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The Trump administration is making viruses great again

The Trump administration is making viruses great again

The Guardian2 days ago
Do you enjoy getting sick from preventable diseases? Do you have a hankering to make once-declining viruses great again? If so, why not pop over to the US where the health secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, and his anti-vaccine cronies are making a valiant effort to overturn decades of progress in modern medicine?
Let's start with measles cases, which are at their highest rate in 33 years in the US. The blame for this doesn't rest entirely with the Trump administration, of course, but officials certainly don't seem too bothered by it all. RFK Jr has downplayed the number of deaths that have occurred from measles and complained about all the headlines they're generating.
Like the rest of his peers in the Trump administration, RFK Jr seems to have absolutely no idea what he is doing, and appears to be just making things up as he goes along. Indeed, the health secretary memorably told Congress in mid-May that he doesn't really think people should be taking medical advice from him. He seems to have forgotten that statement the moment the words left his mouth, however. Not even a couple of weeks later Kennedy announced that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) would stop recommending Covid-19 booster shots for healthy children and pregnant women. This was a highly unusual move, as the health secretary doesn't normally make unilateral changes to vaccine recommendations like this.
While Kennedy seems to govern by vibes, actual medical experts, who rely on things like evidence and data, are deeply alarmed by the removal of the shots from officials' recommended immunization schedule.
'[D]espite the change in recommendations from [health and human services], the science has not changed,' the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) said in a statement. 'It is very clear that Covid-19 infection during pregnancy can be catastrophic and lead to major disability, and it can cause devastating consequences for families.'
Kennedy's decision is now facing legal opposition. In the same week that the US reached its dark measles milestone, a number of leading medical associations sued the Trump administration. 'This administration is an existential threat to vaccination in America, and those in charge are only just getting started,' said the lead counsel for the plaintiffs in a statement.
Restoring trust in public health agencies and vaccines, especially among pregnant women, will take far more than a lawsuit. Two new surveys, published as a research letter in Jama Network Open, have found that only 35% to 40% of US pregnant women and parents of young children say they intend to fully vaccinate their child. To reiterate: we are now at a place where a majority of pregnant women and parents don't plan to accept all recommended kids' vaccines.
'Given the high decisional uncertainty during pregnancy about vaccinating children after birth, there may be value in intervening during pregnancy to proactively support families with childhood vaccination decisions,' the researchers wrote. Unfortunately, under this administration, that's a lot easier said than done.
The president is throwing a fit over backlash to his administration's sudden U-turn on the 'Epstein Files'. On Wednesday he accused his voters of being gullible 'weaklings' who had fallen for the 'Jeffrey Epstein Hoax' which, according to him, is a 'SCAM' cooked up by the 'Lunatic Left' to discredit him. (If it's all a hoax, why is Ghislaine Maxwell in prison, eh?) Then, on Thursday, Status News reported that Trump had called the editor-in-chief of The Wall Street Journal to try to block its story on Trump's relationship with the disgraced financier. No matter how many insults he flings around or threats he makes, Trump can't bury the bigger Epstein story. Instead people are more invested in finding out who Epstein's associates were than ever before and polls show most Americans believe the government is concealing information. Trump may want to look up the Barbra Streisand effect.
The 25-year-old's father allegedly felt threatened because she helped support him financially.
The poet and performance artist died of ovarian cancer. 'Whenever I leave this world, whether it's sixty years from now, I wouldn't want anyone to say I lost some battle,' Gibson once wrote. 'I'll be a winner that day.' Gibson was a winner this week, but the world has lost a force for good.
Back in 2014, the Oscar-winning actor had surgery to remove 30 uterine fibroids– non-cancerous tumors that can cause severe pain and heavy menstrual bleeding. Black women are three times more likely to develop fibroids than white women. July is Fibroid Awareness Month and, on Tuesday, the actor helped introduce a US uterine health legislative package aimed at introducing better prevention and screening protocols and less invasive treatments. 'I hope to seek answers for the far too many women dealing with uterine fibroids,' Nyong'o said. 'We must reject the normalization of female pain.'
'We are deeply concerned about women's access to health care, especially maternal health care, in ICE detention,' the caucus wrote in a letter. They reference the case of a woman who delivered a stillborn baby after being detained in immigration custody and allegedly having medical care delayed.
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The Tufts University doctoral student Rümeysa Öztürk writes about her 45 days in a south Louisiana processing facility.
Someone needs to give that man contraceptive advice, but OK.
In her new memoir, Southern says Tate strangled her in a hotel bed in 2018 and assaulted her. 'No one wants to be a victim, especially not when you come from my political background,' Southern wrote. 'I know exactly what's coming. I'll be crucified online. I'm not looking for sympathy, and I don't expect a victim trophy from any side. I'm publishing this simply because it's the truth and far too few people are telling the truth these days.' Tate, who has been accused of rape and bodily harm by multiple women, responded by accusing Southern of drumming up publicity for her memoir.
Husam Masrouf, a poet from Gaza, has a surreal and haunting piece in Flaming Hydra about the lengths some starving Palestinian women are going to try to obtain nutritional supplements.
You think the US is turning into a police state? I'm afraid things are not any better in the UK, where armed police may threaten to arrest you simply for peacefully holding a Palestinian flag. We live in an upside down world where accused war criminals like Benjamin Netanyahu are wined and dined by politicians, while protesting against the murder of more than 17,000 children is treated as some sort of crime.
Turns out your canine companion may secretly be judging you for your reality TV habit. A new study has found that dogs engage meaningfully with the TV and have certain viewing preferences. I reckon my little chihuahua is a big fan of Game of Bones and RuPaw's Drag Race.
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist
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Readers' Letters: Sack NHS Fife Board in wake of Sandy Peggie case
Readers' Letters: Sack NHS Fife Board in wake of Sandy Peggie case

