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Measles Is Spreading, and RFK Jr. Is Praising Quacks

Measles Is Spreading, and RFK Jr. Is Praising Quacks

Yahoo11-04-2025

Last week, an 8-year-old girl became the second child and the third person to die of measles in the current outbreak. But it was Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the secretary of health and human services, who dominated the news cycle.
'The most effective way to prevent the spread of measles is the MMR vaccine,' Kennedy wrote on X on Sunday afternoon. It was hailed as his strongest endorsement of measles vaccination yet. But in his next post, a few hours later, Kennedy praised two controversial doctors' unproven treatments for measles, making no mention of vaccines. On Thursday, he followed that up by saying on Fox News that 'we need to do better at treating kids who have this disease, and not just saying the only answer is vaccination.'
This type of framing makes it sound like families have two equal options for dealing with measles. 'It provides a false equivalency—it says you can either get vaccinated or you can be treated with these unproven interventions,' Peter Hotez, dean for the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, told me. Instead, 'his rhetoric should be on one thing and one thing only; it should be all hands on deck, in terms of launching a catch-up vaccination campaign and explaining to parents the vital importance of getting vaccinated,' Hotez said. 'That's the only way you can prevent this epidemic from accelerating, and it's the only way you can hope to contain it. And there's no other intervention.'
Children's Health Defense, the anti-vaccine organization helmed by Kennedy until recently, has made claims even wilder than the health secretary's—even seeming to argue that it's the hospital killing kids, not measles. CHD claimed in March that the first child died as a result of 'medical error' because doctors gave her certain antibiotics instead of their preferred antibiotics for a secondary bacterial infection that developed during her measles illness. (Measles itself is a viral illness. Antibiotics will not treat it, though antibiotics can treat bacterial infections that develop as a result of the primary illness.) In reality, that type of secondary infection isn't fatal, and it's not what killed the little girl. Measles did. Even so, other anti-science quacks are echoing the same argument, with one doctor who rose to prominence by spreading Covid-19 misinformation asserting the second girl died from being 'improperly medically managed.'
This isn't anti-vaxxers squabbling at the fringes; these are conversations that are driving the Texas outbreak forward and apparently informing the federal response to measles. It has implications not just for Texas but for the entire country. Health workers in Texas told me that parents are waiting until children are severely ill before they bring them to the hospital. Meanwhile, they're trying unproven remedies, including toxic doses of vitamin A—which puts sick children at grave risk and does nothing to halt the virus as it tears through communities.
One of Kennedy's first moves as health secretary was opening yet another inquiry into whether there's a connection between vaccines and autism—a long-discredited theory that caused vaccination rates to drop. On Thursday, Kennedy said those results were expected to be made public in the fall: 'By September, we will know what has caused the autism epidemic and we will be able to eliminate those exposures.' It seems to be a chilling allusion to the way vaccines are coming under attack, while also spreading stigma and fear about autism.
All of this means the U.S. is now at risk of losing its measles-eliminated status—and we're at risk of having to deal with outbreaks like these regularly, as new misinformation proliferates from the highest levels.While Kennedy wrote, in his Sunday afternoon post encouraging vaccines, that 'the growth rates for new cases and hospitalizations have flattened,' after federal resources were sent to Texas in early March, cases are in fact rising quickly—and more are likely going undetected.
The outbreak in Texas has risen to 541 known cases and 56 hospitalizations. The two children who died in Texas had no previous health conditions, other than being unvaccinated. The outbreak has also spread to New Mexico, where 58 people have tested positive, four have been hospitalized, and one has died; to Oklahoma, with 12 known cases; and possibly to Kansas, which has identified 32 cases and one hospitalization since March 13.
'It's a pretty serious, massive measles epidemic,' Hotez said. The fact that two school-aged kids have died in Texas, and another person in New Mexico died after measles infection, also suggests that the current numbers are likely undercounted. 'There could easily be 1,000 cases or more,' he said—and this outbreak 'still has a lot of energy behind it.'
In his post on Sunday evening, Kennedy posted photos where he posed, smiling, with the two grieving families and one family whose daughter recovered after three weeks in the intensive care unit. While he didn't mention that 2-year-old survivor's doctors or detail the care she received in the hospital, he did single out 'two extraordinary healers,' Richard Bartlett and William 'Ben' Edwards, who he claimed have 'treated and healed' about 300 Mennonite children sickened by measles in Texas, using inhaled budesonide and clarithromycin.
