Tag Archives: highrisk

Fantasy Football: Top high-risk, high-reward picks in each round of drafts | Fantasy Football News, Rankings and Projections – Pro Football Focus

  1. Fantasy Football: Top high-risk, high-reward picks in each round of drafts | Fantasy Football News, Rankings and Projections Pro Football Focus
  2. Target wide receivers for your fantasy football flex position The Washington Post
  3. Fantasy football 2023 rankings, draft prep: QB, WR, RB, TE picks, cheat sheets, ADP, tiers by computer model CBS Sports
  4. TJ’s Targets: 22 Players I Want in Every Fantasy Football Draft (Plus 12 Deep-League Targets) 4for4
  5. Easy fantasy football offenses: Which narrow-usage NFL trees can you trust in 2023? Yahoo Sports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Moderna, Merck say their cancer vaccine reduces metastases by 65% in PhII study of high-risk melanoma: #ASCO23 – Endpoints News

  1. Moderna, Merck say their cancer vaccine reduces metastases by 65% in PhII study of high-risk melanoma: #ASCO23 Endpoints News
  2. Moderna and Merck cancer vaccine used with Keytruda reduces risk of deadly skin cancer spreading CNBC
  3. Cancer vaccines poised to unlock ‘new treatment paradigm’ with Merck/Moderna data KSL.com
  4. Moderna and Merck reveal new data on individualized cancer treatment MarketWatch
  5. Moderna and Merck Announce mRNA-4157 (V940) in Combination With KEYTRUDA(R) (pembrolizumab) Demonstrated a Statistically Significant and Clinically Meaningful Improvement in Distant Metastasis-Free Survival in Patients with High-Risk Stage III/IV Yahoo Finance
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Moderna and Merck Announce mRNA-4157 (V940), an Investigational Individualized Neoantigen Therapy, in Combination with KEYTRUDA(R) (Pembrolizumab), Demonstrated Superior Recurrence-Free Survival in Patients with High-Risk Stage III/IV Melano – Moderna Investor Relations

  1. Moderna and Merck Announce mRNA-4157 (V940), an Investigational Individualized Neoantigen Therapy, in Combination with KEYTRUDA(R) (Pembrolizumab), Demonstrated Superior Recurrence-Free Survival in Patients with High-Risk Stage III/IV Melano Moderna Investor Relations
  2. AACR 2023 – more hope for Moderna’s neoantigen immunotherapy Evaluate Pharma
  3. Pembrolizumab in combination with gemcitabine and cisplatin compared with gemcitabine and cisplatin alone for patients with advanced biliary tract cancer (KEYNOTE-966): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial The Lancet
  4. Phase 2 Data of Personalized Cancer Vaccine With Adjuvant Pembrolizumab for Resected High-Risk Melanoma Dermatology Times
  5. Merck clashes with AstraZeneca in biliary tract cancer FiercePharma
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Moderna and Merck Announce mRNA-4157 (V940), an Investigational Individualized Neoantigen Therapy, in Combination with KEYTRUDA(R) (Pembrolizumab), Demonstrated Superior Recurrence-Free Survival in Patients with High-Risk Stage III/IV Melano – news.modernatx.com

  1. Moderna and Merck Announce mRNA-4157 (V940), an Investigational Individualized Neoantigen Therapy, in Combination with KEYTRUDA(R) (Pembrolizumab), Demonstrated Superior Recurrence-Free Survival in Patients with High-Risk Stage III/IV Melano news.modernatx.com
  2. Including Anti-PD-1 in First-Line Ups Survival in Biliary Tract Cancer Medpage Today
  3. AACR 2023 – more hope for Moderna’s neoantigen immunotherapy evaluate.com
  4. Phase 2 Data of Personalized Cancer Vaccine With Adjuvant Pembrolizumab for Resected High-Risk Melanoma Dermatology Times
  5. Pembrolizumab in combination with gemcitabine and cisplatin compared with gemcitabine and cisplatin alone for patients with advanced biliary tract cancer (KEYNOTE-966): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 trial The Lancet
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Close Relationships With Parents Promote Healthier Brain Development in High-Risk Teens, Buffering Against Alcohol Use Disorder

Summary: Close and supportive parental relationships can help mitigate the genetic and environmental risk of developing alcohol use disorder for at-risk teens.

