Monday, November 25, 2024

 

The Lancet: Without immediate action nearly 260 million people in the USA predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050



The Lancet





  • Most comprehensive US analysis of overweight and obesity at the national level and across all states and age groups estimates that obesity rates in adults (aged 25 or older) and older adolescents (aged 15-24 years) have at least doubled over the past three decades (1990-2021).
  • Southern states, including Oklahoma, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Texas, West Virginia, and Kentucky, had the highest levels of overweight and obesity among older adolescents (aged 15-24 years) in 2021—with over half of older adolescent males in Texas and nearly two-thirds of older adolescent females in Mississippi living with overweight or obesity.
  • Without immediate action, the authors warn of an escalating crisis of overweight and obesity across the USA, with 213 million adults (over the age of 25) and more than 43 million children and adolescents (aged 5-24 years) expected to have overweight or obesity by 2050, with equally striking health, social, and economic consequences.
  • With the prevalence of obesity projected to increase at a more rapid rate than overweight, by 2050, around one in five children, at least one in three adolescents and two in three adults are expected to have obesity—with the highest levels continuing to be concentrated in southern states.
  • The authors say these findings underscore the urgent need for policy action focusing on population-level prevention and intervention, including legislative actions to promote access to healthy foods and improved regulation of the food, agricultural, and marketing sectors. 

**For state-level data see figure 4A in paper and appendix 2**

Over the past three decades, there has been a startling increase in the prevalence of obesity across the USA, at least doubling in adult men and women (aged 25 and older) and older female and male adolescents (aged 15-24 years) since 1990, with the number of people living with overweight and obesity reaching over 208 million in 2021—a trend set to continue in the coming decades without significant reform, according to a major new analysis from the Global Burden of Disease Study Collaborator Network, published in The Lancet.

Especially high levels of overweight and obesity have already been reached in several US states, with over half (52%) of older adolescent males (aged 15-24 years) in Texas and nearly two-thirds (63%) of older adolescent females in Mississippi living with overweight or obesity in 2021. Similarly, in adults (aged 25 or older), around 80% of men in North Dakota and women in Mississippi were estimated to have overweight or obesity in 2021.

The study predicts devastating trends at the population level. The total number of US children and adolescents with overweight and obesity is expected to reach 43.1 million by 2050 (an additional 6.74 million from 2021), and the number of adults 213 million (an additional 41.4 million), underscoring the urgent need for concerted population-wide action to reverse these trends and the stark geographical and sex disparities. 

“Our analysis lays bare the decades-long failure to tackle the growing overweight and obesity epidemic in the USA. The catastrophic consequences of the surge in overweight and obesity among children are already evident in the rising prevalence of childhood hypertension and type 2 diabetes,” said lead author Professor Emmanuela Gakidou from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), University of Washington, USA. 

“Overweight and obesity can trigger serious health conditions—many of which are now occurring at younger ages, including diabetes, heart attacks, stroke, cancer, mental health disorders, and even premature death. The soaring health system and economic costs will be equally pervasive, with over 260 million people in the USA, including over half of all children and adolescents, expected to be living with overweight or obesity by 2050. United efforts and urgent investments are needed to alter these troubling trajectories and ensure a healthier future for current and upcoming generations.”

The new analysis estimated the prevalence of overweight and obesity for children and young adolescents (aged 5-14 years), older adolescents (aged 15-24 years), and adults (aged 25 and older) from 1990 to 2021 with forecasts to 2050 (assuming continuation of past trends and patterns) using 134 unique data sources, including all major national surveillance survey data. The new analysis provides in-depth forecasts, broken down at the state level, as well as by age and sex. Adjustments were made to correct for self-reporting bias.

For individuals older than 18 years, overweight was defined as having a BMI of 25 kg/m² to less than 30 kg/m² and obesity was defined as a BMI of 30 kg/m² or higher. For individuals younger than 18 years definitions were based on International Obesity Task Force criteria [1].

213 million American adults predicted to have overweight or obesity in 2050 

Almost three-quarters of the adult population (172 million adults aged 25 or older) in the USA were estimated to be living with overweight or obesity in 2021. The prevalence of obesity rose especially rapidly, doubling between 1990 and 2021 in both adult men (from 18.6% to 41.5%) and women (from 22.8% to 45.6%; see table in Notes to Editors)

The estimated prevalence of adult overweight and obesity was high across all states in 2021. In men, levels ranged from 80.6% in North Dakota to 65.3% in Washington DC; while in women, levels ranged from 79.9% in Mississippi to 63.7% in Hawaii (see figures 1C and D in paper.)