About those 'healers': In 2003, Richard Bartlett allegedly gave five of his patients risky medications, including powerful intravenous antibiotics, without weighing the harms of the treatment, according to a complaint to the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners, which found Bartlett was 'not practicing medicine in a manner consistent with public health and welfare.' Bartlett reached a settlement with the board, without admitting to wrongdoing, by agreeing to undergo additional medical training and to submit to temporary oversight of his work.
As for the two treatments Kennedy highlighted: Aerosolized budesonide is an asthma treatment. While it might help measles patients who also have asthma, it's unlikely to help and could even hurt sick kids without asthma, doctors told me. Clarithromycin is an antibiotic usually not used in children; while it can treat secondary bacterial infections that arise after respiratory illnesses, an antibiotic will not help with a viral illness—and a deadly virus like measles is the primary concern, even as doctors treat secondary illnesses as well.
'Sometimes we do need to add other types of medications,' Elizabeth Murray, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at the University of Rochester, told me. 'However, saying we can treat measles with an antibiotic is a misleading approach' because it won't treat the 'underlying' illness of measles, she said. And doctors need to take great care with matching bacterial infections to the most effective antibiotics. 'We try to be very diligent and vigilant about using antibiotics because of resistance that can be built up if we just give people antibiotics kind of willy-nilly,' said Murray.
Claiming that hundreds of children received these treatments and recovered, Murray said, is an example of survivor bias: 'If we're taking a sample of people who don't need to be hospitalized, their outcomes are going to be different than people who are sick enough to be in the hospital.' Without full information about their illnesses, 'we can't make accurate conclusions' about the role of the unproven treatments, she said.
It is good that Kennedy is finally talking about the importance of getting vaccinated with the MMR shot, Hotez said. 'But it comes after he put out a lot of head-scratching information about budesonide and vitamin A and clarithromycin, and he needs to walk that back in a more explicit way.'In March, soon after their daughter, Kayley, became the first child in the U.S. to die of measles in a decade, Peter and Eva Fehr went on camera to talk about their experiences with the Children's Health Defense. 'We would absolutely not take the MMR [vaccine],' said Eva Fehr. 'The measles wasn't that bad; they [other children] got over it pretty quickly. And Dr. Edwards was there for us.'
'He was amazing. He was great,' Peter Fehr said.
'Don't do the shots,' Eva added through a translator. 'There's doctors that can help with measles.'
It might be easy to interpret their words as carelessness about their child's death. Their other four children survived; on the whole, measles wasn't that bad. But Peter and Eva Fehr are genuinely grieving their daughter's death; several times, they paused the interview as tears rolled down their cheeks.
Instead, they seem to place the blame on the doctors who treated Kayley in the hospital. They contrast her treatment, where she was placed on a ventilator, with their other children's, who got better after taking Edwards' treatment regimen. It's a clear, heartbreaking example of how survivor bias, fueled by misinformation, leads to exactly the wrong conclusion that there are other, better options for measles beyond vaccination and hospital care. The ventilator or a lack of antibiotics didn't lead to Kayley's death; the virus that made her sick enough to need a ventilator did. The other children survived because they were lucky enough to avoid such a severe infection in the first place. And the video, distributed by a leading anti-vaccine organization, may do untold harm in communities around the globe.
How much harm Kennedy himself may do by promoting these doctors and treatments is hard to predict. 'I don't know, because I don't know that we've ever seen anything like this before,' Murray said.
To battle misinformation, people need to have good relationships with trusted medical providers and understand how to 'weed through this firehose of stuff that comes at us on social media,' Murray said. 'If it's scare tactics being used instead of facts, then it's very easy to be misled.' Even so, 'the overwhelming majority of families throughout our nation are choosing to vaccinate themselves and their children,' Murray pointed out.
More than walking back his statements on unproven treatments, Kennedy needs to reverse his yearslong stance on thoroughly discredited links between vaccines and autism, Hotez said. 'This is a disproven link. We've been at this for 25 years. We have multiple studies showing vaccines don't cause autism in all the different forms that they allege, and we have a lack of plausibility, because autism begins through the action of autism genes that we've identified through early fetal brain development.'
As health secretary, Kennedy 'needs to finally end his insistence on looking at vaccines and autism—that's causing parents to be hesitant about getting vaccinated,' Hotez said. Instead, going by his statements this week, Kennedy seems to be doubling down.

