Katherine J. Wu, Ed Yong, and Sarah Zhang, in The Atlantic, on how our response to Omicron to date represents all of our past mistakes on fast forward.
Saturday, December 25, 2021
Saturday Story: Again Just One And Again It's Omicron
Katherine J. Wu, Ed Yong, and Sarah Zhang, in The Atlantic, on how our response to Omicron to date represents all of our past mistakes on fast forward.
Saturday, December 18, 2021
Saturday Story: Ed Yong on Omicron
Ed Yong, the best science journalist of this pandemic, in the Atlantic, discusses Omicron and how we're definitely not ready for it. It's so good it's the only story I'm posting this week.
Saturday, December 11, 2021
Saturday Stories: Treating The Unvaccinated, Omicron, And Mildness
Steven Novella, in Science Based Medicine, on why we cannot and should not withhold medical care from the unvaccinated.
Sarah Zhang, in The Atlantic, on why Omicron's explosive growth is so concerning.
Andrew Pekosz, in The New York Times, on how COVID doesn't care about lethality, but that you definitely shouldn't assume it's going to evolve to be milder.
Saturday, December 04, 2021
Saturday Stories: Fitness and Health Aren't Enough, 3 Cheers For Our Immune Systems, And Omicron
By Soupvector - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=112983798 |
Sirin Kale, in The Guardian, with the life and death story of 42 year old triathlete, body builder, and anti-vaxxer John Eyers
Katherine J. Wu, in The Atlantic, on why you should be showing your immune system some love
Ewen Callaway & Heidi Ledford, in Nature, with a piece that may in fact be out of date despite being published 2 days ago, on what we do and don't know about Omicron.
Thursday, December 02, 2021
In Yet Another Win, Bariatric Surgery Reduces Cancer Risk In Long Term Study
Before you read any further know that I'm NOT a surgeon.
I think it could be fairly argued that as far as surgical impact and benefits go, there are few that rival bariatric surgery.
Shown to prolong life, regularly push many chronic diseases including type 2 diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea (and so many more) into remission, and dramatically improve subjective quality of life, for so many, bariatric surgery provides a new lease on life.
Well add to the aforementioned list a reduced risk of cancer. While not particularly surprising of course given the relationship between weight and some of our most common cancers, here's new data from the now over 2 decades old SOS study which demonstrates reduced cancer risk in patients who opted for surgery vs. weight matched medically managed controls.
For those of us who have the good fortune of working with patients who've had bariatric surgery, we know just how life changing it can be. What's shocking though, is the comfort of those who don't work with this category of patients to look down on surgery, or fearmonger about it, and this sadly also includes people in the health care community..
The data is clear. Bariatric surgery is remarkable. That said, I'm hopeful that in 20-30 years, it'll no longer be necessary and will be replaced by medications that lead to surgical degrees of weight loss without the surgery. Until then however, I'm thankful the option of bariatric surgery exists, and if you're not, you're either ignorant or an ideologue.
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