly longer than their uncastrated kin, thanks to a slowing of their epigenetic clocks – the DNA aged noticeably slower in the castrated sheep.

Although the research can most immediately be applied to the improvement of the New Zealand sheep industry, the implication for humanity is also apparent. Want to live longer? Get rid of the testosterone. An extreme solution to be sure. As previously reported in this column, researchers wanted to torture our mouths to get us to lose weight, and now they want to castrate people for longer life. What exactly is going on down there in New Zealand?

Man’s best mind reader

There are a lot of reasons why dogs are sometimes called “man’s best friend,” but the root of it may actually have something to do with how easily we communicate with each other. Researchers dug deeper and fetched something that Fido is born with, but his wild wolf cousin isn’t.

FreeImages.com/Boris Benko

That something is known as the “theory of mind” ability. Have you noticed that when you point and tell dogs to grab a leash or toy, they react as if they understood the language you spoke? Researchers from Duke University wondered if this ability is a canine thing or just a domesticated dog thing.

They compared 44 canine puppies and 37 wolf pups between 5 and 18 weeks old. The wolf pups were taken into human homes and raised with a great amount of human interaction, while the dog pups were left with their mothers and raised with less human interaction.

All the puppies were then put through multiple tests. In one test, they were given clues to find a treat under a bowl. In another test, a block of wood was placed next to the treat as a physical marker. During yet another test, researchers pointed to the food directly.

The researchers discovered that the dog puppies knew where the treat was every time, while their wild relatives didn’t.

“This study really solidifies the evidence that the social genius of dogs is a product of domestication,” senior author Brian Hare said in a separate statement.

The domestication hypothesis theorizes that dogs picked up the human social cues through thousands of years of interaction. The more friendly and cooperative a wolf was with humans, the more likely it was to survive and pass on those same traits and practices. Even within the study, the dog puppies were 30 times more likely to approach a stranger than were the wolf pups.

You may think your dog understands everything you say, but it’s actually body language that Fido is most fluent in.

 

I’m not a dentist, but I play one on TikTok

In last week’s column, it was garlic cloves up the nose to treat a cold. This week, TikTok brings us a new way to whiten teeth.

pxfuel

Familiar with the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser? If not, we’ll save you the trouble of Googling it: Check it out here and here.

Have you heard anything about using it to clean your teeth? No, neither did we, and we did a lot of Googling. Proctor & Gamble, which makes the Magic Eraser, goes so far as to say on the package: “Do not use on skin or other parts of the body. Using on skin will likely cause abrasions.” (The warning is actually in all caps, but we are stylistically forbidden by our editorial overlords to do that.)

But it’s magic, right? How can you not use it on your teeth? Enter TikTok. Heather Dunn posted a video in which she rubbed a bit of a Magic Eraser on her teeth – being careful to avoid her gums, because you can never be too careful – “as the product squeaked back and forth,” the Miami Herald reported. The video has almost 256,000 likes so far.

“Yeah, your teeth are white because you scrubbed all the enamel off them. So don’t do this,” Dr. Benjamin Winters, aka the Bentist, said in a YouTube video that has 105,000 likes.

In this race for common sense, common sense is losing. Please help the Bentist restore sanity to the dental world by liking his video. It would make Mr. Clean happy.

Don’t let an expiration date boss you around

Surely you’ve been there: It’s Taco Tuesday and you’re rummaging through the refrigerator to find that shredded cheese you’re sure you have. Jackpot! You find it, but realize it’s probably been in the refrigerator for a while. You open the bag, it smells and looks fine, but the expiration date was 2 days ago. Now you have a decision to make. Maybe you’ll be fine, or maybe you’ll risk food poisoning right before your brother’s wedding.

Richard Franki/MDedge News

But here’s the truth: Americans throw away perfectly good food every day. The average American family throws out $1,365 to $2,275 worth of food a year, according to a 2013 study.

Truthfully, expiration dates are not for buyers, rather they’re for stores to have an idea of their stock’s freshness. Emily Broad Leib, director of the Harvard Law School Food and Policy Clinic and lead author of the 2013 study, told Vox that manufacturers use the dates as a way of “protecting the brand” to keep consumers from eating food that’s just a little past its peak.

With approximately 40 million people in the United States concerned about where their next meal is coming from, the Vox article noted, we need to reevaluate our system. Our national misunderstanding of expiration labels is hurting both suppliers and consumers because perfectly good food is wasted.

Sure, there is always that chance that something might be a little funky after a certain amount of time, but all in all, food probably stays fresh a lot longer than we think. Don’t always judge the shredded cheese by its expiration date.

 

An extreme price to pay for immortality

We know that men don’t live as long as women, but the reasons aren’t entirely clear. However, some New Zealand scientists have a thought on the subject, thanks to a sheep called Shrek.

Max Pixel

The researchers were inspired by a famous old sheep who escaped captivity, but was captured 6 years later at the age of 10. The sheep then lived 6 more years, far beyond the lifespan of a normal sheep, capturing the hearts and minds of Kiwis everywhere. Look, it’s New Zealand, sheep are life, so it’s only natural the country got attached. Scientists from the University of Otago suspected that Shrek lived such a long life because he was castrated.

So they undertook a study of sheep, and lo and behold, sheep that were castrated lived significantly longer than their uncastrated kin, thanks to a slowing of their epigenetic clocks – the DNA aged noticeably slower in the castrated sheep.

Although the research can most immediately be applied to the improvement of the New Zealand sheep industry, the implication for humanity is also apparent. Want to live longer? Get rid of the testosterone. An extreme solution to be sure. As previously reported in this column, researchers wanted to torture our mouths to get us to lose weight, and now they want to castrate people for longer life. What exactly is going on down there in New Zealand?

Man’s best mind reader

There are a lot of reasons why dogs are sometimes called “man’s best friend,” but the root of it may actually have something to do with how easily we communicate with each other. Researchers dug deeper and fetched something that Fido is born with, but his wild wolf cousin isn’t.

FreeImages.com/Boris Benko

That something is known as the “theory of mind” ability. Have you noticed that when you point and tell dogs to grab a leash or toy, they react as if they understood the language you spoke? Researchers from Duke University wondered if this ability is a canine thing or just a domesticated dog thing.

They compared 44 canine puppies and 37 wolf pups between 5 and 18 weeks old. The wolf pups were taken into human homes and raised with a great amount of human interaction, while the dog pups were left with their mothers and raised with less human interaction.

All the puppies were then put through multiple tests. In one test, they were given clues to find a treat under a bowl. In another test, a block of wood was placed next to the treat as a physical marker. During yet another test, researchers pointed to the food directly.

The researchers discovered that the dog puppies knew where the treat was every time, while their wild relatives didn’t.

“This study really solidifies the evidence that the social genius of dogs is a product of domestication,” senior author Brian Hare said in a separate statement.

The domestication hypothesis theorizes that dogs picked up the human social cues through thousands of years of interaction. The more friendly and cooperative a wolf was with humans, the more likely it was to survive and pass on those same traits and practices. Even within the study, the dog puppies were 30 times more likely to approach a stranger than were the wolf pups.

You may think your dog understands everything you say, but it’s actually body language that Fido is most fluent in.

 

I’m not a dentist, but I play one on TikTok

In last week’s column, it was garlic cloves up the nose to treat a cold. This week, TikTok brings us a new way to whiten teeth.

pxfuel

Familiar with the Mr. Clean Magic Eraser? If not, we’ll save you the trouble of Googling it: Check it out here and here.

Have you heard anything about using it to clean your teeth? No, neither did we, and we did a lot of Googling. Proctor & Gamble, which makes the Magic Eraser, goes so far as to say on the package: “Do not use on skin or other parts of the body. Using on skin will likely cause abrasions.” (The warning is actually in all caps, but we are stylistically forbidden by our editorial overlords to do that.)

But it’s magic, right? How can you not use it on your teeth? Enter TikTok. Heather Dunn posted a video in which she rubbed a bit of a Magic Eraser on her teeth – being careful to avoid her gums, because you can never be too careful – “as the product squeaked back and forth,” the Miami Herald reported. The video has almost 256,000 likes so far.

“Yeah, your teeth are white because you scrubbed all the enamel off them. So don’t do this,” Dr. Benjamin Winters, aka the Bentist, said in a YouTube video that has 105,000 likes.

In this race for common sense, common sense is losing. Please help the Bentist restore sanity to the dental world by liking his video. It would make Mr. Clean happy.

Don’t let an expiration date boss you around

Surely you’ve been there: It’s Taco Tuesday and you’re rummaging through the refrigerator to find that shredded cheese you’re sure you have. Jackpot! You find it, but realize it’s probably been in the refrigerator for a while. You open the bag, it smells and looks fine, but the expiration date was 2 days ago. Now you have a decision to make. Maybe you’ll be fine, or maybe you’ll risk food poisoning right before your brother’s wedding.

Richard Franki/MDedge News

But here’s the truth: Americans throw away perfectly good food every day. The average American family throws out $1,365 to $2,275 worth of food a year, according to a 2013 study.

Truthfully, expiration dates are not for buyers, rather they’re for stores to have an idea of their stock’s freshness. Emily Broad Leib, director of the Harvard Law School Food and Policy Clinic and lead author of the 2013 study, told Vox that manufacturers use the dates as a way of “protecting the brand” to keep consumers from eating food that’s just a little past its peak.

With approximately 40 million people in the United States concerned about where their next meal is coming from, the Vox article noted, we need to reevaluate our system. Our national misunderstanding of expiration labels is hurting both suppliers and consumers because perfectly good food is wasted.

Sure, there is always that chance that something might be a little funky after a certain amount of time, but all in all, food probably stays fresh a lot longer than we think. Don’t always judge the shredded cheese by its expiration date.

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Denial or a call to action?

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Changed
Thu, 07/15/2021 - 09:26

Now that everyone in my family has been vaccinated, we’re starting to do more.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

Last week we met my mom and some of her (vaccinated) friends for dinner at a local restaurant. Except for picking up takeout, I hadn’t been to one since early March 2020.

During the usual chatting about jobs, music, my kids, and trips we were thinking about, one of her friends suddenly said: “That’s funny.”

I asked him what was funny, and he said: “My left vision suddenly went dark.”

It only takes a fraction of a second to shift into doctor mode. I asked a few pointed questions and did a quick neuroscan for asymmetries, slurred speech, the things that, after 23 years, have become second nature.

It resolved after about 30 seconds. He clearly didn’t think it was anything to be alarmed about. He’s intelligent and well educated, but not a doctor. I wasn’t going to let it go, and quietly spoke to him a short while later. He may not be my patient, but pushing him in the needed direction is the right thing to do.

I’ve gotten him to the right doctors now, and the ball is rolling, but I keep thinking about it. If I hadn’t been there it’s likely nothing would have been done. In fact, he seemed to think it was more amusing than potentially serious.

Medical blogs and doctors’ lounge stories are full of similar anecdotes, where we wonder why people don’t take such things seriously. We tend to view such people as stupid and/or ignorant.

Yet, this gentleman is neither. I’ve known him since childhood. He’s smart, well educated, and well read. He’s not a medical person, though.

In reality, I don’t think doctors or nurses are any better. Many of us excel at blaming our own symptoms, sometimes worrisome, on less-alarming things. I suspect that’s more human nature, which is hard to override regardless of training.

But maybe it’s time to start giving these people, like my family friend, a pass, with the realization that denial and different training are part of being human, and not something to be poked fun at.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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Now that everyone in my family has been vaccinated, we’re starting to do more.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

Last week we met my mom and some of her (vaccinated) friends for dinner at a local restaurant. Except for picking up takeout, I hadn’t been to one since early March 2020.

During the usual chatting about jobs, music, my kids, and trips we were thinking about, one of her friends suddenly said: “That’s funny.”

I asked him what was funny, and he said: “My left vision suddenly went dark.”

It only takes a fraction of a second to shift into doctor mode. I asked a few pointed questions and did a quick neuroscan for asymmetries, slurred speech, the things that, after 23 years, have become second nature.

It resolved after about 30 seconds. He clearly didn’t think it was anything to be alarmed about. He’s intelligent and well educated, but not a doctor. I wasn’t going to let it go, and quietly spoke to him a short while later. He may not be my patient, but pushing him in the needed direction is the right thing to do.

I’ve gotten him to the right doctors now, and the ball is rolling, but I keep thinking about it. If I hadn’t been there it’s likely nothing would have been done. In fact, he seemed to think it was more amusing than potentially serious.

Medical blogs and doctors’ lounge stories are full of similar anecdotes, where we wonder why people don’t take such things seriously. We tend to view such people as stupid and/or ignorant.

Yet, this gentleman is neither. I’ve known him since childhood. He’s smart, well educated, and well read. He’s not a medical person, though.

In reality, I don’t think doctors or nurses are any better. Many of us excel at blaming our own symptoms, sometimes worrisome, on less-alarming things. I suspect that’s more human nature, which is hard to override regardless of training.

But maybe it’s time to start giving these people, like my family friend, a pass, with the realization that denial and different training are part of being human, and not something to be poked fun at.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

Now that everyone in my family has been vaccinated, we’re starting to do more.

Dr. Allan M. Block, a neurologist in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Dr. Allan M. Block

Last week we met my mom and some of her (vaccinated) friends for dinner at a local restaurant. Except for picking up takeout, I hadn’t been to one since early March 2020.

