Quoted: It’s also critical for avoiding what Dave O’Connor, a virologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, calls “prevention fatigue.” For example, if teachers at a school, who otherwise feel perfectly healthy, come to dread their twice-weekly swab, surveillance testing will quickly become unreliable. “They’ll say, ‘I feel fine’ and find a way to skip it,” O’Connor says. “We’re a nation of wusses, myself included.”
Category: Health
Cotton, Folded, Ventilated — What Kind Of Mask Is Best?
Noted: Research by Scott Sanders, a professor in the mechanical engineering and electrical and computer engineering departments at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has shown that in situations where people can social distance, three-layered masks are best, with cotton for the internal layer, a non-woven synthetic for the middle and an outer layer of polyester.
But even if there is leaking from the mask, some kind of barrier is better than nothing, said Ajay Sethi, an associate professor of population health sciences at UW-Madison.
And, the masks should really be combined with social distancing, added Sethi, who is part of a team developing a model to forecast potential surges in hospitalizations in southern Wisconsin.
U.S. eviction bans are ending. That could worsen the spread of coronavirus
Quoted: Dr. Nasia Safdar, an infectious disease physician and the medical director for infection prevention at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said it’s impossible at this point to establish a scientific correlation between evictions and COVID-19 spread and deaths; diagnosed coronavirus cases are up 150% in Milwaukee, for example, since the eviction moratorium ended.
What is not in doubt among public health experts, she said, is that evictions are dangerous during a pandemic. “A key tenet of prevention in a pandemic is to have the infrastructure that will minimize transmission from person to person,” Safdar said. “Any activity that breaks down that structure … makes containment of a pandemic exceedingly difficult.”
Science elicits hope in Americans – its positive brand doesn’t need to be partisan
Written by Todd Newman, Assistant Professor of Life Sciences Communication, University of Wisconsin-Madison
A lesson from the coronavirus that could save us all – the community can save the community
Noted: William R. Hartman, MD, PhD, Department of Anesthesiology, is principal investigator for the UW COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma Program at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health in Madison.
UW Health: How to cope with anxiety from mask wearing
A rapid heartbeat, chest tightness and dizziness are just some of the symptoms people have been complaining about since having to wear a mask. Maura Grasshoff, a behavioral health social worker for UW Health, said these are all signs of anxiety.
UW Health research program joins fight against COVID-19
The goal is to seek new insights into the virus through antibody testing. Surveys on the pandemic’s impact on mental health and an analysis of health record information will be provided to participants.
UW Health officials discuss importance of colonoscopies during COVID-19
As part of the initial response to the COVID-19 pandemic, nonessential medical procedures were postponed.
Lockdowns could have long-term effects on children’s health
How face masks can help us understand the world
Sarah Anne Carter is the visiting executive director of the Center for Design and Material Culture and a visiting assistant professor of design studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
COVID-19 plasma trial at UW-Madison shows treatment helped 94% of severely ill patients avoid ICU or ventilation
Patients with severe or life-threatening COVID-19 have fared well so far in two clinical trials underway at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, according to preliminary results.
The university also launched three new COVID-19 clinical trials and began considering offers to host another nine. Since the coronavirus clinical trials began, 80% of all UW Health patients with COVID-19 have been enrolled in one.
COVID-19 antibody detection up slightly as cases, hospitalizations rise
The state Department of Health Services is partnering with UW-Madison’s Survey of the Health of Wisconsin to embark on a study of the prevalence of COVID-19 antibodies throughout the state. Past SHOW participants, from 10 randomly selected counties and the city of Milwaukee, will receive antibody testing quarterly over the next year.
COVID-19 posing difficult choices for Wisconsin’s immigrant workers
Shiva Bidar, UW Health chief diversity officer and a Madison City Council member, confirmed that Wisconsin residents can come to their health facilities and receive care, no questions asked. “We’ll make sure they go where they need care and nobody’s asking them to pay up front for anything,” Bidar said. “We will figure out on the back end what we need to do to make sure that their bills are covered.”
Contact tracers work to curb, keep up with growing COVID-19 outbreak
Equipped with a laptop, legal pad and smartphone, Merta Maaneb de Macedo this week called a UW-Madison student whose roommate recently tested positive for COVID-19.
Know Your Madisonian: Infectious disease epidemiologist examines public health ‘conspiracies’
An infectious disease epidemiologist who teaches a course called “Conspiracies in Public Health,” Ajay Sethi has paid close attention to misinformation related to COVID-19.