Source: State University of New York

For teens at elevated risk of developing alcohol use disorder (AUD), close relationships with parents can help mitigate their genetic and environmental vulnerability, a new study suggests.

The offspring of people with AUD are four times more likely than others to develop the disorder. Increasing evidence suggests that this heritable risk may be either amplified or mitigated by the quality of parenting.

Deficient parenting has been linked to a range of negative behavioral and psychiatric outcomes, while positive parenting appears critical for the development of higher-level social, emotional, and cognitive traits.

Typical neurological development during adolescence hones self-regulatory and executive function capacities (e.g., attention, inhibition, and decision-making), enabling adaptive responses to challenging situations. Deficiencies in these capacities underlie risk for developing substance use disorders.

Research has established that people with AUD and their offspring, during cognitive tasks, manifest low activity on two measures of quantifiable brain responses.

These — known as P3 and frontal theta (FT)—are important in self-regulation and executive function. Low levels of P3 and FT predict AUD development and can be conceptualized as a “neurodevelopmental lag.” Little is known about the potential for positive parenting, especially by fathers, to buffer against this outcome in teens at high risk for developing AUD.

For the study in Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, investigators explored associations between vulnerable young people’s P3, FT, risky drinking, and closeness with their mothers and fathers during adolescence.

Between 2004 and 2019, researchers recruited 1,256 young offspring, aged 12–22 at baseline, from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA), a large, multigenerational family study on the genetic and environmental influences driving AUD.

These offspring were interviewed and their brain function was assessed biannually. The interviews covered participants’ substance use, mental health, and aspects of their home environments, including closeness with their mothers and fathers between ages 12-17. Their P3 and FT responses were measured using a visual task.

Researchers also collected data on participants’ binge drinking, impulsiveness (a personality trait known to affect alcohol use problems and relationships with parents), demographic characteristics, and parents’ alcohol and substance use. They used statistical analysis to explore associations between these factors.

Overall, greater closeness with fathers was associated with more robust P3 and FT activity in offspring, while closeness with mothers was linked to less binge drinking. Image is in the public domain

Overall, greater closeness with fathers was associated with more robust P3 and FT activity in offspring, while closeness with mothers was linked to less binge drinking. Certain sex differences also emerged.

Closeness with fathers was linked to larger P3 in sons but not daughters; closeness with mothers was linked to less binge drinking among daughters but not sons.

This may reflect distinct roles of fathers and mothers in child and teen development, and differential parenting of boys versus girls. The findings held independent of other risk factors, including parents’ AUD, substance use problems, socioeconomic status, and offspring impulsiveness.

The study provides compelling evidence that warm, close relationships with parents during adolescence may help build resilience to problematic drinking in offspring negatively affected by family AUD and that this, in part, reflects improved neurocognitive functioning. Aspects of parenting affecting children’s risk of AUD include—and go beyond—drinking behaviors.

The researchers conclude that close bonds with parents during the key transitional period of adolescence can substantially attenuate offspring’s tendency toward risky behaviors and addictive disorders, with important sex differences.

