TWiV 1182: Clinical update with Dr. Daniel Griffin

January 11, 2025

In his weekly clinical update, Dr. Griffin discusses how vaccination and vaccine hesitancy affects public health and disease spread in terms of mpox, the first human death from H5N1 in US, why one should not feed their pets raw pet food and the metapneumonia outbreak in China before reviewing the recent statistics on RSV, influenza and SARS-CoV-2 infections, the WasterwaterScan dashboard, where to find PEMGARDA, how nirmatrelvir-ritonavir/Paxlovid reduces adverse outcomes of COVID in patients with kidney disease, provides information for Columbia University Irving Medical Center’s long COVID treatment center, SARS-CoV-2 infection affects skin conditions including shingles and if long antiviral treatment affects long COVID.

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Intro music is by Ronald Jenkees

Send your questions for Dr. Griffin to daniel@microbe.tv

The post TWiV 1182: Clinical update with Dr. Daniel Griffin first appeared on This Week in Virology.

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0 comments on “TWiV 1182: Clinical update with Dr. Daniel Griffin

  1. James May 6, 2014

    Sadly, the Springer link is no-longer open access 🙁

    • I’m very sorry about that. I don’t know if Springer closed it because we picked it, or if they had planned to anyway. Either way I apologize to listeners: I would not have made it a pick had I known the access would be closed. Not a very nice move, Springer!

    • Luckily, the book is part of the Landes Bioscience open access library and can be downloaded from their web page:

      http://www.landesbioscience.com/books/special/id/958/

  2. Another great show. I especially appreciated the distinction between romantically conjecturing about the possible evolutionary causes or other flights of fantasy with evidence based inquiry. I like both, but it good to remember the difference. Even what seems like good evidence today can turn out to represent an incomplete understanding. Glad to see you bringing this esoteric field of inquiry to the public. I wish some good studies would be made on the impact of a healthy environment. I’m convinced the presumption that the civilation we have evolved into is not healthy for people and needs a lot of debugging.