Categories
Health

For a Science Reporter, the Job Was All the time In regards to the Individuals

“I would have liked to have lived longer, worked longer,” said Sister Mary Andrew Matesich, a Catholic nun in 2004. But she said, “It is not the hand that has been given to me.”

She had breast cancer that had spread and she had volunteered for experimental treatments knowing they probably wouldn’t save her but hoping the research would help other patients.

“I wouldn’t be alive today if it weren’t for other women in clinical trials,” she said.

She died about a year after our conversation. She was 66.

In 22 years of writing medicine for the New York Times, I have covered births, deaths, illnesses, new treatments that worked and some failed, bold innovations in surgery, and countless studies in medical journals. The goal has always been to provide clear information that is useful and interesting to readers, and to show the human side of what the message could mean to patients. When reporting on Covid last year, the focus of my work was on vaccines and treatments, but also on people with other serious illnesses who missed care because of the pandemic.

Today is my last day as a staff writer at The Times. When I retired, the most vivacious were the people: their faces, their voices, their stories, the unexpected truths they revealed – sometimes after I put my notebook away – that shook me or taught or humiliated me, and about it reminded that this beat is about a lot more than all of the data I’d tried to analyze over the decades. It offers a glimpse into the way disease and injury can shape people’s lives, and the huge differences medical advances can make for those who have access to them.

Many who spoke to me suddenly became what we all fear – patients – and faced difficult situations. Nobody sought attention, but they agreed to interviews in the hopes that their stories might help or encourage other people.

Tom and Kari Whitehead invited me to their home in 2012 to meet their daughter Emily, then 7, who was near death from leukemia while they were playing an experimental treatment that genetically altered some of her cells. She was the first child to have it. When we visited seven months after her treatment, she did somersaults and adorned the family’s Christmas tree with a naked Barbie doll. Emily is now 16 years old and the treatment she received was approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2017.

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Other stories were painfully instructive. One woman described her painful, aggressive cancer caused by a sexually transmitted virus, but had to omit her name because she believed her mother-in-law would call her a “slut” when she was diagnosed.

A young former Marine with a brain injury and severe facial damage from a bomb in Iraq said he had a girlfriend prior to his deployment and they were discussing marriage when he returned. “But I didn’t come back,” he said.

Moments of kindness and wisdom also stand out. A doctor who suggested that a little extra time for a cancer patient could mean being there for a wedding or graduation forever tempered my science writer’s cynicism about treatments that could only add months to a person’s life.

In the middle of the night, I accompanied a transplant team who, with the consent of the parents, were to harvest organs from a young woman who was brain dead from an overdose. Team members slipped into a waiting room, taking special care not to allow relatives to see the ice boxes that would carry the young woman’s organs, including her heart.

Looking for help with an article in January, I told Dr. James Bussel, a blood disorders expert at Weill Cornell Medicine, told of a woman who had developed a severe bleeding problem after receiving a Covid vaccination. He surprised me by asking for the family phone number so he could offer his help. Under the direction of Dr. Bussel, the woman’s doctors changed her treatment, a change of course that the patient believes saved her life. Since then, Dr. Bussel has provided similar assistance in about 30 to 40 other cases of this rare condition across the country.

When I asked why he was ready to get involved, he said he became a doctor to help people, adding, “I feel like I have this expertise and it would be stupid to waste it, if I could contribute and help someone. “

In a lesser way, I had similar aspirations. I’ve had an opportunity to do work that I believe is valuable and that I hoped could do something good. Reporting for The Times was a license to meet fascinating people and ask them endless questions. I owe my thanks to everyone who took the time to speak to me, and I hope I lived up to their stories.

Categories
Politics

Fauci blasts ‘preposterous’ Covid conspiracies, accuses his critics of ‘assaults on science’

A defiant Dr. Anthony Fauci on Wednesday lashed out at critics calling for his ouster, blasting their “preposterous” and “painfully ridiculous” attacks and defending his record as a leading official battling the coronavirus pandemic.

Such “attacks on me are, quite frankly, attacks on science,” Fauci said in an interview with NBC News’ Chuck Todd. “People want to fire me or put me in jail for what I’ve done — namely, follow the science.”

Fauci, the White House’s chief medical advisor, pulled few punches as he directly rebutted critics who have attacked his prior remarks on the origins of the virus and on wearing masks to prevent transmission, along with a raft of conspiracy theories.

“If you go through each and every one of them, you can explain and debunk it immediately,” Fauci said. “I mean, every single one.”

Fauci also flatly dismissed a conspiracy theory about him and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg that has been pushed by Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee.

Zuckerberg emailed Fauci early on in the pandemic, inviting him to a Q&A video on the platform and outlining some ideas where the social media giant could work with the U.S. government on the Covid response. Blackburn claimed the emails between the two men showed that Fauci was trying to create a narrative “so that you would only know what they wanted you to know.”