See also

About this neurodevelopment, parenting, and AUD research news

Author: Gayathri Pandey
Source: State University of New York
Contact: Gayathri Pandey – State University of New York
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
“Associations of parent–adolescent closeness with P3 amplitude, frontal theta, and binge drinking among offspring with high risk for alcohol use disorder” by Gayathri Pandey et al. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research


Abstract

Associations of parent–adolescent closeness with P3 amplitude, frontal theta, and binge drinking among offspring with high risk for alcohol use disorder

Background

Parents impact their offspring’s brain development, neurocognitive function, risk, and resilience for alcohol use disorder (AUD) via both genetic and socio-environmental factors. Individuals with AUD and their unaffected children manifest low parietal P3 amplitude and low frontal theta (FT) power, reflecting heritable neurocognitive deficits associated with AUD. Likewise, children who experience poor parenting tend to have atypical brain development and greater rates of alcohol problems. Conversely, positive parenting can be protective and critical for normative development of self-regulation, neurocognitive functioning and the neurobiological systems subserving them. Yet, the role of positive parenting in resiliency toward AUD is understudied and its association with neurocognitive functioning and behavioral vulnerability to AUD among high-risk offspring is less known. Using data from the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism prospective cohort (N = 1256, mean age [SD] = 19.25 [1.88]), we investigated the associations of closeness with mother and father during adolescence with offspring P3 amplitude, FT power, and binge drinking among high-risk offspring.

Methods

Self-reported closeness with mother and father between ages 12 and 17 and binge drinking were assessed using the Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism. P3 amplitude and FT power were assessed in response to target stimuli using a Visual Oddball Task.

Results

Multivariate multiple regression analyses showed that closeness with father was associated with larger P3 amplitude (p = 0.002) and higher FT power (p = 0.01). Closeness with mother was associated with less binge drinking (p = 0.003). Among male offspring, closeness with father was associated with larger P3 amplitude, but among female offspring, closeness with mother was associated with less binge drinking. These associations remained statistically significant with father’s and mothers’ AUD symptoms, socioeconomic status, and offspring impulsivity in the model.

Conclusions

Among high-risk offspring, closeness with parents during adolescence may promote resilience for developing AUD and related neurocognitive deficits albeit with important sex differences.

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Elon Musk’s Twitter is working on a ‘high’-risk paid video feature

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Elon Musk‘s Twitter is pushing ahead with plans to charge for content on the social media site, now with videos.

Twitter is working on a feature to allow people to post videos to the site and then charge users to view them, with the social media company taking a cut of the proceeds, according to an internal email obtained by The Washington Post. The company appears to be aiming to rush out the new feature, referred to as Paywalled Video, with a target of just one to two weeks before launch.

But the team has “identified the risk as high,” according to the email, which was sent by an employee on Twitter’s “Product Trust” team. The email cites “risks related to copyrighted content, creator/user trust issues, and legal compliance,” and says the feature will undergo a brief internal review around those issues before moving forward.

Whether the feature was in development before Musk took over is unclear, and Twitter declined to comment Thursday. But the accelerated timeline gives the company’s internal review teams just three days to provide feedback on the potential risks.

The timeline could signal Musk’s intent to move far more quickly in building and launching new features than Twitter has in the past — even if that means taking on greater risks of abuse or liability. While Twitter makes most of its money from advertising, Musk has already said he wants to charge users, including for the blue check mark of verification.

Musk bought the company for $44 billion last week, taking on billions in debt and promising fellow investors a hefty return — despite some analysts valuing the company at roughly half that price. Upon taking control, Musk immediately fired the executive team, installed himself as “Chief Twit,” brought in trusted business partners and has been floating a slew of major changes, often via his own Twitter account.

Elon Musk courts Twitter advertisers as he seeks new streams of revenue

The paid video feature would mark a significant shift for the platform, which is best known as a place for users to publicly share short thoughts, memes and links. Twitter recently branched into live audio with a feature called Spaces and has begun experimenting with premium features, such as a “tip jar” for content creators and a “Super Follow” option that lets popular tweeters charge a subscription fee for bonus content.

It could also push Twitter, which is unusual among major social networks for allowing nudity and consensual pornography, into competition with sites that specialize in adult content.

According to the internal email describing the new video feature, which has not yet been announced, “When a creator composes a tweet with a video, the creator can enable the paywall once a video has been added to the tweet.” They can then choose from a preset list of prices, such as $1, $2, $5, or $10.