Latest Badger Shield design draws global attention
“It’s for cases where people want to be able to see faces,” said Lennon Rodgers, director of the Grainger Engineering Design Innovation Lab at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “It could be a teacher talking to their students, seeing smiles, things like this that are important, some people say, for developmental reasons.”
‘It’s really terrifying knowing how sick I got,’ Recent UW grad recalls battle with COVID-19
Like so many other graduating seniors, Amy Shircel is disappointed to have missed out on an in-person commencement this past spring. At the same time, though, she understands far better than most why such a gathering could not happen. Shircel contracted COVID-19 in March.
UW-Madison study finds depression increase among student athletes amid high school cancellations
A new UW-Madison study estimates 66,000 high school athletes across Wisconsin could be at risk for depression amid the pandemic.
New public service announcement from UW Health
The PSA encourages people to use their abilities to help stop the spread of COVID-19. People will hear from Dr. Aimee Becker who is one of the Chief Medical Officers at UW Health.
Wisconsin Experts Say Remote Work Is Likely To Outlast Pandemic
Dr. Loren Kuzuhara, a professor in the Department of Management and Human Resources at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, says so much has changed in recent months that it’s unlikely offices will just go back to normal after the pandemic.
Are there any shortcomings to it?-How do nasal vaccines work? Are they better than the injected ones?
Coroflu, a vaccine jointly developed and worked on by vaccine maker FluGen and the University of Wisconsin-Madison is India’s third prime vaccine candidate after COVAXIN and ZyCOV-D which uses a self-limiting version of existing influenza virus to stimulate immunity and spike up production of helpful antibodies in the system. The vaccine is expected to delve into human trials by the end of 2020.
What does it mean to declare racism a public health crisis?
But can a declaration really make a difference? Just pushing it through the process can have an impact, said Paula Tran Inzeo, a director at University of Wisconsin’s Public Health Institute.
Capacity at UW Health fine, doctor says it’s “unlikely” COVID-19 patients will be turned away
If needed, chief quality officer says, hospital will make more room for coronavirus patients
Profile of a Killer: Unraveling the Deadly New Coronavirus
“Basically, everyone in the world is susceptible,” said Thomas Friedrich, a researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Patients aren’t being told about the AI systems advising their care
But there is no clear line that neatly separates medical research from hospital operations or quality control, said Pilar Ossorio, a professor of law and bioethics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. And researchers and bioethicists often disagree on what constitutes one or the other.
She Wrote A Pandemic Preparedness Plan In 2006. Now, She’s A Leader Of Wisconsin’s COVID-19 Response
Willems Van Dijk would leave her Marathon County position in 2009 to work with the University of Wisconsin-Madison Population Health Institute. In 2019, she became deputy director of Wisconsin’s Department of Health Services — just in time to be one of the top officials managing the state’s pandemic response.
Scientists unraveling the deadly new coronavirus
“Basically, everyone in the world is susceptible,” said Thomas Friedrich, a researcher at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Back to school: As UW plans to reopen, students and faculty have questions
UW-Madison remains committed to preserving elements of in-person teaching, with physical distancing requirements and widespread testing. However, as families and faculty continue to ask more specific questions about what school will look like, the university has about five weeks to hash out the details. “This is a big lift,” Blank said at a University Committee meeting Monday. “We’re going to be running the university in virtually every area differently than it’s ever been run before.”
How to use eye makeup safely during coronavirus
In addition to possibly contracting the virus from contaminated fingers or brushes, a makeup user also risks exposure to the coronavirus from the products themselves, especially if those products are shared with others or are used outside of the home, said Sarah M. Nehls, an ophthalmologist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. “The makeup could be potentially contaminated,” she said. “[The coronavirus] has been found on the ocular surface. This is why conjunctivitis [pinkeye] can be an initial symptom of infection.”
UW Health patients to test antibody drug for COVID-19
UW Health patients will be among those testing an experimental antibody treatment heavily backed by the federal government to see if it can treat and prevent COVID-19.
Coronavirus’s Spread Broadens Across U.S.
“We just didn’t have that endurance to see that to the point where cases are now sporadic,” said Ajay Sethi, an associate professor of population health sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison focused on epidemiology and infectious diseases.
As Farm Stress Grows, Wisconsin Farm Center Launches New Counseling Hotline
Joy Kirkpatrick is an outreach specialist for the Center for Dairy Profitability at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She thinks farm families will utilize the service, not only for its convenience but also for the anonymity telehealth services provide.