Fauci has come under fire in recent days following the release of a trove of his emails obtained by BuzzFeed News and other news outlets through the Freedom of Information Act.

“I don’t want to be pejorative of a United States senator, but I have no idea what she’s talking about,” Fauci said after listening to the senator’s claims.

Fauci, the 80-year-old director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, maintained that his views on the origins of the coronavirus have not changed, even as the theory of a lab-leak pandemic has recently become more mainstream.

Saying that a natural-origin scenario is more likely “doesn’t mean there is a closed mind to it being a leak,” Fauci said, “even though many people feel, myself included, that still the most likely origin is a natural one.”

“I haven’t changed my mind,” Fauci said.

“You want to keep an open mind. It’s a possibility. I believe it’s a highly unlikely possibility, and I believe that the most important one, that you look at what scientists feel, is very likely that it was a natural origin,” Fauci said.

He said he’s “very much in favor” of further investigation into Covid’s origins.

Fauci has been a target for criticism in mostly Republican circles for much of the pandemic, including by former President Donald Trump, who suggested he would have fired Fauci if he won re-election.

The release of more than 3,200 pages of his emails from the first half of 2020 has given rise to new waves of attacks from conservatives.

Fauci in Wednesday’s interview seemed at times to be exasperated by the torrent of criticism. “Lately everything I say gets taken out of context — not by you, but by others,” he told NBC’s Todd.

The points are “just painfully ridiculous,” he said. “I could go the next half an hour going through each and every point that they made.”

He spoke at length about why government recommendations on mask-wearing changed over time, noting that he is “picked as the villain” on the issue despite other officials sharing his views at the time.

At the beginning, Fauci said, there was believed to be a shortage of masks, there was little available evidence that masks worked outside of a hospital setting, and the asymptomatic spread of the virus was not fully known.

As those three factors changed, so too did the guidance, he said. “When those data change, when you get more information, it’s essential that you change your position because you have got to be guided by the science and the current data.”

“People want to fire me or put me in jail for what I’ve done — namely, follow the science,” he said.

“It’s preposterous, Chuck. Totally preposterous.”

Asked about the impact of the politically charged attacks on public health officials over the past year, Fauci said it’s “very dangerous.”

“A lot of what you’re seeing as attacks on me, quite frankly, are attacks on science, because all of the things that I have spoken about, consistently from the very beginning, have been fundamentally based on science,” he said.

“Sometimes those things were inconvenient truths for people, and there was pushback against me. So if you are trying to, you know, get at me as a public health official and a scientist, you are really attacking not only Anthony Fauci, you are attacking science,” he said. “And anybody that looks at what is going on clearly sees that.”

Categories
Entertainment

5 Current Science Fiction Motion pictures to Stream Now

Questions, questions: at their best, science-fiction films ponder and ask, then are so compelling that you forget you ever wanted an answer. This month’s selection will particularly reward viewers who have no patience for easy resolutions — or distinct genre classifications.

Stream it on Netflix.

The Taiwanese director Cheng Wei-Hao’s ambitious movie will frustrate viewers who like their genres neatly defined. Set in 2032, it follows the efforts of the prosecutor Liang Wen-Chao (Chen Chang) to solve the gruesome death of a local business tycoon, slaughtered by his estranged son — at least that’s what it looks like. A giant question mark also hovers above the dead man’s second wife, Li Yan (Anke Sun, chilly and unsettling).

Liang is especially desperate to figure out what happened because he has cancer and this could be his last case.

Nothing in the convoluted plot is at it seems, and “The Soul” careers wildly from one red herring to another, from horror to procedural to science fiction to melodrama to thriller to romance, and back again.

For the most part Cheng succeeds in keeping his disparate themes in the air: It’s like watching someone juggle a knife, a ball, a pin and a glass, only occasionally dropping one. And underneath the “oh no, they didn’t!” plot twists, the movie’s bittersweet concern is our inability to accept the inevitable and let things — or people — go.

Buy or rent it on Amazon Prime, Google Play, Vudu.

Some movies come preloaded with lengthy exposition. Others dispense information in a slow, steady drip. And then there are those that dare audiences to embrace a state of puzzlement. “Doors” squarely belongs to that last category, and your reaction to it will vary based on your tolerance for unexplained events with a whiff of the metaphysical. If the last part of “2001: A Space Odyssey” drives you crazy, stay away from this anthology effort, in which millions of the title objects appear overnight, with no clue about their origin.

The best of the movie’s three distinct parts are the first and last. In the introductory “Lockdown,” the director Jeff Desom conjures up a mini-horror movie as a group of kids taking a test must figure out what to do about a door that popped up in a hallway. Saman Kesh’s meandering “Knockers” takes place after millions of people have disappeared through the doors and into … another reality?