During the usual chatting about jobs, music, my kids, and trips we were thinking about, one of her friends suddenly said: “That’s funny.”

I asked him what was funny, and he said: “My left vision suddenly went dark.”

It only takes a fraction of a second to shift into doctor mode. I asked a few pointed questions and did a quick neuroscan for asymmetries, slurred speech, the things that, after 23 years, have become second nature.

It resolved after about 30 seconds. He clearly didn’t think it was anything to be alarmed about. He’s intelligent and well educated, but not a doctor. I wasn’t going to let it go, and quietly spoke to him a short while later. He may not be my patient, but pushing him in the needed direction is the right thing to do.

I’ve gotten him to the right doctors now, and the ball is rolling, but I keep thinking about it. If I hadn’t been there it’s likely nothing would have been done. In fact, he seemed to think it was more amusing than potentially serious.

Medical blogs and doctors’ lounge stories are full of similar anecdotes, where we wonder why people don’t take such things seriously. We tend to view such people as stupid and/or ignorant.

Yet, this gentleman is neither. I’ve known him since childhood. He’s smart, well educated, and well read. He’s not a medical person, though.

In reality, I don’t think doctors or nurses are any better. Many of us excel at blaming our own symptoms, sometimes worrisome, on less-alarming things. I suspect that’s more human nature, which is hard to override regardless of training.

But maybe it’s time to start giving these people, like my family friend, a pass, with the realization that denial and different training are part of being human, and not something to be poked fun at.

Dr. Block has a solo neurology practice in Scottsdale, Ariz.

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Florida-based doctor arrested in Haiti president’s assassination

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Thu, 07/15/2021 - 14:47

 

A Haitian-born doctor, who was based in Florida for more than 2 decades, has been arrested as a central suspect in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, according to The New York Times.

About two dozen people have been arrested as suspects, the newspaper reported, though police believe Christian Emmanuel Sanon, 63, was plotting to become president.

“He arrived by private plane in June with political objectives and contacted a private security firm to recruit the people who committed this act,” Léon Charles, Haiti’s national police chief, said during a news conference on July 11.

The firm, called CTU Security, is a Venezuelan company based in Miami, Mr. Charles said. During a raid at Mr. Sanon’s home in Port-au-Prince, police found six rifles, 20 boxes of bullets, 24 unused shooting targets, pistol holsters, and a hat with a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency logo.

“This initial mission that was given to these assailants was to protect the individual named Emmanuel Sanon, but afterwards, the mission changed,” Mr. Charles said.

The new “mission” was to arrest President Moïse and install Mr. Sanon as president, The New York Times reported, though Mr. Charles didn’t explain when the mission changed to assassination or how Mr. Sanon could have taken control of the government.

President Moïse was shot to death on July 7 at his home in Port-au-Prince by a “team of commandos,” according to The Washington Post. On July 9, Haiti asked the U.S. to send troops to the country to protect its airport and key infrastructure.

The announcement of Mr. Sanon’s arrest came hours after FBI and Department of Homeland Security officials arrived in Haiti on July 11 to discuss how the U.S. can offer assistance, the newspaper reported.

Mr. Sanon has a YouTube channel with three political campaign videos from 2011, which include discussions about Haitian politics, according to Forbes. In one of the videos, titled “Dr. Christian Sanon – Leadership for Haiti,” Mr. Sanon talks about corruption in the country and presents himself as a potential leader.

Mr. Sanon lived in Florida for more than 20 years, ranging from the Tampa Bay area to South Florida, according to the Miami Herald. Public records show that he had more than a dozen businesses registered in the state, including medical services and real estate, though most are inactive.

Mr. Sanon is the third person with links to the U.S. who has been arrested in connection with the assassination, the Miami Herald reported. Two Haitian-Americans from southern Florida – James Solages, 35, and Joseph G. Vincent, 55 – were arrested by local police. They claimed they were working as translators for the assassins.

The first lady, Martine Moïse, was wounded in the attack and is now receiving treatment at a hospital in Miami, the newspaper reported.

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

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A Haitian-born doctor, who was based in Florida for more than 2 decades, has been arrested as a central suspect in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, according to The New York Times.

About two dozen people have been arrested as suspects, the newspaper reported, though police believe Christian Emmanuel Sanon, 63, was plotting to become president.

“He arrived by private plane in June with political objectives and contacted a private security firm to recruit the people who committed this act,” Léon Charles, Haiti’s national police chief, said during a news conference on July 11.

The firm, called CTU Security, is a Venezuelan company based in Miami, Mr. Charles said. During a raid at Mr. Sanon’s home in Port-au-Prince, police found six rifles, 20 boxes of bullets, 24 unused shooting targets, pistol holsters, and a hat with a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency logo.

“This initial mission that was given to these assailants was to protect the individual named Emmanuel Sanon, but afterwards, the mission changed,” Mr. Charles said.

The new “mission” was to arrest President Moïse and install Mr. Sanon as president, The New York Times reported, though Mr. Charles didn’t explain when the mission changed to assassination or how Mr. Sanon could have taken control of the government.

President Moïse was shot to death on July 7 at his home in Port-au-Prince by a “team of commandos,” according to The Washington Post. On July 9, Haiti asked the U.S. to send troops to the country to protect its airport and key infrastructure.

The announcement of Mr. Sanon’s arrest came hours after FBI and Department of Homeland Security officials arrived in Haiti on July 11 to discuss how the U.S. can offer assistance, the newspaper reported.

Mr. Sanon has a YouTube channel with three political campaign videos from 2011, which include discussions about Haitian politics, according to Forbes. In one of the videos, titled “Dr. Christian Sanon – Leadership for Haiti,” Mr. Sanon talks about corruption in the country and presents himself as a potential leader.

Mr. Sanon lived in Florida for more than 20 years, ranging from the Tampa Bay area to South Florida, according to the Miami Herald. Public records show that he had more than a dozen businesses registered in the state, including medical services and real estate, though most are inactive.

Mr. Sanon is the third person with links to the U.S. who has been arrested in connection with the assassination, the Miami Herald reported. Two Haitian-Americans from southern Florida – James Solages, 35, and Joseph G. Vincent, 55 – were arrested by local police. They claimed they were working as translators for the assassins.

The first lady, Martine Moïse, was wounded in the attack and is now receiving treatment at a hospital in Miami, the newspaper reported.

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

 

A Haitian-born doctor, who was based in Florida for more than 2 decades, has been arrested as a central suspect in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, according to The New York Times.

About two dozen people have been arrested as suspects, the newspaper reported, though police believe Christian Emmanuel Sanon, 63, was plotting to become president.

“He arrived by private plane in June with political objectives and contacted a private security firm to recruit the people who committed this act,” Léon Charles, Haiti’s national police chief, said during a news conference on July 11.

The firm, called CTU Security, is a Venezuelan company based in Miami, Mr. Charles said. During a raid at Mr. Sanon’s home in Port-au-Prince, police found six rifles, 20 boxes of bullets, 24 unused shooting targets, pistol holsters, and a hat with a U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency logo.

“This initial mission that was given to these assailants was to protect the individual named Emmanuel Sanon, but afterwards, the mission changed,” Mr. Charles said.

The new “mission” was to arrest President Moïse and install Mr. Sanon as president, The New York Times reported, though Mr. Charles didn’t explain when the mission changed to assassination or how Mr. Sanon could have taken control of the government.

President Moïse was shot to death on July 7 at his home in Port-au-Prince by a “team of commandos,” according to The Washington Post. On July 9, Haiti asked the U.S. to send troops to the country to protect its airport and key infrastructure.

The announcement of Mr. Sanon’s arrest came hours after FBI and Department of Homeland Security officials arrived in Haiti on July 11 to discuss how the U.S. can offer assistance, the newspaper reported.

Mr. Sanon has a YouTube channel with three political campaign videos from 2011, which include discussions about Haitian politics, according to Forbes. In one of the videos, titled “Dr. Christian Sanon – Leadership for Haiti,” Mr. Sanon talks about corruption in the country and presents himself as a potential leader.

Mr. Sanon lived in Florida for more than 20 years, ranging from the Tampa Bay area to South Florida, according to the Miami Herald. Public records show that he had more than a dozen businesses registered in the state, including medical services and real estate, though most are inactive.

Mr. Sanon is the third person with links to the U.S. who has been arrested in connection with the assassination, the Miami Herald reported. Two Haitian-Americans from southern Florida – James Solages, 35, and Joseph G. Vincent, 55 – were arrested by local police. They claimed they were working as translators for the assassins.

The first lady, Martine Moïse, was wounded in the attack and is now receiving treatment at a hospital in Miami, the newspaper reported.

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

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Contentious Alzheimer’s drug likely to get national coverage plan, CMS says

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Wed, 07/14/2021 - 15:59

 

On July 12, federal officials announced they are seeking to establish a national coverage policy for aducanumab (Aduhelm) for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a process that will take until next year to complete.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said it will accept public comments about how Medicare should cover aducanumab through Aug. 11. The agency intends to post a draft decision memo on its coverage approach by Jan. 12, 2022, and then finalize this policy by April 12. Coverage decisions about aducanumab now are being made at the local level by Medicare’s administrative contractors, CMS said in a press release.

The announcement followed separate public calls for such a review by America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) and the Alzheimer’s Association.

On June 30, AHIP submitted a formal request to the CMS. In it, AHIP requests that CMS take “swift action” on a national coverage determination for aducanumab. In the request, the organization specifically urged CMS to use a policy known as coverage with evidence development (CED) for Aduhelm.

This CED approach would allow access for patients considered most likely to benefit from the drug while Biogen continues research needed to definitively show its clinical benefit, said AHIP chief executive Matt Eyles.

In June, the Food and Drug Administration approved aducanumab based on data suggesting the drug might slow AD progression using the surrogate marker of a reduction in amyloid plaque.

The FDA’s accelerated approval letter set a 2030 deadline for Biogen to produce evidence from a phase 3 clinical trial definitively proving the drug’s efficacy.
 

Hefty price tag

Even if Biogen meets the FDA’s deadline, patients with AD, their families, clinicians, and insurers likely will wrestle for years with questions about whether to use this costly drug without clear evidence of benefit. The drug is estimated to cost $56,000 per year.

In addition, patients taking the drug will be required to undergo MRI scans to monitor for brain swelling or bleeding, complications that were experienced by those participating in previous studies of the drug, Mr. Eyles noted in his letter to CMS, which AHIP provided to this news organization.

About 80% of those eligible for aducanumab in the United States are enrolled in Medicare, write James D. Chambers, PhD, MPharm, Tufts University, Boston, and coauthors in a June article in the journal Health Affairs. Like AHIP, these authors also recommended CMS consider the CED path for the drug.

CMS has used the CED approach since 2003 to evaluate interventions such as amyloid PET for clinical evaluation of AD to implantable cardioverter defibrillators.

Applying CED to aducanumab “would provide the medical community, patients, caregivers, and payers with additional information long before the FDA’s required postapproval studies are completed,” Dr. Chambers and coauthors wrote. “It would also ensure that data on every patient treated would add to the knowledge base about how aducanumab impacts patient outcomes such as cognition, function, and quality of life.”

In the AHIP request to CMS, Mr. Eyles also noted that an independent review organization, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, said the evidence from studies done to date on aducanumab is “insufficient” to show a net health benefit for patients with mild cognitive impairment because of AD or mild AD.

At the ICER meeting, which will take place July 15, one of ICER’s expert panels, the California Technology Assessment Forum, said it will further consider all of the available scientific data on aducanumab and vote on a series of questions about its efficacy and value.

ICER’s reports have clout because insurers use its recommendations to help determine how to cover drugs and medical treatments. Among the questions ICER has posted online ahead of the meeting is one about the relative effects of aducanumab plus supportive care versus supportive care alone.
 

 

 

‘Dark irony’

Even as the medical community waits for Biogen to present clear evidence of a benefit for aducanumab, clinics specializing in AD may get a financial boost, said Jason Karlawish, MD, professor of medicine, medical ethics, health policy, and neurology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and codirector of Penn’s Memory Center.

Some clinicians see the arrival of the drug as a “win” for the field despite lingering concerns about its approval, said Dr. Karlawish at a panel discussion held July 12 by the nonprofit Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute. Dr. Karlawish is a fellow at Hastings.

In May, Dr. Karlawish published an article in STAT titled “If the FDA approves Biogen’s Alzheimer’s treatment, I won’t prescribe it.” Dr. Karlawish told this news organization that he was a site investigator for Biogen studies of aducanumab and has worked on studies sponsored by Lilly and Eisai.

During the discussion July 12, Dr. Karlawish said he had altered his view and now might be a “reluctant prescriber.” This shift is because of his commitment “to preserve, protect and defend their autonomy” of patients with AD.

He also noted the drug could draw more money into the field to help care for patients with AD by providing increased access to diagnostics. Additionally, funds provided to clinics for administering aducanumab will aid specialty memory centers, “which have been basically impoverished since their creation,” Dr. Karlawish said.

“There is a dark irony that it takes a questionably beneficial drug to bring in the revenue to finally get memory centers up and functioning,” Dr. Karlawish said, adding that there needs to be “a larger conversation about how a big, vast, and problematic disease is being treated.”

Aducanumab’s approval shows that diseases in the U.S. are not fully considered as diseases until they have “a business model, and much of that business model relies on the pharmaceutical industry,” he noted.
 

