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Happy and Healthy and Together

Happy and Healthy and Together

Happy and Healthy and Together

Putting the “Community” back in “Community Health”

In May of this year, Vivek Murthy issued what’s called a Surgeon General’s advisory. These reports typically call attention to “urgent public health issues” like smoking or obesity. But this one was different. It focused on the effects of loneliness and social isolation.1 It’s long been a concern of Murthy’s and one that he has chosen to use his considerable platform to highlight.

According to the report, social isolation and loneliness have real consequences for health. Those include cardiovascular health, cancer outcomes, dementia, and Alzheimer’s disease. They can even affect academic and financial success in later life.

Not surprisingly, isolation and loneliness affect COVID too. American counties with less social capital have had more COVID-19 cases and deaths. Areas with more social participation have fewer deaths. Similarly, one broad-based international study found higher levels of interpersonal and government trust associated with lower rates of infection.

The whole report is long but fascinating. It’s a subject that touches many different parts of our lives. I recommend it if you’re interested in public health or policy.

Murthy includes a warning in the advisory: social divisions cause poor health. Americans need to build “more connected lives and a more connected society,” he tells his readers. If we fail to do so,

COVID and mental health

Here’s where the church comes in I was going to write this article up last week as part of Mental Illness Awareness Week. But circumstances intervened, as they sometimes do. So instead, let’s do it in observance of World Mental Health Day, October 10th. By now, most of us probably understand that COVID had a profound, and negative, impact on mental…

Do you need a .pdf? Have I got a .pdf for you!

COVID communications tools This week, I have mostly a passel of graphics to share with you. (If you don’t speak cowboy, that means “a bunch.”) But we do need to cover some items of interest first. COVID is in fact on the rise in Wisconsin. According to the CDC, hospitalization rates for COVID are relatively low. But they are showing a steady increase in…

Love and Vaccines

Love and Vaccines

Love and Vaccines

Stuck together, or not as the case may be

Writing a newsletter like this, it’s easy to assume that you’re preaching to the choir, literally and figuratively. We don’t get a lot of feedback on the content, and what does come in is almost always positive.

But there are people with serious concerns about the safety and efficacy of COVID vaccines and deep reservations about taking them. Or at the very least, people who believe that scientists haven’t made the case for vaccines.

You get a new booster, and you get a new booster

You get a new booster, and you get a new booster

You get a new booster, and you get a new booster

You all get new boosters!

Spoiler alert: the CDC is recommending basically everybody get a COVID booster this fall. That’s a good thing! There’s also a program to pay for shots for people with no or inadequate health insurance. That’s an even better thing!

With the highlights out of the way, let’s get into the weeds a little. As anticipated, the FDA has approved a new round of booster vaccines against COVID. At least, they’ve endorsed two of the three possibilities: Moderna and Pfizer. Booster doses of those two vaccines could be available as early as the end of this week.

However, the FDA did not give the green light to Novavax, the only non-mRNA vaccine available in the U.S. That’s been held up for undisclosed reasons, though it’s expected to be available before too long.

This is great news, but what does it mean for you, and for the church? To answer that, we have to look at who can get the shots, and who should get the shots.

So, uh, let’s do that?

What to do?

What to do?

The confusion isn’t all BA.2.86’s fault Looks like we’re back to being a COVID-focused newsletter for a little while. This might last a week, or it might be longer. But we’ve got news to share, and you deserve to hear it! Let’s talk about confusion. As mentioned last week, COVID levels are rising in Wisconsin. It’s increasing in wastewater, it’s increasing in…

Another COVID update

Another COVID update

Another COVID update

I did promise to keep you informed

We are in something of a strange position on the COVID front these days. Infections are moving up, but it’s not time to hit the panic button quite yet. New boosters are on their way, but they haven’t been approved yet, and there’s no official guidance on how to use them.