Scotsman

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  • Scotsman

Readers' Letters: Sack NHS Fife Board in wake of Sandy Peggie case

So far as the Sandie Peggie employment tribunal goes, NHS Fife keeps digging deeper, says reader Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Just what planet do First Minister John Swinney and Health Secretary Neil Gray occupy when they express confidence in the Board of NHS Fife? A Board that has currently spent in excess of £250,000 on an employment tribunal involving a nurse and a transgender doctor and a board that, even during an investigation, has the gall and, indeed, stupidity to issue a public statement attacking a lawyer for the nurse Sandie Peggie and the charity Sex Matters. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad This action was a disgraceful misjudgment and it is now without question that the Board should be removed. If Mr Swinney had a backbone he would at least remove the Chief Executive Carol Potter currently enjoying an overinflated salary of around £150,000. The public and the defence of the public purse deserve nothing less. Nurse Sandie Peggie was suspended from her role by NHS Fife last year after complaining about sharing a changing room with transgender doctor Beth Upton (Picture: Jeff) Richard Allison, Edinburgh Peculiar protest The weekend march in Edinburgh for Gaza was yet another display of anti-Israeli, anti-British "dislike". There were the usual Palestinian flags on display but also of Iran and Scotland. This is an interesting mix. Iran wants to destroy Palestinians, under Hamas, want a genocide of Israelis and Jews to say nothing of gays and the Saltire is from those seeking the break-up of the UK. The common denominator here is for far-reaching changes. This begs relevant questions. Would the elimination of Israel, creating a Hamas run Palestinian state (no placards asked for regime change), an Iranian takeover of the Middle East or even Scottish independence actually make things better? Be careful what you wish for. Gerald Edwards, Glasgow Challenge Trump Every day our ears are assaulted by listening to the insincere words of the Israeli Government; 'Israel is investigating… (yet another slaughter of innocents'), or 'Israel expresses deep sorrow…' (in respect of the killings in Gaza's only Catholic Church, an action criticised by Italy's right wing Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni). Evidence is overwhelming over 18 months of Benjamin Netanyahu's hateful aggression in Gaza, the West Bank and beyond. Experts, even a former Israeli Prime Minister, describe Israeli (and US) plans to create a 'humanitarian city' in South Gaza as nothing other than a concentration camp. Driving Palestinians from their homeland, massacring endless thousands of innocents, clearly pursuing ethnic cleansing and working with Trump to take over Gaza as a development project; these obscene actions are akin to the pogroms of earlier times that were so terrible for the Jews. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Starmer and other world leaders leave Netanyahu to carry on with his obscene plans. Their moral compass has lost direction. The people know better than the politicians what is right and wrong. It's time to challenge Donald Trump and Netanyahu. Time, when Trump visits the UK, to challenge him on his support for the ethnic cleansing of Gaza and the land-grabbing in the West Bank. Andrew Turnbull, Perth Bad old days A Lewis (Letters, 19 July) is, of course, right. Joyce McMillan consistently reaches for the in-words in the world of Champagne socialists, like 'reactionary and neoliberalism', without having a clue what they mean. Like him I am not sure I do. 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There are 17 major islands in the Faroes, meaning fewer than half are interconnected (let's not even start on the 779 minor islands). The oldest tunnel, Vágatunnilin, predates the SNP taking power, there's only one new inter-island tunnel planned – to link Sandoy to Suðuroy – that won't be ready until 2035 at the earliest, and none of them would have happened without massive Danish funding – explaining the eyewatering £40.50 it costs to use the seven-mile long Sandoy tunnel, to pay the costs off, shades of the Skye Toll Bridge fiasco. Mark Boyle, Johnstone, Renfrewshire Write to The Scotsman

Major Hampshire study to examine rare appendix cancer
Major Hampshire study to examine rare appendix cancer

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Major Hampshire study to examine rare appendix cancer

