Tag: Return

  • Medieval medicine: the return to maggots and leeches to treat ailments | Medicine

    Medieval medicine: the return to maggots and leeches to treat ailments | Medicine

    For several long months in the 1990s, Ronald Sherman travelled all over southern California catching flies. As a qualified doctor pursuing an infectious diseases fellowship, Sherman was curious about a potential new – and also very old – way to clean wounds. At medical school, he’d written a paper on the history of maggot therapy, tracing how the creepy crawlies helped heal soldiers in the Napoleonic wars, the American civil war and the First World War. Now Sherman wanted to test maggots in a modern setting. The problem? No one farmed and sold the species of flies that the doctor needed – so he went out and caught them himself.

    Once the specimens were collected and “as soon as everyone stopped laughing”, Sherman got to work. After treating his first patients with maggots, he was impressed by the results, but nonetheless he struggled to get his initial research papers published. A rejection letter from one journal read: “Publishing the manuscript might be interpreted as an endorsement for a therapy that is ancient.” Yet today, Sherman says, “that same journal probably has two or three articles about maggot therapy every year!”

    It is believed that ancient aboriginal tribes used maggots to treat the wounded and some academics argue that the practice “dates back to the beginnings of civilisation”. Hundreds of years later, these superbugs are now used to fight superbugs. In an age of growing antibiotic resistance, maggots are an alternative to modern medicine, as they help to fight infection by consuming dead tissue and bacteria. Between 2007 and 2019, the number of NHS patients treated with maggots increased by 47{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}.

    Meanwhile, there is a farm in Wales that supplies 60,000 medicinal leeches to the NHS and other healthcare providers every year. While most of us imagine that bloodsucking fell out of favour after the Middle Ages, leeches have been consistent healthcare assistants for centuries. The parasites release chemicals that thin the blood and inhibit clotting, meaning they can prevent tissue death by improving blood circulation in areas where it has slowed. In this way, they can save limbs from amputation after nasty accidents.

    Honey, which the ancient Egyptians used to treat wounds thousands of years ago, is in use, too. While medical grade honey dressings are sometimes used by the NHS, in September 2022, scientists at the University of Manchester argued that the sticky stuff should be considered as an alternative to antimicrobial drugs. “One thing is certain,” said postgraduate researcher Joel Yupanqui Mieles, “rising global antibiotic resistance is stimulating the development of novel therapies as alternatives to combat infections – and honey, we think, has a role to play in that.”

    Meet the new medicine – same as the old medicine. In an age where robots can perform hip replacements and livers can be repaired with lab-grown cells, why are ancient practices coming back into favour? Who are the doctors, farmers, professors and patients who have kept our ancestors’ practices alive? And are there more retired remedies hiding in the archives, ready to be revived?

    “There is a taboo that gets in the way of people using the technique,” says Sherman of maggot therapy. “But for many practitioners, once they try their first case – even if it’s a last resort – they see what it can do.” Studies have found that maggots reduce a wound’s surface area and promote healing faster than conventional dressings. Following Sherman’s work and the concurrent work of British doctor Steve Thomas, the NHS accepted the use of maggot therapy in 2004. In 2005, a private company spun out from the Welsh NHS Trust where Thomas worked – ZooBiotic, now BioMonde – a sterile maggot-production facility in Wales that is currently home to 24,000 flies.

    Vicky Phillips, a clinical support manager at BioMonde, educates clinicians about the benefits of maggot therapy. “The larvae will only eat dead tissue,” she explains. BioMonde’s maggots are shipped out in aseptic polyester nets known as BioBags, each one made to order with a patient in mind, the larvae bagged in the morning and shipped in the afternoon in insulated boxes.

    Illustration of a notebook with a picture of a maggot on it
    ‘I always tell patients and clinicians that these are the cleanest little maggots that they’re ever going to meet.’ Illustration: Barry Falls

    “I think there’s only one postcode we haven’t shipped to in the whole of the UK,” she says. BioMonde is the sole provider of medical maggots to the NHS, and an average of 9,000 BioBags are sent out to UK healthcare providers every year. The bags come in five different sizes and each is used for a four-day treatment cycle, after which the maggots are disposed of as clinical waste. “I always tell patients and clinicians that these are the cleanest little maggots that they’re ever going to meet,” Phillips says – the flies’ eggs are disinfected before they hatch. While a Nursing Times study published in October 2022 found that a “yuck factor” was preventing nurses from using maggot therapy, Phillips says acceptance has increased over the four years she’s been at BioMonde. “Generally, clinicians are more and more keen to avoid using antibiotic therapy,” she comments.