Dr. Woodcock’s ‘personal commitment’

In early July, the FDA took two highly publicized steps to address criticism of its handling of the aducanumab approval. It revised the drug’s label to limit its use to patients with mild cognitive impairment likely related to AD or those in the mild stages of the disease.

In addition, Janet Woodcock, MD, the FDA’s acting commissioner, took to Twitter and posted a letter she sent to the Office of the Inspector General that called for a federal investigation into the drug’s approval that would examine agency staff interactions with Biogen.

AHIP spokesperson Kristine Grow said July 12 that her organization is still seeking a national Medicare coverage decision, but that the label revision was a “step in the right direction.”

“Patients with Alzheimer’s disease, and their families and caregivers, deserve safe, effective treatments. We applaud the FDA for this label adjustment, which brings indicated patients a bit closer to those included in clinical trials,” Ms. Grow said in an interview.

“At the same time, we remain concerned about the limited clinical evidence demonstrating efficacy and the serious safety risks that aducanumab poses for patients. We look forward to additional information from the FDA and other regulators, including CMS’ coverage guidance for patients who are Medicare eligible,” she added.

The controversy surrounding the approval of aducanumab is drawing more attention to the lack of a confirmed FDA commissioner. But in her letter to OIG, Dr. Woodcock wrote as if she intends to remain at the helm of the agency for at least a while longer. She wrote in her letter that OIG has her “personal commitment” that the FDA will fully cooperate if the investigative unit decides to undertake a review.

Dr. Woodcock also urged that a review be conducted as soon as possible, noting “should such a review result in actionable items, you also have my commitment to addressing these issues.”

A former FDA adviser who resigned over the agency’s handling of aducanumab said July 12 there needs to be a broader investigation of the FDA’s actions.

Attending the Hastings Center event was Aaron S. Kesselheim, MD, JD, MPH, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, one of three former members of an FDA advisory committee who resigned over the agency’s handling of aducanumab. Dr. Kesselheim said in an interview that he has no financial relationships to disclose in connection with this discussion.

“I would suggest that instead all aspects of this approval process should be investigated,” Dr. Kesselheim said, including the relationship between FDA and Biogen.

Dr. Karlawish said he was also concerned that Dr. Woodcock’s request for an investigation was “very narrow,” and noted members of Congress have said they are examining the FDA’s handling of this drug.

In a July 9 joint statement, House Committee on Energy and Commerce Chairman Frank Pallone Jr (D-N.J.), and House Committee on Oversight and Reform Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) said they were “pleased” by Dr. Woodcock’s announcement, but they will keep digging into ongoing questions about the drug. In their view, the OIG review of FDA staff interactions with Biogen officials would complement their committees’ “robust investigation of this matter.”

“We continue to have concerns about the approval process for Aduhelm, how Biogen set its price, and the implications for seniors, providers, and taxpayers,” Mr. Pallone and Ms. Maloney added.
 

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

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On July 12, federal officials announced they are seeking to establish a national coverage policy for aducanumab (Aduhelm) for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a process that will take until next year to complete.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said it will accept public comments about how Medicare should cover aducanumab through Aug. 11. The agency intends to post a draft decision memo on its coverage approach by Jan. 12, 2022, and then finalize this policy by April 12. Coverage decisions about aducanumab now are being made at the local level by Medicare’s administrative contractors, CMS said in a press release.

The announcement followed separate public calls for such a review by America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) and the Alzheimer’s Association.

On June 30, AHIP submitted a formal request to the CMS. In it, AHIP requests that CMS take “swift action” on a national coverage determination for aducanumab. In the request, the organization specifically urged CMS to use a policy known as coverage with evidence development (CED) for Aduhelm.

This CED approach would allow access for patients considered most likely to benefit from the drug while Biogen continues research needed to definitively show its clinical benefit, said AHIP chief executive Matt Eyles.

In June, the Food and Drug Administration approved aducanumab based on data suggesting the drug might slow AD progression using the surrogate marker of a reduction in amyloid plaque.

The FDA’s accelerated approval letter set a 2030 deadline for Biogen to produce evidence from a phase 3 clinical trial definitively proving the drug’s efficacy.
 

Hefty price tag

Even if Biogen meets the FDA’s deadline, patients with AD, their families, clinicians, and insurers likely will wrestle for years with questions about whether to use this costly drug without clear evidence of benefit. The drug is estimated to cost $56,000 per year.

In addition, patients taking the drug will be required to undergo MRI scans to monitor for brain swelling or bleeding, complications that were experienced by those participating in previous studies of the drug, Mr. Eyles noted in his letter to CMS, which AHIP provided to this news organization.

About 80% of those eligible for aducanumab in the United States are enrolled in Medicare, write James D. Chambers, PhD, MPharm, Tufts University, Boston, and coauthors in a June article in the journal Health Affairs. Like AHIP, these authors also recommended CMS consider the CED path for the drug.

CMS has used the CED approach since 2003 to evaluate interventions such as amyloid PET for clinical evaluation of AD to implantable cardioverter defibrillators.

Applying CED to aducanumab “would provide the medical community, patients, caregivers, and payers with additional information long before the FDA’s required postapproval studies are completed,” Dr. Chambers and coauthors wrote. “It would also ensure that data on every patient treated would add to the knowledge base about how aducanumab impacts patient outcomes such as cognition, function, and quality of life.”

In the AHIP request to CMS, Mr. Eyles also noted that an independent review organization, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, said the evidence from studies done to date on aducanumab is “insufficient” to show a net health benefit for patients with mild cognitive impairment because of AD or mild AD.

At the ICER meeting, which will take place July 15, one of ICER’s expert panels, the California Technology Assessment Forum, said it will further consider all of the available scientific data on aducanumab and vote on a series of questions about its efficacy and value.

ICER’s reports have clout because insurers use its recommendations to help determine how to cover drugs and medical treatments. Among the questions ICER has posted online ahead of the meeting is one about the relative effects of aducanumab plus supportive care versus supportive care alone.
 

 

 

‘Dark irony’

Even as the medical community waits for Biogen to present clear evidence of a benefit for aducanumab, clinics specializing in AD may get a financial boost, said Jason Karlawish, MD, professor of medicine, medical ethics, health policy, and neurology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and codirector of Penn’s Memory Center.

Some clinicians see the arrival of the drug as a “win” for the field despite lingering concerns about its approval, said Dr. Karlawish at a panel discussion held July 12 by the nonprofit Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute. Dr. Karlawish is a fellow at Hastings.

In May, Dr. Karlawish published an article in STAT titled “If the FDA approves Biogen’s Alzheimer’s treatment, I won’t prescribe it.” Dr. Karlawish told this news organization that he was a site investigator for Biogen studies of aducanumab and has worked on studies sponsored by Lilly and Eisai.

During the discussion July 12, Dr. Karlawish said he had altered his view and now might be a “reluctant prescriber.” This shift is because of his commitment “to preserve, protect and defend their autonomy” of patients with AD.

He also noted the drug could draw more money into the field to help care for patients with AD by providing increased access to diagnostics. Additionally, funds provided to clinics for administering aducanumab will aid specialty memory centers, “which have been basically impoverished since their creation,” Dr. Karlawish said.

“There is a dark irony that it takes a questionably beneficial drug to bring in the revenue to finally get memory centers up and functioning,” Dr. Karlawish said, adding that there needs to be “a larger conversation about how a big, vast, and problematic disease is being treated.”

Aducanumab’s approval shows that diseases in the U.S. are not fully considered as diseases until they have “a business model, and much of that business model relies on the pharmaceutical industry,” he noted.
 

Dr. Woodcock’s ‘personal commitment’

In early July, the FDA took two highly publicized steps to address criticism of its handling of the aducanumab approval. It revised the drug’s label to limit its use to patients with mild cognitive impairment likely related to AD or those in the mild stages of the disease.

In addition, Janet Woodcock, MD, the FDA’s acting commissioner, took to Twitter and posted a letter she sent to the Office of the Inspector General that called for a federal investigation into the drug’s approval that would examine agency staff interactions with Biogen.

AHIP spokesperson Kristine Grow said July 12 that her organization is still seeking a national Medicare coverage decision, but that the label revision was a “step in the right direction.”

“Patients with Alzheimer’s disease, and their families and caregivers, deserve safe, effective treatments. We applaud the FDA for this label adjustment, which brings indicated patients a bit closer to those included in clinical trials,” Ms. Grow said in an interview.

“At the same time, we remain concerned about the limited clinical evidence demonstrating efficacy and the serious safety risks that aducanumab poses for patients. We look forward to additional information from the FDA and other regulators, including CMS’ coverage guidance for patients who are Medicare eligible,” she added.

The controversy surrounding the approval of aducanumab is drawing more attention to the lack of a confirmed FDA commissioner. But in her letter to OIG, Dr. Woodcock wrote as if she intends to remain at the helm of the agency for at least a while longer. She wrote in her letter that OIG has her “personal commitment” that the FDA will fully cooperate if the investigative unit decides to undertake a review.

Dr. Woodcock also urged that a review be conducted as soon as possible, noting “should such a review result in actionable items, you also have my commitment to addressing these issues.”

A former FDA adviser who resigned over the agency’s handling of aducanumab said July 12 there needs to be a broader investigation of the FDA’s actions.

Attending the Hastings Center event was Aaron S. Kesselheim, MD, JD, MPH, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, one of three former members of an FDA advisory committee who resigned over the agency’s handling of aducanumab. Dr. Kesselheim said in an interview that he has no financial relationships to disclose in connection with this discussion.

“I would suggest that instead all aspects of this approval process should be investigated,” Dr. Kesselheim said, including the relationship between FDA and Biogen.

Dr. Karlawish said he was also concerned that Dr. Woodcock’s request for an investigation was “very narrow,” and noted members of Congress have said they are examining the FDA’s handling of this drug.

In a July 9 joint statement, House Committee on Energy and Commerce Chairman Frank Pallone Jr (D-N.J.), and House Committee on Oversight and Reform Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) said they were “pleased” by Dr. Woodcock’s announcement, but they will keep digging into ongoing questions about the drug. In their view, the OIG review of FDA staff interactions with Biogen officials would complement their committees’ “robust investigation of this matter.”

“We continue to have concerns about the approval process for Aduhelm, how Biogen set its price, and the implications for seniors, providers, and taxpayers,” Mr. Pallone and Ms. Maloney added.
 

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

 

On July 12, federal officials announced they are seeking to establish a national coverage policy for aducanumab (Aduhelm) for Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a process that will take until next year to complete.

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services said it will accept public comments about how Medicare should cover aducanumab through Aug. 11. The agency intends to post a draft decision memo on its coverage approach by Jan. 12, 2022, and then finalize this policy by April 12. Coverage decisions about aducanumab now are being made at the local level by Medicare’s administrative contractors, CMS said in a press release.

The announcement followed separate public calls for such a review by America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) and the Alzheimer’s Association.

On June 30, AHIP submitted a formal request to the CMS. In it, AHIP requests that CMS take “swift action” on a national coverage determination for aducanumab. In the request, the organization specifically urged CMS to use a policy known as coverage with evidence development (CED) for Aduhelm.

This CED approach would allow access for patients considered most likely to benefit from the drug while Biogen continues research needed to definitively show its clinical benefit, said AHIP chief executive Matt Eyles.

In June, the Food and Drug Administration approved aducanumab based on data suggesting the drug might slow AD progression using the surrogate marker of a reduction in amyloid plaque.

The FDA’s accelerated approval letter set a 2030 deadline for Biogen to produce evidence from a phase 3 clinical trial definitively proving the drug’s efficacy.
 

Hefty price tag

Even if Biogen meets the FDA’s deadline, patients with AD, their families, clinicians, and insurers likely will wrestle for years with questions about whether to use this costly drug without clear evidence of benefit. The drug is estimated to cost $56,000 per year.

In addition, patients taking the drug will be required to undergo MRI scans to monitor for brain swelling or bleeding, complications that were experienced by those participating in previous studies of the drug, Mr. Eyles noted in his letter to CMS, which AHIP provided to this news organization.

About 80% of those eligible for aducanumab in the United States are enrolled in Medicare, write James D. Chambers, PhD, MPharm, Tufts University, Boston, and coauthors in a June article in the journal Health Affairs. Like AHIP, these authors also recommended CMS consider the CED path for the drug.

CMS has used the CED approach since 2003 to evaluate interventions such as amyloid PET for clinical evaluation of AD to implantable cardioverter defibrillators.

Applying CED to aducanumab “would provide the medical community, patients, caregivers, and payers with additional information long before the FDA’s required postapproval studies are completed,” Dr. Chambers and coauthors wrote. “It would also ensure that data on every patient treated would add to the knowledge base about how aducanumab impacts patient outcomes such as cognition, function, and quality of life.”

In the AHIP request to CMS, Mr. Eyles also noted that an independent review organization, the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, said the evidence from studies done to date on aducanumab is “insufficient” to show a net health benefit for patients with mild cognitive impairment because of AD or mild AD.

At the ICER meeting, which will take place July 15, one of ICER’s expert panels, the California Technology Assessment Forum, said it will further consider all of the available scientific data on aducanumab and vote on a series of questions about its efficacy and value.