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Letters: Government's reversal on COVID-19 shots for pregnant women is alarming
Letters: Government's reversal on COVID-19 shots for pregnant women is alarming

Chicago Tribune

timean hour ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Letters: Government's reversal on COVID-19 shots for pregnant women is alarming

Illinois has been a leader in identifying the causes of maternal mortality and creating solutions that would address the causes. Last year, the University of Illinois at Chicago was designated a Maternal Health Research Center of Excellence by the National Institutes of Health, building on the state's successes and allowing us to invest in the next generation of researchers, connect community members with research and investigate the impact of stress on birth outcomes. We understand our efforts can be upended by an emerging crisis. The COVID-19 pandemic is a key example. According to the Illinois Department of Public Health's most recent Maternal Morbidity and Mortality Report (2023), the number of women who died during or within a year of pregnancy from 2020 to 2022 was well above the average of deaths during the five years prior to the pandemic. While we anticipate that the next report will detail how COVID-19 impacted pregnant women in Illinois, we already know from national data that maternal deaths increased by 33% after March 2020 and that the mortality risk of pregnant patients with COVID-19 infection at delivery was approximately 14 times higher compared with those without. As a physician researcher, I have seen the importance of gaining the trust of patients and the public. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's announcement that COVID-19 vaccine boosters will not be recommended to pregnant women, which was done without consulting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, left clinicians to navigate a situation in which research is being actively disregarded by those setting federal policy. Not recommending this vaccine jeopardizes insurance coverage of the vaccine and clinicians' ability to gain the trust of pregnant women for vaccines at a time when they are at risk for adverse outcomes. How can we expect pregnant women to trust clinicians if we recommend vaccines that they may not be allowed to access? Are we to advise patients to disregard CDC recommendations? How do we train future researchers and clinicians if epidemiologic data is ignored? We need to listen to research and learn from data. Barring pregnant women from accessing the COVID-19 vaccine is not clinically sound and will negate our collective efforts to improve maternal health in Illinois and nationally. This will have a chilling effect on efforts to investigate and address causes of maternal morbidity and Father's Day here, I am once again reminded of the father I was blessed with. My mom and dad had five girls. Sadly, their first baby was stillborn, and at the ages of 19 and 26, my parents had to bury their little girl, marking her grave with a small headstone for little 'Linda Jean.' They then had four more girls — I was the second of the four, born in 1950. My dad was a mail carrier all of his working days and oftentimes found it hard to make ends meet. We didn't have the best of everything, but we had all we needed — most importantly, his devotion, his time and his unending love. As kids, we didn't realize that times were so tough. The one story that I remember most vividly was when Dad drove me to my piano lesson. At the time, the lesson was $2 for 45 minutes. I happened to look over when he was getting the $2 out of his wallet one week and saw him pull it out — all folded up in a neat little square in the corner of his wallet. The rest of his wallet was empty. You see, Dad got paid only every other week. It was many years later that I realized on the off days of the month, his wallet was