Tag Archives: Experiencing

Derek Hough’s Wife Hayley Erbert Undergoes Emergency Craniectomy After Experiencing Symptoms While On Dance Tour – Deadline

  1. Derek Hough’s Wife Hayley Erbert Undergoes Emergency Craniectomy After Experiencing Symptoms While On Dance Tour Deadline
  2. Derek Hough Reveals Wife Hayley Erbert Is Hospitalized, Underwent an ‘Emergency Craniectomy’ While on Tour PEOPLE
  3. Derek Hough’s Wife Hayley Erbert Has Emergency Surgery After Cranial Hematoma Access Hollywood
  4. Derek Hough’s wife undergoes emergency brain surgery after cranial hematoma diagnosis Fox News
  5. Dancing With the Stars’ Derek Hough’s Wife Hayley Erbert Rushed to Hospital for Emergency Craniectomy Yahoo Entertainment

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Jamie Foxx Makes First Public Appearance Since Experiencing Medical Issue: “I Saw the Tunnel, I Didn’t See the Light” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Jamie Foxx Makes First Public Appearance Since Experiencing Medical Issue: “I Saw the Tunnel, I Didn’t See the Light” Hollywood Reporter
  2. Jamie Foxx Emotional In First Hollywood Appearance Since Mystery Illness, Says He “Saw The Tunnel – I Didn’t See The Light” Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Jamie Foxx fights back tears in first public appearance post-hospitalization: ‘I couldn’t actually walk’ Page Six
  4. Jamie Foxx Accepts Critics Choice Honor in First Public Appearance Post-Hospitalization: ‘I Wouldn’t Wish What I Went Through on My Worst Enemy’ Variety
  5. Jamie Foxx Emotional in First Public Appearance Since Medical Scare PEOPLE
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Sharon Stone opens up about experiencing medical gaslighting following her 2001 stroke: ‘I would have died if they had sent me home’ – Yahoo Life

  1. Sharon Stone opens up about experiencing medical gaslighting following her 2001 stroke: ‘I would have died if they had sent me home’ Yahoo Life
  2. Sharon Stone Says Doctors ‘Missed’ Diagnosing Her Brain Hemorrhage Because Staff Thought She Was ‘Faking’ PEOPLE
  3. ‘Women Often Just Aren’t Heard’: Sharon Stone Says Doctors Thought She Was ‘Faking’ Stroke HuffPost
  4. Sharon Stone reveals doctors thought she was `faking` brain haemorrhage WION
  5. Sharon Stone reveals terrifying experience: Doctors thought she was “faking” brain hemorrhage Marca English
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Bachelor In Paradise star Jade Roper is rushed to the ER due to ‘feeling awful’ while still ‘experiencing a mi – Daily Mail

  1. Bachelor In Paradise star Jade Roper is rushed to the ER due to ‘feeling awful’ while still ‘experiencing a mi Daily Mail
  2. Bachelor Nation’s Jade Roper Taken to ER While Suffering Missed Miscarriage: ‘Woke Up Feeling Awful’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Bachelor Nation’s Jade Roper Hospitalized After Suffering Missed Miscarriage Just Jared
  4. Bachelor’s Jade Roper Taken to ER While Suffering Pregnancy Loss Us Weekly
  5. Jade Roper Tolbert Thanks Fans for ‘Beautiful & Kind’ Messages After Sharing About Her Miscarriage Bachelor Nation
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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The North Atlantic is experiencing a ‘totally unprecedented’ marine heat wave – Yahoo News

  1. The North Atlantic is experiencing a ‘totally unprecedented’ marine heat wave Yahoo News
  2. An ‘extreme’ heatwave has hit the seas around the UK and Ireland – here’s what’s going on The Conversation Indonesia
  3. ‘Quite weird’: sea temperature rise in north-east of England worries residents The Guardian
  4. UK and Ireland suffer one of the most severe marine heatwaves on Earth msnNOW
  5. Unprecedented marine heatwave underlines the urgency to clean up UK rivers and coasts The Conversation Indonesia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Netflix experiencing issues with ‘Love is Blind’ livestream – TechCrunch

