Tag Archives: labeled

Day One Xbox Game Pass Game Labeled ‘Big Disappointment’ – GameRant

  1. Day One Xbox Game Pass Game Labeled ‘Big Disappointment’ GameRant
  2. Pulpy XCOM-a-like Lamplighters League written off as a “big disappointment” and $22m loss by publisher just a week after release Rock Paper Shotgun
  3. Paradox says The Lamplighters League sales were ‘a big disappointment,’ confirms recent layoffs at developer Harebrained Schemes PC Gamer
  4. The Lamplighters League a ‘Big Disappointment’ for Paradox as It Confirms $22 Million Write-Down IGN
  5. The Lamplighters League Is Pushing Out Multiple Updates To Fix Crashes On Xbox Game Pass Pure Xbox
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

American Airlines flight attendant found dead at Pa. airport hotel, labeled ‘suspicious’: reports – PennLive

  1. American Airlines flight attendant found dead at Pa. airport hotel, labeled ‘suspicious’: reports PennLive
  2. Philadelphia police find flight attendant dead with cloth in mouth inside hotel room Fox News
  3. Female flight attendant, 66, for American Airlines is found dead with CLOTH in her mouth at Philly airport Mar Daily Mail
  4. American Airlines flight attendant found dead with sock in her mouth at Philadelphia Airport Marriott WPVI-TV
  5. Police call flight attendant’s death at Philly airport hotel ‘suspicious’ NBC 10 Philadelphia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Weekly coronavirus cases climb 32%; nine Oregon counties labeled ‘high’ by CDC

Identified coronavirus cases jumped 32% in Oregon last week compared to the previous week, according to state data released Monday, with hospitalizations rising above projections for the omicron wave.

Oregon recorded about 12,000 weekly cases, up from about 9,000 the previous week. The state is now identifying about 1,700 daily cases – the highest level since February – but reported case numbers are a dramatic undercount because of at-home testing.

The number of people hospitalized and testing positive also jumped in the past week, reaching 357 as of Monday, exceeding the June 5 peak of 327 projected by Oregon Health & Science University. The increase comes as Oregon sees more iterations of the highly contagious omicron variant.

Hospitalizations this weekend reached their highest levels since early March. But they remain far below earlier records from delta and omicron, when the number of people hospitalized surpassed 1,100.

Nine Oregon counties are now in the high category for spread, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, with indoor masking recommended in public places.

The high counties are: Hood River, Wasco, Sherman, Lane, Douglas, Coos, Jackson, Klamath and Lake. In the metro area, Multnomah, Washington and Clackamas counties are in the medium range, with people at high-risk of severe infection encouraged to talk with a health care provider about whether to wear masks.

Since it began: Oregon has reported 805,978 confirmed or presumed infections and 7,791 deaths.

Hospitalizations: 357 people with confirmed coronavirus infections are hospitalized, up 57 since Monday, June 20. That includes 55 people in intensive care, up 11 since June 20.

Vaccinations: As of June 20, the state has reported fully vaccinating 2,923,957 people (68.5% of the population), partially vaccinating 288,639 people (6.8%) and boosting 1,673,842 (39.2%).

New deaths: In the six days since June 21, the Oregon Health Authority has reported 62 deaths connected to COVID-19.

— Brad Schmidt; bschmidt@oregonian.com; 503-294-7628

Read original article here

I was diagnosed with terminal cancer while giving birth — after I was labeled hypochondriac

A new mom claims she discovered she had terminal cancer while giving birth via cesarean section — when doctors discovered tumors in her ovaries, lymph nodes and abdomen lining.

Lois Walker, 37, alleges that her shocking diagnosis came after experts dismissed her ongoing symptoms as “anxiety,” calling her a “hypochondriac.”

The new mom from the UK reported experiencing stomach pain for over 12 months — but it took her son Ray being born via C-section in 2021 to get a proper diagnosis of stage 4 cancer.

The mother of three said she made 20 calls to her doctor during the pandemic lockdown, as well as repeated trips to the emergency room, only to be prescribed anxiety medications and warned to avoid dairy.

After her doctors finally discovered malignant tumors, she received six rounds of chemotherapy and two operations. However, they now say there is no way to curb the illness from killing her.

“It’s been absolutely diabolical,” a distressed Walker alleged to South West News Service. “They call themselves health professionals, and they’re supposed to be giving us care, but that is negligence.”