empty — except for the $2 that he had set aside so I could take piano lessons. How blessed I was!I started teaching in 1975 and walked away from the classroom this year. After 36 years of teaching high school and 25 years as a college adjunct, I have some unsolicited observations and advice for the fathers out there. In all my 50 years involved with teenagers, I have never met a messed-up kid who had a good relationship with his or her father. Granted, I have met some problem children with wonderful moms, but then I met the dads, and the source of the kid's anger and unhappiness became clear. I also should point out that not all of the kids who had terrible fathers had difficulties, but those kids with bad fathers who turned out OK usually had a positive father figure there for them — a grandfather, an uncle, an older sibling, a stepdad. Over the years, I've heard all of the excuses for fathers not being involved with their children: 'The ex is difficult,' 'I have to work too much,' 'I have a second family to raise now,' 'My kid doesn't respect me,' 'My kid is angry.' But all of the excuses fall before this one simple truth: That child is a part of you walking around out there, and he or she needs you to assist him or her on the way to a healthy adulthood. Another truth I've learned is that, despite acting like their intent is to spend all of their parents' money, the thing that most kids really want is time. No one really has enough time or money, and how we spend our time and our money is a pretty good indicator of what we value. Instinctively, kids know this. So, this Father's Day, if you are a father and your relationship with your child is not the best, vow to work this year to improve that relationship. Don't blame the ex or the child or the circumstances. Just be a better dad. Be there for looking at the footage of President Donald Trump recently speaking to the German chancellor regarding D-Day, nothing these last few months surprises me except the behaviors coming from the White House. I am the proud daughter of my late dad, who was a bombardier with the 8th Army Air Corps who flew 35 missions over Germany in a B-17 bomber. My late father-in-law fought at the Battle of the Bulge in late 1944, my late uncle was wounded at the Battle of Iwo Jima in 1945, and my husband's great uncle was a sailor whose warship was sunk by the Japanese in 1942 and whose headstone may be found in Manila. My friend's father-in-law was the groom in a wartime wedding in which my mom was the maid of honor. This man was an Army paratrooper who was later killed on Omaha Beach and never met his child. The point is that these brave men fought and many died in defense of our nation and the world. The president spoke as if a war between nations was similar to a fight between brawling children. For all of those involved, the remembrance of D-Day was not a great what I needed, a huge belly laugh while reading the Tuesday Tribune article ('Judge denies Madigan's motion for new trial') about former Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan's approaching sentencing. Through his defense attorneys, he stated that he amassed a personal fortune of $40 million by choosing 'frugality over extravagance, remaining in the same modest home for more than fifty years while making prudent savings and investment choices.' Hey, that's the same lifestyle my husband and I have chosen over our 38-year marriage! Living that lifestyle has not brought our personal fortune anywhere near $40 million. Maybe Madigan can busy himself during his retirement teaching all of the hardworking, frugal, living-below-their-means folks his personal tricks to growing our income to be multimillionaires. Let us in on the little secrets of the good old politician's club for growing your own personal Pope Leo XIV in that White Sox cap leads me to believe that someday he'll replace St. Jude as the patron saint of lost causes.