  1. Netflix experiencing issues with ‘Love is Blind’ livestream TechCrunch
  2. Netflix slammed for massive glitch during ‘failed’ first attempt to livestream fan-favorite series’ explo… The US Sun
  3. Netflix’s much-anticipated ‘Love is Blind’ live show won’t air as planned due to technical errors KTLA Los Angeles
  4. Netflix Crashes Ahead Of ‘Love Is Blind’ Live Reunion, Delaying Special By Almost 90 Minutes Decider
  5. ‘Love is Blind’ Reunion Delay: AOC, Blockbuster Make Funny Tweets TVLine
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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NASA’s Moon-Bound Lunar Flashlight Is Experiencing Thruster Issues

An artist’s impression of Lunar Flashlight scanning a permanently shadowed region on the Moon.

NASA’s Lunar Flashlight is on a mission to hunt for water ice on the Moon’s surface, but the mission appears to be in trouble as three of the craft’s four thrusters are “underperforming,” according to NASA.

The Lunar Flashlight team is in the midst of evaluating the three problematic thrusters as the spacecraft journeys toward the Moon, NASA said in a press release. Lunar Flashlight launched successfully on December 11 aboard a Falcon 9 rocket alongside Japan’s Hakuto-R lunar lander mission. In addition to scanning for water on the Moon’s surface, Lunar Flashlight is also expected to test a more environmentally-friendly propellant.

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NASA says that the trouble began three days after launch, when the mission team first noticed reduced thrust. Ground tests suggests the issue is due to obstructions in the spacecraft’s fuel lines. Since Lunar Flashlight fires its thrusters in short bursts, mission scientists are planning to operate the thrusters for longer durations in an attempt to clear the fuel lines. The spacecraft still needs to perform a series of trajectory correction maneuvers to reach its intended orbit around the Moon.

“In case the propulsion system can’t be restored to full performance, the mission team is drawing up alternative plans to accomplish those maneuvers using the propulsion system with its current reduced-thrust capability,” NASA-JPL wrote in a statement. “Lunar Flashlight will need to perform daily trajectory correction maneuvers starting in early February to reach lunar orbit about four months from now.”

Lunar Flashlight is a brief-case sized satellite that is currently in the midst of a four-month journey to the Moon, making these issues with its thrusters all the more perilous. The spacecraft is powered by a more “green” propellant called a monopropellant. Monopropellants don’t require a separate oxidizer to burn, making it safer to transport over the more commonly used hydrazine, NASA says.

If the mission goes according to plan, Lunar Flashlight will scan the Moon’s southern polar regions with infrared light to find reservoirs of water ice that are located in permanently shadowed regions. These reservoirs could be a source of drinking water, fuel, or even breathable oxygen for future crewed missions to the Moon.

More: SpaceX Stacks Its Starship Rocket Ahead of Anticipated Orbital Launch

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Some people are experiencing ‘Paxlovid rebound’ after taking the COVID antiviral pill. Here’s what you should know.

Paxlovid is Pfizer’s antiviral medication to treat COVID-19. (Reuters/Wolfgang Rattay/Illustration)

When the antiviral medication Paxlovid was approved in 2021 to treat COVID-19, doctors began noticing a perplexing trend among some of the patients who took the medication: a rebound case of the virus. After treatment, some people would recover and test negative for the virus, only to test positive or have symptoms come back a few days later. “Paxlovid rebound,” as it’s known, received a lot of media attention when President Biden, first lady Jill Biden, as well as Drs. Anthony Fauci and Rochelle Walensky, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, all experienced it last year after taking the medication.

Scientists are not sure why this rebound effect occurs when taking Paxlovid, but here are a few things we do know.

What is Paxlovid? How does it work?

Paxlovid is an oral antiviral pill that can be prescribed to people who come down with COVID-19 and are at risk for developing severe disease. This can be individuals who are unvaccinated, the elderly or people with other medical conditions, such as cancer or diabetes. The drug, developed by Pfizer, can protect these high-risk patients from needing hospitalization. Those who are vaccinated but who are at risk for severe outcomes of COVID-19 can also benefit from taking Paxlovid.