Mock-ups of the feature viewed by The Post show a tweet with four images. Three are immediately viewable, while the fourth is obscured, with a lock icon and the message “view for $1.” Paying that amount would unlock the video, with the creator receiving money via Stripe while Twitter takes an unspecified amount.

Users who haven’t paid would not be able to see the video but could like or retweet the tweet.

The email doesn’t specify what types of videos creators might post, though it does raise the concern that users might post copyrighted content or use the feature to scam others. One Twitter employee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal plans, said it seemed like a feature that would likely be used at least partly for adult content.

Analysis: The problem behind all of Twitter’s other problems

Though Twitter is no longer public, it is on the hook for around $1 billion in annual interest payments on the debt Musk accrued when buying the company. He has also said he plans on charging $8 a month for users to keep their blue check mark that signals the company has verified them as who they say they are, while giving them added features like priority in search results.

Some of that money could be used to pay content creators like YouTube, Facebook and TikTok do, Musk said Tuesday on Twitter.

He earlier showed support for content creators on Twitter and engaged with some as he sought to make his case that users should become paid subscribers in exchange for a verification badge and other features.

“This will also give Twitter a revenue stream to reward content creators,” he wrote in one tweet.

“Creators need to make a living!” he added in response to an enthusiastic tweet from a Tesla influencer, who lauded the payment idea as a way to spur further content creation.

Twitter to charge $8 a month for verification. What you need to know.

Twitter estimates around 13 percent of its content is NSFW, or “not safe for work,” according to Reuters, which included the figure in a story last month about how Twitter was losing its most active users. NSFW content, along with cryptocurrency content, were the fastest-growing areas of English-speaking Twitter, according to an internal presentation viewed by The Post and first reported by Reuters.

Most big advertisers shun NSFW content and are hesitant to advertise on platforms that have a reputation for containing pornography. The issue has been one that the marketing industry has had conversations with Twitter with over the years, according to an executive at one of the largest advertising agency who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Rivals such as Facebook and TikTok do not allow pornographic content.

In August, The Verge reported that Twitter had developed and then shelved plans for a subscription service explicitly focused on adult content, reminiscent of the lucrative adult platform OnlyFans. But the project went through an intensive review by an internal “Red Team” tasked with evaluating all the possible risks, and was ultimately derailed by concern that Twitter would be unable to ensure that it wasn’t monetizing illegal child pornography or sexual abuse.

Musk has been in New York this week, partly to meet with advertisers. Last week he posted a note on his Twitter promising advertisers the site wouldn’t become a “free-for-all hellscape.”

Faiz Siddiqui contributed to this report.

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New Hampshire hiker dies of injuries after high-risk snow rescue, officials say

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A New Hampshire hiker, who ran into severe weather and texted his wife he would die without help, has succumbed to his injuries after rescuers located him on a mountainous trail in a hypothermic state Saturday night, authorities said.

The hiker, later identified as 53-year-old Xi Chen, of Andover, Massachusetts, was attempting to traverse the Presidential Range when he was overcome by severe weather on the Gulfside Trail near Mt. Clay in Coos County, New Hampshire, the New Hampshire Fish and Game Law Enforcement Division said.

Fish and Game officers had been responding to multiple calls from cold hikers stuck on the trail when they got a call from Xi’s wife around 6:30 p.m.

“The hiker had sent a text message to his wife telling her that he was cold and wet and could not continue on,” the agency said. “He further wrote that he felt he would die without a rescue.”

DRAMATIC RESCUE OF 19 HIKERS FROM UTAH CANYON: ‘THIS IS WHAT WE TRAIN FOR’

Officials immediately launched a rescue to the area, describing the terrain in the high peaks as treacherous, with freezing temperatures, rain, sleet, snow and winds gusting over 80 mph. Only experienced rescuers with proper gear were dispatched for this rescue, the agency said.