    Patients, somewhat surprisingly, are also keen. Rosalyn Thomas is an acute foot podiatrist for Swansea Bay University Health Board who has been using maggots on her patients for 26 years. Thomas specialises in diabetic foot care and has found maggot therapy to be “the quickest way to clean up a wound” – it is an alternative to invasive and costly surgery and it is less disruptive for patients, who can often go home after having a bag applied. For these reasons, Thomas has found that patients are happy to give maggots a go. “Over the 26 years, I’ve only had one patient who took about three weeks to reluctantly agree, but she did agree in the end,” she says. “I can’t recall anybody point blank refusing to have the treatment.”

    So what exactly does maggot therapy feel like? Susan Barnard, a type 1 diabetic who had maggots applied to a foot wound in 2016, says “to begin with, it doesn’t feel like anything, really.” The 48-year-old from Holywood, Northern Ireland, compares BioBags to teabags and says the maggots inside look like grains of rice. But as the maggots fed on Barnard’s wound, they grew, and then she started to feel “a crawling, like how your skin crawls but without the shivers”. Still, she didn’t feel squeamish about the treatment – she was simply amazed, and “actually felt really guilty” that the maggots had to die after they’d eaten her flesh.

    Carl Peters-Bond is glad I’ve called. It gives him a break from sorting through leeches at his farm – the UK’s only leech farm, which provides the NHS with predatory worms. “I was just about to pick some leeches. Most of them are kept cold and at the moment they’re about 9C. Cold, wet hands at 9C is quite… yes,” Peters-Bond says. “In a really busy year, we can sort through more than 1m leeches, which is very heavy on the fingers.”

    BioPharm Leeches is a 211-year-old company that Peters-Bond has worked at for 31 years. In the 1990s, the farm produced “a few hundred” leeches a year, “and then it steadily increased for the next 20 years up until about 2018”. Leech therapy – also known as hirudotherapy – helps improve circulation and speed healing, making it particularly useful after reconstructive or plastic surgery.

    Peters-Bond breeds his leeches in tanks – newborns are fed on sheep’s blood five days after they hatch and continue to feed intermittently for the better part of a year until they’ve grown, at which point they’re starved from between six months to two years to minimise the presence of bacteria in their gut. BioPharm’s leeches are shipped in small plastic containers “very similar to what you have coleslaw in” and hospitals keep them in fridges for up to three months.

    Leech therapy can last anywhere from 10 minutes to an hour, after which the gorged bloodsuckers end their lives in BioPharm’s leech disposal kits (called Nos da – “goodnight” in Welsh). “They pour on a liquid, which gets the leeches quietly drunk and then there’s a stronger solution to finish them off,” Peters-Bond says.

    In medieval times, leeches were used for bloodletting because it was believed to balance the body’s four humours – obviously, this is not what hirudotherapy is about today. Still, the presence of (wanted) maggots and leeches in modern hospitals might make many wonder whether there is more still that we could learn from our ancestors. Christina Lee is one of the founding members of the AncientBiotics team at the University of Nottingham. Formed in 2013, this research group is made up of medievalists and scientists who investigate the efficacy of long-forgotten remedies.

    “What is actually quite novel is to have this collaboration between scientists and people in the arts,” says Lee, an English professor who researches Anglo-Saxon notions of health and disease. Lee stresses that the AncientBiotics team’s work is not about alternative medicine or cooking up lotions and potions to try yourself at home. Instead, it’s about looking for scientifically sound remedies that could inspire modern drug discovery.

    “I was very, very critical,” Lee says of her initial reaction to testing out ancient remedies. “I thought, this is not something that works.” Yet when she and her colleagues tested out a 1,000-year-old Anglo-Saxon treatment for eye infections, they were amazed by the results.

