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COVID-19 pandemic magnified health inequities for people with high blood pressure

 E-Mail DALLAS, May 19, 2021 Steps to ensure safety and mitigate the spread of COVID-19 have had some unintended consequences on the management of chronic conditions such as high blood pressure, a leading cause of heart disease and health disparities in the United States. COVID-19 has disproportionately affected people from different racial and ethnic groups, those who are from under-resourced populations and communities that face historic or systemic disadvantages. Discussions and research are ongoing to address what many experts label as long-existing inequities in the U.S. health system, according to information published today in the Media coverage has examined how and why COVID-19 is disproportionately impacting communities of color to some degree. However, it is critical that we continue to examine and explain the degree to which the pandemic has widened the divide among race/ethnic and class groups in the U.S. and exposed the systemic and institutional cracks in our he

23 April 2021 Coronavirus Charts and News: Should We Be Vaccinating Dogs And Cats For COVID? MIT Researchers Say Risk Of Contracting COVID-19 Indoors Is The Same at 6ft or 60ft

The U.S. new cases 7-day rolling average are 12.4 % LOWER than the 7-day rolling average one week ago and U.S. deaths due to coronavirus are now 4.3 % LOWER than the rolling average one week ago. Today s posts include: U.S. Coronavirus New Cases are 65,471 U.S. Coronavirus deaths are at 901 U.S. Coronavirus immunizations have been administered to 64.6 % of the population The 7-day rolling average rate of growth of the pandemic shows new cases improved and deaths worsened CDC advisers recommend resuming use of Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine New Study Shows Long Haul COVID-19 Can Kill Patients Months After Infection

Drug Repurposing for COVID-19: What Went Wrong?

email article So far in the pandemic, support for research on drug repurposing particularly for inexpensive generics has not played a huge role in finding new treatments for COVID-19, but that appears to be changing. Critics charge that drug repurposing is like looking for a needle in a haystack. It does not always work, and can raise false hopes and waste resources. In a March 7 interview with 60 Minutes, for instance, NIH director Francis Collins, MD, PhD, said drug repurposing is only going to work if you re kind of lucky, because you re basically picking things that were developed for a different disease.

Boston University Social Innovation on Drug Resistance Program

Boston University Social Innovation on Drug Resistance Program Advocate Member Drug resistance is an inevitable biological process driven by evolution, but made worse by human behavior, threatening to usher in a post-antibiotic era. While the new products created from the Combating Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator s (CARB-X) preclinical product development support are an important step in preventing that; an equally important challenge is to understand the impact of human behavior on the evolution of drug-resistant microbes. The tools for this effort will be interdisciplinary, rooted in the social sciences. To advance these important goals, the Institute for Health System Innovation & Policy and CARB-X created the Social Innovation on Drug Resistance (SIDR) Program, an interdisciplinary postdoctoral fellowship program focused on the interaction of human behavior and drug-resistant infections.

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