Walker and her partner Dale Wistow with their baby Ray. A spokesperson for Dove Valley Practice told SWNS: “We are sorry to hear Ms Walker’s concerns about her care and that she didn’t feel listened to. We carried out a review of Ms Walker’s care and referrals for tests and we shared those findings with her at that time.”
Lois Walker / SWNS

Walker’s symptoms first started in June 2020, experiencing unusual bathroom habits and abdominal swelling, but was first told she might have irritable bowel syndrome after visiting Dove Valley Practice and Barnsley Hospital in the UK.

When she called her general care doctor due to worsening symptoms, she was only offered drugs to calm her hypochondria.

“I was going to the doctors, but I couldn’t tell them anything new because it was the same symptoms always, so they treated me with antacids,” she said. “Then, I got told it could be health anxiety, so they put me on citalopram.” Citalopram is a medication used to treat depression, according to the Mayo Clinic.

She had been battling odd and painful symptoms for a year before her diagnosis. However, a rep for Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said: “We welcome any patient with concerns about the care they have received to get in touch with our Patient Advice and Complaints Team which investigates patient concerns to ensure action is taken in a timely and appropriate manner.”
Lois Walker / SWNS

But Walker had been a skin-cancer sufferer in the past, asking her doctor: “You don’t think I could have cancer?” Yet, he said she was “getting old,” and her body doesn’t “work as well.”

“I just feel like it could have been caught sooner, so I wouldn’t have this late diagnosis — and I’m leaving three kids,” she said. “If the NHS does not acknowledge that things need to change, then I feel sorry for everybody and anybody.”

In December 2020, she discovered she was pregnant. Fourteen weeks later, she was in horrible pain after learning her son’s gender, saying she couldn’t walk or eat, the pain growing more “excruciating” as the pregnancy wore on.

“The doctor said that I weighed the same as I did 12 months ago, and by this time, I was nine months pregnant — and that didn’t seem to ring any alarm bells,” she claimed.

She’s a mother of three, pictured with her baby Ray and other son Ronnie.
Lois Walker / SWNS

When the pain finally grew to be unbearable, she told doctors she would kill herself if they didn’t take her seriously. She was hospitalized for pain management and given morphine, but that’s where the treatment stopped.

“Then the final straw was when they had to get the mental health team involved, because I said that it had reached the point where I would have to end both our lives, and I feel ashamed to say that,” she said.

After months of pushing for more in-depth investigation into her symptoms, her doctor discovered a mass behind her womb, prompting them to deliver her child the following day – when they discovered the cancer.

In September 2021, she gave birth to her third child while simultaneously hearing she was terminally ill.

The doctors labeled her as a hypochondriac, blowing off her concerns.
Lois Walker / SWNS

“When they opened me up, he said, ‘I thought you said you didn’t have any abdominal surgery?’ and I said I hadn’t,” she recalled. “That’s when I knew something had been found, as they called a few doctors in.”

“They just said, basically, that my abdomen was so diseased that they needed to send off some biopsies, and I’d have to wait. But I knew anyway,” she continued. “The doctor actually grabbed my hand and he cried, and he actually said that he’d let me down.”

However, a spokesperson for Dove Valley Practice told SWNS: “We are sorry to hear Ms Walker’s concerns about her care and that she didn’t feel listened to. We carried out a review of Ms Walker’s care and referrals for tests and we shared those findings with her at that time.”

A rep for Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust also told the news agency they are “sorry to hear that Ms Walker has concerns about her care.”

The rep continued, “We welcome any patient with concerns about the care they have received to get in touch with our Patient Advice and Complaints Team which investigates patient concerns to ensure action is taken in a timely and appropriate manner.”

When the doctor’s opened her abdomen for her C-section, they discovered diseased internal organs.
Lois Walker / SWNS

But apologies and chemotherapy treatment didn’t do much for Walker, whose cancer still spread and became terminal.

“My liver had fused to my diaphragm, so that had to be cut back. My bladder had fused to the back of my womb, so that had to be cut back, and all my ovaries had fused,” she said. “Then I had the devastating news that it’s also on my bowels, my stomach and my liver. Obviously, that’s never good – they’re my main organs that I need.”

Because of her illness, her family created an online fund-raiser to benefit Cancer Research UK that has received more than $10,000 in donations, well over their original goal.