    After mixing allium (garlic, onion and leek) together with wine and bile from a cow’s stomach (oxgall), the team tested the mixtures on artificial wounds and later sent the recipe to America to be tested on mice. In 2015, they reported that the remedy – translated by Lee from a 10th-century medical textbook, Bald’s Leechbook – killed 90{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of MRSA bacteria in wounds. The AncientBiotics team believe it is not one ingredient that made the salve so potent, but the combination that had an effect.

    “It felt incredible,” Lee says of the discovery – but questions remained. “If it worked, why was it given up? Is it that at some point it became redundant, something better came out? Or is it that this was something only known to a few people?” Lee believes we can learn a lot from our ancestors because “wounds must have been ubiquitous” in agrarian societies. “If you cut yourself with a scythe, it was highly likely that you’d get an infection.”

    Following their discovery, the AncientBiotics team received funding from Diabetes UK to test their salve on human cells – yet despite its early success, the group hasn’t always found it easy to secure funding. “There is a certain resistance,” Lee says. “We’re still working on it.” Lee’s work is often far from easy – a medieval strawberry differs from a modern strawberry, for example, and the team try to use organic ingredients cultivated in the same soil conditions they might have been centuries ago.

    I ask her what she hopes the ultimate outcome of the team’s work will be. “There is a major, major problem with antibiotic resistance,” Lee says. “My hope is that help can be found.”

    If help is found, will anyone listen? Steve Thomas, the now 74-year-old doctor who helped bring maggots into the NHS (and was subsequently awarded an OBE) says, “If Jenner tried to get approval for his work on cowpox and smallpox today, it would never get off the ground!” Though Thomas declined to be interviewed because of his age and the fact he has “left maggots behind”, he shared some thoughts via email.

    “Any product designed for medicinal use has to go through a rigorous safety-testing programme and regulatory affairs process before it is approved for human use. If successful, this leads to clinical studies. These are incredibly time-consuming and very expensive and with a few exceptions almost always funded by the industry,” he writes. “No company will invest the sort of money to carry out this work on a product that they cannot patent.”

    Thomas is currently studying the use of allicin, a molecule found in garlic, to treat lung infections. He is also researching whether there is an antiviral agent in slug slime after he used the sticky stuff to treat his own warts.

    In August 2022, the University of Cambridge’s Libraries launched a two-year “Curious Cures” project to digitise 8,000 medieval medical recipes. The project will allow greater access to our ancestors – ultimately, it will be far less time-consuming for academics to search through manuscripts. It is possible that people like AncientBiotics’ Lee might find something within these writings – something significant.

    In years to come, remedies from years gone by may become commonplace. Three decades after Sherman had to catch his own flies, maggot therapy is a regular and respected treatment. It remains to be seen what else might come back into vogue, but, for now, Sherman is just pleased that the medical world listened – even if the taboo isn’t completely broken. “I’m glad that the world is now more open to the idea,” he says, “and mostly I feel glad that I’ve been able to directly or indirectly help a lot of people save their limbs.”

  • KAISER HEALTH NEWS: After staying away during pandemic, doctors return to lobby Congress | News

    KAISER HEALTH NEWS: After staying away during pandemic, doctors return to lobby Congress | News

    WASHINGTON — Dr. Timothy McAvoy, an internist from Waukesha, Wisconsin, held his infant granddaughter Tuesday when standing in the Longworth Household Business office Creating, waiting to converse to a congressional aide about escalating Medicare pay out for physicians.

    Struggling with a remarkably partisan Congress the place Republicans have vowed to reduce federal spending, McAvoy hoped his Midwestern appeal, along with a dose of supporting details, would sway associates to remember physicians’ trigger.

    “’Wisconsin nice’ is a true detail,” reported McAvoy, who graduated from medical university in 1973. “Whether it will translate to the votes we need to have, we will have to see.”

    McAvoy was a person of about 350 medical professionals who came to Capitol Hill this 7 days to foyer Congress on behalf of the American Medical Affiliation. Even though they remaining their white coats at house, they were being however there as medical practitioners. Their target was to make aid for the organization’s “Recovery Plan for America’s Medical professionals” — a desire list that contains a spend elevate, reduction from insurance plan business prior-authorization calls for, and a lot more federally funded residency slots to train a lot more physicians.