Continuation of these trends would see overweight and obesity prevalence among adults (age-standardized to allow comparisons between states and over time) rise from an estimated 75.9% in 2021 to around 81.1% for men and from 72.6% to 82.1% for women. This would mean an estimated 41.4 million additional adults living with overweight or obesity by 2050 (raising the total to 213 million, of whom 146 million will have obesity).

Concerningly, the prevalence of obesity is projected to increase at a more rapid rate than overweight, and faster among adult men than women. Between 2021 and 2050, the highest rise in obesity prevalence among men is expected in Colorado (up 44.2%) and New Mexico (up 41.2%), and among adult women in Kansas and Colorado (both up 34.9%).  

However, the highest levels of obesity are expected to remain in the southern states, with around two-thirds of adult men in West Virginia and Kentucky forecast to be living with obesity by 2050, as well as two-thirds of adult women in 12 states, with especially high rates of obesity predicted in Mississippi, West Virginia, and Arkansas and Alabama (both around 69%; see figure 4B in paper). 

Interestingly, the onset of obesity has become earlier over subsequent generations. For example, approximately two out of five women born in the 1960s were living with obesity at the age of 45, however the same proportion were living with obesity by the age of 30 for women born in the 1980s, and by the age of 20 for women born in 2020 (see figure 5).

“Obesity is at a crisis point throughout the USA, with every state challenged to some degree,” said co-author Affiliate Associate Professor Marie Ng from IHME, University of Washington, USA. “Over the past three decades, the country has experienced extensive economic, demographic, and technological transitions that have triggered profound changes to food and agricultural systems, urbanisation, and wealth and educational inequalities together with underlying structural racism that all interact to drive population-wide obesity—whether it be the marketing of unhealthy food products to children, the proliferation of sedentary online activities, or food deserts (neighbourhoods that lack healthy, affordable food options) that are more common in racial and ethnic minority neighbourhoods.”

Unprecedented epidemic of childhood and adolescent obesity

The new analysis estimates that older adolescent obesity prevalence rose substantially in the USA between 1990 and 2021, more than doubling in both males (from 8.8% to 22.7%) and females (from 10.1% to 28.8% see table in Notes to Editors). 

In 2021, an estimated 15.1 million children and young adolescents and 21.4 million older adolescents were living with overweight or obesity. However, they impact segments of the American population differently, with older adolescent females (50.8%) experiencing higher prevalence in 2021 than older adolescent males (46.7%), with especially high rates among older adolescent females in Mississippi, Alabama, and Oklahoma (where levels exceeded 59%), and among older adolescent males in Texas and West Virginia (where levels exceeded 52%; Figure 1A and B in paper). 

The new study predicts that an additional 3.3 million children and young adolescents and 3.41 million older adolescents will be living with overweight or obesity by 2050 (raising the total to 43.1 million, of whom 24 million will have obesity).

With the increase in obesity projected to outpace the increase in overweight, around one in five children and at least one in three adolescents are expected to be living with obesity in 2050. The rising tide of adolescent obesity is projected to reach the highest levels among older adolescent males in Oklahoma (43%), Mississippi (39.8%) and West Virginia (37.7%) in 2050, and affect at least half of older adolescent females living in Mississippi, Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Alabama (see figure 4A). However, the largest numbers of older adolescents with obesity will continue to be in California (1.53 million) and Texas (1.49 million) in 2050.

Associate Professor Ng said: “The mechanisms behind the rising obesity prevalence are much more complex than just a matter of excessive energy intake and physical inactivity. Existing interventions which focus on lifestyle-based behavioural changes do not produce sufficient and sustainable reductions in overweight and obesity, especially among children and adolescents. Addressing the structural drivers of population obesity and emphasising prevention must be central to any future strategies. Future interventions also need to account for societal shifts in acceptance of obesity, alongside tailoring solutions by sex and for states with high obesity rates.” 

