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Cientounero
@cientounero.mstdn.science.ap.brid.gy
Doctor, specialist in Microbiology and Parasitology. From "CadiCadi". My activity is oriented to clinical microbiological diagnosis, guidance to the clinician on […]

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://mstdn.science/@cientounero, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
2025-12-26 General – Pandemics in British Columbia

Pandemics in British Columbia

Summaries of COVID-19 and H5N1 research papers and news articles

https://covidbc.webfoot.com/2025/12/26/2025-12-26-general/
2025-12-26 General
# Influenza ## Transmission 🤧 I just had influenza, so spent some time looking up information about incubation periods and contagiousness to figure out how to keep Spouse from getting sick. O. My. Word. There is so much information that is just plain _wrong_ out there! Almost _every_ web page I visited said that influenza was passed by droplets (which fall to the ground within about six feet of people coughing/sneeezing) and fomites (i.e. surfaces). **This is not true** : the biggest transmission route is via aerosols that travel long distances through the air, just like with COVID-19 (see this web page for more, with references). How can “everybody” be so wrong? Welll, read the book Air-Borne by Carl Zimmer if you want a deep dive, or this Wired article (2021-05-13) for a shorter version (but still long) but here’s a quick summary: * Once upon a time, everybody thought that disease was caused by bad air, AKA miasma. * Eventually people figured out that disease was caused by germs, but there was a big scientific fight about it — as there is every time dogma gets changed. This meant that the pro-germ people went hard after anybody who said anything even slightly pro-miasma — and aerosol transmission sounds too uncomfortably like “miasma” to let it go unchallenged. * A guy named Wells did some experiments in the 1940s where rabbits exposed to tuburculosis particles in a mist of particles under 5 microns all got sick; those who got a mist of TB particles over 5 microns in size did not get sick. * It appears that CDC picked “5 microns” as the important size for disease transmission… but somehow that got interpreted as disease being an issue for particles _over_ 5 microns. * They thought that 5 micron particles would fall down quickly. (Spoiler: they do not.) * There was a _**lot** _of institutional resistance to changing the advice that respiratory diseases could spread over long distances via aerosols. Part of it was simply that people had been trained on droplet theory, had it drilled into them, taken exams that required that answer on tests, etc. But part of it is that acknowledging long-distance transmission required a lot more work from institutions. If droplet theory is correct, then all your customers/patients/workers need to do is stand six feet apart, done. If respiratory diseases transmit through the air over long distances, then you need to do a shitton of work to make the air safer (or make everybody wear a mask, which a lot of customers/patients/staff don’t like doing). * It’s scary to think about things that can stealthily infect you through the air! It’s difficult to protect yourself from invisible things! The dogma about COVID-19 transmission now appears to accept that aerosol transmission is a risk. However, that shift doesn’t seem to have made it to influenza resources, and I’m not sure why: perhaps the influenza pages haven’t been updated since before the pandemic? There’s also a huge overemphasis on washing hands — both for COVID-19 and for influenza. While it is _possible_ to pick up diseases from surfaces, it’s not nearly as big a threat as airborne transmission. (See here (2025-05-21), here, here, and here (2018-08-09).) ## Vaccines Something that I also _knew_ intellectually, but had avoided thinking about, is that almost all socialized-medicine governments provide influenza vaccines to everybody for free, but there are lots who only provide COVID-19 vaccines to limited, more vulnerable populations — despite the fact that COVID-19 is still more deadly than flu (see below). Not only that, in places where people can get them equally, many more people get the flu shot than the COVID-19 shot. Why do more people get flu than COVID-19 shots? I think there are multiple reasons: * People have been getting flu shots for a long time. Your parents probably got flu shots. This means that people are