ICER’s reports have clout because insurers use its recommendations to help determine how to cover drugs and medical treatments. Among the questions ICER has posted online ahead of the meeting is one about the relative effects of aducanumab plus supportive care versus supportive care alone.
 

 

 

‘Dark irony’

Even as the medical community waits for Biogen to present clear evidence of a benefit for aducanumab, clinics specializing in AD may get a financial boost, said Jason Karlawish, MD, professor of medicine, medical ethics, health policy, and neurology at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and codirector of Penn’s Memory Center.

Some clinicians see the arrival of the drug as a “win” for the field despite lingering concerns about its approval, said Dr. Karlawish at a panel discussion held July 12 by the nonprofit Hastings Center, a bioethics research institute. Dr. Karlawish is a fellow at Hastings.

In May, Dr. Karlawish published an article in STAT titled “If the FDA approves Biogen’s Alzheimer’s treatment, I won’t prescribe it.” Dr. Karlawish told this news organization that he was a site investigator for Biogen studies of aducanumab and has worked on studies sponsored by Lilly and Eisai.

During the discussion July 12, Dr. Karlawish said he had altered his view and now might be a “reluctant prescriber.” This shift is because of his commitment “to preserve, protect and defend their autonomy” of patients with AD.

He also noted the drug could draw more money into the field to help care for patients with AD by providing increased access to diagnostics. Additionally, funds provided to clinics for administering aducanumab will aid specialty memory centers, “which have been basically impoverished since their creation,” Dr. Karlawish said.

“There is a dark irony that it takes a questionably beneficial drug to bring in the revenue to finally get memory centers up and functioning,” Dr. Karlawish said, adding that there needs to be “a larger conversation about how a big, vast, and problematic disease is being treated.”

Aducanumab’s approval shows that diseases in the U.S. are not fully considered as diseases until they have “a business model, and much of that business model relies on the pharmaceutical industry,” he noted.
 

Dr. Woodcock’s ‘personal commitment’

In early July, the FDA took two highly publicized steps to address criticism of its handling of the aducanumab approval. It revised the drug’s label to limit its use to patients with mild cognitive impairment likely related to AD or those in the mild stages of the disease.

In addition, Janet Woodcock, MD, the FDA’s acting commissioner, took to Twitter and posted a letter she sent to the Office of the Inspector General that called for a federal investigation into the drug’s approval that would examine agency staff interactions with Biogen.

AHIP spokesperson Kristine Grow said July 12 that her organization is still seeking a national Medicare coverage decision, but that the label revision was a “step in the right direction.”

“Patients with Alzheimer’s disease, and their families and caregivers, deserve safe, effective treatments. We applaud the FDA for this label adjustment, which brings indicated patients a bit closer to those included in clinical trials,” Ms. Grow said in an interview.

“At the same time, we remain concerned about the limited clinical evidence demonstrating efficacy and the serious safety risks that aducanumab poses for patients. We look forward to additional information from the FDA and other regulators, including CMS’ coverage guidance for patients who are Medicare eligible,” she added.

The controversy surrounding the approval of aducanumab is drawing more attention to the lack of a confirmed FDA commissioner. But in her letter to OIG, Dr. Woodcock wrote as if she intends to remain at the helm of the agency for at least a while longer. She wrote in her letter that OIG has her “personal commitment” that the FDA will fully cooperate if the investigative unit decides to undertake a review.

Dr. Woodcock also urged that a review be conducted as soon as possible, noting “should such a review result in actionable items, you also have my commitment to addressing these issues.”

A former FDA adviser who resigned over the agency’s handling of aducanumab said July 12 there needs to be a broader investigation of the FDA’s actions.

Attending the Hastings Center event was Aaron S. Kesselheim, MD, JD, MPH, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, one of three former members of an FDA advisory committee who resigned over the agency’s handling of aducanumab. Dr. Kesselheim said in an interview that he has no financial relationships to disclose in connection with this discussion.

“I would suggest that instead all aspects of this approval process should be investigated,” Dr. Kesselheim said, including the relationship between FDA and Biogen.

Dr. Karlawish said he was also concerned that Dr. Woodcock’s request for an investigation was “very narrow,” and noted members of Congress have said they are examining the FDA’s handling of this drug.

In a July 9 joint statement, House Committee on Energy and Commerce Chairman Frank Pallone Jr (D-N.J.), and House Committee on Oversight and Reform Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) said they were “pleased” by Dr. Woodcock’s announcement, but they will keep digging into ongoing questions about the drug. In their view, the OIG review of FDA staff interactions with Biogen officials would complement their committees’ “robust investigation of this matter.”

“We continue to have concerns about the approval process for Aduhelm, how Biogen set its price, and the implications for seniors, providers, and taxpayers,” Mr. Pallone and Ms. Maloney added.
 

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

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Dance training ‘drastically’ reduces Parkinson’s progression, eases symptoms

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Changed
Wed, 07/14/2021 - 16:00

 

Dancing helps slow the progression of motor and nonmotor symptoms and improves quality of life for patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), new research shows.

Over 3 years, weekly participation in dance training classes “drastically” reduced the expected decline in motor function and significantly improved speech, tremors, balance, and stiffness, the researchers reported.

Dance training also appeared to have benefits regarding cognition, hallucinations, depression, and anxiety.

“These findings strongly suggest the benefits of dance for people with PD as a supplement to a normal treatment regimen,” the investigators noted.

Although the mechanism of benefit is unclear, dance training may help “train neural network nodes that helps either strengthen networks damaged or builds neural road maps that pass the damage,” study investigator Joseph DeSouza, PhD, principal investigator and associate professor, department of psychology, York University, Toronto, said in an interview.

The study was published online July 7, 2021, in Brain Sciences.
 

Multiple benefits

PD is a neurodegenerative disease associated with progression of motor dysfunction within the first 5 years of diagnosis. The annual rate of motor decline, as determined with the Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS), is between 5.2 and 8.9 points.

Prior studies that assessed various styles of dance by patients with PD showed beneficial effects regarding gait speed, balance, locomotion, and aspects of quality of life.

To investigate further, DeSouza and coauthor Karolina Bearss, a PhD candidate at York University, followed 16 patients with mild to moderate PD who participated in a weekly dance class at Canada’s National Ballet School and Trinity St. Paul’s church.

Dance for Parkinson’s Disease, which is an established dance curriculum, involves aerobic and anaerobic movements. The protocol begins with a seated warm-up, followed by barre work, and ends with moving across the floor. All participants learn choreography for an upcoming performance.

In the study, 16 patients with PD who did not participant in the dance classes served as control patients.

Over 3 years, the daily rate of motor decline, as indicated by scores on part III of the MDS-UPDRS, was zero among the dancers (slope = 0.000146), indicating no motor impairment, whereas among the nondancers, the motor decline during follow-up was as expected (P < .01), the researchers reported.

In modeling the data, the researchers determined that after completing 1,000 days of dance training, dancers will have a motor score of 19.07, compared with a score of 28.27 for nondancers.

“Our data further showed that training in dance will slow the rate of PD motor impairment progression, as measured by the UPDRS III, by close to 3 points annually in comparison to our PD subjects who did not train,” the researchers reported.

Dance training also had a beneficial effect on motor or nonmotor aspects of daily living and on motor complications, for which there was no significant decline among the PD dancers.

“For those with Parkinson’s disease, even when it’s mild, motor impairment can impact their daily functioning – how they feel about themselves. Many of these motor symptoms lead to isolation because once they get extreme, these people don’t want to go out,” Dr. DeSouza said in a news release.

“These motor symptoms lead to further psychological issues, depression, social isolation and eventually the symptoms do get worse over time. Our study shows that training with dance and music can slow this down and improve their daily living and daily function,” he added.
 

 

 

‘Great potential’

Reached for comment, Demian Kogutek, PhD, director of music therapy, University of Evansville (Indiana), said that these preliminary findings from a longitudinal study are “promising.”

“I believe that dance therapy has a great potential for PD. The longitudinal aspect of this study undoubtedly adds to the current literature. Although it is a standardized assessment, it is somewhat subjective,” Dr. Kogutek said in an interview.

Going forward, Dr. Kogutek said he’d like to see other objective outcomes measured, such as objective assessments of balance, gait, hand strength, and dexterity.

Also weighing in on the results, Karen Lee, PhD, president and CEO of Parkinson Canada, said her organization is “encouraged by these preliminary findings as exercise and healthy activities are important for people with Parkinson’s. This study is part of a growing body of research that explores the link between the impact of activities and both motor and nonmotor symptoms of Parkinson’s.

“This research adds to growing evidence about the importance of exercise as part of the management of Parkinson’s, and we encourage people living with Parkinson’s to incorporate exercise as part of their approach to managing their health,” Dr. Lee said in an interview.

Funding for the project is provided in part by a National Science and Engineering Research Council Discovery Grant and by donations from the Irpinia Club of Toronto and others. Dr. Dr. DeSouza, Ms. Bearss, Dr. Kogutek, and Dr. Lee disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Dancing helps slow the progression of motor and nonmotor symptoms and improves quality of life for patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), new research shows.

Over 3 years, weekly participation in dance training classes “drastically” reduced the expected decline in motor function and significantly improved speech, tremors, balance, and stiffness, the researchers reported.

Dance training also appeared to have benefits regarding cognition, hallucinations, depression, and anxiety.

“These findings strongly suggest the benefits of dance for people with PD as a supplement to a normal treatment regimen,” the investigators noted.

Although the mechanism of benefit is unclear, dance training may help “train neural network nodes that helps either strengthen networks damaged or builds neural road maps that pass the damage,” study investigator Joseph DeSouza, PhD, principal investigator and associate professor, department of psychology, York University, Toronto, said in an interview.

The study was published online July 7, 2021, in Brain Sciences.
 

Multiple benefits

PD is a neurodegenerative disease associated with progression of motor dysfunction within the first 5 years of diagnosis. The annual rate of motor decline, as determined with the Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS), is between 5.2 and 8.9 points.

Prior studies that assessed various styles of dance by patients with PD showed beneficial effects regarding gait speed, balance, locomotion, and aspects of quality of life.

To investigate further, DeSouza and coauthor Karolina Bearss, a PhD candidate at York University, followed 16 patients with mild to moderate PD who participated in a weekly dance class at Canada’s National Ballet School and Trinity St. Paul’s church.

Dance for Parkinson’s Disease, which is an established dance curriculum, involves aerobic and anaerobic movements. The protocol begins with a seated warm-up, followed by barre work, and ends with moving across the floor. All participants learn choreography for an upcoming performance.

In the study, 16 patients with PD who did not participant in the dance classes served as control patients.

Over 3 years, the daily rate of motor decline, as indicated by scores on part III of the MDS-UPDRS, was zero among the dancers (slope = 0.000146), indicating no motor impairment, whereas among the nondancers, the motor decline during follow-up was as expected (P < .01), the researchers reported.

In modeling the data, the researchers determined that after completing 1,000 days of dance training, dancers will have a motor score of 19.07, compared with a score of 28.27 for nondancers.

“Our data further showed that training in dance will slow the rate of PD motor impairment progression, as measured by the UPDRS III, by close to 3 points annually in comparison to our PD subjects who did not train,” the researchers reported.

Dance training also had a beneficial effect on motor or nonmotor aspects of daily living and on motor complications, for which there was no significant decline among the PD dancers.

“For those with Parkinson’s disease, even when it’s mild, motor impairment can impact their daily functioning – how they feel about themselves. Many of these motor symptoms lead to isolation because once they get extreme, these people don’t want to go out,” Dr. DeSouza said in a news release.

“These motor symptoms lead to further psychological issues, depression, social isolation and eventually the symptoms do get worse over time. Our study shows that training with dance and music can slow this down and improve their daily living and daily function,” he added.
 

 

 

‘Great potential’

Reached for comment, Demian Kogutek, PhD, director of music therapy, University of Evansville (Indiana), said that these preliminary findings from a longitudinal study are “promising.”

“I believe that dance therapy has a great potential for PD. The longitudinal aspect of this study undoubtedly adds to the current literature. Although it is a standardized assessment, it is somewhat subjective,” Dr. Kogutek said in an interview.

Going forward, Dr. Kogutek said he’d like to see other objective outcomes measured, such as objective assessments of balance, gait, hand strength, and dexterity.

Also weighing in on the results, Karen Lee, PhD, president and CEO of Parkinson Canada, said her organization is “encouraged by these preliminary findings as exercise and healthy activities are important for people with Parkinson’s. This study is part of a growing body of research that explores the link between the impact of activities and both motor and nonmotor symptoms of Parkinson’s.

“This research adds to growing evidence about the importance of exercise as part of the management of Parkinson’s, and we encourage people living with Parkinson’s to incorporate exercise as part of their approach to managing their health,” Dr. Lee said in an interview.

Funding for the project is provided in part by a National Science and Engineering Research Council Discovery Grant and by donations from the Irpinia Club of Toronto and others. Dr. Dr. DeSouza, Ms. Bearss, Dr. Kogutek, and Dr. Lee disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Dancing helps slow the progression of motor and nonmotor symptoms and improves quality of life for patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), new research shows.

Over 3 years, weekly participation in dance training classes “drastically” reduced the expected decline in motor function and significantly improved speech, tremors, balance, and stiffness, the researchers reported.

Dance training also appeared to have benefits regarding cognition, hallucinations, depression, and anxiety.