Population-level prevention and a cross-government strategy key to tackling obesity crisis

The analysis notes that while anti-obesity medications like glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) have a place in obesity management, they alone will not be enough to solve the obesity epidemic. 

As Associate Professor Ng explains: “Given the predicted surge in overweight and obesity, demand for anti-obesity medication will definitely increase, but it is not a silver bullet. With concern surrounding prohibitive costs and equitable access, together with varying effectiveness and potentially serious side-effects, prevention will remain a primary strategy.”

The authors stress that prevention needs to become a much more dominant focus of obesity control and that any policies aiming to tackle the obesity crisis must be a priority at federal and state governments and backed by high-level political commitment. They should also be comprehensive, reaching individuals across the life course and targeting inequalities. For example, given that obesity is intergenerational, the authors say that intervention needs to begin with pregnant women and early feeding practices.

“Rather than relying on individual agency, stronger governance is needed to support and implement a multifaceted whole-system approach to radically disrupt the structural drivers of overweight and obesity at both national and community levels, as well as within households and schools,” said Professor Gakidou. “Federal policymakers must look beyond short-term political goals to target policy interventions not just within the health sector, for example ensuring all children have access to nutritious primary school meals and that there is greater regulation of junk food marketing.”

She added: “Above all, reversing the US obesity epidemic will rely on the government supporting programmes that increase levels of physical activity, such as investing in safe and walkable neighbourhoods, guaranteeing the availability of healthy food to children and adolescents, regulating the food and marketing industries, and achieving environmentally sustainable food systems.”

The authors note some important limitations, including that while the study uses the best available data, predictions are constrained by the quality and availability of data, and for that reason, they were unable to estimate the prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity at the state level. They also note that the definition of overweight and obesity is based on BMI, which might not account for variations in body structure across the population, and that they did not examine racial and ethnic disparities in obesity. Finally, past trends are not always predictive of what will happen in the future, and some factors, like the recent surge in the use of GLP-1 anti-obesity medications could alter the longer-term forecasting trends of overweight and obesity. 

Writing in a linked Comment, Professor Syvain Sebert from the University of Oulu in Finland (who was not involved with the study) said: “A multifaceted, whole-system approach is needed to address the overweight and obesity crisis, with the challenge that it has now surpassed every known level of epidemic progression. Extensive collaboration is needed across all health sectors, and both public and personalised health approaches need to be combined to confront and address the challenge together. There is great hope in new therapeutic approaches, such as GLP-1 analogues, for more effective and well tolerated treatments for overweight and obesity; however, these treatments should not be seen as a reason to abandon prevention efforts. Health-care systems cannot manage the epidemic solely through life-long secondary prevention policies…Hopefully this excellent new report will find its way onto the global policy agenda to aid in prevention efforts for all causes identified and all potential consequences of the obesity crisis.”

NOTES TO EDITORS

The study was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. It was conducted by the GBD 2021 US Burden of Disease Collaborators.

Quotes from Authors cannot be found in the text of the Article, but have been supplied for the press release. The Comment quote is taken directly from the linked Comment.

[1] Extended international (IOTF) body mass index cut‐offs for thinness, overweight and obesity - Cole - 2012 - Pediatric Obesity - Wiley Online Library

US older adolescents overweight and obesity estimates and projections (1990, 2021, and 2050)

US older adolescents
(15-24 years)

1990

2021

2050

Overweight and obesity prevalence males

31.4%

46.7%

54.0%

Overweight and obesity prevalence females

26.0%

50.8%

60.8%

Number males overweight or obesity

6.1 million

10.5 million

11.9 million

Number females overweight or obesity

4.8 million

10.9 million

12.8 million

Obesity prevalence males

8.8%

22.7%

30.6%

Obesity prevalence females

10.1%

28.8%

38.0%

US adults overweight and obesity estimates and projections (1990, 2021, and 2050)

US adults (25+ years)

1990

2021

2050

Overweight and obesity prevalence males

60.5%

75.9%

81.1%

Overweight and obesity prevalence females

49.1%

72.6%

82.1%

Number males with overweight or obesity

45.8 million

85.0 million

103.6 million

Number females with overweight or obesity

41.3 million

86.6 million

109.5 million

Obesity prevalence males

18.6%

41.5%

55.3%

Obesity prevalence females

22.8%

45.6%

58.8%

The labels have been added to this press release as part of a project run by the Academy of Medical Sciences seeking to improve the communication of evidence. For more information, please see: http://www.sciencemediacentre.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/AMS-press-release-labelling-system-GUIDANCE.pdf if you have any questions or feedback, please contact The Lancet press office pressoffice@lancet.com  
 

