Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:
Research Backlog at NIH Due to Shutdown
It will take some time before research programs return to normal at the U.S. National Institutes of Health after the end of the federal government shutdown, officials say.
During the shutdown, 73 percent of NIH’s 18,646 employees were placed on enforced leave, according to Nature, CBS News reported.
About 6,000 researchers in NIH labs who were working on hundreds of experiments suffered a “profound loss of momentum,” with their research, the NIH said in a statement to Science magazine. The majority of projects were put on hold, and it may take “many months” to restart them.
It will also take time for the office in charge of handing out research grants to return to normal.
“The shutdown came at one of our busiest periods and it is going to take some time to bring the extramural program back to full strength,” Dr. Sally Rockey, NIH’s Deputy Director for Extramural Research, said in an agency blog, CBS News reported.
All October grant applications from researchers have been pushed back to November, and peer review meetings that were planned to take place during the shutdown or this week or next will be rescheduled.
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California Fighting Yellow Fever Mosquito
California officials have issued a warning about a mosquito species that can carry dengue and yellow fever.
The yellow fever mosquito, or Aedes aegypti, was first detected in June in Madera, and subsequently found in Clovis, Fowler, San Mateo County and Fresno, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Officials are spraying insecticide around infected homes in an effort to stop the spread of the yellow fever mosquito, which bites during the day.
“We were shocked,” Leonard Irby, district manager of Madera’s abatement program, told the Times. “We never expected this mosquito in California.”
“This affects all of California,” Irby added. “It requires everyone’s help: Turn over plant saucers, wash out dog bowls, remember this mosquito can lay eggs even in the cracks of cement if water is left there for a couple of days.”
The appearance of this mosquito “could change the way we live in California, if we don’t stop it,” Tim Phillips of the Fresno Mosquito and Vector Control District, told the Times. “Imagine not feeling safe to sit out in your backyard in the afternoons.”
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