“These findings strongly suggest the benefits of dance for people with PD as a supplement to a normal treatment regimen,” the investigators noted.

Although the mechanism of benefit is unclear, dance training may help “train neural network nodes that helps either strengthen networks damaged or builds neural road maps that pass the damage,” study investigator Joseph DeSouza, PhD, principal investigator and associate professor, department of psychology, York University, Toronto, said in an interview.

The study was published online July 7, 2021, in Brain Sciences.
 

Multiple benefits

PD is a neurodegenerative disease associated with progression of motor dysfunction within the first 5 years of diagnosis. The annual rate of motor decline, as determined with the Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS), is between 5.2 and 8.9 points.

Prior studies that assessed various styles of dance by patients with PD showed beneficial effects regarding gait speed, balance, locomotion, and aspects of quality of life.

To investigate further, DeSouza and coauthor Karolina Bearss, a PhD candidate at York University, followed 16 patients with mild to moderate PD who participated in a weekly dance class at Canada’s National Ballet School and Trinity St. Paul’s church.

Dance for Parkinson’s Disease, which is an established dance curriculum, involves aerobic and anaerobic movements. The protocol begins with a seated warm-up, followed by barre work, and ends with moving across the floor. All participants learn choreography for an upcoming performance.

In the study, 16 patients with PD who did not participant in the dance classes served as control patients.

Over 3 years, the daily rate of motor decline, as indicated by scores on part III of the MDS-UPDRS, was zero among the dancers (slope = 0.000146), indicating no motor impairment, whereas among the nondancers, the motor decline during follow-up was as expected (P < .01), the researchers reported.

In modeling the data, the researchers determined that after completing 1,000 days of dance training, dancers will have a motor score of 19.07, compared with a score of 28.27 for nondancers.

“Our data further showed that training in dance will slow the rate of PD motor impairment progression, as measured by the UPDRS III, by close to 3 points annually in comparison to our PD subjects who did not train,” the researchers reported.

Dance training also had a beneficial effect on motor or nonmotor aspects of daily living and on motor complications, for which there was no significant decline among the PD dancers.

“For those with Parkinson’s disease, even when it’s mild, motor impairment can impact their daily functioning – how they feel about themselves. Many of these motor symptoms lead to isolation because once they get extreme, these people don’t want to go out,” Dr. DeSouza said in a news release.

“These motor symptoms lead to further psychological issues, depression, social isolation and eventually the symptoms do get worse over time. Our study shows that training with dance and music can slow this down and improve their daily living and daily function,” he added.
 

 

 

‘Great potential’

Reached for comment, Demian Kogutek, PhD, director of music therapy, University of Evansville (Indiana), said that these preliminary findings from a longitudinal study are “promising.”

“I believe that dance therapy has a great potential for PD. The longitudinal aspect of this study undoubtedly adds to the current literature. Although it is a standardized assessment, it is somewhat subjective,” Dr. Kogutek said in an interview.

Going forward, Dr. Kogutek said he’d like to see other objective outcomes measured, such as objective assessments of balance, gait, hand strength, and dexterity.

Also weighing in on the results, Karen Lee, PhD, president and CEO of Parkinson Canada, said her organization is “encouraged by these preliminary findings as exercise and healthy activities are important for people with Parkinson’s. This study is part of a growing body of research that explores the link between the impact of activities and both motor and nonmotor symptoms of Parkinson’s.

“This research adds to growing evidence about the importance of exercise as part of the management of Parkinson’s, and we encourage people living with Parkinson’s to incorporate exercise as part of their approach to managing their health,” Dr. Lee said in an interview.

Funding for the project is provided in part by a National Science and Engineering Research Council Discovery Grant and by donations from the Irpinia Club of Toronto and others. Dr. Dr. DeSouza, Ms. Bearss, Dr. Kogutek, and Dr. Lee disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Political support of permanent DST concerns sleep scientists

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Changed
Wed, 07/14/2021 - 15:21

 

The reintroduction of congressional bills that aim to end seasonal time change and move permanently to daylight saving time (DST) – and action on the issue by 19 states in the last 4 years – signal political momentum and up the ante on sleep medicine to educate others and to more uniformly weigh in on the health consequences of such a change.

This was the message of several sleep scientists and physicians who participated in moderated discussions of DST at the virtual annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.

A position paper issued about a year ago by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine objected to the proposed switch and instead called for elimination of DST in favor of permanent standard time (ST). While there are detrimental health effects with time changes in either direction, there is “abundant” evidence that the transition from standard time to daylight saving time is worse, the AASM statement says.

Some experts have questioned, however, whether the evidence is weighty and comprehensive enough to drive a change in national policy. Others, such as SLEEP 2021 discussant Karin Johnson, MD, say there is unawareness outside of sleep medicine – and even within – of a growing body of literature on circadian misalignment and its associated health risks.

“There’s an educational gap for what’s out there [in the literature],” Dr. Johnson, medical director of the Baystate Health regional sleep program and Baystate Medical Center sleep laboratory in Springfield, Mass., said in an interview after the meeting.

Calls for more research, particularly on the chronic effects of DST and ST, are concerning because discussions of abolishing seasonal time change are “moving forward with or without us,” Kenneth Wright Jr., PhD, director of the chronobiology laboratory at the University of Colorado in Boulder and professor in the university’s department of integrative biology, said at the meeting.

“We don’t have time ... to have the studies we’d need to prove unequivocally that permanent standard time [is best]. We need to consider the scientific evidence before us – what’s known about human biology and health with respect to light and circadian timing,” Dr. Wright said. “The argument that pushing our clocks later is going to be healthier is not tenable. We cannot support that given the vast amount of scientific evidence we have from circadian and sleep science.”

Underscoring the sense of urgency to be engaged in the issue were the messages of Rep. Raymond Ward, MD, PhD, a Utah legislator in the state’s House of Representatives who introduced a bill to permanently observe DST, pending the amendment of federal law to permit such a change, and provided that five other Western states enact the same legislation.

“I chose to support DST because I became convinced this is the only thing that’s politically possible,” said Rep. Ward, a family practice physician at the Ogden Clinic in Bountiful. National polls have shown a “strong preference” to end seasonal time change, he said, and a poll conducted in his district showed that nearly 80% “wanted to stop changing the clocks, and 65% wanted the summer time schedule.”

“To me, the train seems to be moving in one direction,” said Rep. Ward. “The bills open in Congress in both the House and the Senate don’t have enough support yet, but every time another state legislature passes [legislation to establish permanent DST], they pick up a few more supporters.”

The Sunshine Protection Act of 2021 introduced in the House in January by Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.) has 23 cosponsors, and a bill of the same name introduced in the Senate in March by Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has 14 cosponsors. Both bills have bipartisan support and are reintroductions of legislation initially put forth in 2019. A press release issued by Sen. Rubio’s office says that “extending DST can benefit the economy and our overall health.”

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions in the last several years to provide for year-round DST, if Congress were to allow such a change. And according to a Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on DST updated in September 2020, at least 45 states have, since 2015, proposed legislation to change their observance of DST.

These efforts include proposals to exempt a state from DST observance, which is allowable under existing law, and proposals that would establish permanent DST, which would require Congress to amend the Uniform Time Act of 1966, the CRS report says.
 

 

 

The state of the science

Shifting from ST to DST has been associated with an increase in cardiovascular morbidity (heart attacks and atrial fibrillation), increased missed medical appointments, increased ED visits, increased mood disturbances and suicide risk, increased risk of fatal car crashes and medical errors – and sleep loss, said Elizabeth Klerman, MD, PhD, professor of neurology in the division of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

These associations are covered in AASM statement, along with acknowledgment that most studies on the chronic effects of DST have “either been retrospective or addressed the issue indirectly.”

For Dr. Johnson, who refers to DST as “sleep deprivation time,” the most convincing data regarding the dangers of permanent DST come from studies comparing locations within time zones. “The farther you’re off from the meridian, the more you have that ‘social jet lag’ or circadian misalignment [between the innate circadian rhythm, which is synchronized with solar time, and school or work schedules],” she said at the meeting.

Researchers reported in 2017, for instance, that the risk for all cancers and many specific cancers increased from east to west within a time zone, as solar time is progressively delayed. “They documented changes in risk for every 5 degrees west from the meridian,” she said.

Dr. Johnson is a case in point of the “educational gap” that she believes needs attention. Two years ago, as chair of the sleep section of the American Academy of Neurology, she delved into the literature after the AAN asked the section whether it should endorse the AASM’s position paper on DST. “I didn’t know the literature even as a sleep scientist until I got into this,” she said.

“If you’re asked me 2 years ago,” she added in the later interview, “I would have said that permanent DST is fine.”

The sleep section recommended that the AAN endorse permanent ST, but the AAN ultimately decided it “didn’t feel strongly enough to say that standard time is unequivocally the better option,” Dr. Johnson said in an interview. “They agreed that there’s science [in favor of it], but ... it’s a big public policy decision.”

Jamie Zeitzer, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford (Calif.) University’s Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine, voiced similar concerns at the meeting about currently advocating a shift in either direction. It’s “absolutely clear that switching clocks, especially since it’s occurring at a population level, is deleterious and we need to get rid of it,” he said. “But before we put forth dictates on public health [with a shift to permanent ST], I think we better be sure we’re correct.”

“I think we’re getting close. I think the data thus far [are indicating] that permanent standard time is better for health,” Dr. Zeitzer said. “But I don’t think there’s a cumulative amount of evidence to really say that we have to subvert all other interests because this is so important for public health. We need at least a few more studies.”

There is not enough evidence, for instance, to conclude that the body clock does not eventually adjust to DST, he said, and it is not yet clear what roles electric light and sunlight each play in the body’s circadian time.

“And we need to think about north-south. What may be important for the upper Midwest, and for Maine, and for Washington, may not be ... good for Florida and Texas and southern California,” Dr. Zeitzer said. “You have very different patterns of light exposure, especially when it deals with seasons.”
 

 

 

Historical considerations

In his comments at the meeting, Muhammad Rishi, MBBS, the lead author of the AASM’s position statement, added that circadian misalignment – that “asynchrony between the internal and external clocks” – is associated in studies with an increased risk of obesity, metabolic syndrome, and depression.

But he also emphasized that the “historical evidence” against permanent DST is at least as strong as the medical evidence.

“The U.S. has gone on permanent daylight savings time several times in the past, most recently in the 1970s during the OPEC [oil embargo], and it was so unpopular,” said Dr. Rishi, of the department of pulmonology, critical care and sleep medicine at the Mayo Clinic Health System in Eau Claire, Wis. “England also did it in the 1960s and then abolished it, and most recently Russia did it ... it became so unpopular with increased depression and mood disorders that they abolished it.”

Rep. Ward said that China has offered a large natural experiment with its move decades ago from five time zones to one time zone – Beijing time. “I don’t think we’ve seen any sweeping changes in their health because they have one large time zone,” he said.

Dr. Klerman took issue, saying she “knows someone in China who is trying to get that data about health outcomes and is unable to get it.”

Arguments that DST saves energy hold little to no weight upon scrutiny of the data, Dr. Johnson said. Moreover, research other than oft-cited, older Department of Transportation studies suggests that “permanent DST is bad for energy and bad for the climate,” she said. “This really needs to be more fully evaluated by the government and others.”

Dr. Johnson said after the meeting that it’s important for experts from the energy and climate sectors, education, and medicine – including pediatrics, oncology, and other specialties with “a stake in this” – to come together and share information so “we won’t all be in our silos.” She and other sleep experts in the neurology field are planning to host a summit in 2022 to do just this.

Dr. Johnson and Kin Yuen, MD, of the Sleep Disorders Center at the University of California, San Francisco, both expressed concern at the meeting that adoption of permanent DST would negate the benefits of delayed school start times in middle and high school students.

There is some evidence that delayed start times have led to decreased tardiness and absences, Dr. Yuen said. To have the same impact with permanent DST, “instead of starting at 8:30 a.m., you’d have to start at 9:30,” Dr. Johnson added after the meeting.

The first discussion of DST at the SLEEP 2021 meeting was led by Erin E. Flynn-Evans, PhD, MPH, director of the Fatigue Countermeasures Laboratory at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center. Dr. Yuen led a later second question-and-answer session. They and each of the eight participants reported that they had no relevant conflicts of interest.

Dr. Yuen and Dr. Flynn-Evans are both coauthors of the AASM’s position statement on DST. Dr. Klerman is a coauthor of the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms 2019 position paper on DST.

The AASM’s statement has been endorsed by 19 organizations, including the American College of Chest Physicians, the SRBR, the American Academy of Cardiovascular Sleep Medicine, the Society of Behavioral Sleep Medicine, the National PTA, and the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

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The reintroduction of congressional bills that aim to end seasonal time change and move permanently to daylight saving time (DST) – and action on the issue by 19 states in the last 4 years – signal political momentum and up the ante on sleep medicine to educate others and to more uniformly weigh in on the health consequences of such a change.

This was the message of several sleep scientists and physicians who participated in moderated discussions of DST at the virtual annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.

A position paper issued about a year ago by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine objected to the proposed switch and instead called for elimination of DST in favor of permanent standard time (ST). While there are detrimental health effects with time changes in either direction, there is “abundant” evidence that the transition from standard time to daylight saving time is worse, the AASM statement says.