U.S. regulators granted emergency use authorization for Paxlovid in December 2021. Today the drug is available by prescription only, from a physician or pharmacist. Anyone ages 12 and older who weighs at least 88 pounds and who is at high risk for severe disease is eligible for the medication. Patients with severe kidney disease — or who are on dialysis — or people with severe liver disease, however, should not take Paxlovid. The drug can also interact with other medications such as those that treat high cholesterol, high blood pressure and migraines, so patients taking these drugs should avoid taking Paxlovid.

Like many antivirals, Paxlovid works best when taken early in the course of illness. The CDC recommends treatment begin within the first five days of experiencing symptoms. Once a person is prescribed the medication, they will take three Paxlovid pills twice a day for five days for a full course that adds up to 30 pills.

The antiviral therapy consists of a combination of two oral antiviral drugs — nirmatrelvir and ritonavir — which work together to stop the viral replication process. By reducing a person’s viral load, the medication lessens the severity of their symptoms.

In clinical trials, which were conducted when the Delta variant was predominant, Paxlovid was found to reduce the risk of hospitalization or death by 89% in high-risk people. Since its approval, many clinical studies that have been conducted around the world have also confirmed the drug’s high level of protection against hospitalization and death.

With Omicron being a highly immune-evasive variant that has rendered many antibody treatments ineffective, vaccine experts worried that Paxlovid would lose its effectiveness too. Fortunately, that doesn’t seem to be the case. According to recent research, the drug continues to offer significant protection against hospitalization and death and can also offer a substantial benefit even to vaccinated patients diagnosed with COVID-19.

Other studies, however, have found no evidence of Paxlovid benefiting people younger than age 65.

“I don’t think we need to push Paxlovid in every 20-year-old who comes down with COVID or 35-year-old who’s healthy,” Dr. Bruce Farber, chief of public health and epidemiology at Northwell Health, the largest health care system in New York state, told Yahoo News. “But in those who are at high risk, those who are elderly, who have not been vaccinated, those who have comorbidities, those who are immunosuppressed, [for] those people [it] can make a significant difference,” he added.

In addition to keeping high-risk patients from getting very sick, Paxlovid can reduce the risk of symptoms of long COVID, a November study conducted by the Department of Veterans Affairs found.

What is Paxlovid rebound?

The CDC defines Paxlovid rebound as when, after completing the full five-day course of treatment, a person experiences either a reemergence of symptoms or tests positive after having tested negative for COVID-19. According to the CDC, this rebound effect tends to occur between two and eight days after initial recovery. But experiencing a rebound, the agency said, doesn’t mean that a person was resistant to Paxlovid, nor does it mean they were reinfected with the virus. Additionally, the CDC has said Paxlovid rebound cases are typically mild, resolve within a few days, and there’s no evidence that additional treatments are needed for these patients.

Despite Paxlovid’s efficacy even in the setting of Omicron, the medication is being underutilized in the U.S. and other parts of the world. According to a report by the London-based health analytics firm Airfinity, U.S. physicians have prescribed the drug in only about 13% of new COVID-19 cases, Nature recently reported. Experts have said concerns about suffering from potential Paxlovid rebound is one of the reasons this may be happening.

Farber also said that another reason Paxlovid is being underutilized has to do with the virus itself.

“This virus is much less virulent even though it’s more contagious,” he said, adding that the need for Paxlovid “became less.”

Scientists are still studying why this rebound effect occurs when taking Paxlovid, as well as who is more likely to experience it. However, recent research has found that rebound can also happen to people who develop COVID-19 and don’t take Paxlovid. Studies are underway to understand why this happens, Farber said.

“More recent data suggests that rebound also occurs in people who recover from COVID who have not gotten Paxlovid, and it occurs at probably similar rates, whether you take Paxlovid or not,” Farber said, adding that rebound cases after taking the drug were initially thought to occur in roughly 5% of cases but that research has shown it may happen more often than initially thought. “More recent articles say it may be as common as 10 or 15% of cases,” he said.