 

Generation of rat offspring from ovarian oocytes by Cross-species transplantation




Niigata University
A diagram showing production of rat offspring by xenotransplantation 

image: 

The researchers xenotransplanted rat ovaries into renal capsules of immunodeficient mice. After transplantation, rat oocytes were retrieved from the mice, matured and fertilized in vitro. Finally, the rat embryos were transferred to recipient rats and offspring were obtained.

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Credit: Niigata University and University of Toyama




Niigata and Toyama, Japan - The idea of maturing oocytes in the ovary to produce offspring has been implemented in various ways. One such method, ovarian transplantation, is a relatively simple procedure for obtaining eggs, compared to in vitro culture of ovaries and follicles. However, it is still difficult to transplant ovaries into cellular immunodeficient mice and produce offspring from the eggs grown in the mice.

In order to produce offspring from xenotransplanted ovaries, Japanese researchers at Niigata University and University of Toyama conducted a study to establish a system to produce offspring from eggs obtained by transplanting rat ovaries into mice.

The researchers implanted rat ovaries under the renal capsules of immunodeficient mice and confirmed their viability. Then, they administered hormones related to oocyte development and succeeded in obtaining mature rat eggs. These eggs were found to develop normally when fertilized in vitro and to become embryos or offspring when transplanted into the rat uterus. When the ovaries from rats expressing a fluorescent protein throughout the body were used for donner, resulting in rat offspring expressing the fluorescent protein. It was confirmed that this genetic trait is inherited to the next generation. These results were published in Scientific Reports on August 29, 2024.

"There have been reports on the acquisition of eggs and embryos using interspecies ovarian transplantation into mouse recipients, but there are no successful cases of offspring production. In this study, we were able to produce fertilized eggs and offspring, overcoming this tough challenge," says Runa Hirayama, a graduate student at the University of Toyama.

An important point in producing offspring by this method was to obtain mature eggs from the transplanted ovaries. After administering hormones to transplanted mice, both mature and immature eggs were obtained from the transplanted ovaries. Mature eggs could be fertilized immediately after acquisition, while immature eggs needed to be matured before fertilization. In this study, we found that the percentage of eggs that matured and were cultured in vitro and produced offspring was very low, and that the maturity when the eggs were obtained from the ovary was critical for increasing the birth rate.

"This new offspring production system has the potential for the generation of genetically modified rats and could become one of the most effective methods of animal offspring production," says Dr. Hiroaki Taketsuru of Niigata University. This achievement will not only facilitate the production of genetically modified animals, but also be applied to the creation of offspring of all types of animals, as well as reproductive medicine.

 

Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group




Hospital is recognized for its commitment to patient safety for the ninth time since 2019




University of Southern California - Health Sciences

Keck Hospital of USC has received an “A” Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group, an independent national watchdog organization, ranking it among the safest hospitals in the nation. 

image: 

Keck Hospital of USC has received an “A” Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group, an independent national watchdog organization, ranking it among the safest hospitals in the nation.

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Credit: Ricardo Carrasco III




LOS ANGELES — Keck Hospital of USC earned an “A” Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group, an independent national nonprofit watchdog focused on patient safety.   

This is the ninth “A” grade the hospital has received since 2019.  

“An ‘A’ grade once again puts Keck Hospital among the safest hospitals in the nation, and reflects the hospital’s dedication to maintaining the highest standards of quality and safety protocols,” said Marty Sargeant, MBA, CEO of Keck Medical Center of USC.   

Leapfrog assigns an “A,” “B,” “C,” “D” or “F” grade to general hospitals across the country based on over 30 performance measures reflecting the systems hospitals have in place to prevent errors, accidents, injuries and infections.  

“Every year, The Leapfrog Group raises its quality standards, and each time, we successfully meet or exceed these benchmarks,” said Stephanie Hall, MD, MHA, chief medical officer of Keck Medical Center. “The entire hospital staff works tirelessly to ensure our patients have the safest environment possible.” 