“Lamaj,” directed by Dugan O’Neal, is back on solid footing as Jamal (Kyp Malone, from the band TV on the Radio) monitors a door deep in the woods. One day, the door talks to him — not to explain what is happening, though. For that, we still have to use our imagination.

Buy or rent it on Amazon Prime, Google Play, Vudu.

There’s little science in this new Swedish movie, and even less fiction: It’s hard not to think that the events could happen all too easily.

“The Unthinkable” squarely belongs to the pre-apocalyptic genre: Mysterious explosions paralyze Stockholm, the Swedish power grid collapses, nobody can figure out what’s happening, and in no time the country completely falls apart. As is typical in survival tales, the movie — which is credited to the film collective Crazy Pictures — follows a small group of archetypes trying to make it through the ordeal: a tormented guy (Christoffer Nordenrot, who helped write the screenplay) trying to reconnect with his childhood sweetheart (Lisa Henni), herself desperately looking for her small daughter; a conspiracy theorist (Jesper Barkselius) who may or may not be right about what’s happening; a high-ranking government official (Pia Halvorsen) trying to do the right thing.

The movie’s first third feels like a fairly run-of-the-mill family drama, complete with flashback to traumatic childhood events. And then the machine clicks into high gear and you’re too distracted by the impressive set pieces to be bothered by the murky explanations — an unnecessary coda during the end credits feels like a jokey cop-out. And the biggest question remains unanswered: How the heck did Crazy Pictures pull this off on a $2 million budget?

Stream it on Hulu.

Try not to get stuck on the convoluted plot — time-travel paradoxes are hell on screenwriters. What matters in this Australian eco-dystopia is the human element. More specifically Kodi Smit-McPhee’s performance as Ethan, a lowly worker who is sent from 2067, when an oxygen-starved Earth is in its death throes, to a time centuries ahead that may hold the key to salvation. Tall and slightly gaunt, with wide-spaced eyes that give him a haunted look, Smit-McPhee — first noticed 12 years ago as the young boy in the adaptation of the Cormac McCarthy post-apocalyptic novel “The Road” — does not resemble the he-men usually assigned to single-handedly rescue the world. But that’s exactly what makes him so distinctively appealing here.

Seth Larney’s film does not always make sense, and you wish it made better use of Ryan Kwanten and Deborah Mailman in key supporting roles. But Smit-McPhee is a strong anchor. That Ethan accepts the mission less for the sake of saving humanity and more for that of saving a single person (his wife), makes terrible sense.

When a crisis hits onscreen, characters often seem to instantly become experts in survival, no matter their jobs — remember, Tom Cruise was a simple longshoreman in “War of the Worlds.”

But what if the folks facing an alien invasion were woefully inept, for a change? That’s the case in this very funny satire from Alex Huston Fischer and Eleanor Wilson. A couple of Brooklyn hipsters, Jack (John Reynolds, from “Search Party”) and Su (Sunita Mani, “GLOW”), are spending an off-the-grid week upstate when mysterious fur balls crash-land from space. Lacking follow-through and entirely devoid of practical skills — the movie suggests that an overreliance on smartphones is partly to blame — our two earthlings sink rather than rise to the occasion, and soon Su and Jack are on the run, screaming, from the killer “pouffes” (whose resemblance to the Tribbles of old “Star Trek” cannot be fortuitous).

The movie pokes fun both at science-fiction conventions and coddled millennials, while besting many other comedies by miraculously not running out of gas halfway through.

Categories
Business

Senate Weighs Investing $120 Billion in Science to Counter China

WASHINGTON – An expansive bill that would put $ 120 billion into fueling scientific innovation by strengthening research on cutting-edge technologies is running through the Senate amid the increasing urgency of Congress to make the United States more competitive with China.

At the center of the sweeping legislation known as the Endless Frontier Act is an investment in the country’s research and development in emerging science and manufacturing on a scale that its advocates have not seen since the Cold War. The Senate voted 86 to 11 on Monday to push the bill beyond a procedural hurdle. Democrats and Republicans agreed, and a vote to approve it, as well as a tranche of related Chinese bills, is expected this month.

The nearly 600-page bill quickly caught on in the Senate, driven by mounting concerns from both parties about Beijing’s critical supply chain bottleneck. The coronavirus pandemic has exposed the risks of China’s dominance as healthcare workers faced medical supplies shortages and a global semiconductor shortage has shut down American auto factories and slowed shipments of consumer electronics.

The bill, spearheaded by Senators Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and Majority Leader, and Todd Young, Republican of Indiana, is the backbone of a legislative package that Mr. Schumer requested from the chairs of key recalibration committees in February Relationship of the Nation with China and Safeguarding American Jobs. Taken together, the string of bipartisan bills would represent the most important step that Congress has seriously considered in years to improve the nation’s competitiveness with Beijing.