already in the habit of getting flu shots. * Flu shots are cheap; COVID-19 shots are expensive. This means that the governmental risk trade-off looks different (especially if they don’t take into account the long-term elevated risk of many things — which they don’t, for reasons I talked a lot about in this post (2025-08-11)). * A lot of people are wary about the mRNA technology. * COVID-19 vaccines frequently make you feel quite bad for a day. (FYI: the more COVID-19 vaccines I get, the less bad I feel.) * COVID-19 vaccines wear off, so you have to keep getting new ones. * Some people don’t know that, so they think that they’ve gotten enough COVID-19 vaccines and don’t need more. * Some people _do_ know that and so figure why bother? * Note: flu vaccines wear off too, but flu only circulates for a few months in the winter, so getting a shot once per year is a more reasonable thing to do. # COVID-19 ## Transmission These Christmas cookies are shaped like something that people traditionally share a lot of during the holidays: ## COVID-Related Excess Death and Sickness ☠️ COVID-19 is not the flu! This paper from South Korea (2025-12-17) reports that people who had a COVID-19 infection were 76% more likely to die within 30 days than people who had an influenza infection. * * * 😴 This paper from USA (2025-12-18) reports that Long COVID messes up your sleep. People with Long COVID had a 3.27 times higher risk of sleeping less than six hours per night about 1.5 years after infection than people who’d had COVID infections but not Long COVID. At three years, the relative risk compared to controls dropped, but was still 1.91 times higher. ## Vaccines 💉 This paper from USA (2025-12-24) reports that the vaccine effectiveness of the KP.2 booster from August 2024 to January 2025 among veterans was not-great against everything except death and declined over time, compared to veterans who did not get a booster. The vaccine effectiveness was: **against**| **at 60 days**| **at 90 days**| **at 120 days** ---|---|---|--- infection| 31.28%| 25.81%| 22.44% ED/UC visit| 34.40%| 29.19%| 25.71% hospitalization| 37.39%| 28.98%| 22.52% death| 75.02%| 71.02%| 63.08% Remember, though, that the comparison population might have gotten some immunity via infection. Vaccinations are much safer than infections. * * * 💉 This paper from Canada (2025-12-15) reports that vaccination is a very good thing for pregnant people. Vaccination effectiveness was: **against**| **during Delta**| **during Omicron** ---|---|--- hospitalization| 62%| 62% ICU admission| 90%| 90% pre-term birth| 20%| 36% The high effectiveness held up after adjusting for comorbidity. The unvaccinated had a 2.43x higher adjusted risk than the vaccinated during Delta, which rose to 3.82x higher adjusted risk during Omicron. * * * 💉 This press release from the World Health Organization (2025-12-18) says that the next vaccines should use LP.8.1 as their base. ## Treatments 💊 This paper from Hong Kong (2025-12-21) reports that hospitalized patients who were given Paxlovid had a significantly lower risk of many long-term cardiovascular complications than controls. Patients who got molnupiravir had a short-term reduction in cardiovascular issues, but not a long-term one. # H5N1 ## Transmission 🐦‍⬛🐄🤧 This press release from USA (2025-12-19) reports that there was a new “spillover event” from birds to cows in Wisconsin. (This means that cows got infected by wild _birds_ , as opposed to cows getting infected by other cows.) This is the fourth independent birds-to-cows spillover event in the US. # Measles ## Transmission According to the Government of Canada Measles and Rubella Monitoring Report (updated 2025-12-22), in the week ending 13 December, the following jurisdictions had the following number of measles cases: * Canada: 24; * Manitoba: 10; * BC: 7; * Alberta: 6; * Quebec: 1.
covidbc.webfoot.com
December 30, 2025 at 12:52 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
"Prof. Siegel said multiple studies have shown that improved air quality in classrooms results in better student performance on standardized tests, reduced absenteeism and less spread of infectious disease."
Schools must improve air quality to slow spread of respiratory illness, advocates say
Proper air filtration could help mitigate the rapid spread of flu and other illnesses, say experts and parents
www.theglobeandmail.com
December 27, 2025 at 5:52 AM
Agricultura señala que el brote de peste porcina salió del laboratorio de Bellaterra

