𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare

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𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare banner
𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare

𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare

@EnnnDeee

Leans gray. Tell me more. Life is myths.. yes/both/& Passionate🇮🇹🇺🇸 #TitsUp 🚺of substance . 🗒️ IT’s 2026 & WE ARE STILL IN THE COVID19 PANDEMIC

United States เข้าร่วม Mart 2011
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𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare รีทวีตแล้ว
Ashley 😷💜🟧
Ashley 😷💜🟧@sassyashieOG·
I keep seeing so many liberals with this take, like it’s some sort of gotcha moment. 🤦🏼‍♀️ The pandemic isn’t over. Everyone should still be masking, but the people making these comments also decided their comfort was more important than other people’s lives and stopped masking. 🥴
Mehdi Hasan@mehdirhasan

These are probably the exact same folks who refused to wear masks during the pandemic

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sucka free sukusiri
sucka free sukusiri@_marokiya·
I had an appointment today with my obgyn and was wearing my mask and she deadass asked me why I was wearing a mask and if I was sick. I really had to stare at her because wdym you’re a fucking doctor and you’re asking me why I’m masking.
covid is oncogenic@chaitrovert

i still think the worst spreaders of covid & covid disinformation are healthcare workers. unlike many laypeople, most of them can't use illiteracy as an excuse for treating it like a bad cold. it's literally your job to have an accurate basic understanding

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𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare รีทวีตแล้ว
chantzy
chantzy@chantz_y·
Written 6 years ago today in @voguemagazine. How'd I miss this? It's sooo good "In the unlikely event that someone won’t go out with you because you are wearing a mask - were they ever worthy of you in the first place?" vogue.com/article/why-we…
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Taylor Lorenz
Taylor Lorenz@TaylorLorenz·
@mehdirhasan We are still in an active pandemic, so ppl should be masking right now! COVID didn’t magically disappear or become less harmful, we have *fewer* treatments for COVID today than 3 years ago, making it’s more dangerous to get infected today than in 2022 😷 salon.com/2024/01/04/lea…
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Dr. Sean Mullen
Dr. Sean Mullen@drseanmullen·
If someone announces a medical vulnerability (social kryptonite) after building a brand around wellness… what happens next? Do they pivot? Do they already own “the cure” and are getting ready to monetize it after spending years building trust with the chronic illness community? Was the condition temporary, resolved, or successfully managed? Or do they have a genuine bedside conversion after a couple mushroom trips? These are the things I think about after watching vultures feed on people with Long Covid—and after learning how people with chronic illness have been dismissed, exploited, and underserved for decades. What still surprises me is that the science-bro ecosystem hasn’t really gone all in on Long Covid. It’s practically the lowest-hanging fruit imaginable for wellness influencers, yet they’re mostly like, “Nah.” Even BJ. He’s a fascinating hybrid of evidence and eccentricity. He openly shared data showing COVID negatively affected his own biomarkers, but it feels like he stopped reading the literature sometime around 2022. Like… bro. Autoimmunity. Immune dysregulation. Persistent viral reservoirs. Endothelial dysfunction. Dysautonomia. Want me to break out the Etch A Sketch?
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𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare รีทวีตแล้ว
Wokecrates
Wokecrates@GhostOfSocrates·
Not only this but medical professionals are elevated in our society by virtue of their credentials. They have a duty to set an example for their communities. And they certainly shouldn't be repeating misinformation regarding PPE and infection prevention.
covid is oncogenic@chaitrovert

i still think the worst spreaders of covid & covid disinformation are healthcare workers. unlike many laypeople, most of them can't use illiteracy as an excuse for treating it like a bad cold. it's literally your job to have an accurate basic understanding

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𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare รีทวีตแล้ว
么 ꜱ ᴀ ᴍ ꪜ,
么 ꜱ ᴀ ᴍ ꪜ,@___TheGOOdWitch·
么 ꜱ ᴀ ᴍ ꪜ, tweet media
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Dr. Sean Mullen
Dr. Sean Mullen@drseanmullen·
That mystery virus you had — and passed on to 100 others while contagious for 10-14 days — won’t just cause a week of illness. Statistically, about half of them will face Long Covid after repeat infections (3/4 of the US already have a chronic condition), and about 10 will die years earlier than they should from heart attacks, strokes, or other accelerated diseases. You did that.
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𝕊𝕔𝕙𝕄𝕀𝔻𝔾𝔼 🐝🧢😷 #PutN95sInHealthcare
Phenomenal thread, as always @manruipa
Manuel Ruiz@manruipa