What to do if you experience Paxlovid rebound

If someone’s symptoms return or they test positive after Paxlovid treatment, the CDC advises following its isolation guidance and quarantining again for five days. Isolation can end after this period if a person is fever-free for 24 hours without the use of fever-reducing medications. The agency also recommends wearing a mask for 10 days after rebound symptoms start.

The CDC encourages doctors and patients to report Paxlovid rebound cases to Pfizer’s portal for adverse events associated with the drug.

Finally, Farber said that Paxlovid rebound is still fairly uncommon and that it shouldn’t deter people and their doctors from using the life-saving medication when needed.

“In theory, it could prolong their isolation. But I think [people] should realize that this can occur even without Paxlovid. So it becomes really not an important distinguisher, of whether they get it or not,” he said.

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Women Experiencing Intimate Partner Violence Three Times More Likely to Contract HIV

Summary: Study reveals women who experience domestic abuse are three times more likely to contract HIV infection.

Source: McGill University

Women that experience recent intimate partner violence (IPV) are three times more likely to contract HIV, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers. In regions like Sub-Saharan Africa, women face an intersecting epidemic of intimate partner violence and HIV.

“Worldwide, more than one in four women experience intimate partner violence in their lifetime,” says McGill University Professor Mathieu Maheu-Giroux, a Canada Research Chair in Population Health Modeling.

“Sub-Saharan Africa is among one of the regions in the world with the highest prevalence of both IPV and HIV. We wanted to examine the effects of intimate partner violence on recent HIV infections and women’s access to HIV care in this region,” he says.

Their study, published in The Lancet HIV, shows considerable overlap between violence against women and the HIV epidemics in some of the highest burdened countries. Among women living with HIV, those experiencing intimate partner violence were nine percent less likely to achieve viral load suppression—the ultimate step in HIV treatment.

New calls to eliminate all forms of sexual and gender-based violence

“The 2021 UN General Assembly, attended and supported by the Government of Canada, adopted the Political Declaration on HIV and AIDS with bold new global targets for 2025. This encompasses a commitment to eliminate all forms of sexual and gender-based violence, including IPV, as a key enabler of the HIV epidemic. Improving our understanding of the relationships between IPV and HIV is essential to meet this commitment,” says Professor Maheu-Giroux.

Among women living with HIV, those experiencing intimate partner violence were nine percent less likely to achieve viral load suppression—the ultimate step in HIV treatment. Image is in the public domain

The researchers found that physical or sexual intimate partner violence in the past year was associated with recent HIV acquisition and less frequent viral load suppression. According to the researchers, IPV could also pose barriers for women in accessing HIV care and remaining in care while living with the virus.

“Given the high burden of IPV worldwide, including in Canada, the need to stem the mutually reinforcing threats of IPV and HIV on women’s health and well-being is urgent,” says Salome Kuchukhidze, a Ph.D. candidate studying epidemiology and the lead author of the research.

About this domestic violence and HIV research news

Author: Press Office
Source: McGill University
Contact: Press Office – McGill University
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
“The effects of intimate partner violence on women’s risk of HIV acquisition and engagement in the HIV treatment and care cascade: a pooled analysis of nationally representative surveys in sub-Saharan Africa” by Salome Kuchukhidze et al. Lancet HIV


Abstract

See also

The effects of intimate partner violence on women’s risk of HIV acquisition and engagement in the HIV treatment and care cascade: a pooled analysis of nationally representative surveys in sub-Saharan Africa

Background

Achieving the 95-95-95 targets for HIV diagnosis, treatment, and viral load suppression to end the HIV epidemic hinges on eliminating structural inequalities, including intimate partner violence (IPV). Sub-Saharan Africa has among the highest prevalence of IPV and HIV worldwide. We aimed to examine the effects of IPV on recent HIV infection and women’s engagement in the HIV care cascade in sub-Saharan Africa.