For the first time a major study aims to get a better understanding of the biology of a rare appendix cancer and dramatically delay peritonei, or PMP, affects up to 400 new patients in the UK a year, with as many as 40% seeing it return after the last 30 years Basingstoke and North Hampshire Hospital has become a world leader in this type of cancer. PMP originates in the appendix and spreads throughout the peritoneal cavity, which is the space within the abdomen that contains the intestines, stomach, and liver. Kelly Warwick, 46, is part of the new trial that aims to stop it returning. It involves what is called a "hot wash" of chemotherapy after the cancerous tumour is removed."They put the chemo liquid inside and that stays in for about an hour to an hour and a half, and then they take that out and sow you back up," she describes it as "obviously very painful", but said the main aftereffect was "tiredness".But Kelly said she now felt '"absolutely fine"."I've recovered really well, I've been very lucky thankfully. I literally had no symptoms from the chemo, there was nothing," she said. The hospital's Peritoneal Malignancy Institute will study up to 200 patients who will be given two different will be randomising patients, giving different doses of chemotherapy, and monitoring them to establish how the cancer responds, as well as what impacts it has on a patient's quality of five-year research study aims to explore how a patient's post-operative prognosis could be improved through greater understanding of chemotherapy treatments, as well as dosage. The study, which is being carried out in partnership with the Southampton Clinical Trials Unit, will also deliver insight into the genetics of the disease, something which could assist in identifying more targeted treatment for Surgeon Faheez Mohamed said the research programme would result in the hospital's "pioneering work" gaining "understanding that will aid innovation in treatment for our patients, and so improving long-term prognoses".The hospital trust said the results could be life-changing for people suffering with this rare cancer all over the world. You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.

Yorkshire skincare brand shoppers 'wish' existed 'when my breakouts were bad as a teen'
Yorkshire skincare brand shoppers 'wish' existed 'when my breakouts were bad as a teen'

Daily Mirror

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Yorkshire skincare brand shoppers 'wish' existed 'when my breakouts were bad as a teen'

One of Britain's fastest-growing beauty brands has a number of products to leave skin feeling smooth and glowy. Skincare is a top priority for many and almost everyone prioritising their skin health as part of a dedicated beauty regime. Finding the correct products that won't lead to irritation and problems can be difficult and for many it can be a frustrating time. Now however, a beauty revolution has been born in the heart of Yorkshire - perhaps not where everyone would expect. 47 Skin, which has been named one of the UK's fastest-growing privately held businesses by The Sunday Times 100 List, for the second year in a row, now has a number of products which include their unique ingredient - Silver Chitoderm. In 2024 the brand ranked 52nd on the list, and landed at 55th in 2025 - making it a full-circle moment for them as in 2003, founder Nic's father made the very same list. Silver Chitoderm is an ingredient unique to 47 Skin and together the silver and the chitoderm bond create an invisible barrier, killing 99.9% of the bacteria that causes breakouts, the brand explains. The brand's founder Nic explains that he had been suffering from blemishes for over ten years, before a parcel arrived out of the blue from his Grandma. 47 Skin is one of Britain's fastest-growing beauty brands £29 £29 47 Skin Buy Here Product Description He explains: "I'd tried what felt like every single product and treatment under the sun and spent thousands of pounds. Nothing worked. I even resorted to medication which led to a short period of depression. But in January 2017, Grandma sent me a pot of cream through the post with a handwritten note urging me to try it. I was sceptical, but to my complete surprise it cleared my spots and blemishes in just four days.""I was so amazed with the results that I tracked down and partnered with the scientist behind the formulation. Now our mission is to spread the word through our range of incredible products and skin-positive community. At 47 Skin, we understand exactly how spots, blemishes and skin concerns can make you feel from the inside out." Shoppers can try a range of their products such as the Anti-Blemish & Scar Repair Everyday Cleanser for £29, which is used to help promote clearer skin, and leaves skin feeling silky soft and hydrated. Another option is the Anti-Blemish & Scar Repair Silver Mask for £24 which is designed to soothe, brighten and reduce redness and inflammation. There's also a best seller, the Anti-Blemish & Scar Repair Serum for £29, which naturally soothes and protects skin and leaves it feeling soft and hydrated and another product is their Anti-Blemish & Scar Repair Daily Moisturiser for £34 which is a lightweight, oil-free daily moisturiser. However, if this brand isn't for everyone, they could try others such as The Ordinary Essentials Bundle for £28.20 from Boots. This comes with a natural moisturising factors and hyaluronic acid daily moisturiser, a hyaluronic acid 2% and B5 hydrating serum, a squalane cleanser for all skin types and niacinamide 10% + zinc 1% oil control serum. Another option could be the Medik8 Blemish Sos 15ml from LookFantastic for £25 which is a fast-acting gel that dries invisibly and leaves no residue. Shoppers have rated 47 Skin quite highly however as one person, Anna, said in June 2025: 'I love 47 skin and would recommend anyone with blemish prone skin to use it. I wish when my breakouts were bad as a teenager that 47 skin existed honestly." Another named Gioia said: "It's the clearest my skin has looked in over 10 years." Some others did share mixed reviews on Trustpilot however with one person saying: "It's made no difference at all to my skin after a month of using it." "I really tried everything possible.. I tried a few different brands which didn't make much difference, then my friend recommended 47Skin and I absolutely love it! The quality is so good and I notice such a difference in my skin! I used to be so self conscious about going make-up free in summer/at the beach and now I feel so much more confident - definitely recommend!" said Zoe.

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