⚠️‼️‼️ Maybe Bryan Johnson’s case is being interpreted too late in the chain. If you want to live longer, maybe you should not only measure aging. You should also ask what is chronically activating your immune system. His case may not be just about the stomach, ferritin or thyroid. Low ferritin may not be the real starting point. Autoimmune gastritis may not even be the first autoimmune event. What if the real story started years earlier, with loss of immune tolerance? This case is much more interesting than “my stomach is eating itself.” What I see here is a possible immune story that started years before the autoimmune gastritis was diagnosed. First, autoimmune thyroid disease. Then, years of low ferritin that nobody could explain properly. Now, autoimmune gastritis. Medicine often treats these as separate boxes: -thyroid problem -iron problem -stomach problem But immunologically, they may be connected. If someone develops autoimmune thyroid disease early in life, I would always ask what broke tolerance in the first place. Genetics matter, of course. But the immune system usually does not attack a healthy organ out of nowhere. In many autoimmune diseases, the pattern may be: susceptibility -persistent antigenic stimulation -chronic inflammation → loss of tolerance → autoimmunity. That persistent stimulus could be EBV, another herpesvirus, SARS-CoV-2, Borrelia, Toxoplasma, H. pylori or another pathogen able to persist, evade immune control or create chronic inflammatory pressure. One persistent trigger does not have to create only one autoimmune disease. Over years, it may create an immune environment where more targets appear. This is why autoimmune diseases often cluster. Thyroid autoimmunity and autoimmune gastritis are already known to travel together. This is sometimes called thyrogastric syndrome. So the combination is not random. Now look at the stomach. Autoimmune gastritis targets parietal cells. Parietal cells produce stomach acid and intrinsic factor. If they are damaged, stomach acid falls. And if stomach acid falls, iron absorption can fail. That explains why ferritin can stay low for years even when hemoglobin and hematocrit still look normal. The body keeps blood values normal by draining iron stores first. So low ferritin can be the early warning sign before anemia appears. But the deeper question is not only: “Why was ferritin low?” The deeper question is: “Why did the immune system start attacking the stomach?” Chronic mucosal inflammation is one possible answer. The gut is one of the largest immune surfaces in the body. If there is persistent infection or persistent antigenic stimulation, immune cells can keep being recruited into the tissue. Over time, chronic inflammation can create ectopic lymphoid structures — immune aggregates inside tissues where antigen presentation continues and immune responses are amplified. In that environment, self-antigens are repeatedly exposed. If the person is genetically susceptible, autoreactive T and B cells that should remain silent may become activated. That is how chronic inflammation can turn into organ-specific autoimmunity. This is especially important because many tissues do not normally express high levels of MHC-II. But under inflammatory signals such as interferon, epithelial or glandular cells can begin presenting antigen in a way they normally should not. That can be dangerous for tolerance. In the thyroid, that may contribute to thyroid autoimmunity. In the gastric mucosa, it may contribute to autoimmune gastritis. In the pancreas, under a different context, it may contribute to diabetes. The organ affected may depend on where the immune conflict is happening. So his three problems could be part of one connected process: (1/2)🧵👇🏻

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Manuel Ruiz
Manuel Ruiz@manruipa·
🔴I don’t think it’s that simple. Stress, vaccines, lifestyle, sunlight, medical interventions… all of these things can affect the immune system. But reducing autoimmunity to one easy explanation is exactly the problem. “Stress” can also become a convenient label when nobody wants to look deeper. Autoimmunity usually means something went wrong with immune tolerance. And that can involve genetics, HLA background, persistent antigens, infections, barrier dysfunction, molecular mimicry and immune dysregulation. Vaccines can be a trigger in susceptible people, yes. But so can infections, herpesviruses, chronic pathogens, allergens, tissue damage and other inflammatory stimuli. So the real question is not “which one thing caused it?” The real question is: why did tolerance break in that person? That’s what I tried to explain in the post. 👇🏻
Manuel Ruiz@manruipa