The page, created by her sister, notes Walker was “failed hugely by the NHS,” while calling the newborn a “miracle.”

“We plan on having her as long as possible,” the fund-raiser description reads at the end of her story.

While the fund-raiser is receiving donations for cancer research, no amount of love or money is likely to save Walker. Now that she can focus on fighting the disease, she’s just trying to live as best she can.

“It’s just about a comfortable life for however long I’ve got left, and that’s where we are at the minute,” she said.

Read original article here

Sending a probe to Uranus labeled as top priority by space science community

The space science community thinks the time is ripe to study Uranus in depth — and they’re being serious. A new report compiled by planetary scientists from across the United States says that sending an interplanetary probe to study the ice giant planet should be considered the top priority for planetary exploration over the next decade.

Specifically, scientists are calling on NASA to create the Uranus Orbiter and Probe, or UOP. The mission concept would send a spacecraft into orbit around Uranus, along with a probe that would plunge into the planet’s atmosphere. Scientists envision such a mission launching sometime in the early 2030s as long as engineers get started on it as soon as next year.

If it works, the UOP mission could provide the most intricate details yet about this mostly unexplored world. The only spacecraft to ever visit Uranus was NASA’s Voyager 2 mission, which flew by the planet in 1986, coming within 50,700 miles of the planet’s cloud tops. Voyager 2 unlocked some intriguing secrets about Uranus, discovering new moons and rings around the planet. But Voyager 2 didn’t stay for long; it zoomed by during its exploration of the outer Solar System and kept going, eventually heading off into interstellar space.

An orbiter and a probe could provide a wealth of additional knowledge. Most of all, they could tell us exactly what Uranus is made of. Scientists believe the planet mainly consists of some combination of rock, ices, and hydrogen and helium, but that hasn’t really been confirmed. “Our understanding of the interior structure of the planet is so poor that we really have very little idea what the ratio of those three things are to each other,” Jonathan Fortney, a professor at UC Santa Cruz who authored a report about possible missions to Uranus and Neptune, tells The Verge. “And so there’s been a long assumption that it’s mostly these ices but that’s that’s literally an assumption. We don’t really know that.”

Additionally, when scientists look at planets outside our Solar System, ice giants like Uranus and Neptune seem to dominate the Universe. And yet, they are the only main planets in our Solar System that we’ve never orbited. “Ice giant-like planets are some of the most common ones out there,” Bethany Ehlmann, a professor at Caltech and one of the steering committee members on the Decadal, tells The Verge. “We have two in our cosmic neighborhood in our Solar System, and it’s high time we check them out.”

The Uranus mission is at the top of a long wishlist detailed today in what is known as the Planetary Science Decadal Survey. Published by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, it’s a massive document written every 10 years or so by groups of planetary scientists detailing the space missions they’d most like to see happen a decade into the future. The Decadal Survey is done so infrequently because of the extensive amount of time it takes to plan and build a flagship interplanetary spacecraft, often requiring roughly a decade of work to execute.

Because it takes so long to pull off a space mission, scientists have to be strategic about their asks, ranking the missions they want to happen in order of highest to lowest priority. The Uranus mission was actually first recommended in 2011 during the last Decadal Survey, but the spacecraft was listed as the third-highest priority behind a Mars rover designed to look for signs of life on the Red Planet and a spacecraft to study Jupiter’s icy moon Europa, thought to harbor a liquid water ocean underneath its surface.

Both of those priorities have manifested into actual missions. The Mars rover became NASA’s Perseverance rover, which landed on the Red Planet in February 2021 and continues to drill up samples of Martian soil. The mission to Europa became NASA’s Europa Clipper, a spacecraft designed to periodically zoom by Jupiter’s moon to potentially taste its atmosphere and perhaps pass through plumes of water that might erupt from its surface. As of now, Europa Clipper is slated to launch in October of 2024, with its arrival at Europa scheduled for 2030.

Saturn’s moon Enceladus, as seen from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft.
Image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Since those programs have been funded and planned, the lower priority missions from a decade ago have now moved to the top. Now, the second-highest priority on the list, after the Uranus mission, is a spacecraft to visit Saturn’s enticing moon Enceladus, also thought to harbor a liquid water ocean underneath its crust. Specifically, the Decadal calls for building an Enceladus Orbilander — a spacecraft that would function as both an orbiter and a lander. First the spacecraft would insert itself into orbit around Enceladus, possibly flying through plumes that are thought to erupt from the moon’s surface. Eventually, it would look for a spot to land on Enceladus, where it would stay for a two-year mission. Its main objective would be to search for signs of life.