“If we want to win the next century, the United States must discover the next breakthrough technologies,” said Schumer. “We now have the opportunity to put our country on a path to over-innovate, surpass and surpass the world in emerging industries of the 21st century, with profound consequences for our economic and national security. If we are not leaders in science and innovation, we will fall far behind. “

Passing the law has become a personal priority for Mr Schumer, who early on found himself in a lonely position as one of the earliest and vocal Chinese hawks in the Democratic Party. Now in power, he hopes to steer billions of dollars toward a long-held priority while achieving a largely bipartisan victory despite the high price tag.

“I’ve looked at this for decades and lots of different bills have been introduced by lots of different people,” Schumer said in an interview. “But if you are the majority leader, you have the option of putting such a bill on the floor.”

Despite the bipartisan support for the move, the path for the legislation was not without its challenges, and on Tuesday Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky and minority leader, warned that the move was “not primetime ready” and that it would be of a “robust” nature. Round benefit from changes during the Senate debate.

As one of the few laws considered likely this year, the Endless Frontier Act has become a magnet for unrelated parochial elements of the legislature and the target of intense efforts by lobbyists to introduce provisions that are beneficial to individual industries.

It was approved by a key Senate committee last week, but not before lawmakers added more than 500 pages, including laws approving a new round of funding for NASA, a ban on the sale of shark fins, and a mandate to mark the country of origin for king crabs.

“This is not a bill primarily intended to deal with shark fins – although that is important,” said a visibly irritated Mr. Young, listing some of the other unrelated provisions that had been addressed. “It is mainly not supposed to be about aerospace or private space companies. Mainly it should be about surpassing communist China, innovating and growing. “

The legislature, however, was able to repel a number of divisive and alien measures that would have completely sunk the bill.

The legislation would allocate $ 120 billion to support and expand research on new technologies such as semiconductors, artificial intelligence and robotics.

It would include $ 10 billion to create 10 tech hubs to connect manufacturing centers and research universities across the United States to diversify investments rather than building on already established tech giants on the two coasts.

The aim is to position the United States to be at the forefront of emerging technologies while strengthening the country’s manufacturing capacity and building a pipeline of researchers and trainees to accomplish this. This goal has united universities, industry associations and national laboratories which will benefit from it – all about legislation.

“This would really put the spotlight on the next level of innovation,” said Debbie Altenburg, associate vice president at the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities. “There is significant investment in grants, grants and internships so we make sure we invest in domestic workers too.”

However, the question of how the research money can be spent was hotly debated. Mr Young’s complaints last week came as he tried unsuccessfully to block a bipartisan push to divert roughly half of the funds – originally intended for new National Science Foundation initiatives – to laboratories across the country, the operated by the Ministry of Energy.

A bipartisan group of senators who have one or more department-run laboratories in their states, including Senators Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, a critical Democratic vote, and Ben Ray Luján, Democrat of New Mexico, had called for the change.

Mr Young had argued that the bill should only be used for applied research that would produce a tangible product that would help the United States compete with China. But many lawmakers in both parties – including the House Science Committee, which must also approve the legislation – have instead worked to redirect it to laboratories in their states and districts doing basic research.

Other senators also took the opportunity to include provisions on pets in the bill.

Washington State Senator Maria Cantwell, Chair of the Commerce Committee, added a full draft permit for NASA. A group of Republicans, led by Senator Marsha Blackburn from Tennessee, has instituted a measure requiring the government to investigate whether the Chinese government is using twin town partnerships as a means of espionage.

The Senators also approved a provision by Senator Gary Peters, Democrat of Michigan, to pump $ 2 billion into the semiconductor industry to help ease the bottlenecks that have shut down auto plants in Detroit and elsewhere.

Mr Schumer announced Tuesday evening that lawmakers would also consider additional funding for laws passed last year to bolster the semiconductor industry. The negotiations were embroiled in a party-political labor dispute aimed at obliging manufacturers to pay their workers the applicable wages.

The industry is intensely committed to the money.

“This would boost US chip manufacturing and innovation and help keep America at its best competitive for years,” said John Neuffer, president of the Semiconductor Industry Association.

Categories
Health

‘We’re following the science’

The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, defended the agency’s guidelines for guiding Covid-19 masks amid widespread criticism from lawmakers and health authorities.

“These topics are complex, science moves on, science moves and we follow science every day and our guidance moves on as science moves,” Walensky said during a Wednesday interview on CNBC’s “The News with Shepard” Blacksmith. ”

Walensky pointed out the declining Covid cases and rising vaccination rates in the nation. The U.S. positivity rate fell to 3.1%, the lowest level in the pandemic, according to Johns Hopkins University. Almost 59% of adults have received at least one vaccine, according to the CDC.

The CDC chief also signaled to Shepard Smith that guidelines will change soon after the agency approves the administration of Pfizer and BioNTech’s Covid-19 vaccine to teenagers aged 12-15.

“Today we have vaccines available for 12-15 year olds. [the agency’s guidelines are] I’ll have to keep evolving and I’m very excited to update them very soon, “said Walensky.