⚠️‼️‼️ Maybe Bryan Johnson’s case is being interpreted too late in the chain. If you want to live longer, maybe you should not only measure aging. You should also ask what is chronically activating your immune system. His case may not be just about the stomach, ferritin or thyroid. Low ferritin may not be the real starting point. Autoimmune gastritis may not even be the first autoimmune event. What if the real story started years earlier, with loss of immune tolerance? This case is much more interesting than “my stomach is eating itself.” What I see here is a possible immune story that started years before the autoimmune gastritis was diagnosed. First, autoimmune thyroid disease. Then, years of low ferritin that nobody could explain properly. Now, autoimmune gastritis. Medicine often treats these as separate boxes: -thyroid problem -iron problem -stomach problem But immunologically, they may be connected. If someone develops autoimmune thyroid disease early in life, I would always ask what broke tolerance in the first place. Genetics matter, of course. But the immune system usually does not attack a healthy organ out of nowhere. In many autoimmune diseases, the pattern may be: susceptibility -persistent antigenic stimulation -chronic inflammation → loss of tolerance → autoimmunity. That persistent stimulus could be EBV, another herpesvirus, SARS-CoV-2, Borrelia, Toxoplasma, H. pylori or another pathogen able to persist, evade immune control or create chronic inflammatory pressure. One persistent trigger does not have to create only one autoimmune disease. Over years, it may create an immune environment where more targets appear. This is why autoimmune diseases often cluster. Thyroid autoimmunity and autoimmune gastritis are already known to travel together. This is sometimes called thyrogastric syndrome. So the combination is not random. Now look at the stomach. Autoimmune gastritis targets parietal cells. Parietal cells produce stomach acid and intrinsic factor. If they are damaged, stomach acid falls. And if stomach acid falls, iron absorption can fail. That explains why ferritin can stay low for years even when hemoglobin and hematocrit still look normal. The body keeps blood values normal by draining iron stores first. So low ferritin can be the early warning sign before anemia appears. But the deeper question is not only: “Why was ferritin low?” The deeper question is: “Why did the immune system start attacking the stomach?” Chronic mucosal inflammation is one possible answer. The gut is one of the largest immune surfaces in the body. If there is persistent infection or persistent antigenic stimulation, immune cells can keep being recruited into the tissue. Over time, chronic inflammation can create ectopic lymphoid structures — immune aggregates inside tissues where antigen presentation continues and immune responses are amplified. In that environment, self-antigens are repeatedly exposed. If the person is genetically susceptible, autoreactive T and B cells that should remain silent may become activated. That is how chronic inflammation can turn into organ-specific autoimmunity. This is especially important because many tissues do not normally express high levels of MHC-II. But under inflammatory signals such as interferon, epithelial or glandular cells can begin presenting antigen in a way they normally should not. That can be dangerous for tolerance. In the thyroid, that may contribute to thyroid autoimmunity. In the gastric mucosa, it may contribute to autoimmune gastritis. In the pancreas, under a different context, it may contribute to diabetes. The organ affected may depend on where the immune conflict is happening. So his three problems could be part of one connected process: (1/2)🧵👇🏻

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Jennifer Purdy
Jennifer Purdy@purdygreenKC·
As a MD I agree. I saw a MD who I cared for and respected greatly last year (when there were what 400,000 papers on the harms of #Covid ), wearing my mask & he said something about not seeing my smile. Attended FMF the premier family med conference in Canada last year & was …
covid is oncogenic@chaitrovert

i still think the worst spreaders of covid & covid disinformation are healthcare workers. unlike many laypeople, most of them can't use illiteracy as an excuse for treating it like a bad cold. it's literally your job to have an accurate basic understanding

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Laura Miers
Laura Miers@LauraMiers·
@sasswashere It has been over 4 years since the first damning studies came out, followed by even more damning studies. Private equity has hijacked every industry people will be required to interact with after COVID disables their babies.
Megan Ben Dor Ruthven@_mbdr_

COVID and development delays. This study reports: COVID+ during pregnancy associated with 2x rates of their babies DX'd w/developmental delays than controls (6.3% vs 3.0% respectively) What could COVID infection(s) be doing to kids' development, even after they're born?