It’s going to be a while before the Enceladus mission takes flight, though. The Decadal calls for the mission to begin formulation in fiscal year 2029 at the earliest, with an arrival at Enceladus in the 2050s. And that’s if the budget manifests in full for both the Uranus mission and the Enceladus mission at NASA, which will likely cost billions of dollars. Understanding that funding is always precarious, the authors of the Decadal also made a second set of recommendations in case the money doesn’t materialize; they suggested that the Uranus mission could start development in 2028. But that would likely mean the Enceladus mission wouldn’t get underway until the 2030s at the earliest.

While the Uranus and the Enceladus missions are the top new missions for the Decadal authors, they’ve also included a list of recommendations for space missions already taking place that they want to see continue. For instance, they strongly recommend that NASA continue to work toward bringing back samples from Mars. The Perseverance rover was just one major step in a long-term plan to dig up samples and then eventually transport them to Earth, where they can be studied in a lab. NASA is slowly moving forward with the next part of that plan, which entails creating a suite of vehicles that would land on Mars, collect the samples Perseverance cached, launch them off Mars, and then travel back to Earth. It’s going to be a very complicated process, and again, the Decadal recognizes budget can be a concern. While the report recommends finishing this sample return as quickly as possible, it also cautions not to let the budget balloon too much that it impacts all of the other planetary missions NASA is juggling.

There are also plenty of smaller planetary missions that are recommended that wouldn’t cost nearly as much money as the Uranus and Enceladus flagship missions. These would include probes to Saturn and its moon Titan, a new Venus mission, another mission to fly by Enceladus, missions to the Moon, and more. The Decadal isn’t done with Mars, either; it wants to create another mission called the Mars Life Explorer to look for signs that life may currently live on the Red Planet while assessing the world’s habitability. Additionally, the authors want NASA to continue the search for hazardous asteroids that could pose a threat to Earth by completing a planned spacecraft called the NEO Surveyor, which is scheduled to launch in 2026.

It’s an extremely detailed report, consisting of nearly 800 pages. And while the focus of the Decadal may be on studying the worlds and rocks in our Solar System, wrapped in this report is a key message that the authors want to emphasize: we also need to protect and support the people working on these missions. In an effort to create a more diverse community of scientists and engineers working on these programs, the report recommends engaging students from underrepresented communities to pursue planetary science. The authors also recommend that NASA’s planetary science division work to eliminate bias and create codes of conduct surrounding its missions and conferences.

“While scientific understanding is the primary motivation for what our community does, we must also work to boldly address issues concerning our community’s most important resource — the people who propel its planetary science and exploration missions,” Philip Christensen, a professor at Arizona State University and co-chair of the Decadal’s steering committee, said in a statement.

Read original article here

Vials Labeled ‘Smallpox’ Are Found in Pennsylvania Laboratory

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is investigating the discovery of vials that are labeled “smallpox” at a laboratory in Pennsylvania, the health agency said on Thursday.

The frozen vials “were incidentally discovered by a laboratory worker while cleaning out a freezer in a facility that conducts vaccine research in Pennsylvania,” Belsie González, a spokeswoman for the C.D.C., said in an email on Thursday.

She added that the C.D.C. was working with law enforcement officials to investigate the vials. The agency said the vials appeared to be intact.

“The laboratory worker who discovered the vials was wearing gloves and a face mask,” she said. “There is no indication that anyone has been exposed to the small number of frozen vials. We will provide further details as they are available.”

The C.D.C. did not say where in Pennsylvania the vials were discovered or how many there were.

Mark O’Neill, a press secretary for the Pennsylvania Department of Health, said there were a “small number of vials” found at a Merck facility in Montgomery County, outside Philadelphia.

Merck did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Thursday. The F.B.I. referred inquiries to the C.D.C.

“The Pennsylvania Department of Health would like to stress that there has been no known threat to public health and safety,” Mr. O’Neill said. “As referenced by the C.D.C., there is no indication that anyone was exposed to the small number of frozen vials that were labeled ‘smallpox.’”

