Health – fastestnews https://fastestnews24.com latest world news update Wed, 13 Sep 2023 06:48:45 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://fastestnews24.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/logo-150x150.png Health – fastestnews https://fastestnews24.com 32 32 Masking or Not Masking? Biden Takes a Stand After the First Lady Tests Positive for Covid-19 https://fastestnews24.com/masking-or-not-masking-biden-takes-a-stand-after-the-first-lady-tests-positive-for-covid-19/ https://fastestnews24.com/masking-or-not-masking-biden-takes-a-stand-after-the-first-lady-tests-positive-for-covid-19/#respond Wed, 13 Sep 2023 07:47:02 +0000 https://fastestnews24.com/?p=346 President Joe Biden came up in a mask for the first time in months on Tuesday, a day after his wife tested positive for COVID-19. However, the president promptly removed it during a ceremony honoring an 81-year-old Vietnam veteran, and the two unmasked octogenarians shook hands before leaving.

Biden, who tested negative for the virus earlier in the day, will wear a mask indoors but remove it when standing away from people, according to the White House.

Reality differed from the stated routine, showing how complicated coronavirus measures may become when the national emergency has ended and mask restrictions have been lifted yet the virus is spreading. When a new booster becomes ready next month, doctors hope to get more shots in arms. Hospitalizations are higher, but not as much.

Biden and Capt. Larry Taylor, who unmasked in the East Room, stood side by side as a commendation was read, then Biden reached behind the vet’s body to place the medal around his neck. Face-to-face, they shook hands enthusiastically.

CDC recommends wearing a mask and monitoring for symptoms for 10 days after coronavirus exposure.

Saturday, Biden and his wife visited Florida to assess Hurricane Idalia damage. The Bidens spent Labor Day weekend at their Delaware beach property before the president went to a union gathering in Philadelphia without his wife on Monday and then back to the White property.

First lady Jill Biden planned to stay at the Rehoboth Beach residence for the week and arrange replacement teachers for her northern Virginia community college lectures. The White House said the president would test again before leaving for the Group of 20 summit in India on Thursday.

Biden spent fewer than 15 minutes at Tuesday’s Medal of Honor presentation. The CDC recommends 15 minutes for casual contact between two persons to spread COVID-19, although it can spread faster.

COVID hospitalizations have increased from 6,000 a week at the start of the summer to over 15,000 the week of Aug. 19, according to federal data. According to the CDC, COVID hospitalizations are minimal throughout 96% of the country.

Late August COVID deaths in the U.S. rose to 2% from 1.7% the week before.

The CDC advises COVID-19 patients to stay home for five days and wear a good mask inside. The CDC advises non-infected persons to stay away from infected people until their home isolation period expires. The CDC advises wearing a high-quality mask, washing hands, and taking other infection-prevention steps when near an infected family member.

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Biden would mask indoors unless distant from others and follow CDC regulations.

She stated they advocate masking, testing, and monitoring for symptoms, which he has no symptoms, so we’ll follow those guidelines. She wouldn’t specify if Biden would be tested daily until he went for India.

The president would have to cancel the trip, which includes stops in Vietnam and a military station in Alaska to commemorate the 9/11 attacks, if he gets the virus again.

White House officials wouldn’t discuss alternatives if Biden couldn’t travel. National security advisor Jake Sullivan said the government had “long experience from the early days of the administration in managing for situations in which COVID plays a role in summits.”

“As you know, we’ve seen various leaders at various times participate virtually in events,” Sullivan added.

The last time the president wore a mask in public was last summer when the Bidens had COVID-19. He just announced that he will ask Congress for more money to create a coronavirus vaccine.

Officials expect improved COVID-19 vaccinations with XBB.1.5 omicron strain. It’s a big difference from today’s combo shots, which combine the original coronavirus strain with last year’s most frequent omicron variations. Since the virus mutates, fresh vaccines will constantly be needed.

]]>
https://fastestnews24.com/masking-or-not-masking-biden-takes-a-stand-after-the-first-lady-tests-positive-for-covid-19/feed/ 0
The Ban on Hormone Therapy for Transgender Minors in Georgia Can Be Enforced Again, the Judge Ruled https://fastestnews24.com/the-ban-on-hormone-therapy-for-transgender-minors-in-georgia-can-be-enforced-again-the-judge-ruled/ https://fastestnews24.com/the-ban-on-hormone-therapy-for-transgender-minors-in-georgia-can-be-enforced-again-the-judge-ruled/#respond Wed, 13 Sep 2023 06:48:13 +0000 https://fastestnews24.com/?p=352 After a federal appeals court upheld Alabama’s limitation on hormone replacement therapy for minors, a judge in Georgia ruled on Tuesday that the state could start enforcing the ban.

In light of the ruling in Alabama, state lawyers requested Judge Sarah Geraghty to lift the preliminary injunction.

Geraghty did not go quite that far, but she did say that it would be impossible to maintain her injunction in light of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision on Alabama’s statute last month. To prepare for the possibility of a rehearing of the Alabama case before a larger panel of judges, she instead imposed a stay, or hold, on her injunction.

According to a statement released by the office of the Georgia attorney general’s spokeswoman Kara Richardson, the state is happy with the verdict and “will continue fighting to protect the health and well-being of Georgia’s children.”

Legal representatives for the plaintiffs in the Georgia case expressed their regret “primarily for the families who are unable to get the care they need in Georgia or make medical decisions based on the best interest of their children” but emphasized that they will continue to fight for their clients in court.

A restriction on the use of puberty blockers and hormones to treat transgender youth was upheld by a panel of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals last month. A preliminary injunction had been imposed the day before by Geraghty.

Senate Bill 140 in Georgia legalizes the use of hormone treatment for children and teens, including the prescription of drugs to delay puberty. However, it forbids beginning hormone therapy on new patients who are younger than 18. Furthermore, the majority of gender-affirming procedures for transgender minors are prohibited.

The policy started on July 1. On August 20th, Geraghty issued a temporary restraining order against the project. Several parents of transgender children and a community group filed suit to overturn the ban and seek an injunction.

In her judgment issued in August, Geraghty stated that the “imminent risks” posed by the prohibition included sadness, anxiety, eating disorders, self-harm, and suicidal ideation among the transgender youth who had sought the injunction. She argued that the dangers outweighed the potential damage to the state from an injunction.

To paraphrase the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals’ ruling on Alabama’s law: “states have a compelling interest in protecting children from drugs.” This is especially true for substances like marijuana, the usage of which has recently spiked, and narcotics like heroin, the effects of which are permanent.

Pediatricians frequently recommend speech therapy or voice training for kids before considering any sort of medical intervention.

Surgery is much less common if puberty has been blocked with hormone therapy. They’ve been around for almost a decade, and they’re considered standard therapy by the American Medical Association and other professional groups representing doctors.

Twenty-two states have passed legislation that either severely limits or outright bans transgender adolescents’ access to gender-affirming medical care. These states have been sued the most.

]]>
https://fastestnews24.com/the-ban-on-hormone-therapy-for-transgender-minors-in-georgia-can-be-enforced-again-the-judge-ruled/feed/ 0