Rescuers said the conditions around the Gulfside Trail near Mount Clay in New Hampshire were treacherous, with 80 mph wind gusts, freezing temperatures and driving snow, officials said.
(NH Fish and Game Department Law Enforcement Division)

Rescuers located the hiker after an hour, enduring driving rain and blowing snow. Officials said Xi was unresponsive and in a highly hypothermic state. 

While trying to warm him up, the agency said rescuers detected signs of life despite him remaining unresponsive. Rescuers then raced to carry the hiker up toward the summit of Mt. Washington, trekking over a mile in rain and buffeting winds.

At the summit, rescuers placed the hiker in a truck and drove him down to the base where an ambulance was waiting to rush him to the hospital. After several hours of life saving efforts, Xi was pronounced dead.

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Officials said that multiple other hikers ignored the forecasted weather conditions and instead of turning back or bailing to safer elevations, they pressed on and ultimately called 911 expecting a rescue.

“Sometimes having enough gear is not enough,” the agency said. “In weather conditions experienced this weekend it is better to descend and get out of the wind and cold instead of pushing on until it is too late.”

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US in process of releasing monkeypox vaccine from national stockpile for ‘high-risk’ people, CDC says

There is one confirmed case of monkeypox and four suspected cases in the United States, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday.

“I can report that there has been a request for release of the Jynneos vaccine from the National Stockpile for some of the high-risk contacts of some of the early patients, so that is actively happening right now,” Dr. Jennifer McQuiston, deputy director of the Division of High Consequence Pathogens and Pathology within the CDC’s National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, said Monday.

McQuiston said the United States has a “good stock” of vaccine because it has been preparing for the possibility of needing to use doses for smallpox.

In the United States, the two-dose Jynneos vaccine is licensed to prevent smallpox and specifically to prevent monkeypox.

“Right now, we have over 1,000 doses of that available, and we expect that level to ramp up very quickly in the coming weeks as the company provides more doses to us,” McQuiston said.

There is another smallpox vaccine licensed in the United States, ACAM2000, that could be used to prevent monkeypox, she said, and the country has more than 100 million doses.

“ACAM2000 is an older-generation smallpox vaccine that has some potential significant side effects with it. So a decision to use that widely would have to have some serious discussion behind it,” McQuiston said.

Overall, “we are hoping to maximize vaccine distribution to those that we know would benefit from it,” she said. “Those are people who’ve had contact with a known monkeypox patients, health care workers, very close personal contact, and those in particular who might be at high risk for severe disease.”

The confirmed US monkeypox case is in a man in Massachusetts, and the four cases of orthopox are in men in New York, Florida and Utah, the CDC says. Orthopox refers to pox viruses in general.

McQuiston said health care providers should assume that these orthopox cases are monkeypox.

“It is likely that there are going to be additional cases reported in the United States,” she said.

McQuiston said the CDC expects to receive samples from the four suspected cases “today or tomorrow” for further analysis. Labs within the CDC’s Laboratory Response Network can test for an orthopox virus, and then confirmation of monkeypox specifically is done at the agency through PCR tests, which take “a couple of hours” to run, she said.

“From the time that CDC gets a specimen, we could do our monkeypox confirmatory PCR tests likely the same day. We’ve been seeing turnaround of a couple of days really, from the time a suspect patient might come to a doctor’s attention to they can get that initial state LRN laboratory results,” McQuiston said.

CDC sequencing of the sample from the confirmed case in Massachusetts went “really quickly,” and within 48 hours, researchers were able to see that it closely matched that of a case in Portugal.

“This process previously took up to two weeks, but we were able to get it posted within two days because we feel like this kind of public sharing of early sequence data is going to be important for all countries to do so that we can all better understand how the virus is spreading across the globe,” McQuiston said.

Monkeypox is not spread through sex itself but can be spread through contact during sex, said Dr. John Brooks, the CDC’s chief medical officer of HIV prevention.