Citing a notification from the state’s department of health, Kelly Cofrancisco, a spokeswoman for the Montgomery County Office of Communications, said there was a total of “15 questionable vials” with five labeled as “smallpox” and 10 as “vaccinia.”

Smallpox, an infectious disease caused by the variola virus, caused devastating outbreaks for centuries, with about three of every 10 cases proving fatal, according to the C.D.C.

Symptoms include a very high fever and a blistering, progressive skin rash.

The virus claimed the lives of 300 million people in the 20th century, according to the World Health Organization.

In the event of an outbreak, the C.D.C. said, “there is enough smallpox vaccine to vaccinate every person in the United States.”

The agency said that the last natural outbreak of smallpox in the United States was in 1949. The last known natural case was in Somalia in 1977, according to the W.H.O.

The W.H.O. said that there were two authorized repositories of variola virus stocks, with the C.D.C. in Atlanta and at a research center in Russia. That year, six glass vials that contained the smallpox virus were found in a storeroom in a government laboratory outside Washington. At the time, the C.D.C. said there was no indication that lab workers or the public had been exposed to the contents.

The C.D.C. said that smallpox research in the United States focused on the development of vaccines, drugs and diagnostic tests to protect people against smallpox in the event that it is used for bioterrorism.

Dr. Robert Glatter, an emergency physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, said that smallpox can be lethal “even after it is freeze-dried.”

He said that because of its highly infectious nature, “the virus itself must be kept cold.” At room temperature after many years, he said, it was “unlikely that the virus would retain any ability to infect people.”

Dr. Glatter added that there had been an ongoing debate about whether governments should retain viral samples or eliminate all known copies of the virus.

Read original article here

Vials labeled ‘Smallpox’ discovered in Pennsylvania lab freezer

Frozen vials labeled “Smallpox” were recently discovered by a laboratory worker at a Pennsylvania facility that conducts vaccine research, federal officials said.

The vials were found while the worker was clearing out a freezer at the unspecified facility, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“CDC, its administration partners, and law enforcement are investigating the matter and the vials’ contents appear intact,” a CDC spokesperson told The Associated Press.

“The laboratory worker who discovered the vials was wearing gloves and a face mask. There is no indication that anyone has been exposed to the small number of frozen vials.”

A nurse holds a 100-dose vial of smallpox vaccine.
AP

Smallpox is a deadly disease that was globally eradicated in 1980.

Caused by the variola virus, smallpox plagued the world for centuries and killed nearly a third of the people it infected.

The World Health Organization designated two sites in the world where stocks of variola virus are stored and used for research: the CDC facility in Atlanta and a center in Russia.

The CDC said smallpox research in the US revolves around the development of vaccines, drugs and diagnostic tests to protect people against the infectious disease in the event that it is used as an agent of bioterrorism.

With Post wires

Read original article here

Vials labeled ‘smallpox’ found by lab worker cleaning freezer in Pennsylvania

Vials labeled as smallpox were discovered at a Pennsylvania lab, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Wednesday.

The frozen vials “were incidentally discovered by a laboratory worker while cleaning out a freezer in a facility that conducts vaccine research in Pennsylvania,” a CDC spokesperson said in a statement to NBC News.

The contents appeared to be intact, and the CDC is partnering with law enforcement to investigate, the agency said.

“The laboratory worker who discovered the vials was wearing gloves and a face mask. There is no indication that anyone has been exposed to the small number of frozen vials. We will provide further details as they are available,” the spokesperson said.

Smallpox was eradicated in the 1970s, but vaccines still exist in case of an outbreak, according to the CDC. Once a person develops a smallpox rash, the vaccine cannot protect them. About 3 in 10 people with smallpox die.

NBC Philadelphia reported that the vials were found at a Merck facility in Montgomery County, about 30 miles northwest of Philadelphia. Only two facilities in the world are supposed to have doses of the virus: CDC’s Atlanta headquarters and a Russian lab.

Merck did not respond to a request for comment Wednesday. The Department of Health and Human Services also did not respond to a request for comment.

Read original article here

FBI, CDC Investigating Vials Labeled ‘Smallpox’ Found in Lab Freezer

A vial of dried smallpox vaccination is shown December 5, 2002 in Altamonte Springs, Florida.
Image: Scott A. Miller (Getty Images)

A scenario ripe for a zombie-horror movie has just happened. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revealed Tuesday that vials labeled “smallpox”—an extremely deadly virus that was eradicated in the 1970s—were found at a vaccine research facility in Pennsylvania. Despite the scary find, officials say there is no evidence that anyone’s been exposed to the pathogen.