Some experts have questioned, however, whether the evidence is weighty and comprehensive enough to drive a change in national policy. Others, such as SLEEP 2021 discussant Karin Johnson, MD, say there is unawareness outside of sleep medicine – and even within – of a growing body of literature on circadian misalignment and its associated health risks.

“There’s an educational gap for what’s out there [in the literature],” Dr. Johnson, medical director of the Baystate Health regional sleep program and Baystate Medical Center sleep laboratory in Springfield, Mass., said in an interview after the meeting.

Calls for more research, particularly on the chronic effects of DST and ST, are concerning because discussions of abolishing seasonal time change are “moving forward with or without us,” Kenneth Wright Jr., PhD, director of the chronobiology laboratory at the University of Colorado in Boulder and professor in the university’s department of integrative biology, said at the meeting.

“We don’t have time ... to have the studies we’d need to prove unequivocally that permanent standard time [is best]. We need to consider the scientific evidence before us – what’s known about human biology and health with respect to light and circadian timing,” Dr. Wright said. “The argument that pushing our clocks later is going to be healthier is not tenable. We cannot support that given the vast amount of scientific evidence we have from circadian and sleep science.”

Underscoring the sense of urgency to be engaged in the issue were the messages of Rep. Raymond Ward, MD, PhD, a Utah legislator in the state’s House of Representatives who introduced a bill to permanently observe DST, pending the amendment of federal law to permit such a change, and provided that five other Western states enact the same legislation.

“I chose to support DST because I became convinced this is the only thing that’s politically possible,” said Rep. Ward, a family practice physician at the Ogden Clinic in Bountiful. National polls have shown a “strong preference” to end seasonal time change, he said, and a poll conducted in his district showed that nearly 80% “wanted to stop changing the clocks, and 65% wanted the summer time schedule.”

“To me, the train seems to be moving in one direction,” said Rep. Ward. “The bills open in Congress in both the House and the Senate don’t have enough support yet, but every time another state legislature passes [legislation to establish permanent DST], they pick up a few more supporters.”

The Sunshine Protection Act of 2021 introduced in the House in January by Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.) has 23 cosponsors, and a bill of the same name introduced in the Senate in March by Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has 14 cosponsors. Both bills have bipartisan support and are reintroductions of legislation initially put forth in 2019. A press release issued by Sen. Rubio’s office says that “extending DST can benefit the economy and our overall health.”

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions in the last several years to provide for year-round DST, if Congress were to allow such a change. And according to a Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on DST updated in September 2020, at least 45 states have, since 2015, proposed legislation to change their observance of DST.

These efforts include proposals to exempt a state from DST observance, which is allowable under existing law, and proposals that would establish permanent DST, which would require Congress to amend the Uniform Time Act of 1966, the CRS report says.
 

 

 

The state of the science

Shifting from ST to DST has been associated with an increase in cardiovascular morbidity (heart attacks and atrial fibrillation), increased missed medical appointments, increased ED visits, increased mood disturbances and suicide risk, increased risk of fatal car crashes and medical errors – and sleep loss, said Elizabeth Klerman, MD, PhD, professor of neurology in the division of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

These associations are covered in AASM statement, along with acknowledgment that most studies on the chronic effects of DST have “either been retrospective or addressed the issue indirectly.”

For Dr. Johnson, who refers to DST as “sleep deprivation time,” the most convincing data regarding the dangers of permanent DST come from studies comparing locations within time zones. “The farther you’re off from the meridian, the more you have that ‘social jet lag’ or circadian misalignment [between the innate circadian rhythm, which is synchronized with solar time, and school or work schedules],” she said at the meeting.

Researchers reported in 2017, for instance, that the risk for all cancers and many specific cancers increased from east to west within a time zone, as solar time is progressively delayed. “They documented changes in risk for every 5 degrees west from the meridian,” she said.

Dr. Johnson is a case in point of the “educational gap” that she believes needs attention. Two years ago, as chair of the sleep section of the American Academy of Neurology, she delved into the literature after the AAN asked the section whether it should endorse the AASM’s position paper on DST. “I didn’t know the literature even as a sleep scientist until I got into this,” she said.

“If you’re asked me 2 years ago,” she added in the later interview, “I would have said that permanent DST is fine.”

The sleep section recommended that the AAN endorse permanent ST, but the AAN ultimately decided it “didn’t feel strongly enough to say that standard time is unequivocally the better option,” Dr. Johnson said in an interview. “They agreed that there’s science [in favor of it], but ... it’s a big public policy decision.”

Jamie Zeitzer, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford (Calif.) University’s Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine, voiced similar concerns at the meeting about currently advocating a shift in either direction. It’s “absolutely clear that switching clocks, especially since it’s occurring at a population level, is deleterious and we need to get rid of it,” he said. “But before we put forth dictates on public health [with a shift to permanent ST], I think we better be sure we’re correct.”

“I think we’re getting close. I think the data thus far [are indicating] that permanent standard time is better for health,” Dr. Zeitzer said. “But I don’t think there’s a cumulative amount of evidence to really say that we have to subvert all other interests because this is so important for public health. We need at least a few more studies.”

There is not enough evidence, for instance, to conclude that the body clock does not eventually adjust to DST, he said, and it is not yet clear what roles electric light and sunlight each play in the body’s circadian time.

“And we need to think about north-south. What may be important for the upper Midwest, and for Maine, and for Washington, may not be ... good for Florida and Texas and southern California,” Dr. Zeitzer said. “You have very different patterns of light exposure, especially when it deals with seasons.”
 

 

 

Historical considerations

In his comments at the meeting, Muhammad Rishi, MBBS, the lead author of the AASM’s position statement, added that circadian misalignment – that “asynchrony between the internal and external clocks” – is associated in studies with an increased risk of obesity, metabolic syndrome, and depression.

But he also emphasized that the “historical evidence” against permanent DST is at least as strong as the medical evidence.

“The U.S. has gone on permanent daylight savings time several times in the past, most recently in the 1970s during the OPEC [oil embargo], and it was so unpopular,” said Dr. Rishi, of the department of pulmonology, critical care and sleep medicine at the Mayo Clinic Health System in Eau Claire, Wis. “England also did it in the 1960s and then abolished it, and most recently Russia did it ... it became so unpopular with increased depression and mood disorders that they abolished it.”

Rep. Ward said that China has offered a large natural experiment with its move decades ago from five time zones to one time zone – Beijing time. “I don’t think we’ve seen any sweeping changes in their health because they have one large time zone,” he said.

Dr. Klerman took issue, saying she “knows someone in China who is trying to get that data about health outcomes and is unable to get it.”

Arguments that DST saves energy hold little to no weight upon scrutiny of the data, Dr. Johnson said. Moreover, research other than oft-cited, older Department of Transportation studies suggests that “permanent DST is bad for energy and bad for the climate,” she said. “This really needs to be more fully evaluated by the government and others.”

Dr. Johnson said after the meeting that it’s important for experts from the energy and climate sectors, education, and medicine – including pediatrics, oncology, and other specialties with “a stake in this” – to come together and share information so “we won’t all be in our silos.” She and other sleep experts in the neurology field are planning to host a summit in 2022 to do just this.

Dr. Johnson and Kin Yuen, MD, of the Sleep Disorders Center at the University of California, San Francisco, both expressed concern at the meeting that adoption of permanent DST would negate the benefits of delayed school start times in middle and high school students.

There is some evidence that delayed start times have led to decreased tardiness and absences, Dr. Yuen said. To have the same impact with permanent DST, “instead of starting at 8:30 a.m., you’d have to start at 9:30,” Dr. Johnson added after the meeting.

The first discussion of DST at the SLEEP 2021 meeting was led by Erin E. Flynn-Evans, PhD, MPH, director of the Fatigue Countermeasures Laboratory at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center. Dr. Yuen led a later second question-and-answer session. They and each of the eight participants reported that they had no relevant conflicts of interest.

Dr. Yuen and Dr. Flynn-Evans are both coauthors of the AASM’s position statement on DST. Dr. Klerman is a coauthor of the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms 2019 position paper on DST.

The AASM’s statement has been endorsed by 19 organizations, including the American College of Chest Physicians, the SRBR, the American Academy of Cardiovascular Sleep Medicine, the Society of Behavioral Sleep Medicine, the National PTA, and the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

 

The reintroduction of congressional bills that aim to end seasonal time change and move permanently to daylight saving time (DST) – and action on the issue by 19 states in the last 4 years – signal political momentum and up the ante on sleep medicine to educate others and to more uniformly weigh in on the health consequences of such a change.

This was the message of several sleep scientists and physicians who participated in moderated discussions of DST at the virtual annual meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies.

A position paper issued about a year ago by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine objected to the proposed switch and instead called for elimination of DST in favor of permanent standard time (ST). While there are detrimental health effects with time changes in either direction, there is “abundant” evidence that the transition from standard time to daylight saving time is worse, the AASM statement says.

Some experts have questioned, however, whether the evidence is weighty and comprehensive enough to drive a change in national policy. Others, such as SLEEP 2021 discussant Karin Johnson, MD, say there is unawareness outside of sleep medicine – and even within – of a growing body of literature on circadian misalignment and its associated health risks.

“There’s an educational gap for what’s out there [in the literature],” Dr. Johnson, medical director of the Baystate Health regional sleep program and Baystate Medical Center sleep laboratory in Springfield, Mass., said in an interview after the meeting.

Calls for more research, particularly on the chronic effects of DST and ST, are concerning because discussions of abolishing seasonal time change are “moving forward with or without us,” Kenneth Wright Jr., PhD, director of the chronobiology laboratory at the University of Colorado in Boulder and professor in the university’s department of integrative biology, said at the meeting.

“We don’t have time ... to have the studies we’d need to prove unequivocally that permanent standard time [is best]. We need to consider the scientific evidence before us – what’s known about human biology and health with respect to light and circadian timing,” Dr. Wright said. “The argument that pushing our clocks later is going to be healthier is not tenable. We cannot support that given the vast amount of scientific evidence we have from circadian and sleep science.”

Underscoring the sense of urgency to be engaged in the issue were the messages of Rep. Raymond Ward, MD, PhD, a Utah legislator in the state’s House of Representatives who introduced a bill to permanently observe DST, pending the amendment of federal law to permit such a change, and provided that five other Western states enact the same legislation.

“I chose to support DST because I became convinced this is the only thing that’s politically possible,” said Rep. Ward, a family practice physician at the Ogden Clinic in Bountiful. National polls have shown a “strong preference” to end seasonal time change, he said, and a poll conducted in his district showed that nearly 80% “wanted to stop changing the clocks, and 65% wanted the summer time schedule.”

“To me, the train seems to be moving in one direction,” said Rep. Ward. “The bills open in Congress in both the House and the Senate don’t have enough support yet, but every time another state legislature passes [legislation to establish permanent DST], they pick up a few more supporters.”

The Sunshine Protection Act of 2021 introduced in the House in January by Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla.) has 23 cosponsors, and a bill of the same name introduced in the Senate in March by Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has 14 cosponsors. Both bills have bipartisan support and are reintroductions of legislation initially put forth in 2019. A press release issued by Sen. Rubio’s office says that “extending DST can benefit the economy and our overall health.”

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, 19 states have enacted legislation or passed resolutions in the last several years to provide for year-round DST, if Congress were to allow such a change. And according to a Congressional Research Service (CRS) report on DST updated in September 2020, at least 45 states have, since 2015, proposed legislation to change their observance of DST.

These efforts include proposals to exempt a state from DST observance, which is allowable under existing law, and proposals that would establish permanent DST, which would require Congress to amend the Uniform Time Act of 1966, the CRS report says.
 

 

 

The state of the science

Shifting from ST to DST has been associated with an increase in cardiovascular morbidity (heart attacks and atrial fibrillation), increased missed medical appointments, increased ED visits, increased mood disturbances and suicide risk, increased risk of fatal car crashes and medical errors – and sleep loss, said Elizabeth Klerman, MD, PhD, professor of neurology in the division of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston.

These associations are covered in AASM statement, along with acknowledgment that most studies on the chronic effects of DST have “either been retrospective or addressed the issue indirectly.”

For Dr. Johnson, who refers to DST as “sleep deprivation time,” the most convincing data regarding the dangers of permanent DST come from studies comparing locations within time zones. “The farther you’re off from the meridian, the more you have that ‘social jet lag’ or circadian misalignment [between the innate circadian rhythm, which is synchronized with solar time, and school or work schedules],” she said at the meeting.

Researchers reported in 2017, for instance, that the risk for all cancers and many specific cancers increased from east to west within a time zone, as solar time is progressively delayed. “They documented changes in risk for every 5 degrees west from the meridian,” she said.

Dr. Johnson is a case in point of the “educational gap” that she believes needs attention. Two years ago, as chair of the sleep section of the American Academy of Neurology, she delved into the literature after the AAN asked the section whether it should endorse the AASM’s position paper on DST. “I didn’t know the literature even as a sleep scientist until I got into this,” she said.

“If you’re asked me 2 years ago,” she added in the later interview, “I would have said that permanent DST is fine.”

The sleep section recommended that the AAN endorse permanent ST, but the AAN ultimately decided it “didn’t feel strongly enough to say that standard time is unequivocally the better option,” Dr. Johnson said in an interview. “They agreed that there’s science [in favor of it], but ... it’s a big public policy decision.”