With recent uptick of COVID-19 cases in Wisconsin, response measures likely limited to local orders
But Patrick Remington, a UW-Madison emeritus professor and former chief medical officer for Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention in the state Division of Health, said the issue over DHS’ authority is “black and white” on the matter.
Six months of coronavirus: the mysteries scientists are still struggling to solve.
With governments and industry injecting billions into the development, testing, and manufacturing of vaccines, scientists say, a vaccine may be available in record time, but it simply may not be fully effective. “We could have vaccines in the clinic that are useful in people within 12 or 18 months,” Dave O’Connor, a virologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told Nature in May. “But we’re going to need to improve them.
As COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations rise, panel addresses ‘nightmare’ of school reopening
“School opening is an engine for all the other respiratory viruses,” said Dr. Jonathan Temte, a UW-Madison family medicine professor and member of the State Disaster Medical Advisory Committee, which met online Thursday. “This is going to be a nightmare for our school districts.”
Masks now required for Wisconsin prison staff and all state workers as Capitol stays closed to the public
Quoted: Dr. Nasia Safdar, director of infection prevention and control for UW Health, said masks cannot single-handedly prevent coronavirus spread but are an effective intervention.
“If someone was wearing a mask, it would likely reduce the number of people they would infect,” she said.
Tony Evers signals he might try to mandate face masks statewide but expects a legal challenge
Noted: The surge in cases in the county has put in jeopardy the ability of the state’s flagship university to hold in-person classes this fall, the University of Wisconsin Health chief quality and safety officer told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel last week.
In 1918, the University of Wisconsin’s expertise and the ‘Wisconsin Idea’ proved crucial in fighting a pandemic
As colleges and universities announce plans to invite students back to campus this fall, American higher education is, according to the New York Times, “about to embark on a highly uncertain experiment.”
UW Health officials say planning is key on hot, humid days
With the prolonged heat wave this week, UW Health physicians are reminding you to be conscious of your health.
Facing a world clamoring for help with COVID-19, scientists are changing how they work
Quoted: Pilar Ossorio, a professor of law and bioethics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, worries there is so much pressure to produce positive results that conditions are ripe for cutting corners. She notes, for example, that in an emergency where people are suffering, there can be resistance to having control groups that don’t get an experimental treatment in a study.
“But it doesn’t work scientifically,” Ossorio said. “It doesn’t produce good enough data that you can actually have any confidence that the test intervention is safe or effective.”
“We have this real brick and mortar view of how clinical research had to happen, and I think COVID has really challenged that,” said Betsy Nugent, the director of clinical trials development for the UW School of Medicine and Public Health and UW Health.
Song Gao, an assistant professor of geographic information science at UW-Madison, was among the first to study and map how people’s mobility changed during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In March, Buttenheim and Malia Jones, an epidemiologist at UW-Madison, launched “Dear Pandemic,” a social media group that communicates the latest COVID-19 research.
“The world is just going to be different,” Jones said, “Getting to the point where there’s hopefully a vaccine that’s effective is going to take enough time that I think science will change.”
Which mask is best? UW engineering professor studies how droplets escape from face coverings
University of Wisconsin-Madison engineer Scott Sanders usually spends his time figuring out how gases and particles behave in combustion engines.
But Sanders has turned his expertise to determining how a different type of particle, one that has sickened millions around the world, moves from human mouths covered with masks.
‘Desperation Science’ Slows the Hunt for Coronavirus Drugs
Alta Charo, a University of Wisconsin lawyer and bioethicist, recalled the clamor in the 1990s to get insurers to cover bone marrow transplants for breast cancer until a solid study showed they “simply made people more miserable and sicker” without improving survival.
Coronavirus forces scientists to change while searching for vaccine
Pilar Ossorio, a professor of law and bioethics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, worries there is so much pressure to produce positive results that conditions are ripe for cutting corners. She noted that in an emergency when people are suffering, there can be resistance to having control groups that don’t get an experimental treatment in a study.