    The campaign motto packs a pat on the back for these health-related gurus: “You took treatment of the nation. It’s time for the nation to acquire care of you.”

    The AMA represents about 250,000 health professionals, approximately a quarter of the U.S. physician workforce. And sending its users in droves to Washington to make their situation is practically nothing new. But this was the initial organized team work in far more than three decades, due to the fact of the covid-19 pandemic.

    In that time, many congressional workplaces have been claimed by new users with distinct legislative aides. As a end result, doctors say, they have to have to shell out in-human being time teaching them about the complexities of Medicare payment principles and other topics important to the follow of medicine.

    When the AMA has a comprehensive employees of lobbyists in Washington, affiliation officials say their greatest weapon is frequently physicians themselves, who wrestle with coverage business red tape and bureaucratic reimbursement regulations just about every working day. “There is very little rather like telling associates of Congress how issues function in their district,” said Dr. Jack Resneck Jr., AMA president and a dermatologist at the College of California-San Francisco.

    Before they satisfied with House and Senate associates and their aides, AMA staffers briefed the medical professionals at a downtown lodge on how to provide their concept for optimum outcome. The most important lesson: Show how these changes will enable their individuals, not just their company tactics.

    Element how clients are experiencing delays having medications and providers simply because insurance company acceptance is required initial. Mention they know of medical practitioners retiring early, marketing their procedures to hospitals or non-public fairness firms, and how this makes it challenging for sufferers to locate a medical professional. “We have the plan and details, but it is these tales that will adhere in their heads,” an official AMA lobbyist advised them.

    They also had been recommended to pay attention and find typical ground with customers of Congress.

    “When you go up on the Hill, enable individuals congresspeople know how significantly you care about your people and want to hold undertaking your work,” an AMA staffer mentioned, sounding practically like a mentor outlining how a strategy must operate on recreation day. “Let them know how we care about our clients and want to enhance the well being of the country.”

    But it was also a pitch about revenue, coming from some of the country’s nicely-over-ordinary cash flow earners. (A federal government estimate for the class “physicians and surgeons” established the median 2021 annual money at $208,000.) Tell Congress that with better payments from Medicare they could supply greater treatment and support to people, the medical doctors were urged. “No one particular wishes a program that is not fiscally steady, and no a single needs to see physicians chaotic filling out paperwork to fight denials from insurers,” one particular AMA staffer claimed.

    They have been also informed to remind Congress that Medicare payments to medical practitioners do not include things like an automatic adjuster for inflation, even though hospitals and nursing households get that. “Medicare beneficiaries are at authentic hazard of not receiving treatment,” Resneck explained.

    While Medicare payments are nevertheless a critical concern for several doctors, most medical professionals today work as workers of hospitals, insurers, and other company entities and frequently are compensated a wage rather than a cost for every patient service.

    AMA lobbyists cautioned them that inquiring for bigger fork out has achieved pushback in current yrs. Which is mainly for the reason that the Medicare Payment Advisory Fee, which advises Congress, has repeatedly said Medicare charges were being superior more than enough and there was no sign Medicare sufferers have been getting widespread hassle getting doctors.

    Certainly, in its most recent report, in March 2022, MedPAC wrote: “The Commission’s analyses advise that Medicare’s mixture payments for clinician products and services are enough.”

    MedPAC pointed out that all through the pandemic Congress offered tens of billions of dollars in relief money to clinicians, and predicted demand for their products and services would attain or exceed pre-pandemic concentrations by 2023.

    Dr. Tosha Wetterneck, an internist from Madison, Wisconsin, who joined McAvoy in Tuesday’s conference, claimed immediately after a session with Wisconsin Republican Rep. Mike Gallagher’s legislative aide that she felt happy he experienced heard their concept about needing assist to preserve health practitioner workplaces open and absolutely staffed. She pressured that medical practitioners will need a lot more revenue to fork out nurses, clinical assistants, and receptionists when they are remaining lured absent with larger fork out from other businesses.