https://www.lavanguardia.com/natural/20251206/11337027/agricultura-senala-brote-peste-porcina-salio-laboratorio-bellaterra.html

> La cepa que mata jabalíes, Georgia 2007, no circula en el medio natural, pero […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
December 6, 2025 at 8:58 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
Against the odds, the business journal Forbes has good coverage of the Climate and Nature Emergency Briefing.
BBC apparently didn't bother.

UK Security, Food And Economy At Risk Without Climate Action, Experts Say […]
Original post on mstdn.social
mstdn.social
December 1, 2025 at 9:14 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/article/i-almost-died-troubling-number-of-canadian-seniors-struggle-to-recover-from-surgery-study-suggests/

“More than 2,000 Canadian seniors, aged 65 and older, were enrolled in the national study

Their investigation found that within the first six months […]
Original post on med-mastodon.com
med-mastodon.com
November 27, 2025 at 7:33 PM
Reposted by Cientounero
#CervicalCancer could be the first cancer EVER in the world to be eliminated, if:

9️⃣0️⃣% of girls are vaccinated
7️⃣0️⃣% of women are screened
9️⃣0️⃣% of women with cervical cancer receive treatment

Learn more: bit.ly/47GIbzd #EndCervicalCancer
November 23, 2025 at 10:00 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
the point of camo for a soldier is to obscure their position from the enemy. camo in an urban environment is completely different, and this forest green or desert pattern is functionally useless.

police only dress this way to project an image of power they should not have.
November 13, 2025 at 2:39 PM
Reposted by Cientounero
I simply refuse to accept that police ever have to look like this. this is just pure cosplay. it should be illegal for cops to be dressed like soldiers going to war.
November 13, 2025 at 2:36 PM
Best microbiological practice recommendations for the diagnosis of peri-prosthetic joint infections: the CRIOGO bacteriology reference center network | Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials | Full Text

https://ann-clinmicrob.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12941-025-00831-6 […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
November 13, 2025 at 5:25 PM
Reposted by Cientounero
RE: https://infosec.exchange/@TheKeystoneCollective/115516203144304259

Metadata. When FB announced they would become Meta because Metaverse I thought metaverse my ass. It's an inside joke about all the metadata they rake together from WhatsApp to sell it to the highest bidder.

Quiet villain […]
Original post on todon.nl
todon.nl
November 9, 2025 at 10:03 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
1. This is a thread on freedom, and how easy it is to lose.

Over the past 2,000 years in Europe, there have been few periods and places of freedom. For much of the time we lived under highly oppressive tyrannies of various kinds, whether small or grand, local or imperial, secular or religious.🧵
November 7, 2025 at 6:35 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
November 7, 2025 at 12:53 AM
First-Trimester COVID-19 Vaccination Not Associated With Congenital Risks | Vaccination | JAMA | JAMA Network

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2841011
November 1, 2025 at 8:33 PM
SARS-CoV-2 reinfection is associated with impaired TCR diversity and distinct clonal expansion patterns, underscoring the role of T cell immunity in reinfection susceptibility. healthy convalescent-enriched TCR clusters may represent protective memory responses, whereas primary SARS-CoV-2 […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
November 1, 2025 at 6:59 PM
Open-source protein structure AI aims to match AlphaFold

The system, called OpenFold3. OpenFold3 uses proteins’ amino acid sequences to map their 3D structures and model how they interact with other molecules, such as drugs or DNA.

The tool still doesn’t have the same functionality as […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
October 29, 2025 at 6:17 AM
Reposted by Cientounero
Another reason to not get Covid

COVID Linked to Eye Issues, Vaccine Offers Protection

Patients with COVID had a higher risk of developing diplopia and cranial nerve VI palsy than those with influenza. Compared with unvaccinated patients, recipients of mRNA vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 had more […]
Original post on med-mastodon.com
med-mastodon.com
October 28, 2025 at 12:33 PM
Revisiting diagnostics: discarding the urine dipstick is way overdue - Clinical Microbiology and Infection

"Preliminary experience after complete removal of #urinedipsticks from emergency departments of all hospitals providing acute care in North Denmark Region showed an approximate 20% […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
June 3, 2025 at 3:06 PM
Evidence for Selection of Doxycycline Resistance in Staphylococcus aureus in Doxycycline Preexposure Prophylaxis Study

"We conclude that the data from these 2 studies are compatible with doxyPEP/PrEP selecting for antimicrobial resistance in S. aureus at both individual and population levels" […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
June 2, 2025 at 8:28 PM
Harvard PhD Graduates To Propel Scientific Discovery at a Pivotal Moment

https://hms.harvard.edu/news/harvard-phd-graduates-propel-scientific-discovery-pivotal-moment
May 31, 2025 at 10:11 PM
SNAP Trial Helps Resolve Long-Running Controversies Over Management of Staph Bacteremia -

Highlights from the cefazolin study:

Cefazolin was noninferior to flucloxacillin for 90-day mortality in MSSA bacteremia — 15.0% and 17.0%, respectively.
Acute kidney injury rates were lower in the […]
Original post on mstdn.science
mstdn.science
May 30, 2025 at 8:38 PM