27 Pandemic Changes Still Affecting Us Today
27 Pandemic Changes Still Affecting Us Today

Buzz Feed

time11 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

27 Pandemic Changes Still Affecting Us Today

Overall, it feels like the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic is behind us, with lockdowns, mask mandates, and isolations being a thing of the past. But there are just some things and experiences that have not yet returned to normal, even now five years later. We asked the BuzzFeed Community to weigh in on what some of these experiences are, and the responses were very telling. Here they are: "Life and human relations. We lost our humanity while in quarantine, and we haven't yet been able to get it back. Somehow, I doubt we ever will." —ladicair "Driving. After COVID, everyone gave up on following the rules of the roads, basic courtesy, and safety while driving in general. Zero awareness or care for others." —Anonymous "In the US, healthcare. Everybody working in healthcare during that time, especially in hospitals, went through hell, and also probably had their pay cut to boot, since health systems lost a lot of money during the pandemic. Many people quit, retired early, or are still struggling with burnout from the trauma of that wild, tragic time. A ton of people delayed services during COVID, and we're still dealing with that backlog of needed care. Wait times for all kinds of important services, including cancer screening and treatment, are still wildly long, and it's hard for new patients to establish care with a primary care provider because panels are full. Patients are also more belligerent than before, especially about things like masking and vaccinations, to the point that my health system has had to put signage up warning that you'll be kicked out for violent or abusive behavior toward employees." —chaosofthesun "Going to the cinema, people would talk before but now people treat the screens like their front rooms. Being on phones, talking all the way through, singing along loudly, and worst of all? I once had someone clip their fingernails in the row in front of me." —katashworth "The pandemic ruined work. Everyone works remotely now, and we never see each other. A lot of my colleagues don't even have assigned desks because they're never in the office." —Anonymous, 57, Victoria BC "Youth mental health. People talk a lot about the iPad kids thing, which is totally valid, but something I think most people don't realize is that the kids who were a little older/more developed when lockdown hit got impacted differently. I've worked with 11-17-year-olds for many years. Since they were old enough to be able to appreciate genuine human connection before the pandemic, they weren't content being stuck in front of a screen. Seeing them experience such a deep level of isolation and hopelessness so young and trying to coach them through that was heartbreaking. It was a traumatic experience that very few of them have bounced back from." —sleepinggazelle414 "My body, my life. Still suffering with long COVID nearly five years on. It's essentially M.E. and Fibromyalgia, and it's stopped me from living the life I want." —Anonymous, 45, UK "Empathy. Everyone spent so much time alone focusing on themselves that they forgot how to see things from another person's perspective." —Anonymous, 31, USA "Access to special education services. It was bad enough prepandemic. But postpandemic, there was a giant backlog of kids needing evaluations, a giant loss of school employees, and a greater need for more intensive supports due to not being able to access early intervention. Its a shitshow. Where I live, it's incredibly common for kids who genuinely need services to be denied them because of all of this." —j4287b3497 "Kids' social ability/intelligence. There is a noticeable gap in kids' social life because their parents just shoved an iPad in they're face and went back to working from home." —charmingsorcerer731 "People are still learning how to be in crowds again. I mostly notice it at concerts. There are people who really think they will get their spot back in front when they leave the crowd for a drink, and I keep hearing complaints about being jostled around in the crowd. I have noticed it lessening, but it will still be a while before people remember that concerts are supposed to be a little rowdy." —surprisedlegend852 "Attitudes. People became so used to everything