cfsandmore
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
How will the return of unused Covid funds affect the 1.6 billion NIH received? https://www.npr.org/2023/05/31/1178...pent-covid-relief-money-democrats-republicans
WASHINGTON — University of Alabama at Birmingham infectious disease director Jeanne Marrazzo will be the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases’ director by this fall.
The announcement comes roughly eight months after longtime institute director Anthony Fauci stepped down. Marrazzo will assume her post at the $6.3 billion-dollar agency just as Congress begins hashing out the 2024 budget. Some Republicans have pushed for controls on NIAID-funded pathogen research to be included in that legislation.
Marrazzo is “very well-liked, very respected” and experienced, Fauci told STAT. “She’s going to be a good fit. It’s a great challenge that she’s going to be facing; it’s going to be exciting for her.”
Like Fauci, Marrazzo hails from an HIV research background. Her work focuses largely on sexually transmitted diseases in female reproductive systems. She has worked with the NIH through grants and advisory boards steadily for more than two decades, the institute said in a press release.
Peter Staley, an HIV activist who sat on the NIH search committee that selected Marrazzo, praised her as one of the “amazing candidates” to fill Fauci’s role.
In social media posts, Staley urged Marrazzo to keep the institute focused on persistent challenges such as HIV and newer concerns such as long covid, and also address how the institute works with the private sector on drug development — a frequent point of contention between activists and the federal government.
Todd, thanks. It's great to be here and it is great to ask this critical question because when you look at the disparities in outcomes with COVID, I think history is going to judge us very, very harshly. And the issue is that the access to health care and to the best health care has such a long history of discrimination and putting people in a position where they were already at great disadvantage to access the best "health care possible." You add on that a pandemic, you add on that social isolation, you add onto that physical barriers to getting in, and you're asking people to do telemedicine on top of it. You can imagine that these have added up and really exponentially impacted the experience of our most vulnerable patients. So it's been really hard.
More than 90 percent of those who contract COVID-19 will recover. But for some, their lives are still far from normal.
“I think we need to do a better job describing to people that the consequences of this infection go way beyond that number”, stated Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo, M.D., Dir. UAB Division of Infectious Diseases.
They’re called long haulers, patients who are virus-free but still have serious symptoms. Long haulers often experience permanent organ damage or continue to experience debilitating symptoms. People of all ages are susceptible.
“There’s the pulmonary or the lung symptoms”, Marrazzo explained. “People, including very young people, including people who did not have asthma or emphysema before continue to experience a sense of breathlessness. They just can’t catch their breath.”
Other issues include heart inflammation, vessel disease, and brain issues.
“The brain issue is a big thing”, stated Marrazzo. “There is this feeling for some people that they just can’t concentrate, they can’t really get back to work. We’ve seen frankly, young people with very demanding jobs not being able to get back to their jobs two or three months after COVID.”
While this is a key point of research, doctors haven’t been able to determine a cause or specific demographic who’s most at risk.
“This is not just people who were limited in their function pre-COVID, these are people who were highly functional in jobs and in society in terms of work, responsibilities, and they’re really having challenges”, Marrazzo said.
UAB is now establishing a clinic to treat and follow post-COVID patients with these symptoms.
“This is an interdisciplinary clinic, we’ll have cardiologists, pulmonologists, neurologists, psychiatrists, and of course infectious disease people working together to try to puzzle out what’s going on.”
From that article:
Peter Staley, an HIV activist who sat on the NIH search committee that selected Marrazzo, praised her as one of the “amazing candidates” to fill Fauci’s role.
In social media posts, Staley urged Marrazzo to keep the institute focused on persistent challenges such as HIV and newer concerns such as long covid, and also address how the institute works with the private sector on drug development — a frequent point of contention between activists and the federal government.
I just checked and with five days to go, you still can’t register. Hope it doesn’t affect the numbers.Here's a link to the registration page for the series of webinars.
https://event.roseliassociates.com/me-cfs-research-roadmap/register/
As the tweet says, 'Registration information is forthcoming'. You can't register yet.
The topics of the series of webinars:
Nervous System: August 25, 2023
Immune System: TBD
Circulation: TBD
Metabolism: TBD
Genomics/Genetic Susceptibilities: November 1, 2023
Chronic Infection: TBD
Physiology: December 1, 2023
Email from NIH.
REMINDER: NIH ME/CFS Research Roadmap Webinar: Nervous System – August 25, 2023, 10am-2pm
"The first ME/CFS Research Roadmap webinar focused on the nervous system will take place on August 25, 2023, from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm ET. Please visit the webinar series website for the agenda, speakers, and more details. Join the Zoom webinar here (passcode: 616680). Click here to add the event to your calendar and for information about how to join by phone.
Presenters will describe current research, knowledge gaps, and future research opportunities in this area. There will be Q&A sessions during which attendees can ask questions and contribute ideas. Researchers, clinicians, advocates, those living with ME/CFS, and anyone invested in or impacted by ME/CFS are encouraged to attend. The webinar will be recorded and posted online after the event for future viewing.
Learn about the overall roadmap process, including information on how you can provide input, on the NANDSC ME/CFS Research Roadmap Working Group page"
Friday August 25thEmail from NIH.
REMINDER: NIH ME/CFS Research Roadmap Webinar: Nervous System – August 25, 2023, 10am-2pm
"The first ME/CFS Research Roadmap webinar focused on the nervous system will take place on August 25, 2023, from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm ET. Please visit the webinar series website for the agenda, speakers, and more details. Join the Zoom webinar here (passcode: 616680). Click here to add the event to your calendar and for information about how to join by phone.
Presenters will describe current research, knowledge gaps, and future research opportunities in this area. There will be Q&A sessions during which attendees can ask questions and contribute ideas. Researchers, clinicians, advocates, those living with ME/CFS, and anyone invested in or impacted by ME/CFS are encouraged to attend. The webinar will be recorded and posted online after the event for future viewing.
Learn about the overall roadmap process, including information on how you can provide input, on the NANDSC ME/CFS Research Roadmap Working Group page"