    “It’s not a 1-time matter,” she mentioned about this week’s lobbying. “It’s about forming relationships. We are in it for the lengthy expression.”

    Wetterneck said the aide told her team Gallagher supports changes to insurance provider prior-authorization procedures. Asked no matter if he would assistance bigger payments to physicians, she said: “Everyone supports us striving to maintain the lights on, but it all is dependent on how the sausage gets manufactured.”

    The aide explained to the health professionals about Gallagher’s bill to quit anti-aggressive techniques that would limit employers’ use of noncompete clauses in contracts, which the physicians claimed would enable them when they alter providers, Wetterneck said.

    More than two days, the Wisconsin doctors satisfied with 9 associates of Congress from their condition, nevertheless it was primarily aides in the Dwelling, as the lower chamber was on recess.

    They fulfilled Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson, one of the most conservative users of Congress, who typically rails against enhanced govt intervention and investing.

    Wetterneck mentioned Johnson put in nearly an hour with them, all through which he defined that he wanted medical practitioners to be the trustworthy career once again alternatively than be crushed by principles and pink tape. The senator advised them he understands that medical doctor methods need revenue to pay out employees customers and treatment for patients. But that doesn’t guarantee he will vote for an enhance, she explained.

    Dr. Melissa Garretson, a Fort Worthy of, Texas, pediatric unexpected emergency medication specialist, clutched a Diet plan Coke as she still left a Dwelling cafeteria and headed to her fifth of 8 conferences in the Residence and Senate.

    She stated the payment situation resonated with members of Congress, notably when the information centered on helping medical professionals maintain tactics open up in rural Texas.

    She was prepared with a tale from just very last 7 days: An insurer refused to deal with a liquid treatment for her 4-year-old affected individual and would fork out only for a pill way too large for the little one to swallow. “Prior authorization is a roadblock to individual treatment,” she claimed.

    Even though treating unexpected emergency patients is her work, she sees lobbying Congress as an extension of her part.

    “Our clients want the treatment they will need when they want it, and to not advocate that is not to do my position as a physician,” Garretson reported as she walked into a Texas Household member’s business office.

  • Lawmakers return to Raleigh with health policy wish lists

    Lawmakers return to Raleigh with health policy wish lists

    By Rose Hoban

    Amid the smiles, photographs, receptions and family members crowding the legislative building in Raleigh on Wednesday, lawmakers involved in the making of health care policy said they were readying their lists of priorities for the legislative biennium that began this week.

    The topmost issue on both sides of the aisle? The seemingly perennial issue of the past decade: whether North Carolina would ever join the majority of states and expand the Medicaid program to provide coverage for more than half a  million low income workers. 

    Senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) highlighted Medicaid expansion in an address after being elected as leader for the seventh time since 2011, saying it was one of the issues the legislature “must tackle.”

    “I support expanding Medicaid in North Carolina,” he told a capacity crowd in the Senate chamber.

    Berger spent a decade opposed to the measure, but he changed his stance in 2022. He shepherded his bill through the Senate last year, only to have it hit a dead end in the House of Representatives. 

    “We must recognize that it is not a silver bullet,” he continued. “North Carolinians are saddled with some of the highest health care costs in the country. We need to eliminate regulatory red tape and other bureaucratic barriers that impede access to care and unnecessarily increase medical costs.”

    Berger’s 2022 Medicaid expansion bill also included provisions that would 1) overhaul rules around hospital competition in North Carolina and 2) give advanced practice nurses more latitude to work independently of physicians.

    In a media gathering after the swearing-in ceremony, Berger reiterated his position. 

    “In order to get … the broad bipartisan support that we had for the Medicaid expansion bill that we had before, there have got to be some measures that address the supply side,” he told reporters. “If you’re going to give 500,000, 600,000 people an insurance card that says they have a right to have their medical care paid for, then we need to do something to hopefully open up more access to more primary care providers, more facilities where they can be treated.” 

    Old differences could reemerge, though, as members of the House and Tim Moore (R-Kings Mountain), the re-elected House speaker, talked about a “clean” Medicaid expansion bill that does not include mention of nurses or hospitals. 