According to the CDC, the frozen vials were found by a lab worker as they were cleaning out a freezer. The vials don’t appear to have been opened, and the worker was wearing gloves and a face mask at the time of the discovery. The facility is one of many that conduct vaccine research for the CDC.

“There is no indication that anyone has been exposed to the small number of frozen vials,” the CDC said in a statement to CNN. “CDC, its Administration partners, and law enforcement are investigating the matter and the vials’ contents appear intact.”

The CDC will transport the vials to another location for testing on Wednesday, Yahoo News reported, citing an alert sent to Department of Homeland Security leadership. According to the DHS alert seen by Yahoo News, there were 15 vials; five were labeled “smallpox” and 10 were labeled “vaccinia.”

Smallpox, named for the characteristic pockmarks it causes on the skin, is one of the more fearsome germs that has plagued humanity. It’s been responsible for countless epidemics and is estimated to have killed 300 million people in the 20th century alone. However, the virus was also the first to be beaten back through vaccination, when the technique of inoculation was improved and popularized by Edward Jenner in the late 18th century. The disease was finally eradicated worldwide in 1977, a feat aided by the fact that humans are the only known natural host of smallpox.

Though smallpox is (probably) gone from the wild, there do remain legally allowed samples of the virus at select labs in the U.S. and Russia—a decision that’s earned a fair share of controversy. In recent years, there have been discoveries of undocumented smallpox, such as when workers at the National Institutes of Health found six vials preserved from the 1950s during a move. Two of these vials were later shown to contain viable virus, though no cases of smallpox occurred as a result.

As scary as an accidental release of smallpox would be, there are smallpox vaccines available, though they’re only given to people who could be at risk of exposure, such as certain lab workers. Today, Americans are no longer routinely vaccinated against smallpox. In 2018, the Food and Drug approved the drug tecovirimat as the first antiviral specifically meant to treat smallpox, based on data from tests in the lab on smallpox and its cousins.

There are occasional cases of other related diseases in the U.S., such as monkeypox and Alaskapox, though none of these are as serious or prevalent as smallpox was in its heyday.

Read original article here

Vials labeled ‘smallpox’ found at vaccine research facility in Pennsylvania, CDC says

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — Several vials labeled “smallpox” have been found at a vaccine research facility in Pennsylvania, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday.

“There is no indication that anyone has been exposed to the small number of frozen vials,” the CDC said in a statement emailed to CNN.

“The frozen vials labeled ‘Smallpox’ were incidentally discovered by a laboratory worker while cleaning out a freezer in a facility that conducts vaccine research in Pennsylvania. CDC, its Administration partners, and law enforcement are investigating the matter and the vials’ contents appear intact,” the CDC added.

“The laboratory worker who discovered the vials was wearing gloves and a face mask. We will provide further details as they are available.”

According to Yahoo News, which cited an alert sent to Department of Homeland Security leadership, the vials were reportedly found in a freezer Monday night at a Merck facility outside Philadelphia.

The closest Merck facility to Philadelphia is North Wales, Pa., although Action News cannot confirm there are questionable vials inside the building.

Smallpox, also known as variola, was declared eradicated in 1980 by the World Health Organization after a concerted global vaccination effort. Before that, the virus, which passes easily from person to person, infected 15 million people a year and killed about 30% of them. The last known outbreak in the US was in 1947.

In 2014, employees of the National Institutes of Health found six vials of smallpox in an unused storage room as they packed up a lab at the NIH’s Bethesda, Maryland, campus to move it. Two of the vials contained viable virus. The CDC said at the time there was no evidence anyone had been exposed to the contents of any of the vials.

Governments have argued about whether to keep samples of the virus or to destroy all known copies. Most routine vaccination stopped in 1972 but military personnel and some researchers are still vaccinated.

The CDC recommends that people get smallpox boosters every 3-5 years to stay protected although at least one study indicated vaccinated people may have at least some immunity for life.

The-CNN-Wire & 2021 Cable News Network, Inc., a WarnerMedia Company. All rights reserved.

Copyright © 2021 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.



Read original article here