Jamie Zeitzer, PhD, associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford (Calif.) University’s Center for Sleep Sciences and Medicine, voiced similar concerns at the meeting about currently advocating a shift in either direction. It’s “absolutely clear that switching clocks, especially since it’s occurring at a population level, is deleterious and we need to get rid of it,” he said. “But before we put forth dictates on public health [with a shift to permanent ST], I think we better be sure we’re correct.”

“I think we’re getting close. I think the data thus far [are indicating] that permanent standard time is better for health,” Dr. Zeitzer said. “But I don’t think there’s a cumulative amount of evidence to really say that we have to subvert all other interests because this is so important for public health. We need at least a few more studies.”

There is not enough evidence, for instance, to conclude that the body clock does not eventually adjust to DST, he said, and it is not yet clear what roles electric light and sunlight each play in the body’s circadian time.

“And we need to think about north-south. What may be important for the upper Midwest, and for Maine, and for Washington, may not be ... good for Florida and Texas and southern California,” Dr. Zeitzer said. “You have very different patterns of light exposure, especially when it deals with seasons.”
 

 

 

Historical considerations

In his comments at the meeting, Muhammad Rishi, MBBS, the lead author of the AASM’s position statement, added that circadian misalignment – that “asynchrony between the internal and external clocks” – is associated in studies with an increased risk of obesity, metabolic syndrome, and depression.

But he also emphasized that the “historical evidence” against permanent DST is at least as strong as the medical evidence.

“The U.S. has gone on permanent daylight savings time several times in the past, most recently in the 1970s during the OPEC [oil embargo], and it was so unpopular,” said Dr. Rishi, of the department of pulmonology, critical care and sleep medicine at the Mayo Clinic Health System in Eau Claire, Wis. “England also did it in the 1960s and then abolished it, and most recently Russia did it ... it became so unpopular with increased depression and mood disorders that they abolished it.”

Rep. Ward said that China has offered a large natural experiment with its move decades ago from five time zones to one time zone – Beijing time. “I don’t think we’ve seen any sweeping changes in their health because they have one large time zone,” he said.

Dr. Klerman took issue, saying she “knows someone in China who is trying to get that data about health outcomes and is unable to get it.”

Arguments that DST saves energy hold little to no weight upon scrutiny of the data, Dr. Johnson said. Moreover, research other than oft-cited, older Department of Transportation studies suggests that “permanent DST is bad for energy and bad for the climate,” she said. “This really needs to be more fully evaluated by the government and others.”

Dr. Johnson said after the meeting that it’s important for experts from the energy and climate sectors, education, and medicine – including pediatrics, oncology, and other specialties with “a stake in this” – to come together and share information so “we won’t all be in our silos.” She and other sleep experts in the neurology field are planning to host a summit in 2022 to do just this.

Dr. Johnson and Kin Yuen, MD, of the Sleep Disorders Center at the University of California, San Francisco, both expressed concern at the meeting that adoption of permanent DST would negate the benefits of delayed school start times in middle and high school students.

There is some evidence that delayed start times have led to decreased tardiness and absences, Dr. Yuen said. To have the same impact with permanent DST, “instead of starting at 8:30 a.m., you’d have to start at 9:30,” Dr. Johnson added after the meeting.

The first discussion of DST at the SLEEP 2021 meeting was led by Erin E. Flynn-Evans, PhD, MPH, director of the Fatigue Countermeasures Laboratory at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center. Dr. Yuen led a later second question-and-answer session. They and each of the eight participants reported that they had no relevant conflicts of interest.

Dr. Yuen and Dr. Flynn-Evans are both coauthors of the AASM’s position statement on DST. Dr. Klerman is a coauthor of the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms 2019 position paper on DST.

The AASM’s statement has been endorsed by 19 organizations, including the American College of Chest Physicians, the SRBR, the American Academy of Cardiovascular Sleep Medicine, the Society of Behavioral Sleep Medicine, the National PTA, and the American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

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Medicare proposes direct payments to PAs, telehealth expansion

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Wed, 07/14/2021 - 16:01

Medicare intends next year to allow physician assistants (PAs) to begin directly billing for their work and to expand coverage of telehealth services. It also intends to change the approach to payments for office visits and for coaching programs for diabetes prevention.

adventtr/iStock/Getty Images Plus

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recently posted its proposed 2022 physician fee schedule. Running to more than 1,700 pages, the draft rule contains myriad other changes in how the giant federal health program pays for medical care, including revisions to its approach to evaluation and management (E/M) services, which represent many office visits. In addition, Medicare is seeking to increase participation in a program intended to prevent people from developing diabetes.

Physician groups posted quick complaints about a proposed 3.75% reduction to the conversion factor because of budget neutrality requirements. The cut reinstates a reduction Congress prevented in late 2020.

In a statement, Anders Gilberg, senior vice president of government affairs for the Medical Group Management Association, called the draft rule a “mixed bag for physician practices.” Mr. Gilberg said the MGMA will seek congressional intervention to avert the cut for services in 2022.

In keeping with a provision Congress included in a massive spending bill enacted in December, Medicare will let PAs directly bill, as nurse practitioners already can. In a press release, CMS on July 13 described this as a move likely to expand access to care and reduce administrative burden. In 2020, the American Academy of PAs praised the inclusion in the spending bill of the provision allowing its members to directly bill Medicare.

In the draft rule, CMS also intends to remove certain geographic restrictions regarding use of telehealth services for diagnosis, evaluation, and treatment of mental health disorders. CMS also is proposing to allow payment to eligible clinicians for certain mental health and behavioral health services to patients via audio-only telephone calls. These services would include counseling and therapy services provided through opioid treatment programs.

“These changes would be particularly helpful for those in areas with poor broadband infrastructure and among people with Medicare who are not capable of, or do not consent to the use of, devices that permit a two-way, audio/video interaction for their health care visits,” CMS said in a statement.
 

Slimmer Medicare enrollees, bigger payments for coaches?

CMS is seeking to draw more participants to the Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program (MDPP). This program includes organizations that provide structured, coach-led sessions in community and health care settings to help people lose weight and exercise more. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, CMS waived an enrollment fee for new suppliers of services in MDPP. CMS now is proposing to waive this fee for all organizations that submit an application to enroll in Medicare as an MDPP supplier on or after Jan. 1, 2022.

Another proposed change in MDPP services is a restructuring of payments so that organizations involved in coaching would receive larger payments when their participants reach milestones for attendance and for becoming slimmer.

“We propose to increase performance payments for MDPP beneficiary achievement of the 5% weight-loss goal, as well as continued attendance during each core maintenance interval,” CMS said in a statement.

Medicare remains engaged in a review of its payments for E/M services. In the draft rule, CMS is proposing a number of refinements to current policies for split, or shared, E/M visits, critical care services, and services furnished by teaching physicians involving residents. The intention of these changes is to “better reflect the current practice of medicine, the evolving role of nonphysician practitioners as members of the medical team, and to clarify conditions of payment that must be met to bill Medicare for these services,” CMS said.

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

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Medicare intends next year to allow physician assistants (PAs) to begin directly billing for their work and to expand coverage of telehealth services. It also intends to change the approach to payments for office visits and for coaching programs for diabetes prevention.

adventtr/iStock/Getty Images Plus

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recently posted its proposed 2022 physician fee schedule. Running to more than 1,700 pages, the draft rule contains myriad other changes in how the giant federal health program pays for medical care, including revisions to its approach to evaluation and management (E/M) services, which represent many office visits. In addition, Medicare is seeking to increase participation in a program intended to prevent people from developing diabetes.

Physician groups posted quick complaints about a proposed 3.75% reduction to the conversion factor because of budget neutrality requirements. The cut reinstates a reduction Congress prevented in late 2020.

In a statement, Anders Gilberg, senior vice president of government affairs for the Medical Group Management Association, called the draft rule a “mixed bag for physician practices.” Mr. Gilberg said the MGMA will seek congressional intervention to avert the cut for services in 2022.

In keeping with a provision Congress included in a massive spending bill enacted in December, Medicare will let PAs directly bill, as nurse practitioners already can. In a press release, CMS on July 13 described this as a move likely to expand access to care and reduce administrative burden. In 2020, the American Academy of PAs praised the inclusion in the spending bill of the provision allowing its members to directly bill Medicare.

In the draft rule, CMS also intends to remove certain geographic restrictions regarding use of telehealth services for diagnosis, evaluation, and treatment of mental health disorders. CMS also is proposing to allow payment to eligible clinicians for certain mental health and behavioral health services to patients via audio-only telephone calls. These services would include counseling and therapy services provided through opioid treatment programs.

“These changes would be particularly helpful for those in areas with poor broadband infrastructure and among people with Medicare who are not capable of, or do not consent to the use of, devices that permit a two-way, audio/video interaction for their health care visits,” CMS said in a statement.
 

Slimmer Medicare enrollees, bigger payments for coaches?

CMS is seeking to draw more participants to the Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program (MDPP). This program includes organizations that provide structured, coach-led sessions in community and health care settings to help people lose weight and exercise more. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, CMS waived an enrollment fee for new suppliers of services in MDPP. CMS now is proposing to waive this fee for all organizations that submit an application to enroll in Medicare as an MDPP supplier on or after Jan. 1, 2022.

Another proposed change in MDPP services is a restructuring of payments so that organizations involved in coaching would receive larger payments when their participants reach milestones for attendance and for becoming slimmer.

“We propose to increase performance payments for MDPP beneficiary achievement of the 5% weight-loss goal, as well as continued attendance during each core maintenance interval,” CMS said in a statement.

Medicare remains engaged in a review of its payments for E/M services. In the draft rule, CMS is proposing a number of refinements to current policies for split, or shared, E/M visits, critical care services, and services furnished by teaching physicians involving residents. The intention of these changes is to “better reflect the current practice of medicine, the evolving role of nonphysician practitioners as members of the medical team, and to clarify conditions of payment that must be met to bill Medicare for these services,” CMS said.

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

Medicare intends next year to allow physician assistants (PAs) to begin directly billing for their work and to expand coverage of telehealth services. It also intends to change the approach to payments for office visits and for coaching programs for diabetes prevention.

adventtr/iStock/Getty Images Plus

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recently posted its proposed 2022 physician fee schedule. Running to more than 1,700 pages, the draft rule contains myriad other changes in how the giant federal health program pays for medical care, including revisions to its approach to evaluation and management (E/M) services, which represent many office visits. In addition, Medicare is seeking to increase participation in a program intended to prevent people from developing diabetes.

Physician groups posted quick complaints about a proposed 3.75% reduction to the conversion factor because of budget neutrality requirements. The cut reinstates a reduction Congress prevented in late 2020.

In a statement, Anders Gilberg, senior vice president of government affairs for the Medical Group Management Association, called the draft rule a “mixed bag for physician practices.” Mr. Gilberg said the MGMA will seek congressional intervention to avert the cut for services in 2022.

In keeping with a provision Congress included in a massive spending bill enacted in December, Medicare will let PAs directly bill, as nurse practitioners already can. In a press release, CMS on July 13 described this as a move likely to expand access to care and reduce administrative burden. In 2020, the American Academy of PAs praised the inclusion in the spending bill of the provision allowing its members to directly bill Medicare.

In the draft rule, CMS also intends to remove certain geographic restrictions regarding use of telehealth services for diagnosis, evaluation, and treatment of mental health disorders. CMS also is proposing to allow payment to eligible clinicians for certain mental health and behavioral health services to patients via audio-only telephone calls. These services would include counseling and therapy services provided through opioid treatment programs.

“These changes would be particularly helpful for those in areas with poor broadband infrastructure and among people with Medicare who are not capable of, or do not consent to the use of, devices that permit a two-way, audio/video interaction for their health care visits,” CMS said in a statement.
 

Slimmer Medicare enrollees, bigger payments for coaches?

CMS is seeking to draw more participants to the Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program (MDPP). This program includes organizations that provide structured, coach-led sessions in community and health care settings to help people lose weight and exercise more. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, CMS waived an enrollment fee for new suppliers of services in MDPP. CMS now is proposing to waive this fee for all organizations that submit an application to enroll in Medicare as an MDPP supplier on or after Jan. 1, 2022.

Another proposed change in MDPP services is a restructuring of payments so that organizations involved in coaching would receive larger payments when their participants reach milestones for attendance and for becoming slimmer.

“We propose to increase performance payments for MDPP beneficiary achievement of the 5% weight-loss goal, as well as continued attendance during each core maintenance interval,” CMS said in a statement.

Medicare remains engaged in a review of its payments for E/M services. In the draft rule, CMS is proposing a number of refinements to current policies for split, or shared, E/M visits, critical care services, and services furnished by teaching physicians involving residents. The intention of these changes is to “better reflect the current practice of medicine, the evolving role of nonphysician practitioners as members of the medical team, and to clarify conditions of payment that must be met to bill Medicare for these services,” CMS said.

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

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Long COVID symptoms reported by 6% of pediatric patients

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Thu, 09/09/2021 - 16:19

 

Persistent long COVID symptoms affect approximately 6% of children 3 months after infection with SARS-CoV-2, according to new research.

The prevalence of long COVID in children has been unclear, and is complicated by the lack of a consistent definition, said Anna Funk, PhD, an epidemiologist at the University of Calgary (Alba.), during her online presentation of the findings at the 31st European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases.

In the several small studies conducted to date, rates range from 0% to 67% 2-4 months after infection, Dr. Funk reported.

