Reminder: Kids Aren’t Immune to Pandemic-Related Depression and Anxiety

Reminder: Kids Aren’t Immune to Pandemic-Related Depression and Anxiety

JUCM News has featured data on increases in depression and anxiety among adults over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as alarming news about burnout among healthcare providers. Lost in the discussion up to this point has been relevant clinical literature about how children are faring—which is to say, not good, according to a new article published by JAMA Pediatrics. Even before the pandemic took hold in 2019, the piece points out, nearly …

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Update: CDC Data Amplify the Need for Further Immunization to Stave Off COVID-19 Surges

Update: CDC Data Amplify the Need for Further Immunization to Stave Off COVID-19 Surges

On the heels of news that the Food and Drug Administration had authorized a second booster for many individuals vaccinated against COVID-19, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest that patients who got the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine would be well advised to get a booster with either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine. The Food and Drug Administration had just authorized a second vaccine boost for specific groups of Americans, based …

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At Least Some Lawmakers See Urgent Care as a Resource for Improving Mental Health Care

At Least Some Lawmakers See Urgent Care as a Resource for Improving Mental Health Care

Just a few weeks ago, we shared the news that Arizona, New Jersey, and South Dakota have all seen addition of walk-in mental health centers in various communities. Now New Jersey state legislators are aiming to put state resources into ensuring such opportunities become more readily available—with existing urgent care centers a key part of the plan. As reported by NJ.com, one of six bills being proposed takes aim at the high number of patients …

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Different Study, Same Results: Ivermectin Is Not Helpful in Treating COVID-19

Different Study, Same Results: Ivermectin Is Not Helpful in Treating COVID-19

Whether it’s been suspect science, desperation borne of fear, or even devotion to a popular  podcaster, many patients across the U.S. have clamored for the federal government, payers, and clinicians to adopt ivermectin as a go-to therapeutic agent to treat COVID-19. When even the physician who started the fervor with a small nonscientific study ultimately disavowed his own findings, conspiracy theorists continued to tout the narrative that dark forces were withholding the one true solution …

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Vigilance for Signs of COVID-19 Is (Still) Essential for Minimizing Risk in Young Children

Vigilance for Signs of COVID-19 Is (Still) Essential for Minimizing Risk in Young Children

Many families, and probably some clinicians, have relied on the notion that COVID-19 poses less risk for serious outcomes in young children than it does for adults. The problem is, that idea has been shown in multiple studies and data sets to be exaggerated. Now a new study published by Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report adds more evidence that vigilance may be more important than ever, considering the ongoing emergence of new variants and uncertain …

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The Calendar Says Peak Flu Season Is Over. The Data Say Otherwise

The Calendar Says Peak Flu Season Is Over. The Data Say Otherwise

On paper, at this time of year, we expect to see incidence of seasonal influenza declining steadily from its December–February peak in the United States. Instead, however, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that flu activity is actually increasing across most of the country. This reverses a decline from mid-December through January. As recently as March 12 of this year, nearly 7% of all respiratory specimens tested at clinical labs turned up positive …

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With Authorization of a Second COVID-19 Booster for Some, ‘Fully Vaccinated’ May Have a New Definition

With Authorization of a Second COVID-19 Booster for Some, ‘Fully Vaccinated’ May Have a New Definition

With COVID-19 ebbing and flowing throughout the world, including the United States, healthcare organizations continue striving to stay ahead of the next variant and potential for another surge. To that end, the Food and Drug Administration has amended its emergency use authorization to authorize a second booster dose of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna COVID-19 vaccine for individuals age 50 and older at least 4 months after receiving their first booster dose, as well as …

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Addicts Are in Desperate Need of Treatment. Can You Provide It?

Addicts Are in Desperate Need of Treatment. Can You Provide It?

It became apparent early in the COVID-19 pandemic that people with substance use disorders were going to have an especially tough go of it. Anxiety and social isolation spiked along with infection rates, both simultaneously with reduced access to treatment resources. It was predictable, then, that data showed the already-existing opioid epidemic escalating. So, it’s alarming to learn that even in 2019 only 28% of U.S. adults and adolescents who could have benefited from treatment …

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The ‘Great Resignation’ Isn’t Helping an Already-Bleak Staffing Situation—but There Might Be a Solution

The ‘Great Resignation’ Isn’t Helping an Already-Bleak Staffing Situation—but There Might Be a Solution

JUCM and other medical industry publications have been aware of growing concerns over provider shortages for several years now. While the pandemic has done nothing to improve the prospect of maintaining a steady flow of new clinicians in the coming years, it has increased the risk of urgent care centers losing nonclinical staff leaving their current positions. Presumably some have left healthcare-related jobs, possibly wearied by the stress of being on the frontlines of a …

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That Next Febrile Infant Could Be Perfectly Fine—or Not. New Guidelines May Help You Get It Right

That Next Febrile Infant Could Be Perfectly Fine—or Not. New Guidelines May Help You Get It Right

A couple you’ve never encountered before come in with their 10-week-old baby. They’re first-time parents who are very nervous because their pride and joy has a fever of 102 and their pediatrician’s office is closed. The child appears to be fine otherwise to you, but now you’re nervous about attributing the fever to an unnamed, run-of-the-mill virus or dismissing it as just one of those things infants experience. New guidelines from the American Academy of …

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