Japanese authorities pulled the trigger on excluding all fans from the upcoming Summer Olympic games. Per the Associated Press, โ€œFans were banned from the pandemic-postponed Tokyo Olympics which will open in two weeks, Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike said after meeting with IOC and Japanese organizers on Thursday. The ban came hours after a state of emergency in the capital starting from Monday, declared by Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga to contain rising COVID-19 cases. The twin decisions have turned the Olympics into a made-for-TV event in a decision pushed by the Japanese government and supported by the International Olympic Committee.โ€ You could say that Japan was pretty unlucky with regards to the timing of the current COVID-19 spike. All things considered, though, they made the right decision. It must have been pretty painful to make and they should be applauded. https://bit.ly/3dYhNEG


Climate change is transforming once temperate regions to warmer, more humid climates. This shift comes with some serious public health consequences. Diseases once limited to equatorial countries are now creeping further from their natural area. Per the Guardian, โ€œThe study, led by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and published in the Lancet Planetary Health journal, found that if emission levels continue to rise at current rates, the effect on global temperatures could lengthen transmission seasons by more than a month for malaria and four months for dengue over the next 50 years.โ€ Malaria alone would have been bad enough but the addition of dengue makes it even worse. The trend could result in the deaths of millions. https://bit.ly/3yBXggV


Researchers track the mutations that allow HIV-1 to escape broadly neutralizing antibodies
Broadly neutralizing antibodies show promise in HIV treatment, but viral resistance mechanisms …
Controlled peanut intake may reduce allergies in toddlers
Researchers successfully treated young children with peanut allergies using gradual exposure, achieving …
DAILY DOSE: Experts Question CDCโ€™s Muted Role in Cruise-Ship Hantavirus Outbreak; Fathersโ€™ Lifestyles May Leave Molecular Marks in Sperm.
Concerns grow over the CDC's response to a hantavirus outbreak on MV …
Ice Age butcherโ€™s tools are a sign of ancient humansโ€™ creativity during hard times
Scientists discovered that ancient humans in central China created advanced stone tools …

The journal Nature has an article that discusses the evidence that reopening schools can be done safely if proper contingencies are implemented. While the author argues that itโ€™s okay to open schools and that re-openings last spring were, for the most part, successful, one quote sticks out: โ€œDeepti Gurdasani, an epidemiologist at the Queen Mary University of London, says some of her colleagues seem too blasรฉ about the impact of COVID-19 on children. โ€˜It has really puzzled me why weโ€™re so comfortable exposing children to a virus that we havenโ€™t studied that much,โ€™ she says.โ€ Speaking truth to power. https://go.nature.com/3xtDBzB


Speaking of truthโ€ฆ A recent pre-print paper coming out of Brazil indicated that an experimental prostate cancer drug was able to reduce COVID-19 mortality rates by a whopping 77%. The push-back to the study was swift with scientists poking more holes in the study than a cheese grater, in essence arguing that the trial was not only polly-anna-ish but also sloppy science. Per Science, โ€œAlleged irregularities in the clinical trial have reportedly triggered an investigation by a national research ethics commission in Brazil. Top medical journals have rejected a paper about the study, and its main author, Flavio Cadegiani, an endocrinologist at the biotech company Applied Biology, has previously touted unproven COVID-19 medications, such as ivermectin, azithromycin, and antiworm compounds as COVID-19 therapies. And to many, the claims simply seem implausible.โ€ Sometimes, pre-print really ainโ€™t so good, eh? https://bit.ly/3yx6afy

Thanks for reading. Letโ€™s be careful out there.


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