To examine prevalence, she and her colleagues, as part of the Pediatric Emergency Research Network (PERN) global research consortium, assessed more than 10,500 children who were screened for SARS-CoV-2 when they presented to the ED at 1 of 41 study sites in 10 countries – Australia, Canada, Indonesia, the United States, plus three countries in Latin America and three in Western Europe – from March 2020 to June 15, 2021.

PERN researchers are following up with the more than 3,100 children who tested positive 14, 30, and 90 days after testing, tracking respiratory, neurologic, and psychobehavioral sequelae.

Dr. Funk presented data on the 1,884 children who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 before Jan. 20, 2021, and who had completed 90-day follow-up; 447 of those children were hospitalized and 1,437 were not.

Symptoms were reported more often by children admitted to the hospital than not admitted (9.8% vs. 4.6%). Common persistent symptoms were respiratory in 2% of cases, systemic (such as fatigue and fever) in 2%, neurologic (such as headache, seizures, and continued loss of taste or smell) in 1%, and psychological (such as new-onset depression and anxiety) in 1%.

“This study provides the first good epidemiological data on persistent symptoms among SARS-CoV-2–infected children, regardless of severity,” said Kevin Messacar, MD, a pediatric infectious disease clinician and researcher at Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, who was not involved in the study.

And the findings show that, although severe COVID and chronic symptoms are less common in children than in adults, they are “not nonexistent and need to be taken seriously,” he said in an interview.

After adjustment for country of enrollment, children aged 10-17 years were more likely to experience persistent symptoms than children younger than 1 year (odds ratio, 2.4; P = .002).

Hospitalized children were more than twice as likely to experience persistent symptoms as nonhospitalized children (OR, 2.5; P < .001). And children who presented to the ED with at least seven symptoms were four times more likely to have long-term symptoms than those who presented with fewer symptoms (OR, 4.02; P = .01).
 

‘Some reassurance’

“Given that COVID is new and is known to have acute cardiac and neurologic effects, particularly in children with [multisystem inflammatory syndrome], there were initially concerns about persistent cardiovascular and neurologic effects in any infected child,” Dr. Messacar explained. “These data provide some reassurance that this is uncommon among children with mild or moderate infections who are not hospitalized.”

But “the risk is not zero,” he added. “Getting children vaccinated when it is available to them and taking precautions to prevent unvaccinated children getting COVID is the best way to reduce the risk of severe disease or persistent symptoms.”

The study was limited by its lack of data on variants, reliance on self-reported symptoms, and a population drawn solely from EDs, Dr. Funk acknowledged.

No external funding source was noted. Dr. Messacar and Dr. Funk disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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Persistent long COVID symptoms affect approximately 6% of children 3 months after infection with SARS-CoV-2, according to new research.

The prevalence of long COVID in children has been unclear, and is complicated by the lack of a consistent definition, said Anna Funk, PhD, an epidemiologist at the University of Calgary (Alba.), during her online presentation of the findings at the 31st European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases.

In the several small studies conducted to date, rates range from 0% to 67% 2-4 months after infection, Dr. Funk reported.

To examine prevalence, she and her colleagues, as part of the Pediatric Emergency Research Network (PERN) global research consortium, assessed more than 10,500 children who were screened for SARS-CoV-2 when they presented to the ED at 1 of 41 study sites in 10 countries – Australia, Canada, Indonesia, the United States, plus three countries in Latin America and three in Western Europe – from March 2020 to June 15, 2021.

PERN researchers are following up with the more than 3,100 children who tested positive 14, 30, and 90 days after testing, tracking respiratory, neurologic, and psychobehavioral sequelae.

Dr. Funk presented data on the 1,884 children who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 before Jan. 20, 2021, and who had completed 90-day follow-up; 447 of those children were hospitalized and 1,437 were not.

Symptoms were reported more often by children admitted to the hospital than not admitted (9.8% vs. 4.6%). Common persistent symptoms were respiratory in 2% of cases, systemic (such as fatigue and fever) in 2%, neurologic (such as headache, seizures, and continued loss of taste or smell) in 1%, and psychological (such as new-onset depression and anxiety) in 1%.

“This study provides the first good epidemiological data on persistent symptoms among SARS-CoV-2–infected children, regardless of severity,” said Kevin Messacar, MD, a pediatric infectious disease clinician and researcher at Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, who was not involved in the study.

And the findings show that, although severe COVID and chronic symptoms are less common in children than in adults, they are “not nonexistent and need to be taken seriously,” he said in an interview.

After adjustment for country of enrollment, children aged 10-17 years were more likely to experience persistent symptoms than children younger than 1 year (odds ratio, 2.4; P = .002).

Hospitalized children were more than twice as likely to experience persistent symptoms as nonhospitalized children (OR, 2.5; P < .001). And children who presented to the ED with at least seven symptoms were four times more likely to have long-term symptoms than those who presented with fewer symptoms (OR, 4.02; P = .01).
 

‘Some reassurance’

“Given that COVID is new and is known to have acute cardiac and neurologic effects, particularly in children with [multisystem inflammatory syndrome], there were initially concerns about persistent cardiovascular and neurologic effects in any infected child,” Dr. Messacar explained. “These data provide some reassurance that this is uncommon among children with mild or moderate infections who are not hospitalized.”

But “the risk is not zero,” he added. “Getting children vaccinated when it is available to them and taking precautions to prevent unvaccinated children getting COVID is the best way to reduce the risk of severe disease or persistent symptoms.”

The study was limited by its lack of data on variants, reliance on self-reported symptoms, and a population drawn solely from EDs, Dr. Funk acknowledged.

No external funding source was noted. Dr. Messacar and Dr. Funk disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

 

Persistent long COVID symptoms affect approximately 6% of children 3 months after infection with SARS-CoV-2, according to new research.

The prevalence of long COVID in children has been unclear, and is complicated by the lack of a consistent definition, said Anna Funk, PhD, an epidemiologist at the University of Calgary (Alba.), during her online presentation of the findings at the 31st European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases.

In the several small studies conducted to date, rates range from 0% to 67% 2-4 months after infection, Dr. Funk reported.

To examine prevalence, she and her colleagues, as part of the Pediatric Emergency Research Network (PERN) global research consortium, assessed more than 10,500 children who were screened for SARS-CoV-2 when they presented to the ED at 1 of 41 study sites in 10 countries – Australia, Canada, Indonesia, the United States, plus three countries in Latin America and three in Western Europe – from March 2020 to June 15, 2021.

PERN researchers are following up with the more than 3,100 children who tested positive 14, 30, and 90 days after testing, tracking respiratory, neurologic, and psychobehavioral sequelae.

Dr. Funk presented data on the 1,884 children who tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 before Jan. 20, 2021, and who had completed 90-day follow-up; 447 of those children were hospitalized and 1,437 were not.

Symptoms were reported more often by children admitted to the hospital than not admitted (9.8% vs. 4.6%). Common persistent symptoms were respiratory in 2% of cases, systemic (such as fatigue and fever) in 2%, neurologic (such as headache, seizures, and continued loss of taste or smell) in 1%, and psychological (such as new-onset depression and anxiety) in 1%.

“This study provides the first good epidemiological data on persistent symptoms among SARS-CoV-2–infected children, regardless of severity,” said Kevin Messacar, MD, a pediatric infectious disease clinician and researcher at Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora, who was not involved in the study.

And the findings show that, although severe COVID and chronic symptoms are less common in children than in adults, they are “not nonexistent and need to be taken seriously,” he said in an interview.

After adjustment for country of enrollment, children aged 10-17 years were more likely to experience persistent symptoms than children younger than 1 year (odds ratio, 2.4; P = .002).

Hospitalized children were more than twice as likely to experience persistent symptoms as nonhospitalized children (OR, 2.5; P < .001). And children who presented to the ED with at least seven symptoms were four times more likely to have long-term symptoms than those who presented with fewer symptoms (OR, 4.02; P = .01).
 

‘Some reassurance’

“Given that COVID is new and is known to have acute cardiac and neurologic effects, particularly in children with [multisystem inflammatory syndrome], there were initially concerns about persistent cardiovascular and neurologic effects in any infected child,” Dr. Messacar explained. “These data provide some reassurance that this is uncommon among children with mild or moderate infections who are not hospitalized.”

But “the risk is not zero,” he added. “Getting children vaccinated when it is available to them and taking precautions to prevent unvaccinated children getting COVID is the best way to reduce the risk of severe disease or persistent symptoms.”

The study was limited by its lack of data on variants, reliance on self-reported symptoms, and a population drawn solely from EDs, Dr. Funk acknowledged.

No external funding source was noted. Dr. Messacar and Dr. Funk disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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

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FDA to warn J&J that vaccine can increase Guillain-Barré risk: Media

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Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:45

 

People receiving the Johnson and Johnson COVID-19 vaccine could be at increased risk for developing Guillain-Barré syndrome, the Food and Drug Administration is expected to announce as early as July 13, according to multiple media reports.

Although the FDA is projected to add the new warning to the labeling for the vaccine, the agency still calculates the benefit of vaccination with the J&J product continues to outweigh the risk. Benefits include protection against the Delta variant and serious COVID-19 outcomes.

More than 100 cases of Guillain-Barré reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, a federal program for reporting vaccine issues, spurred the FDA to act.

Men and people older than 50 appear to be at highest risk, according to reports of a July 12 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statement. The CDC also revealed that most cases occur about 2 weeks following immunization.

Guillain-Barré syndrome often causes muscle weakness and sometimes temporary paralysis. Most people who develop the rare syndrome recover.

Such was not the case for a 57-year-old man, the New York Times reported July 12. He had a history of both a heart attack and stroke in the previous 4 years and died in April after vaccination with the J&J vaccine and developing Guillain-Barré.

The new warning comes in the wake of a number of setbacks for the company’s COVID-19 vaccine. On April 13, the FDA and CDC both recommended a 10-day pause on administration of the J&J vaccine after reports of rare blood clot events emerged. In mid-June, the FDA requested that Johnson and Johnson discard millions of vaccine doses produced at a manufacturing facility in Baltimore.

The mRNA vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna are not affected by the new FDA warning.

The Biden administration is expected to make a formal announcement of the new warning for the Johnson and Johnson vaccine as early as July 13, the Times reports.

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

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People receiving the Johnson and Johnson COVID-19 vaccine could be at increased risk for developing Guillain-Barré syndrome, the Food and Drug Administration is expected to announce as early as July 13, according to multiple media reports.

Although the FDA is projected to add the new warning to the labeling for the vaccine, the agency still calculates the benefit of vaccination with the J&J product continues to outweigh the risk. Benefits include protection against the Delta variant and serious COVID-19 outcomes.

More than 100 cases of Guillain-Barré reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, a federal program for reporting vaccine issues, spurred the FDA to act.

Men and people older than 50 appear to be at highest risk, according to reports of a July 12 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statement. The CDC also revealed that most cases occur about 2 weeks following immunization.

Guillain-Barré syndrome often causes muscle weakness and sometimes temporary paralysis. Most people who develop the rare syndrome recover.

Such was not the case for a 57-year-old man, the New York Times reported July 12. He had a history of both a heart attack and stroke in the previous 4 years and died in April after vaccination with the J&J vaccine and developing Guillain-Barré.

The new warning comes in the wake of a number of setbacks for the company’s COVID-19 vaccine. On April 13, the FDA and CDC both recommended a 10-day pause on administration of the J&J vaccine after reports of rare blood clot events emerged. In mid-June, the FDA requested that Johnson and Johnson discard millions of vaccine doses produced at a manufacturing facility in Baltimore.

The mRNA vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna are not affected by the new FDA warning.

The Biden administration is expected to make a formal announcement of the new warning for the Johnson and Johnson vaccine as early as July 13, the Times reports.

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

 

People receiving the Johnson and Johnson COVID-19 vaccine could be at increased risk for developing Guillain-Barré syndrome, the Food and Drug Administration is expected to announce as early as July 13, according to multiple media reports.

Although the FDA is projected to add the new warning to the labeling for the vaccine, the agency still calculates the benefit of vaccination with the J&J product continues to outweigh the risk. Benefits include protection against the Delta variant and serious COVID-19 outcomes.

More than 100 cases of Guillain-Barré reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, a federal program for reporting vaccine issues, spurred the FDA to act.

Men and people older than 50 appear to be at highest risk, according to reports of a July 12 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statement. The CDC also revealed that most cases occur about 2 weeks following immunization.

Guillain-Barré syndrome often causes muscle weakness and sometimes temporary paralysis. Most people who develop the rare syndrome recover.

Such was not the case for a 57-year-old man, the New York Times reported July 12. He had a history of both a heart attack and stroke in the previous 4 years and died in April after vaccination with the J&J vaccine and developing Guillain-Barré.

The new warning comes in the wake of a number of setbacks for the company’s COVID-19 vaccine. On April 13, the FDA and CDC both recommended a 10-day pause on administration of the J&J vaccine after reports of rare blood clot events emerged. In mid-June, the FDA requested that Johnson and Johnson discard millions of vaccine doses produced at a manufacturing facility in Baltimore.

The mRNA vaccines from Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna are not affected by the new FDA warning.

The Biden administration is expected to make a formal announcement of the new warning for the Johnson and Johnson vaccine as early as July 13, the Times reports.

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

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