Smith also asked Walensky why everyone who had been vaccinated in his office still had to wear masks inside. She stated that the CDC wants to make sure the vaccines are effective against all variants circulating in the US and that “you are not an asymptomatic carrier if you are vaccinated” before indoor masks are completely phased out.

Categories
Health

Biden Has Elevated the Job of Science Adviser. Is That What Science Wants?

On the campaign trail, Joseph R. Biden Jr. vowed to depose Donald J. Trump and bring science back to the White House, federal government, and nation after years of President’s assaults and denials, neglect, and disorder.

As president-elect, he got off to a quick start in January by appointing Eric S. Lander, a top biologist, as his scientific advisor. He also made the job a cabinet position, describing his survey as part of his effort to “reinvigorate our national science and technology strategy.”

In theory, the expanded position of Dr. Make Lander one of the most influential scientists in American history.

However, his Senate confirmation hearing was postponed for three months and eventually rescheduled for Thursday.

The delay arose in part from questions about his meetings with Jeffrey Epstein, the financier who had crept into the scientific elite despite a 2008 conviction that classified him as a sex offender, Politico said. Dr. Lander met Mr. Epstein twice at fundraisers in 2012, but denied having received any funding or relationship with Mr. Epstein, who was later charged with federal sexual trafficking and committed suicide in prison in 2019.

The long delay in the Senate’s confirmation has raised concerns that the survey of Dr. Lander by the Biden government is more symbolic than content – it’s more about creating the appearance of strong federal support for the science enterprise than working to achieve a productive reality.

Roger Pielke Jr., a professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder who has interviewed and profiled scientific advisor to the President, recently stated that one of President Biden’s major scientific agendas, climate policy, swiftly without the help of a White House science advisor made progress.

“Does Biden give him a lot of work?” he asked for Dr. Lander’s role. “Or is there actually an insurance portfolio?”

Likewise, Mr Biden’s first proposed federal budget, presented on April 9, was not publicly approved by the President’s science advisor, but is aiming for a substantial increase in funding from almost every science agency.

Mr. Biden’s science post advocate and his late start has raised a number of questions: What are the White House science advisors actually doing? What you should do? Are some more successful than others, and if so, why? Do they ever play a significant role in Washington’s budget wars? Does Mr. Biden’s approach have echoes in history?

The American public received few answers to such questions during Mr. Trump’s tenure. He left the position blank for the first two years of his tenure – by far the longest such post since Congress in 1976, when the modern version of the advisory post and office was established in the White House. Under public pressure, Mr. Trump filled the opening in early 2019 with Kelvin Droegemeier, an Oklahoma meteorologist, who held back. Critics mocked Mr. Trump’s neglect of this position and the open positions in other academic expert positions across the executive branch.

While the responsibilities of federal labor scientists are usually defined in great detail, every president’s science advisor comes to the job with a blank board, according to Shobita Parthasarathy, director of the science, technology, and public order program at the University of Michigan.

“You don’t have a clear portfolio,” she said. “You have a lot of flexibility.”

The lack of set responsibilities means that as early as 1951, and President Harry S. Truman – the first to bring a formal science advisor to the White House – had the leeway to assume a variety of roles, including those far removed from science.

“We have the image of a wise person who stands behind the president, whispering in his ear and imparting knowledge,” said Dr. Pielke. “The reality is that the science advisor is a resource for the White House and the President to do with what they see fit.”

Dr. Pielke argued that Mr. Biden is genuinely interested in quickly rebuilding the credibility of the position and building public confidence in the federal know-how. “There’s a lot to like,” he said.

However, history shows that even good beginnings in the world of scientific advice to the president are no guarantee that the appointment will end on a high level.

“Anyone who comes to a science advisor without significant political experience faces some gross shocks,” said Edward E. David Jr., the science advisor to President Richard M. Nixon, in an interview long after his tenure as a bruise. He passed away in 2017.

One day in 1970, Mr. Nixon ordered Dr. David, all federal research grants to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dr. David’s alma mater, to be shortened. At the time, it was receiving more than $ 100 million a year.

The reason? The President of the United States had found the school president’s political views intolerable.

“I just sat there amazed,” recalled Dr. David. Back in his office, the phone rang. It was John Ehrlichman, one of Mr. Nixon’s trusted helpers.

“Ed, my advice is not to do anything,” he recalled Mr. Ehrlichman. The sensitive subject soon disappeared.

1973, shortly after Dr. David had resigned, Mr. Nixon eliminated the fiefdom. The president had reportedly come to see the advisor as a science lobbyist. After Mr. Nixon stepped down, Congress entered to reinstate both the advisory post and its administrative body, renaming him the White House Science and Technology Policy Office.

