Tag Archives: tied

California doctors see uptick in rare, serious condition in children tied to COVID-19

After an increase in COVID-19 cases in early January, doctors are now seeing an increase in another condition in children. Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in children, or MIS-C, causes different parts of the body to be inflamed. New data shows there are 302 reported cases of MIS-C statewide. That’s up from 176 cases in January and 157 in December.“There have been reports of children dying from it. There have been reports of children having to have their arms or legs amputated and it can affect the heart very severely,” said Dr. Dean Blumberg, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at UC Davis Children’s Hospital.RELATED | COVID-19 in California: Maps, tiers, vaccine info and everything else you need to knowIn August, KCRA 3 shared Maeson Howard’s story. The otherwise healthy 10-year-old was admitted to the hospital for what doctors thought was MIS-C. “Quickly, he was showing multiple symptoms for something, obviously, really bad, and immediately you start thinking about COVID-19,” Maeson’s father Corley Howard said at the time.Howard said the little boy had a fever and was vomiting with diarrhea.Those are just some of the symptoms doctors say parents should watch out for. Other things like abdominal and or neck pain, a rash, bloodshot eyes or feeling tired are also possible signs of the condition.“These children are admitted to the hospital. They are very sick. Fortunately, almost all of them get better. They respond very well to the treatment,” Blumberg said.MORE | CDC Data: MIS-C in the United StatesAccording to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, doctors are seeing most cases in children 3 to 12 years old. Fifty-eight percent of the cases were boys. Thirty-seven percent of the reported cases are Hispanic children.“We think it might have to do with increased risk of infection because many of these families are essential workers and so they might be getting having increased risk of exposure,” Blumberg said.Research shows nearly all of the children who had MIS-C tested positive for COVID-19. The others had been around someone with the virus.“So what this reflects then is the surge that we had in January and then we’re seeing the results of that now,” Blumberg said.Doctors advise parents to protect children by following the guidance to prevent getting COVID-19 — things like hand washing, physical distancing and wearing a mask.The CDC says MIS-C is a new syndrome, and many questions remain about why some children and adolescents develop it after a COVID-19 illness or contact with someone with COVID-19, while others do not.

After an increase in COVID-19 cases in early January, doctors are now seeing an increase in another condition in children.

Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in children, or MIS-C, causes different parts of the body to be inflamed. New data shows there are 302 reported cases of MIS-C statewide. That’s up from 176 cases in January and 157 in December.

“There have been reports of children dying from it. There have been reports of children having to have their arms or legs amputated and it can affect the heart very severely,” said Dr. Dean Blumberg, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at UC Davis Children’s Hospital.

RELATED | COVID-19 in California: Maps, tiers, vaccine info and everything else you need to know

In August, KCRA 3 shared Maeson Howard’s story. The otherwise healthy 10-year-old was admitted to the hospital for what doctors thought was MIS-C.

“Quickly, he was showing multiple symptoms for something, obviously, really bad, and immediately you start thinking about COVID-19,” Maeson’s father Corley Howard said at the time.

Howard said the little boy had a fever and was vomiting with diarrhea.

Those are just some of the symptoms doctors say parents should watch out for. Other things like abdominal and or neck pain, a rash, bloodshot eyes or feeling tired are also possible signs of the condition.

“These children are admitted to the hospital. They are very sick. Fortunately, almost all of them get better. They respond very well to the treatment,” Blumberg said.

MORE | CDC Data: MIS-C in the United States

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, doctors are seeing most cases in children 3 to 12 years old. Fifty-eight percent of the cases were boys. Thirty-seven percent of the reported cases are Hispanic children.

“We think it might have to do with increased risk of infection because many of these families are essential workers and so they might be getting [or] having increased risk of exposure,” Blumberg said.

Research shows nearly all of the children who had MIS-C tested positive for COVID-19. The others had been around someone with the virus.

“So what this reflects then is the surge that we had in January and then we’re seeing the results of that now,” Blumberg said.

Doctors advise parents to protect children by following the guidance to prevent getting COVID-19 — things like hand washing, physical distancing and wearing a mask.

The CDC says MIS-C is a new syndrome, and many questions remain about why some children and adolescents develop it after a COVID-19 illness or contact with someone with COVID-19, while others do not.