being at their fingertips (online shopping, Zoom meetings, etc.) that when they DON'T get their way for a valid reason, they SCREAM like toddlers. My friends in customer service had to call the cops more times over the pandemic because of DEATH THREATS OVER A PIECE OF CLOTH. PEOPLE, IT'S NOT GONNA KILL YOU. From then on, it became clear that people don't like being told what to do, even if it's to their benefit." —Anonymous, Georgia "Pre-COVID, I would take long trips to Great Britain, Europe, and all over the US: from Boston to Daytona Beach, FL, to Seattle, WA, to Los Angeles, to Houston, TX, and cities in between. Flying got too risky due to a few non-masked passengers." —Anonymous, 74, Phoenix AZ "My marriage. After working in the health sector during the pandemic, and still doing my 'home' and 'wifey' duties, I found out last year that my husband of 25 years was cheating on me with multiple women via WhatsApp, texts, online gaming, and possibly in person too. He says it was an 'intense' time. Yeah, it was…for everyone. I find it hard to trust anyone now." —Anonymous, 47 "The cost of living." —Anonymous "Absenteeism in school. Kids are missing way too much school." —Anonymous, 45, Midwest "My tolerance for a 40 hour work week." —Anonymous, 40, CT "I don't think the cost of groceries will ever go down. Our grocery bill doubled during the pandemic and has only gotten worse. It's also apparent that the Trump administration does not care to bring prices down for the average American. I used to be able to feed my spouse and me for about $100 a week. It's made our cash flow tighter and tighter even though we both have good jobs." —Anonymous "Health. The pandemic brought vaccines to the forefront, and the rhetoric made many weary of vaccines. I was pregnant towards the end of 2022 when life was returning to 'normal,' and my parents would not get any of the recommended vaccines to be around newborns. It has been very hurtful." —Anonymous, 33, Charlotte NC " work. People figured out how to keep people 'in the loop.' Before the pandemic, when you were not in the office, people would know you were (probably) on leave. These days, nobody cares whether you're physically at work or not; they expect you to be online and answer calls and emails from wherever." —Anonymous, 39, Indonesia "As a retail employee, WORKING RETAIL. Corporations realized they can understaff their stores and save money by making one person do three people's jobs for minimum wage. Customers complain, but we genuinely don't have enough people working to do more than the bare minimum in customer service. " —Anonymous, 23, California "Housing/rent affordability." —Anonymous, 43, Canada "Not that it wasn't already a little bit headed in that dating. The apps are the worst, and the 'algorithms' force you to pay for everything. But going out in person seems just as bleak. It seems like a lot fewer people will approach you in public now to show interest. In general, public interactions have gone down. Coming from a Southern state where people usually love to strike up conversations with strangers, it's very unusual not to have that daily random banter with someone in line at the store or sitting at a bar. The last time someone had interest in me at a bar, they had to get their friend to ask me if I would be OK with them asking me out." —Anonymous, 25, Oklahoma City "'Free services.' For example, Jiffy Lube used to vacuum your car for you. Or the hotel that I worked for offered tea time in the afternoon. Once corporations learned that they could offer less and still charge more, they never went back." —Anonymous, 30, CA "Communion practices at church are still not the same as pre-COVID." —Anonymous "Socializing! I was in college when the pandemic hit. My university was completely virtual for two semesters, and when we finally returned for my last semester of college, there were a ton of social restrictions, and events were canceled. The lifelong friendships people usually make in college were simply underdeveloped for me. I also feel like the pandemic made cellphone addiction way worse for Gen Z. As someone who's not screen addicted, I find it hard to connect these days with people around my age. They're always on their phones. It's exhausting to try to hold a conversation with someone who's only half present." —Anonymous, 26, Maryland Do you agree or disagree with these answers? Is there anything you would add? Comment below!