Some analysts argue that the position has become more influential in line with academic achievements and advances. However, others say the stature of the job has declined as science has become more specialized and advisory work has increasingly focused on narrow topics that are unlikely to interest the president. Still others believe that so many specialists are now informing the federal government that a senior White House scientist has become superfluous.

But Mr Biden’s moves, he added in an interview, were now poised to add importance and potential vacillation to the post. “For Democrats,” he said, “science and politics are converging, so it is wise to raise the status of science.” It’s good politics. “

The scientific community tends to view presidential advisers as effective science budget activists. Not so, did Dr. Sarewitz argues. He sees the federal budget for science well done over the decades, regardless of what the president’s science advisors have endorsed or promoted.

Neal F. Lane, a physicist who served as scientific advisor to President Bill Clinton, argued that the post is more important today than ever as its resident offers a broad perspective on what can best serve the nation and the world.

“Only the science advisor can be the integrator of all these complex issues and the broker who helps the president understand the game between the agencies,” he said in an interview.

The moment is right, added Dr. Lane added. Disasters like the war, the Kennedy assassination, and the 2001 terrorist attacks could become turning points in the revitalization. He added that the coronavirus pandemic is a time in American history when “big changes can take place”.

He hoped that Mr Biden would be able to bring up topics such as energy, climate change and pandemic preparedness.

Regarding the federal budget, Dr. Lane, who headed the National Science Foundation before becoming Clinton’s scientific advisor from 1998 to 2001, his own experience suggested the post could have a modest impact, but it would reset the country’s scientific development. In his own tenure, he said, funding increased for the natural sciences, including physics, math, and engineering.

Part of his own influence, said Dr. Lane, came from personal relationships in the White House. For example, he met the powerful director of the Office of Management and Budget who set the finances of the administration while he was dining at the White House Mess.

According to analysts, the advisory post becomes most influential when the scientific advisors are closely coordinated with the president’s agendas. But a commander in chief’s goals may not coincide with those of the scientific establishment, and any influence exerted by proximity to the president can prove to be quite narrow.

George A. Keyworth II was a physicist from Los Alamos – the birthplace of the atomic bomb in New Mexico. In Washington, as a scientific advisor to Ronald Reagan, he strongly supported the president’s vision of the missile defense plan known as the Star Wars.

Dr. Pielke of the University of Colorado said the controversial topic was Dr. Keyworths become business card in official Washington. “It was Star Wars,” he said. “That’s it.” Despite intense lobbying, the president’s call for weapons in space met with fierce opposition from experts and Congress, and the costly effort never got beyond the research phase.

Political analysts say Mr. Biden went out of his way to help Dr. Lander, a geneticist and president of the Broad Institute, a center for advanced biology operated by Harvard University and MIT, to share his core interests

On January 15, Mr. Biden published a letter with marching orders to Dr. Lander, where he pondered whether science can help “backward communities” and “ensure Americans of all backgrounds” are involved in the creation of science and secure its rewards.

Dr. Parthasarathy said Mr. Biden’s approach was unusual, both as a public letter and as a request to science to have a social conscience. In time, she added, the agenda could change both the advisor’s office and the nation.

“We are in a moment” where science has the potential to make a difference on issues of social justice and inequality, she said. “I know my students are increasingly concerned about these questions, and I think they are simple scientists too,” added Dr. Parthasarathy added. “If there was ever a time to really focus on her, it is now.”

Categories
Health

Science Performs the Lengthy Recreation. However Folks Have Psychological Well being Points Now.

When assessing government-funded research projects – presumably a cleaner company – I re-asked the questions that people in crises keep asking me. Is this study useful in any way to my son or sister? Or, more generously, given the pace of research, could this work possibly be useful to someone at some point in their life?

The answer was almost always no. Again, this does not mean that the tools and technical understanding of brain biology have not been further developed. It’s just that these advances didn’t affect mental health in one way or another.

Don’t take my word for it. In his upcoming book, Recovery: Healing the Mental Health Care Crisis in America, Dr. Thomas Insel, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health: “The scientific advances in our field have been breathtaking, but as we studied risk factors for suicide, the death rate had increased by 33 percent. As we identified the neuroanatomy of addiction, deaths from overdose had tripled. While we were mapping the genes for schizophrenia, people with the disease were still chronically unemployed and died 20 years earlier. “

And it continues to this day. Government agencies like the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the National Mental Health Institute continue to double up, pouring huge sums of taxpayers’ money into biological research to someday find a neural signature or “blood test” for possible psychiatric diagnoses, perhaps someday in the Future useful – while people are in crisis now.

I’ve written about some of these studies. For example, the National Institutes of Health is conducting a $ 300 million study of brain imaging in 10,000+ young children with so many interacting variables for experience and development that it is difficult to pinpoint the study’s main goals. The agency also has a $ 50 million project underway to try to understand the myriad, cascading, and sometimes random, processes that occur during neural development and that could underlie some mental health issues.

