It's approved for adults up to 45 but not broadly recommended for older adults. The benefits drop with folks who have had prior HPV exposure. For that reason it's more targeted to kids to be more cost-effective.
@taisonbell
Critical Care and Infectious Disease doc at UVA. Owl Peak Technologies co-founder. Associate Editor for CID. Here to discuss health topics and career development in academic medicine. Opinion are my own. Pronounced "TY-
It's approved for adults up to 45 but not broadly recommended for older adults. The benefits drop with folks who have had prior HPV exposure. For that reason it's more targeted to kids to be more cost-effective.
The potential links between vaccines and mortality in certain cancers are exciting!
There was a time when I told students/trainees they should avoid using nicknames if their name was difficult to pronounce. But many just don't want to teach pronunciation repeatedly and prefer to be called a nickname.
I think the most important thing is to respect whatever your colleague prefers.
thank you!
If an #H5N1 pandemic starts tomorrow or in three months, there will be little mystery as to how it happened. The conditions are all there. They have been for a while.
So in some ways the more interesting question to me at the moment is: Why arenβt we in a pandemic yet?
Story here, π§΅ to come:
π§ͺ#IDSky
also true
While furiously posting about pandemics I forgot to introduce myself. I'm Taison Bell. I'm a critical care and infectious diseases doctor at UVA. I'm also an editor for CID and I founded a med-tech company. I try to make complex health topics more easy to understand. π¬πππ₯
There's a lot going on right now...but an undiagnosed respiratory illness is worth paying attention to. One of the reasons a robust global/local public health infrastructure is so crucial.
Early days, but another exciting application of vaccine technology.
And a tough one for antivaxx crowd.
Vaccine shows promise against aggressive breast cancer medicine.washu.edu/news/vaccine....
One of the reasons to aggressively monitor/contain H5N1 cases is to prevent it from acquiring a mutation that could make it take off. Especially if it's just one away
I'm still keeping close tabs on this. The USDA recently mandated milk supply monitoring in California, Colorado, Michigan, Mississippi, Oregon and Pennsylvania. This is a good move to try to stay ahead.
I just joined!