Read original article here

Hacker claims to have stolen files from law firm tied to Trump: WSJ

A hacker is claiming to have stolen files from prominent law firm Jones Day, The Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday.

The files were posted to the dark web, according to the Journal, and included some documents that were reviewed by the newspaper. One memo was reportedly addressed to a judge and marked “confidential mediation brief,” while another is a cover letter for “confidential documents.”

The Journal reported it couldn’t immediately confirm the documents’ authenticity.

The hacker told the newspaper that they first reached out to the law firm on Feb. 3 to inform it that its network had been hacked, but it hadn’t responded as of Tuesday.

The Jones Day breach was first reported on cyber security blog DataBreaches.net on Feb. 13.

A major international law firm, Jones Day has many high-profile clients and has represented former President TrumpDonald TrumpMichigan Democrat Dingell on violent rhetoric: ‘I’ve had men in front of my house with assault weapons’ McConnell doesn’t rule out getting involved in Republican primaries 75 percent of Republicans want Trump to play prominent role in GOP: poll MORE’s administration and reelection campaign. 

The firm acknowledged to the Journal that it had data exposed but attributed it to another cyberattack on file-transferring platform from Accellion FTA.

“Jones Day has been informed that Accellion’s FTA file transfer platform, which is a platform that Jones Day—like many law firms, companies and organizations—used was recently compromised and information taken,” the law firm said in a statement to Bloomberg Law.

“Jones Day continues to investigate the breach and has been, and will continue to be, in discussion with affected clients and appropriate authorities,” the statement said.

The law firm didn’t immediately return a request for comment from The Hill.

Accellion first disclosed on Feb. 1 that its file-sharing platform was the target of a sophisticated cyberattack.

“Accellion is conducting a full assessment of the FTA data security incident with an industry-leading cybersecurity forensics firm,” Accellion spokesman Robert Dougherty said in a statement to The Hill on Tuesday. “We will share more information once this assessment is complete. For their protection, we do not comment on specific customers.”

However, the hacker told the Journal that they breached Jones Day’s server directly and were not associated with the Accellion hack. Bloomberg noted that Jones Day was the second firm in two weeks to say it had data exposed as part of the attack.



Read original article here

New York Mets owner Steve Cohen taking ‘break’ from Twitter following threats tied to stock flurry

New York Mets owner Steve Cohen is taking a “break” from Twitter after saying his family received personal threats this week amid an ongoing stock-trading standoff between day traders and hedge funds.

“I’ve really enjoyed the back and forth with Mets fans on Twitter which was unfortunately overtaken this week by misinformation unrelated to the Mets that led to our family getting personal threats,” Cohen said in a statement Saturday after deactivating his account Friday night. “So I’m going to take a break for now. We have other ways to listen to your suggestions and remain committed to doing that. I love our team, this community, and our fans, who are the best in baseball. Bottom line is that this week’s events in no way affect our resources and drive to put a championship team on the field.”

Cohen’s decision to step off Twitter appears to stem from conflict between independent investors and hedge funds. Day traders, mobilized on Reddit, have poured about all the money they can find into the stocks of struggling video game retailer GameStop and a few other beaten-down companies. Their buying has swollen those companies’ share prices beyond anyone’s imagination and inflicted huge losses on the hedge funds that had placed bets that the stocks would drop.

Cohen’s Point72 Asset Management became involved when it invested in Melvin Capital Management, a hedge fund that had heavily placed bets against GameStop and drew the ire of the Reddit users.

GameStop rocketed nearly 70% on Friday to close at $325. Over the past three weeks, the stock has delivered a stupefying 1,600% gain. The danger for the day traders is that, at any time, the stocks could collapse.

Before closing his Twitter account, Cohen — the richest owner in baseball, worth more than $14.5 billion — responded to the controversy Tuesday by tweeting, “Rough crowd on Twitter tonight. Hey stock jockeys, keep bringing it.”

Among the critics of Cohen, WFAN morning host and former NFL quarterback Boomer Esiason said he would stop going to Mets games “until I find out exactly what’s going on here” regarding Cohen’s involvement with the GameStop situation.

The Mets owner had previously garnered a Twitter following of nearly 200,000 for his irreverent interactions with fans, where he took suggestions about how to run the team, reacted to the team’s biggest moves — such as the trade for shortstop Francisco Lindor — and teased a return of black jerseys.

ESPN’s Joon Lee and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Read original article here