This kind of great scientific effort is well-intentioned, but the payoffs are indeed uncertain. The late Scott Lilienfeld, big-budget psychologist and skeptic of brain research, had his own terminology for these types of projects. “They are either fishing expeditions or Hail Marys,” he would say. “Make your choice.” When people drown, they care less about the genetics of breathing than they are about a lifesaver.

In 1973, well-known microbiologist Norton Zinder took over a committee that considered the National Cancer Institute’s grants to study viruses. He concluded that the program had become a “gravy train” for a small group of preferred scientists and recommended that their support be cut in half. A tough, Zinder-like review of current behavioral research spending, I suspect, would result in equally sharp cuts.

Categories
Health

CDC Covid steering should adapt to new science extra shortly

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention must adjust their Covid recommendations faster as new scientific knowledge emerges, said Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Monday, adding that the agency needs to do the same with more transparency.

“These guidelines have more of an economic impact than regulation,” but Gottlieb said in Squawk Box that they are much less publicly scrutinized.

The former Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration’s comments came after the CDC changed its guidelines on social distancing in schools, not society at large, on Friday. The Public Health Agency said that with universal masking, most students can sit 3 feet apart instead of the previous 6 foot protocol. The CDC also continued to recommend a separation of at least 6 feet between adults in schools and between adults and students.

In an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal on Sunday, Gottlieb urged the CDC to be more open about the science behind their guidelines, writing that the “exact basis for their initial view of staying 6 feet apart” remains unclear . In the Journal and on CNBC, he said initial recommendations and precautions early last year were based on the novel coronavirus, which spread like seasonal influenza.

“It was sensible to do this because we didn’t know much about the coronavirus and therefore assumed that it would behave like the flu. It didn’t behave like the flu,” said Gottlieb in “Squawk Box” and claimed it crucially led health officials to “both overestimate and underestimate this virus”.

“It’s not so much an important question: ‘Were we wrong?’ We were wrong in some ways, “added Gottlieb, who headed the FDA in the Trump administration from 2017 to 2019. “But: ‘Have we learned quickly enough and adjusted our recommendations and guidelines quickly enough?’ The answer is no. “

In a statement to CNBC, a CDC spokesman said that “during the first year of the pandemic, there were concerns about some of the CDC’s guidelines.” However, the spokesman said the agency’s new director under President Joe Biden, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, has “pledged to restore scientific credibility and public confidence in the agency” the latest science.

We underestimated the role of air quality and quality masks because we underestimated that aerosol transmission spreads this.

Dr. Scott Gottlieb

Former FDA commissioner

Gottlieb said on CNBC that health officials “have overestimated the benefits of physical distancing because the flu spreads primarily through droplet transmission, and we know droplets don’t spread more than six feet.” On the other hand, he added, “We underestimated the role of air quality and quality masks because we underestimated the fact that aerosol transmission spreads it.”

Initially, doctors had expressed some skepticism about whether advising Americans to wear face covering – especially something homemade like a scarf or headscarf – would be effective. However, in early April last year, the CDC began recommending that people wear them in public, especially in environments like grocery stores where social distancing was more difficult to maintain.

There is little debate in the public health community these days about the importance of wearing face masks, and some experts like White House Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anthony Fauci, even started to suggest that wearing two masks is probably more effective.

As early as October, the CDC recognized the spread of the coronavirus through particles in the air that “linger in the air for minutes to hours” and infect people who were more than a meter apart.

On the CDC website, titled “How COVID-19 Spreads,” the health department says it “most often” happens through close contact between people within 6 feet.

“There is evidence that, under certain conditions, people with COVID-19 appear to have infected others more than three feet away,” adds the CDC. “These transmissions took place in closed rooms with insufficient ventilation. Sometimes the infected person breathed heavily, for example when singing or exercising.”

Some of the areas where Covid risks were initially overestimated also included contaminated surfaces, Gottlieb told CNBC. The CDC updated its website in May 2020 – about two months after the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic – to emphasize that the virus did not spread easily from a person touching a contaminated surface, according to NBC News.

Gottlieb acknowledged that in the early stages of a health crisis like the Covid pandemic, there may be a lack of quality information to use as a basis for guidelines.

“When the CDC makes recommendations, there are different levels of evidence and different levels of security behind those recommendations,” he said. “If the agency is unsure or suggests a recommendation for a less specific science, they should be really transparent about it so that we can take seriously an interpretation we want to take, but they usually don’t.”

The CDC spokesman told CNBC that “key findings” have already been implemented following the agency’s latest review, including “reviewing key guidelines for possible updates at least every three months” and “improving clarity and usability”.

Dr. Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC employee and board member of Pfizer, the genetic testing startup Tempus, healthcare technology company Aetion, and Illumina biotech. He is also co-chair of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings and Royal Caribbean’s Healthy Sail Panel.