“Monkeypox is not a sexually transmitted infection in the typical sense, but it can be transmitted during sexual and intimate content, as well as with personal contact and shared bedding and clothing,” Brooks said Monday.

Anyone can get or spread monkeypox, but a “notable fraction of cases” in the latest global outbreak are happening among gay and bisexual men.

“Some groups may have a greater chance of exposure right now, but by no means is the current risk of exposure to monkeypox exclusively to the gay and bisexual community in the US,” Brooks said. “Anyone, anyone, can develop [and] spread monkeypox infection, but … many of those affected in the current global outbreak identified as gay and bisexual men.”

Brooks said the CDC decided to hold a news conference about the outbreak now because LGBTQ Pride month usually kicks off around the Memorial Day weekend, and officials wanted to make sure the community was aware of the situation. He also urged doctors to be on the lookout for the disease, because it can look like other types of STDs.

He said the rash is “showing up in different parts of the body than we typically expect to see it.”

“In some cases, it has produced anal or genital lesions that look like other diseases like herpes, chickenpox or syphilis. So anyone with a rash or lesion around or involving their genitals, their anus or any other place that they have not seen it before, get fully evaluated, both for that rash but particularly for sexually transmitted infection and other illnesses that can cause rash,” he said.

“What we’re trying to do by bringing attention to the fact that some of these cases have had a genital and perianal presentation is just to remind people that people may come in for an evaluation of what they think is an STD, but we’d like the provider to think ‘could it be monkeypox as well?’ if the circumstances fit the story.”

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US in process of releasing monkeypox vaccine from national stockpile for ‘high-risk’ people, CDC says

There is one confirmed case of monkeypox and four suspected cases in the United States, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday.

“I can report that there has been a request for release of the Jynneos vaccine from the National Stockpile for some of the high-risk contacts of some of the early patients, so that is actively happening right now,” Dr. Jennifer McQuiston, deputy director of the Division of High Consequence Pathogens and Pathology within the CDC’s National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, said Monday.

McQuiston said the United States has a “good stock” of vaccine because it has been preparing for the possibility of needing to use doses for smallpox.

In the United States, the two-dose Jynneos vaccine is licensed to prevent smallpox and specifically to prevent monkeypox.

“Right now, we have over 1,000 doses of that available, and we expect that level to ramp up very quickly in the coming weeks as the company provides more doses to us,” McQuiston said.

There is another smallpox vaccine licensed in the United States, ACAM2000, that could be used to prevent monkeypox, she said, and the country has more than 100 million doses.

“ACAM2000 is an older-generation smallpox vaccine that has some potential significant side effects with it. So a decision to use that widely would have to have some serious discussion behind it,” McQuiston said.

Overall, “we are hoping to maximize vaccine distribution to those that we know would benefit from it,” she said. “Those are people who’ve had contact with a known monkeypox patients, health care workers, very close personal contact, and those in particular who might be at high risk for severe disease.”

The confirmed US monkeypox case is in a man in Massachusetts, and the four cases of orthopox are in men in New York, Florida and Utah, the CDC says. Orthopox refers to pox viruses in general.

McQuiston said health care providers should assume that these orthopox cases are monkeypox.

“It is likely that there are going to be additional cases reported in the United States,” she said.

McQuiston said the CDC expects to receive samples from the four suspected cases “today or tomorrow” for further analysis. Labs within the CDC’s Laboratory Response Network can test for an orthopox virus, and then confirmation of monkeypox specifically is done at the agency through PCR tests, which take “a couple of hours” to run, she said.

“From the time that CDC gets a specimen, we could do our monkeypox confirmatory PCR tests likely the same day. We’ve been seeing turnaround of a couple of days really, from the time a suspect patient might come to a doctor’s attention to they can get that initial state LRN laboratory results,” McQuiston said.

