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  • Gene Sequencing May Be Able To Someday Help Prevent Outbreaks, Research Fellow Says

    Josh Quick, UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders fellow at the Institute of Microbiology and Infection at the University of Birmingham, wrote in a “First Opinion” piece for STAT (9/11), “As the novel coronavirus continues to infect people around the...
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  • Researchers May Be Able To Use Baseline Data, Biological Materials To Investigate Coronavirus Risk Factors

    STAT (9/11, Tuller) reported, “From 2014 to 2018, DePaul University psychologist Leonard Jason and colleagues collected personal information and blood samples from more than 4,500 healthy college students,” following “the group as some students contracted...
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  • Pathogenesis Of Human Adenovirus Type 7-Induced Severe Disease Tied To High Replication Competence And Hyperinflammatory Responses, Study Indicates

    Infectious Disease Advisor (9/11, van Paridon) reported researchers found “the pathogenesis of human adenovirus type 7-induced severe disease was likely associated with high replication competence and hyperinflammatory responses.” The findings were publis...
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  • Massachusetts Announces Four More Cases Of West Nile Virus In People

    The AP (9/13) reports the Massachusetts Department of Public Health announced four more cases of West Nile virus in humans, bringing this year’s total to seven. All four new cases were in Middlesex County, and the state health department “said Cambridge,...
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  • Various Companies, Restaurants Conducting Temperature Screenings

    The New York Times (9/13, Rabin) reports, “In recent weeks, a new cadre of gatekeepers armed with thermometer guns has appeared at the entrances of hospitals, office buildings and manufacturing plants to screen out feverish individuals who may carry the c...
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  • Many Patients Across US Receiving Surprise Bills For Coronavirus Tests Despite Coverage Programs

    The New York Times (9/9, Kliff) reports, “For months, Americans have been told not to worry about the costs of coronavirus tests. ... Congress passed laws requiring insurers to pay for tests, and the Trump administration created a program to cover the bil...
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  • Texas Working To Secure New $5, 15-Minute Rapid Coronavirus Tests

    The Dallas Morning News (9/11, Krause, Tatum) reports Texas officials are “working to get new $5, 15-minute rapid COVID-19 tests, Gov. Greg Abbott’s (R) spokesman, John Wittman, confirmed Tuesday.” In an email, Wittman said, “Texas is in the process of re...
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  • Experts Say All Patients With Breast Cancer And Second Cancer Should Undergo Multigene Panel Testing

    Medscape (9/10, Fuerst, Subscription Publication) reports all patients with breast cancer “who develop a second primary cancer should undergo multigene panel testing, according to a paper published in JCO Precision Oncology.” The paper’s “authors noted th...
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  • Researchers Say Hypertension Is The Most Common Comorbidity In Patients Hospitalized For COVID-19

    Healio (9/10, Dobkowski) reports “researchers found in two separate studies” that “the most prevalent comorbidity in patients hospitalized for COVID-19 was hypertension, which was also a risk factor for acute kidney injury in the ED and mortality in these...
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  • Among Patients With Bacteremia Or With Hematogenous PJI, There Is A Low Risk Of Second PJI In Concomitant Asymptomatic Prosthetic Implants, Study Indicates

    Infectious Disease Advisor (9/10, Gupta) reports researchers found “in patients with bacteremia or with a hematogenous periprosthetic joint infection (PJI), there is a low incidence of a second PJI in concomitant prosthetic implants that have no clinical...
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  • Researchers Examine Which Hospital Workers Are At Greater Risk For Coronavirus Seropositivity

    MedPage Today (9/10, Walker) reports researchers found that “hospital clinicians taking care of the sickest COVID-19 patients were associated with the lowest risk of seropositivity versus those working in other areas of the hospital, and personal protecti...
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  • Researchers Say Infection Control Measures Implemented At Brigham And Women’s Hospital Kept Coronavirus Transmission Very Low

    HealthDay (9/10, Preidt) reports researchers found “infection control measures implemented in response to the coronavirus pandemic kept transmission of the virus to patients” at Brigham and Women’s Hospital “at nearly zero.” The hospital’s infection contr...
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  • Study Of Medical Records Raises Questions About If COVID-19 Was Spreading In US Earlier Than Thought

    The Washington Post (9/10, Guarino) reports “the number of patients complaining of coughs and respiratory illnesses surged at a sprawling Los Angeles medical system from late December through February, raising questions about whether the novel coronavirus...
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  • Idaho Reports Its First Human Cases Of West Nile Virus This Season

    Fox News (9/10, Rivas) reports, “Idaho health officials reported two human West Nile cases Wednesday, marking the first of the season.” These “infections were found among two residents in Owyhee County, which runs along the state’s southwest border.”
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  • Researchers At Rutgers University Report First Case In New Jersey Of A Tick Species Associated With Bats

    Fox News (9/10, Rivas) reports, “A tick species associated with bats was recorded in New Jersey for the first time, researchers say, and humans, pets and livestock could be at risk of infection.” The “findings from the Rutgers University-led study were pu...
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  • Red Blood Cells and Platelets Conventional and Research Parameters: Stability Remarks Before Their Interpretation: A Method to Quantify and Correct Time-Dependent Changes

    Abstract Not Available
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  • Forty Postmortem Examinations in COVID-19 Patients: Two Distinct Pathologic Phenotypes and Correlation With Clinical and Radiologic Findings

    Abstract Not Available
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  • COVID-19 Pandemic Has Reportedly Worsened Shortages For Personnel Trained In Microbiology And Molecular Testing

    Modern Healthcare (9/9, Bonislawski, Subscription Publication) reports the COVID-19 pandemic “has ramped up demand in two areas – microbiology and molecular testing – where trained personnel were already in short supply.” Modern Healthcare quotes several...
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  • Machine Learning Approach May Analyze Placenta Slides, Inform More Women Of Health Risks In Future Pregnancies, Study Indicates

    Health IT Analytics (9/9, Kent) reports, “A machine learning approach can analyze placenta slides and inform more women of their health risks in future pregnancies, leading to lower healthcare costs and better outcomes,” investigators concluded. In the st...
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  • Researchers Say Two Gene Expression Profile Tests For Cutaneous Melanoma Often Fail To Accurately Identify Recurrent Stage I Disease

    Healio (9/9, Volansky) reports researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis and found “two gene expression profile tests for cutaneous melanoma often failed to accurately identify recurrent stage I disease.” Healio adds “the researchers aim...
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