    Rep. Donny Lambeth (R–Winston-Salem) acknowledged that some of Berger’s concerns will need to be addressed before the two chambers come to any agreement. House committee assignments have not been announced, but Lambeth has been a key player from the House in committees with members from both legislative chambers tackling health care issues.

    “I think we have to do the certificate of need reform,” he said, referring to the laws on hospital competition. “So my second bill will be a certificate of need bill that I’ve been working on with the industry. And I think we’ve got to get that one done in order to do expansion.

    “That was kind of the Senate feedback.”

    Mental health on many minds

    Republicans and Democrats noted the importance of addressing mental health needs across the state. 

    Lambeth said he recently attended a forum on mental health best practices with representatives Carla Cunningham (D-Charlotte), a nurse, and Wayne Sasser (R-Albemarle), a pharmacist. Lambeth said they were interested in implementing some things other states are doing.

    “I think we need more psychologists in schools, because I think we need to reach out to these kids and listen to these kids in a more proactive way,” Lambeth said. “We’ve talked about having more guidance counselors and psychologists in schools, and we’ve done a little bit of that. But I do think we need more.”

    Lambeth also would like the legislature to consider funding mental health crisis centers.

    “We’ve seen suicide rates grow exponentially in the last several years, and COVID did not help anything,” said Sen. Sydney Batch (D-Apex), who is a social worker and family law attorney. She’s been appointed to the Senate Health Care Committee. 

    Senate leader Phil Berger (R-Eden) said he’s planning on pushing for Medicaid expansion again this year, but continues to insist the measure be combined with “supply side” measures to loosen restrictions on advanced practice nurses and increase hospital competition. Credit: Rose Hoban

    “Children are sitting in hospitals for way too long not having appropriate placements,” Batch said. “We have a mental health crisis in the foster care system. And then also just within our schools every single day, we need to actually have mental health professionals seeing the children, identifying them and addressing their needs.”

    Batch filed a bill in the last session that would have given mental health providers treatment spaces in schools, prioritizing children who lack health insurance or a regular care provider.

    “My real concern is that… everybody’s talking mental health, but we just say the same redundant words over and over again,” said Rep. Donna White (R-Clayton), a nurse who has played a key role in shaping legislative health care policies. “We just don’t try to find out what’s causing the mental health issues in our young people.”

    Lists are long

    Rep. Hugh Blackwell (R-Valdese) said that during the swearing-in festivities he started jotting down on a scrap of paper a list of priorities that he wants to work on in the coming biennium. House committee assignments haven’t been announced, but Blackwell said he expects to again be appointed to health care committees. 

    Rep. Hugh Blackwell (R-Valdese) shows off the list of legislative priorities he jotted down during the swearing-in ceremonies at the legislative building on Wednesday. Credit: Rose Hoban

    At the top of that list were mental health issues, but he ticked off a number of other topics, including getting patient information at state-operated health care facilities onto electronic health records.

    Another one of his concerns was about staffing in health care. 

    “I think, at Broughton Hospital, for example… that we’ve got maybe over 100 beds that are not being used that could be, because we haven’t got the staffing for it,” Blackwell said. 

    Last year, leaders at the Department of Health and Human Services signaled to lawmakers that they faced significant staffing shortages across all of their divisions, including in state-operated hospitals. 

    Sen. Jim Perry (R-Kinston) also had health care workforce issues on his mind, and he mentioned the shortage of child care workers. 

    “The availability of workforce, qualified individuals to work in those facilities, [of] affordability — wages have just gone through the roof,” Perry said. “We’ve got to try to figure some things out… have a healthy workforce. Mom and Dad got to have someone taking care of the kids so they can go to work.”

