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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Apr 22 2020

Full Issue

Call Centers Flooded With More Reports Of Poisonings From Exposures To Disinfectants

Calls to poison control centers are up 20% this year. The CDC reports that adults are making toxic mixes of cleaning chemicals, wiping their faces and hands with powerful disinfectants and children are ingesting hand sanitizers. More public health news related to the virus reports on autism, childhood infections, consequences for at-risk children, cleaner air, delayed treatments, happy dental patients and bat research.

As awareness of the coronavirus pandemic has spread throughout the United States, doctors who monitor activity at poison call centers have noticed an alarming trend: a significant increase in accidental exposures to household cleaners and disinfectants. A study released Monday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that calls to poison hotlines this year for cases involving cleaners and disinfectants rose significantly compared with the same period over the previous two years, and charts a dramatic spike in March for both categories. (Waldstein, 4/21)

When Amy Belles first heard the coronavirus lockdown would close her son鈥檚 school in Ohio, it felt like the moment 14 years ago when he was first diagnosed with autism. 鈥淭he wave just hit me, a feeling of uncertainty, anxiety, and that you鈥檙e dropped into this new world, and you have to figure it out and adapt,鈥 she says. For people with autism, lockdowns have shattered the routines they rely on, deprived them of specialist education and therapy, and heightened already high levels of anxiety. (MacDonald, 4/21)

Skylar Herbert loved dressing up and performing. She adored going to kindergarten. She started reading at age 4. She liked "girly things" and bling. 鈥淪he could take over a room,鈥 her grandmother Leona Pannell Herbert said. About a month ago, Skylar started to complain of headaches. Within days, she was hospitalized in the Detroit suburbs, where she was diagnosed with covid-19, the disease caused by the novel coronavirus, and then with a rare form of meningitis. (Janes and Elmer, 4/21)

Strategies are needed to manage the unintended consequences for at-risk children of COVID-19鈥搑elated school closings, social distancing, overwhelming numbers of distressing public health messages, and cancelation of non-urgent healthcare visits, according to a commentary in Pediatrics. Similarly, a second commentary in the same journal outlines recommendations for pediatricians to guide assessment and mitigation of the family violence likely to endanger many children during a prolonged quarantine. (Van Beusekom, 4/21)

An unplanned grand experiment is changing Earth. As people across the globe stay home to stop the spread of the new coronavirus, the air has cleaned up, albeit temporarily. Smog stopped choking New Delhi, one of the most polluted cities in the world, and India鈥檚 getting views of sights not visible in decades. (Borenstein, 4/22)

Doctors at some Los Angeles County hospitals say people are waiting too long to seek medical treatment -- including those infected with the coronavirus -- over fears of catching Covid-19, potentially leading to more detrimental effects to their health. Los Angeles County reported 1,491 new coronavirus cases on Monday, bringing the total to 13,816, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said. (Elam and Holombe, 4/21)

Dr. Phil Cai is experiencing something no dentist ever expects: Patients, starved for human connections, are actually happy to arrive at his office. 鈥淚t is kind of funny, people are actually eager to see the dentist,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ot for dental work but for social interaction.鈥 Dr. Cai sees far fewer visitors at his McLean, Va., office, as stay-at-home orders restrict dental visits to emergencies. (Stoll, 4/22)

As forensic virologists search to uncover the origins of COVID-19, bats have been fingered as a likely source. Genetic analyses show the virus is very similar to one harbored by Chinese horseshoe bats, and researchers think it鈥檚 possible it jumped from those winged mammals to people. But some bat lovers and chiropterologists 鈥 scientists who study the flying mammals 鈥 are adamant there is no proof. Instead, they鈥檙e wringing their hands about the reverse: That people with COVID-19 could spread the disease to their furry, nocturnal housemates. They are particularly worried about already vulnerable North American bat populations, which are being wiped out by white-nose syndrome, a disease caused by a deadly fungus. (4/21)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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