Will the new COVID-19 variant that's on the rise give you a ‘razor blades' sore throat? Here's what we know
Will the new COVID-19 variant that's on the rise give you a ‘razor blades' sore throat? Here's what we know

Hamilton Spectator

time12 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Will the new COVID-19 variant that's on the rise give you a ‘razor blades' sore throat? Here's what we know

A new COVID-19 variant was this week expected to become the dominant strain in Ontario, after circulating in parts of the world including our neighbours to the south. The new variant, part of the Omicron subfamily, is called NB.1.8.1 and it is derived from the recombinant variant XDV.1.5.1, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) , with cases detected globally as the previous dominant COVID-19 strain, LP.8.1, starts to decline. NB.1.8.1 first emerged in January and cases are climbing predominantly in areas such as in the eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asia and western Pacific regions. In the U.S., airport screening has detected the new variant in travellers arriving from these regions to California, Washington state, Virginia and New York. Experts in Ontario say the variant is on it's way to become the most prevalent COVID-19 strain across the province, although they're not worried about it causing an uptick in severe disease. Here's what you should know about the new COVID-19 variant and how to protect yourself. The most recent data from Public Health Ontario shows that COVID-19 positivity rates are low in the province since the start of the month, with 2.6 per cent positivity, eight outbreaks, 79 hospital bed occupancies and no deaths. At the end of May, COVID-19 rates remained low at 2.5 per cent positivity, three outbreaks, 69 hospital bed occupancies and one death. The Public Health Ontario surveillance report for this week's COVID-19 cases is expected to be released next week. The numbers from the available data are based on limited testing as COVID-19 testing isn't done as frequently as it was during the pandemic, said Dr. Fahad Razak, an internal medicine physician at St. Michael's Hospital and former scientific director of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table. 'Some people do random surveillance out of their family medicine offices, emergency rooms do some surveillance, public health does some surveillance — and that gets reported on the Public Health Ontario website,' said Dr. Allan Grill, chief of the department of family medicine at Oak Valley Health's Markham Stouffville Hospital. With the data that is available, NB.1.8.1 makes up roughly 10 per cent of all COVID-19 cases in the province, Razak said, and although COVID-19 rates are generally low, the new variant is rising quickly and displacing the older version of the virus. Razak added the data projects that within this week or the next, NB.1.8.1 will account for nearly 60 per cent of the COVID-19 cases circulating in the province. Public Health Ontario says the weekly relative growth rate of the new strain is 1.77 times that of LP.8.1.1. The NB.1.8.1 variant is not yet causing major concern, says Razak, since it isn't causing a flood of patients in hospitals nor infecting so many people that it's causing health system pressures. 'It is just the latest expected evolution of a virus, which continues to mutate. And as it mutates, versions of the virus that can escape your immune system become the new dominant version,' he said. Doctors say the symptoms of NB.1.8.1 are much the same as previous strains of COVID-19, with respiratory issues being the most typical in infected individuals. According to Health Canada , common COVID-19 symptoms include: Dr. Alon Vaisman, an infectious diseases and infection control physician at University Health Network (UHN), said this strain will present itself with upper respiratory tract symptoms similar to previous COVID-19 strains. In more severe cases, often for vulnerable populations, it will also show up as in previous strains with lower respiratory tract symptoms that could lead to pneumonia or lung inflammation. Vaisman says those age 65 and older who are immunocompromised remain at the highest risk for the new strain. But as the risk for COVID-19 has reduced for the general public, 'the overall absolute risk has dropped' for vulnerable populations, as well, over the last few years. Some online reports have said the new variant is connected to a sore throat that feels like 'razor blades.' While Razak has heard these claim, he said sore throats are not new for those who contract COVID-19 and there's likely no 'significance' to the online reports. The COVID-19 vaccine is 'an important layer of protection' against the new strain, especially for vulnerable groups, said Razak. Referring to information from Canada's National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) in January, Grill said the current available vaccine should protect those at highest risk of getting COVID-19, including this new strain. Higher risk groups and marginalized populations with less access to health care such, including some Indigenous communities, are recommended by NACI to continue getting a COVID-19 booster at least once a year, Grill added. As well, people over age 80 are recommended to receive a second dose of the booster shot in a year. 'We're suggesting that they get vaccinated twice a year because we know that the protection tends to wane at around six months, and we are continuously updating our vaccines to match the most recent circulating version,' Razak said. 'The version that's being given this spring is the same as the version from last fall, and the real reason to get it is to bolster your immune protection.' As well as getting the COVID-19 vaccine, doctors say good hygiene practises can help keep the virus's spread to a minimum — like with any respiratory illness. Those with active symptoms should practice proper hand washing, especially before eating or drinking. It is recommended infected people stay home until they're fever free for at least 24 hours with improving symptoms. As well, wearing a mask is recommended to help halt the spread in indoor spaces. Vaisman says those with symptoms should be cautious around immunocompromised individuals. While it's not yet known if new strain NB.1.8.1 will cause increased illness, 'it's unlikely that it's going to be significant in one direction or the other,' Vaisman said, 'So, if you are an individual who took precautions prior to this strain, then that is unchanged now.' With files from the Associated Press

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