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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Download TWiV 1182 (19 MB .mp3, 31 min)
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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. Les2011 Sep 29, 2014

    Please change the download link from TWIV303.mp3 to TWIV304.mp3 on the TWIV304 page

    • Chris Sep 29, 2014

      Thank you for pointing that out. I would have missed TWIV 303 because I fell behind while on vacation. I did just grab TWiV 304 from the RSS feed (link above on right).

  2. the numbers look better now, just look at the WHO-charts at
    http://www.who.int/csr/disease/ebola/situation-reports/en/

    yet at http://cpid.iri.columbia.edu/ebola.html I still read

    Update 10/01/2014
    … Overall, for the combined forecast, the exponential growth of the outbreak is consistent
    with the previous week.

    which I don’t quite understand.

  3. Ddanimal Oct 8, 2014

    Hello

    Will you guys discuss this study sometime?

    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2672.2010.04778.x/full

    it shows that EBV can survive and remain infectious in the form of aerosol particles for at least 90 minutes.

    “This study has demonstrated that filoviruses are able to survive and remain infectious for cell culture, for extended periods when suspended within liquid media and dried onto surfaces. In addition, decay rates of a range of filoviruses, within small-particle aerosols, have been calculated, and these rates suggest that filoviruses are able to survive and remain infectious for cell culture for at least 90 min.”

    And yet, the CDC and other medical people are saying that its absolutely not airborne. That seems to me to be false in view of this evidence and other evidence (experiments on monkeys, the infections of people that had zero physical contact with patients or fluids).