Recent research on the health effects of Covid-19 found that even mild cases could cause significant changes to the brain.
That makes “living with Covid” a risky and dangerous strategy trib.al/5xXxnGm
The @uk_biobank project involves half a million adults ranging in age from 40 to 69. They’ve collected:
🩸Blood samples
⚕️Detailed health info
🧠Thousands of scans & brain images
It's one of the most rigorous analyses of the effects of Covid on the brain trib.al/5xXxnGm
What makes the data unique is that they compare brain images before and after a Covid infection in the same people.
Even mild cases of Covid led to loss of volume in certain areas of the brain, specifically those involved in processing smell and taste trib.al/5xXxnGm
But they also found statistically significant brain volume loss in the gray matter in other areas involved with memory formation.
Authors speculate that even mild Covid cases might have deleterious effects that may last long past the period of infection trib.al/5xXxnGm
This kind of “longitudinal” analysis allowed them to discover something else they might not have otherwise: people who were diagnosed with Covid had a smaller thalamus to begin with than those who did not trib.al/5xXxnGm
Is this finding unique to Covid, or has it been found in other viral diseases?
There are other viruses that infect the nervous system, such as measles, HIV, herpes and polio, and as we know these can have dire consequences trib.al/5xXxnGm
The only other common respiratory virus that can infect the brain, aside from coronoviruses, is the respiratory syncytial virus.
But these mostly manifest as seizures and brain inflammation trib.al/5xXxnGm
Volume changes are only one of the potential brain conditions caused by Covid. There's increased risk of:
➡️Seizures
➡️Strokes
➡️Guillain-Barre syndrome
But brain volume loss is a significantly bigger problem since it happens in even mild cases of Covid trib.al/5xXxnGm
If even mild cases cause issues that store up real morbidity for the future, then we should continue to be obsessed with crushing even mild cases of Covid.
Given the unknowns, we should aim to get as close to zero cases as possible trib.al/5xXxnGm
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— Americans 65+: Mortality rates have been in steady decline for almost a century
— Ages 45 through 64: Declines have been less steady
— Infants and children: Declines since 1900 have been spectacular trib.al/KbZRbU1
Infants have gone from being the age group with the second-highest mortality rate to middle of the pack.
Small children have gone from middle of the pack to second-lowest.
Kids ages 5 through 14 have always had the lowest mortality rate trib.al/KbZRbU1
More than 150 years after the end of slavery, most Black families in the U.S. lack an essential part of the American dream: a home of their own.
Occasional efforts to address the problem have mostly failed — and sometimes they’ve made things worse trib.al/KkSLk3S
Federal housing policy played a central role in creating the American middle class. Beginning in the 1930s, government-subsidized mortgages enabled people to…
🏡Buy homes
🏘️Invest in communities
💰Build equity
🚸Pass wealth on to their children twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
Between 1934 and 1968, 98% of loans insured by the FHA went to White people.
The presence of a single Black family in a new subdivision was enough for them to refuse financing. The result was residential segregation and a legacy of entrenched disadvantage trib.al/KkSLk3S
Millennials spent their early adulthood dogged by:
💰Two large recessions
🏡Rising housing prices
🎓Exploding student debt
It's no wonder they're less likely, even as they approach 40, to be married or own a home trib.al/CdKePKO
In modern history, each generation has typically been richer than the last, and surprisingly, millennials aren't any different.
A closer look at the data and a more inclusive definition of wealth reveals this often-maligned group is doing quite well twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
But comparing generations is hard.
Things are different since the baby boomers were young. Getting paid a decent salary and having stability now often requires some education or training beyond high school trib.al/CdKePKO
The world’s cargo ships can’t get their act together:
🚢There were the lines at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach
🚢The Ever Given got stuck in the Suez Canal for a week
🚢The port of Yantian in the Chinese city of Shenzhen is joining the fun trib.al/DcTs1TB
If you think this issue will smooth itself out, you might be in for a shock.
The factors that have driven Asia-Europe container rates to record levels of more than $10,000 per 40-foot box aren’t a temporary problem. Returning to normality could take years twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
The container shipping industry is usually such a well-oiled machine that we barely notice it. In 2016, you could shift a metric ton of goods from Shanghai to Rotterdam for $10.
The flip side of that is that when things go wrong, they go seriously wrong trib.al/DcTs1TB