    Other health care topics that topped lawmakers’ lists included:

    • Addressing mental health issues faced by foster children, a topic raised by Batch and Sen. Mike Woodard (D-Durham). Woodard said he’s concerned about how kids in foster care have difficulty accessing health care if they move from one region of the state to another — something that Batch tried to address in a bill she championed last year.
    • White said she’s ready to take another run at getting her chamber behind the SAVE Act, which would give more independence to advanced practice nurses. Last year, the bill had 75 co-sponsors in the House of Representatives, but it was never brought to the floor for a vote. “I believe that I could get that many [sponsors] this time,” White said. “I’ve not met all the freshmen and I don’t know what their views are about a lot of things, but it’s certainly a whole new group to consult with, and I’ll be doing that very shortly.”
    • Lambeth said he’d like to address some of the issues around getting other health care workers into the educational pipeline. “One is physician manpower in rural areas. Whether we do loan forgiveness or other programs, we’ve got to do something to address the shortage in some of the rural areas,” Lambeth added. “We’ve met with some community colleges. What they’re telling me is ‘We’ve got the space, we’ve got qualified applicants, we don’t have instructors, we don’t have enough money.’”
    • Abortion was mentioned by multiple lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Woodard noted that Senate Democrats plan to file a bill codifying the constitutional protections for abortion overturned in last summer’s Supreme Court Dobbs decision. Republicans, for their part, talked about a range of possibilities for a possible bill limiting the procedure. “We’ll see what, if anything, is something that can be passed by the General Assembly and withstand a possible veto,” Berger said. 

    Wednesday was just the start of a process that will play out over the coming months and perhaps years. Many of the initiatives would take state funding, which will pit interest groups against each other — and lawmakers know how frustrating that can be. 

    “Everything requires money, and that’s why you can never do everything at once,” Perry said. “It’s not that something is or is not important, it’s just that resources are scarce.”

  • Wendy Williams Updates Fans on Health, Potential Return to Her Show

    Wendy Williams Updates Fans on Health, Potential Return to Her Show

    6 times just before the premiere, the present announced that Williams was still receiving treatment for concerns related to her Graves’ disorder and not able to return to live Television set just yet, and that visitor hosts would be filling in. “Wendy continues to be less than health care supervision and meets with her health-related staff on a every day basis,” the show’s manufacturing business said on Instagram. “She is earning development but is encountering critical issues as a direct consequence of Graves’ Disorder and her thyroid problem.” 

    Williams was identified with Graves’ disease—the most common bring about of hyperthyroidism (an overactive thyroid gland) in the U.S., in accordance to the National Institute of Diabetic issues and Digestive and Kidney Ailments (NIDDK)—over 20 several years ago. This overproduction of thyroid hormones can bring about indications like a immediate or irregular heartbeat, problems sleeping, nervousness or irritability, tiredness, muscle mass weak point, fat reduction, shaky arms, frequent bowel actions, or diarrhea. 

    Even though Williams’s problem had been properly-controlled, in 2018 she professional a flare-up in indications (these as mood swings) that forced her to take a hiatus from her clearly show, as SELF documented. “I experienced a storm heading in my human body is the greatest way I can demonstrate it,” Williams explained to Men and women in March 2018. Williams reported that her signs and symptoms arose just after she skipped an appointment with her endocrinologist and that she in the beginning attributed them to menopause. “I was just emotion like, ‘Alright, effectively I’m 53 and this is I guess how it’s supposed to be,’” she stated.

    Treatment method solutions for Graves’ disease—which is typically diagnosed with a physical test and blood exams or imaging tests—include medication and surgery. The most prevalent treatment for Graves’ sickness in the U.S., in accordance to the NIDDK, is radioiodine treatment (using capsules of radioactive iodine, which destroys thyroid gland cells that make thyroid hormone). Amid other prevalent remedy selections are medication that lessen your thyroid’s hormone generation and operation to take away some or all of the thyroid gland. All of these solutions can enormously lower indicators, but also trigger other facet effects that require managing (these as the reverse trouble, hypothyroidism). 

    When Graves’ sickness is untreated or poorly managed, it raises a person’s danger of issues impacting a range of system systems, according to the Cleveland Clinic—such as Graves’ ophthalmopathy (which causes eye problems like bulging, ache, and double vision), skin problems, and heart difficulties (due to an uncontrolled irregular heartbeat). As with any persistent health issues, handling Graves’ disorder can be an ongoing task that needs not only adequate clinical treatment but also a superior romantic relationship with your medical professional and taking care of oneself. “I appreciate performing the show, but I love me additional,” as Williams set it to People today in 2018. “So I’m heading to get care of me, so I can be there for them.” 

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