Evjue Foundation announces grants, including pandemic relief
The additional $70,000 brings total pandemic-related aid to $705,000 for the year, including assistance to front-line health care workers and vaccine-related endeavors at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
How can I get my child to wear a mask? If I’m sick with COVID, how long do I need to quarantine? Experts answer your questions
Quoted: “A mask that is not covering the nose will not stop a person infected with SARS-CoV-2 from contaminating the air in front of them when they exhale. Similarly, a mask covering only the mouth will fail to prevent an uninfected person from inhaling contaminated air. Since it does not take a lot of virus particles to cause infection, a partially worn mask may not be effective enough. This reminds me of when I see people wearing a bicycle helmet without buckling the strap or wearing it so loosely that it doesn’t cover the front of their head. The intention might be there, but there is a higher risk of head injury following an accident if the helmet is unable to do what it is designed to do.”
— Ajay Sethi, PhD, MHS, associate professor, Department of Population Health Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Colleges Brace for Sharp Drop in Foreign Students, Especially From China
Iris Zhou, an 18-year-old from Wuxi in eastern China, has been admitted to the University of Wisconsin-Madison for the coming school year, but the earliest visa appointment she could get when she applied in May was in November.
Doctors stress importance of safety during heat wave
The UW Health Emergency Department treated a few patients for heat-related illness over the weekend.
Meet the face of UW Health’s COVID-19 response: Dr. Jeff Pothof
Pothof, UW-Health’s Chief Quality Officer, is helping lead a team in the fight against the novel Coronavirus. He quickly became a prominent voice in the news, informing people about the pandemic.
Nearly 800 people have died from COVID-19 in Wisconsin. Here’s what we are learning so far.
“Halfway through 2020, 786 people in Wisconsin died prematurely, unexpectedly, and separated from family,” said Ajay Sethi, associate professor of population health sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “COVID-19 will be a leading cause of death in Wisconsin for 2020. We have not had a new leading cause of death in Wisconsin or the U.S. since HIV/AIDS.”
Madison Health Officials Close Bars Ahead Of Holiday Weekend
College towns across Wisconsin like La Crosse and Oshkosh have also seen a spike in cases of COVID-19. Dane County health officials said at the press conference that they are working with the University of Wisconsin-Madison to change behavior, and will also have a social media campaign targeted at young people.
Meriter’s home health agency becomes part of UW Health’s
UnityPoint at Home, UnityPoint Health-Meriter’s home health care agency, has become part of Chartwell, UW Health’s home health care agency.
Cloud of confusion – Conflicting covid-19 messages add to struggle to contain virus
Health scares always spawn scurrilous stories. But with covid-19, “there’s lots of opportunity for misinformation,” said Dhavan Shah, a professor of mass communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Amid rise in COVID-19 cases, Dane County tightens restrictions on bars, restaurants, indoor gatherings
Last month UW officials released their “Smart Restart” plan for opening campus in the fall. It allows in-person teaching with precautions and with instruction moving completely online after Thanksgiving. But officials made clear that if COVID-19 cases spike early in the semester, that shift could happen earlier.
UW Health: Calls for pain treatment increased during pandemic
“Pain is a symptom of something going on. It is a warning sign that warns the body that something is going on, go check for it,” said Dr. Alaa Abd-Elsayed, medical director of the UW Health Pain Management Clinic and assistant professor of anesthesiology at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health.
Chronic pain sufferers significantly impacted by COVID-19, UW Health says
UW Health reports calls to the UW Health Pain Management Clinic increased 50 to 70 percent in the early days of the pandemic.
‘Wear a mask’: UW doctor works to get message out about COVID-19
When Jeff Pothof, who grew up in Randolph, goes to the store to get some milk or supplies for a weekend project he wears a face mask.
Know Your Madisonian: UW-Madison health director leads COVID-19 response behind the scenes
Jake Baggott doesn’t remember precisely where he was or on what day he first heard the term “COVID-19,” but the coronavirus has since consumed most of his waking hours.
Dane County reports sharp increase in coronavirus cases, with half affecting people in their 20s. Many linked to businesses near UW
Dane County is reporting a sharp increase in coronavirus cases, with 279 people testing positive for COVID-19 in the last five days.
Half of those new cases involve people in their 20s, and multiple cases have been linked to businesses near the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus, local health officials said Thursday.
How Often Should You Use Antimicrobial Products?
University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor of Microbiology and Immunology Lindsay Kalan said that level of antimicrobial — a broad term for something that can kill bacteria and fungi — use might not have been required, but was part of an early learning curve of treating a new disease.
Stress caused from COVID-19 leaves many with hair and skin conditions
Dr. Apple Bodemer, a UW Health integrative dermatologist, says COVID-19 impacts every part of life and that she is not surprised of these side affects given all the changes and uncertainty COVID-19 creates.