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Health

The Pandemic and the Limits of Science

Most striking, however, are the key lessons he has learned from his pandemic, which apply all too well to ours. First, respiratory diseases are highly contagious, and even the most common ones require attention. Second, the burden of preventing their spread rests heavily on the individual. These three create the overriding challenge: “Public indifference,” wrote Soper. “People don’t appreciate the risks they are taking.”

After more than a hundred years of medical advancement, the same obstacle remains. It is the duty of leadership, not science, to protect its citizens from indifference. Of course, indifference doesn’t quite capture the reality of why we found it so difficult not to gather inside or without a mask. This pandemic may also have revealed the power of our species’ desire for communication. We need each other, even against common sense and well-founded advice in the field of public health.

A week before “Lessons” appeared in 1919, Soper published another article in the New York Medical Journal in which he spoke out in favor of an international health commission. “It should not be left to the vagaries of chance to encourage or sustain the progression of these forms of diseases that are neglected and become pestilence,” he argued. He envisioned a supranational agency tasked with investigating and reporting the progress of dangerous diseases – “a vibrant, efficient, energetic institution with real powers and capable of doing great things.”

He got his wish. Soper modeled his vision on the model of the International Bureau of Public Health, which was founded in Paris in 1908 and later, just two months before his death, became part of the United Nations World Health Organization, which was founded in April 1948. But the WHO couldn’t contain Covid-19 either. Preventing the next pandemic requires far more coordination and planning within and between governments than it did this time, let alone a century ago.

“Let’s hope the nations recognize the need” and “begin the work that so urgently needs to be done,” wrote Soper in 1919. Let’s hope that before the next pandemic we have done more than just hope.

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Health

7 Podcasts Concerning the Wonders of Science

Starter episode: “Urban Rodentology”

The premise behind this decade-old show is simple: we all have science stories to tell, because simply to exist in the world means we are interacting with science all the time. The Story Collider is a nonprofit group founded by two physicists who wanted to expand personal stories that “spark emotional connections with science,” a mission summarized in their podcast. Most of the episodes present two stories that share a common thread about the human experience behind scientific experiments, interactions with animals, or how biological impulses shape our lives. Since November, the show has been telling “Stories of Covid-19” from different perspectives, such as the effects of the pandemic on different generations or how society is adapting to a new normal.

Starter episode: “Celebrating 10 years: Our favorite stories”

The title may sound hyperbolic, but in general it’s pretty accurate. In each episode of this iHeartRadio show, presenters Robert Lamb and Joe McCormick address a different scientific phenomenon, mystery, or dilemma that will expand your understanding of how the world works. “Deep in the back of your mind, you always felt that there was something strange about reality,” reads the show’s official teaser, which leads you to suspect that you spent an hour thinking about crazy conspiracy theories. But “Stuff to Blow Your Mind” is always evidence-based and thoroughly researched, regardless of whether it is about seemingly inconspicuous topics (tomatoes, squirrels, sinkholes), mythical figures like the Minotaur or the question of whether Santa Claus is a god.

Updated

Jan. 26, 2021, 8:18 ET

Starter Episode: “Psychedelics: The Manifested Mind, Part 1”

Crooked Media, known for left-wing political hits like “Pod Save America”, broadened its horizons a few years ago and debuted in September 2019 with “America Dissected” with the aim of “discussing pressing health issues in America”. Six months later, it was renamed America Dissected: Coronavirus for obvious reasons, and now devotes each weekly episode to a different aspect of the pandemic. The show is directed by Dr. Moderator is Abdul El-Sayed, a doctor and epidemiologist who became known as Detroit’s director of public health during the Flint water crisis. It offers both a ruthless analysis of the federal government’s Covid-19 failures and a more hopeful blueprint for how the country can move forward.

Starter Episode: “The Vaccine Episode”

If you like your science stories with a side of Sherlock Holmes-esque intrigue, this adorable BBC series is the place for you. In “The Curious Cases”, written by the “science people” Dr. Adam Rutherford and Dr. Hosted by Hannah Fry, the duo tackle listener-submitted scientific riddles many of which may have asked themselves (why do we find noises like a fork scratching? A plate that is so unbearable?) And others that you may never bother with thought (how many hamsters on wheels would it take to power London?). Regardless of the topic, the chemistry and ironic relationship of the moderators makes every episode a joy.

Starter episode: “The Mosquito Conundrum”

The sheer volume of misinformation surrounding the coronavirus has become such a danger that it has been dubbed “infodemia,” but it is also a symptom of a larger and more systemic anti-science movement. On this Gimlet Media show, journalist Wendy Zukerman pitches “fads, trends, and the opinionated crowd” against science – checking factual gaps and delivering the truth in a fun and authoritative style. Although many of the recent episodes are devoted to the myth-busting of Covid-19, Science Vs offers a lot of escape through other questions as well: Is there a scientific basis for astrology? Can laboratory-grown meat really replace the original? And did the CIA plant a virus in Cuba in the 1970s?