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How 4 medical experts are approaching this Thanksgiving

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Also: The differing ways states are spending opioid settlement money November 22, 2022

Also: The differing ways states are spending opioid settlement money [View in browser](    [❤️]( November 22, 2022 Hi CommonHealth reader, In many ways, this holiday season seems more "normal" than the last few. There are no longer mask mandates. There's no omicron surge (at least not yet). But then, I heard Dr. Jacob Lemieux say, pretty much, the last thing I wanted to hear before heading into Thanksgiving break. “We are in the midst of a true triple-epidemic,” said Lemieux, an infectious disease physician at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). [COVID]( is still killing roughly 300 people a day in the U.S. Pediatric hospitals are full of patients with [RSV]( (aka respiratory syncytial virus). And [influenza]( is just beginning to surge, he said. “There are many warning flags, I would say, regarding the holiday season ahead, risks to all ages and subsets of the population from these three dangerous respiratory viruses,” he added. So, with that as the backdrop, I asked four medical experts exactly what they had in store for Thanksgiving, and what precautions they are planning to take. Lemieux said RSV is running through his household. So, only if everyone is better by Thanksgiving will they be joining family and friends in New York. His advice for those who don’t have any respiratory symptoms was this: “I don't want to say cancel Thanksgiving,” he said. “But there's likely a role for rapid COVID testing before — possibly more than once before.” Lael Yonker, a pediatrician at MGH, is hosting 19 people for Thanksgiving. She's asking anyone with cold symptoms to take a rapid test before coming. “And I've been having my kids wear their masks for the week leading up [to Thanksgiving], even though masks aren't required in school,” she said. Jeremy Luban, professor of molecular medicine, biochemistry and molecular biotechnology at UMass Chan Medical School, is hosting an even bigger Thanksgiving meal, with more than 20 people expected. He’s invited over a number of international members of his lab and other labs, who don’t have family nearby. “These are people in infectious disease labs and are quite cognizant of the issues. But we will ask everyone to test, to do rapid tests,” Luban said, adding that the calculation might be different if you have attendees who are elderly or at high risk. And finally, Kathryn Stephenson, an infectious disease expert at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, said she has COVID right now. “So I'm going to not go to Thanksgiving with my older relatives,” she said. Stephenson urged people to go back to the basics, and just stay home if you are sick. If you absolutely cannot stay home, she advised wearing a really good mask. Whatever you decide to do this holiday, I wish you and your loved ones a happy — and hopefully healthy (fingers crossed) — Thanksgiving. Gabrielle Emanuel Health reporter [Follow]( Support the news  This Week's Must Reads [States differ on how best to spend $26B from settlement in opioid cases]( The cash represents an unprecedented opportunity to derail the opioid epidemic. But with countless groups advocating for a share of the pie, the impact may depend heavily on geography and politics. [Read more.]( [States differ on how best to spend $26B from settlement in opioid cases]( The cash represents an unprecedented opportunity to derail the opioid epidemic. But with countless groups advocating for a share of the pie, the impact may depend heavily on geography and politics. [Read more.]( [Three hour wait, three days in a row: Mass. shelter hotline leaves some families desperate]( Massachusetts is the only state in the country that guarantees a “right to shelter” for families experiencing homelessness. But the first step is getting through to the state-run shelter system, and some families and advocates say the hotline can take hours, or even days. [Read more.]( [Three hour wait, three days in a row: Mass. shelter hotline leaves some families desperate]( Massachusetts is the only state in the country that guarantees a “right to shelter” for families experiencing homelessness. But the first step is getting through to the state-run shelter system, and some families and advocates say the hotline can take hours, or even days. [Read more.]( [How monoclonal antibodies lost the fight with new COVID variants]( The treatments were highly popular earlier in the pandemic. One by one, they got knocked out by more convenient, less expensive treatment options, and new COVID variants. [Read more.]( [How monoclonal antibodies lost the fight with new COVID variants]( The treatments were highly popular earlier in the pandemic. One by one, they got knocked out by more convenient, less expensive treatment options, and new COVID variants. [Read more.]( [Hidden audits reveal millions in overcharges by Medicare Advantage plans]( Taxpayers footed the bill for care that should have cost far less, according to records released under the Freedom of Information Act. The U.S. government may charge insurers $650 million as a result. [Read more.]( [Hidden audits reveal millions in overcharges by Medicare Advantage plans]( Taxpayers footed the bill for care that should have cost far less, according to records released under the Freedom of Information Act. The U.S. government may charge insurers $650 million as a result. [Read more.]( [More than 1 billion young people could be at risk of hearing loss, a new study shows]( Researchers compiled data from previous studies and found that recreational listening, such as on devices and at entertainment venues, posed a threat for those aged 12 to 35. [Read more.]( [More than 1 billion young people could be at risk of hearing loss, a new study shows]( Researchers compiled data from previous studies and found that recreational listening, such as on devices and at entertainment venues, posed a threat for those aged 12 to 35. [Read more.]( What We're Reading 📚 Two picks this week: First, in [The Carmel Pine Cone]( — a little paper in Northern California — there’s the story of a cardiologist running a local half marathon. “Not once, but twice, during his run along the course…cardiologist Steven Lome found himself staring down at someone who desperately needed his skills,” writes reporter Chris Counts. Lome saved the lives of two unresponsive people that day: at the 3-mile mark and again just after he crossed the finish line. It's a story of remarkable fortuitousness, just in time for Thanksgiving. Second, this investigation by The [The Wall Street Journal]( into hospitals' financial assistance policies is well worth a read. Nonprofit hospitals are required to provide financial aid for patients who need it the most. In turn, they get roughly $60 billion in tax breaks. But Anna Wilde Mathews, Andrea Fuller and Melanie Evans found that hospitals often make it mighty hard to get this aid. They reviewed thousands of documents and interviewed dozens of advocates and patients, documenting the obstacles set up by hospitals to avoid distributing financial aid. “Under tax laws, nonprofit hospitals are set up to function as charities benefiting their communities," the authors write. Instead, "The Journal found that many of these hospitals act like for-profit businesses in their efforts to get paid, even by those who can’t afford it.” "Monoclonals had their day, like the Model T or the biplane. Now it's time to move on." — Carl Dieffenbach, head of the National Institutes of Health's Antiviral Program for Pandemics, on [the shift to new treatments to combat COVID variants]( ICYMI [Tackling the fake pill supply killing teens and young adults]( Counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl, sold via social media sites, are killing young people. Here's how parents, advocates and social media companies are trying to tackle the problem. [Read more.]( [Tackling the fake pill supply killing teens and young adults]( Counterfeit pills laced with fentanyl, sold via social media sites, are killing young people. Here's how parents, advocates and social media companies are trying to tackle the problem. [Read more.]( 🧠💥 Did you know...💥🧠 ...a new study in JAMA Psychiatry suggests intensive daily meditation could be as[good at calming anxiety]( as the widely-prescribed medication escitalopram (aka Lexapro). 😎 Forward to a friend. They can sign up [here](. 📣 Give us your feedback: newsletters@wbur.org 📧 Get more WBUR stories sent to your inbox. [Check out all of our newsletter offerings.]( Support the news     Want to change how you receive these emails? Stop getting this newsletter by [updating your preferences.](  I don't want to hear from WBUR anymore. Unsubscribe from all WBUR editorial newsletters [here.](  Interested in learning more about corporate sponsorship? [Click here.]( Copyright © 2022 WBUR-FM, All rights reserved.

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