CDC sequencing of the sample from the confirmed case in Massachusetts went “really quickly,” and within 48 hours, researchers were able to see that it closely matched that of a case in Portugal.

“This process previously took up to two weeks, but we were able to get it posted within two days because we feel like this kind of public sharing of early sequence data is going to be important for all countries to do so that we can all better understand how the virus is spreading across the globe,” McQuiston said.

Monkeypox is not spread through sex itself but can be spread through contact during sex, said Dr. John Brooks, the CDC’s chief medical officer of HIV prevention.

“Monkeypox is not a sexually transmitted infection in the typical sense, but it can be transmitted during sexual and intimate content, as well as with personal contact and shared bedding and clothing,” Brooks said Monday.

Anyone can get or spread monkeypox, but a “notable fraction of cases” in the latest global outbreak are happening among gay and bisexual men.

“Some groups may have a greater chance of exposure right now, but by no means is the current risk of exposure to monkeypox exclusively to the gay and bisexual community in the US,” Brooks said. “Anyone, anyone, can develop [and] spread monkeypox infection, but … many of those affected in the current global outbreak identified as gay and bisexual men.”

Brooks said the CDC decided to hold a news conference about the outbreak now because LGBTQ Pride month usually kicks off around the Memorial Day weekend, and officials wanted to make sure the community was aware of the situation. He also urged doctors to be on the lookout for the disease, because it can look like other types of STDs.

He said the rash is “showing up in different parts of the body than we typically expect to see it.”

“In some cases, it has produced anal or genital lesions that look like other diseases like herpes, chickenpox or syphilis. So anyone with a rash or lesion around or involving their genitals, their anus or any other place that they have not seen it before, get fully evaluated, both for that rash but particularly for sexually transmitted infection and other illnesses that can cause rash,” he said.

“What we’re trying to do by bringing attention to the fact that some of these cases have had a genital and perianal presentation is just to remind people that people may come in for an evaluation of what they think is an STD, but we’d like the provider to think ‘could it be monkeypox as well?’ if the circumstances fit the story.”

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People in ‘high-risk’ New York counties should wear masks indoors in public settings, Health Department says

NASSAU COUNTY, Long Island (WABC) — The New York State Health Department is recommending that people in high-risk counties wear masks in all indoor public settings, regardless of their vaccination status.

According to the CDC, Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Putnam, Orange, Dutchess, Sullivan, and Ulster counties are now considered high risk.

Most of New York City is listed at medium risk; the Bronx is considered low risk.

In addition to high-risk counties, health officials say everyone with compromised immune systems should stay masked while inside in public settings.

“These public health measures, as well as ensuring proper air ventilation when gathering, will help reduce COVID-19 transmission in communities and lower the risk of serious illness and hospitalization for individuals. We will continue to work with local partners and make every tool at our disposal widely available to New Yorkers, as we move forward through the pandemic,” said State Health Commissioner Dr. Mary T. Bassett in a statement.

Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman says the county will not change any polices.

“We encourage everybody to go about their life normally,” he said.

Blakeman says his decision is based on hospitalizations and ICU admissions — unline the state, which counts cases and deaths as well.

“If those numbers spiked to a level that was dangerous, then, of course, we would look for guidance from our health comissioner and we would follow appropriate protocols. But right now, we’re not anywhere near a crisis situation,” Blakeman added.

Some residents of Nassau County say they have moved on, despite the risks.

“I’m on the railroad every day, we wear masks — we’re cautious. But at the same time, I think we’ve had enough at this point and need to move on,” said Blaine Capobianco.

Others don’t understand the reluctance.

“You know, if it worked before, let’s do what worked before,” said an unamed Nassau County resident.

While New York State has a mask recommendation, Blakeman says he would not rule out a mask order in Nassau County, but insists his own data does not come close to supporting that.

Some residents told us they’ve moved on, despite the risks.

ALSO READ | Bronx DA urges credit card companies to cut ties with ghost gun sellers

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