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CoronaHeadsUp
CoronaHeadsUp@CoronaHeadsUp·
Possibly 1 in 4 children may develop Long COVID, even after vaccination
Harry Spoelstra@HarrySpoelstra

Long COVID-19 in children: a review of key information 🚨Possibly 1 in 4 children may develop Long COVID, even after vaccination 😡Paediatricians, WAKE-UP! WE NEED TO PROTECT OUR CHILDREN! #PREVENTION ➡️A Polish review needs your attention! ➡️Review information: 1. Definition LongC0vid: - WHO 2023 criteria, symptoms appearing ≤3 months after SARSCoV2 infection, lasting ≥2 months, and significantly affecting daily functioning (school, activity, development), - Symptoms are heterogeneous and multisystemic, 2. Prevalence: - Pooled estimate 25% (meta-analysis >80,000 children), - Rises to 29% in hospitalized cases, - Over 200 possible symptoms reported, 3. Common manifestations(Fig): - Fatigue (3–87%), headaches (3–80%), cognitive dysfunction/brain fog (2–81%), sleep disturbances (2–63%), mood disorders, - Age-specific patterns exist (younger children: rashes/behavioural changes. Adolescents: fatigue, concentration issues), 4. Risk factors: - Older age (adolescence), female sex, comorbidities (obesity, allergies), severe acute infection, poor pre-infection health, - One-third of cases occur without clear risk factors, 5. Pathophysiology(Fig): - Multifactorial, - Possible viral persistence, immune dysregulation/autoimmunity, autonomic dysfunction, gut dysbiosis, vascular/endothelial damage, 6. Diagnosis: - Challenging due to nonspecific symptoms, - Requires thorough differential diagnosis and exclusion of other causes, - No specific biomarkers, 7. Vaccination & reinfection: - Pre-infection vaccination shows protective effect in some studies, - Reinfections increase longC0VID risk even after 2–3 vaccine doses, - One Omicron-era study found similar symptom burden/severity at 12 months between primary infection and reinfection groups, - Vaccination status did not significantly alter risk, - Number of infections does not appear decisive(?). ➡️The review stresses the need for standardized definitions and longer-term controlled studies. ‼️So, evidence remains limited and inconsistent. While pre-infection vaccination likely reduces longC0VID risk, reinfections (even in vaccinated children) can still trigger comparable long-term symptoms to primary infection, suggesting vaccines do not reliably prevent or mitigate post-acute sequelae once infection occurs. This implies cumulative risk with repeated exposures and that current vaccines offer incomplete protection against longC0VID in the paediatric population. Given the high prevalence (~25%), nonspecific symptoms, and diagnostic challenges, reinfections could meaningfully add to the long-term health burden in children despite generally mild acute disease. The review itself highlights that data on vaccination/reinfection effects are inconclusive and require further rigorous investigation, a key limitation of the current literature. Clinically, this supports continued emphasis on infection PREVENTION (including vaccination) while recognising that longC0VID remains a real, if poorly understood, risk even in the vaccinated and reinfected with a possible major Health and QOL impact. #AvoidSars2 #AvoidReinfections #Vaccination #CleanAir termedia.pl/Journal/-127/p…

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Envidreamz
Envidreamz@envidreamz·
Millennials are facing a cancer surge, and it’s no coincidence. Science shows they are the generation hit hardest by Long Covid. As the prime parenting age group, they are constantly exposed through kids, daycares, and schools, driving repeated Covid infections that are quietly destroying their bodies. This isn’t normal. Time to face it.
Envidreamz tweet mediaEnvidreamz tweet mediaEnvidreamz tweet media
Sarah@SarahMcGinger

spoke to a woman whose 35 year old daughter just died of an "aggressive" cancer. She said, "cancer seems to be taking more and more young people."

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