Methods

We did a retrospective pooled analysis of data from nationally representative, cross-sectional surveys with information on physical or sexual IPV (or both) and HIV testing, from Jan 1, 2000, to Dec 31, 2020. Relevant surveys were identified from data catalogues and previous large-scale reviews, and included the Demographic and Health Survey, the AIDS Indicator Survey, the Population-based HIV Impact Assessment, and the South Africa National HIV Prevalence, Incidence, Behavior and Communication Survey. Individual-level data on all female respondents who were ever-partnered (currently or formerly married or cohabiting) and aged 15 years or older were included. We used Poisson regression to estimate crude and adjusted prevalence ratios (PRs) for the association between past-year experience of physical or sexual IPV (or both), as the primary exposure, and recent HIV infection (measured with recency assays), as the primary outcome. We also assessed associations of past-year IPV with self-reported HIV testing (also in the past year), and antiretroviral therapy (ART) uptake and viral load suppression at the time of surveying. Models were adjusted for participant age, age at sexual debut (HIV recency analysis), urban or rural residency, partnership status, education, and survey-level fixed effects.

Findings

57 surveys with data on self-reported HIV testing and past-year physical or sexual IPV were available from 30 countries, encompassing 280 259 ever-partnered women aged 15–64 years. 59 456 (21·2%) women had experienced physical or sexual IPV in the past year. Six surveys had information on recent HIV infection and seven had data on ART uptake and viral load suppression. The crude PR for recent HIV infection among women who had experienced past-year physical or sexual IPV, versus those who had not, was 3·51 (95% CI 1·64–7·51; n=19 179). The adjusted PR was 3·22 (1·51–6·85). Past-year physical or sexual IPV had minimal effect on self-reported HIV testing in the past year in crude analysis (PR 0·97 [0·96–0·98]; n=274 506) and adjusted analysis (adjusted PR 0·99 [0·98–1·01]). Results were inconclusive for the association of ART uptake with past-year IPV among women living with HIV (crude PR 0·90 [0·85–0·96], adjusted PR 0·96 [0·90–1·02]; n=5629). Women living with HIV who had experienced physical or sexual IPV in the past year were less likely to achieve viral load suppression than those who had not experienced past-year IPV (crude PR 0·85 [0·79–0·91], adjusted PR 0·91 [0·84–0·98], n=5627).

Interpretation

Past-year physical or sexual IPV was associated with recent HIV acquisition and less frequent viral load suppression. Preventing IPV is inherently imperative but eliminating IPV could contribute to ending the HIV epidemic.

Funding

Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canada Research Chairs Program, and Fonds de recherche du Québec-Santé.

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Twitter is experiencing a widespread global outage

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Twitter experienced a global outage late Wednesday, according to numerous reports from Twitter users and the online tracker Downdetector.

It wasn’t immediately clear how many Twitter accounts were impacted by the outage. As of just before 8 p.m. Eastern on Wednesday, Downdetector had tracked more than 10,000 user reports of outages. Virtually all 10,000 reports had emerged over the course of the previous hour.

According to Downdetector, reports of the outage started in the United Kingdom, followed by Canada, Germany, Italy and France. The tracker said the vast majority of people impacted by the outage were using the Twitter website, not the app.

Twitter did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A few hours after the problems emerged, reports of outages were way down, according to the tracker, a sign that the worst had passed.

A massive global outage is an outcome that observers and analysts have feared since billionaire Elon Musk took over the company. In October, shortly before the takeover, The Washington Post reported on Musk’s internal plans to save money, which included making large cuts to the data centers that keep the site running.

Documents show Twitter’s plans to gut workforce

Since his takeover, Musk has fired thousands of staff members, including engineers, and many others have quit, leaving Twitter with a skeleton crew.

Twitter operates three major data centers globally. Musk ordered the biggest data center in Sacramento to be shut down on Christmas, provoking anguish among ineers, according to a person familiar with the order who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters.

The person said that in group chats among current and former engineers on Wednesday, some speculated that the outage was triggered by a software update gone wrong.

Musk issues ultimatum to staff: Commit to ‘hardcore’ Twitter or take severance

Wednesday evening Musk tweeted that the service was working for him.

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