The Leapfrog hospital grading system is peer-reviewed, fully transparent and free to the public. Grades are updated twice annually, in the fall and spring.  

To see Keck Hospital’s full grade details and access hospital safety tips for patients, please visit HospitalSafetyGrade.org.  

This is the fourth such distinction Keck Hospital has received in 2024. In April, the hospital earned an “A” in The Leapfrog Group’s spring Hospital Safety Grade. In July, Keck Hospital earned five stars, the highest rating possible, on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) 2024 quality star rating report, and in September, Vizient, Inc. named the hospital a top performer along with a five-star rating, the highest possible. 

 ### 

Keck Hospital of USC is part of Keck Medical Center of USC, part of Keck Medicine of USC. 

For more information about Keck Medicine of USC, please visit news.KeckMedicine.org

 

Students who use dating apps take more risks with their sexual health



Risky sexual behavior and frequent use of dating apps by US college students may form a vicious cycle, show researchers



Frontiers





In May, the WHO raised the alarm over the rise in incidence of sexually transmitted illnesses (STIs) in many regions of the world, currently running at more than a million new cases per day. Among high-income countries, the US has one of the highest prevalences of STIs, and this problem is getting worse. For example, the incidence of chlamydia has more than doubled since 2000, while gonorrhea increased by 40% and syphilis by 400%. The highest prevalence is among young adults between 20 and 34 years of age.

Over roughly the same period, technology made it easier than ever to find sex partners: more than half of Americans under 30 report using dating apps. Such apps have existed for over 20 years but became mainstream around 2010. Now, a new study in Frontiers in Reproductive Health shows that these two modern phenomena may be linked.

“Here we show the use of dating apps among college students is linked to an increase in unprotected sexual behaviors and a higher number of sexual partners, raising the risk of STI and HIV transmission,” said Dr Jaquetta Reeves, the study’s corresponding author and an assistant professor at the College of Nursing and Health Innovation of the University of Texas at Arlington.

Let’s talk about sex

In 2022, Reeves and colleagues used an anonymous online questionnaire to interview 122 young adult college students between 19 and 35 years old of both genders in northern Texas. Participants were first asked if they had ever used a dating app. They were then invited to give information about their sexual behavior: for example, their number of partners, use of university campus clinics, history of STIs, and practice of condomless intercourse.

Through three open questions, the participants were asked about any sexual partners they had met through dating apps, whether in a committed relationship, as ‘friends-with-benefits’, or hook-ups.

The use of dating apps was more common among White (47%) than among Black students (12%); more common among men (64%) than among women (33%); and more common among people who identified as heterosexual (86%) than among those who identified as gay or lesbian (14%).

The analyses revealed significant differences between participants who used dating apps and those who had never done so. For example, those who reported having more than one sexual partner over the past year were 2.2 times more likely to use dating apps than those with only one partner, while those who reported having sex in combination with alcohol were 1.4 times more likely to use such apps. Participants who reported having their first sexual encounter at ages between 16 and 19 were 1.5 times more likely to use apps than those who reported their first sexual encounter at 20 years old or later.

Students who had ever undergone HIV/STI screened at their campus clinic were 1.8 times more likely to use apps than those who had never been screened, while those had ever tested positive for HIV/STI were 1.3 times more likely to use apps.

The authors didn’t find any differences in the frequency of condom use during oral and vaginal sex between those who used dating apps and those who did not. In contrast, those who reported always or often using condoms during anal sex were 1.1 times more likely to use apps than those who rarely or never used condoms during anal sex.

Mutually reinforcing behaviors

In summary, Reeves et al. concluded that there was a significant positive association between the use of dating apps and engagement in risky sexual behaviors among the students. But which might be the cause of this association, and which the effect?

“Causality between risky sexual behaviors and dating app use likely flows both ways. Dating apps make it easier to find casual partners, which can lead to risky behaviors like inconsistent condom use. Conversely, individuals already engaging in risky behaviors may turn to dating apps for partners who share similar practices,” suggested Reeves.

“To break this vicious cycle, sexual health interventions should focus on integrating sexual health education into apps, promoting safer sex norms through youth campaigns, improving access to STI/HIV testing, reducing stigma around sexual health discussions, and using technology for testing reminders and exposure notifications,” recommended Reeves.

 

Scientists transform blood into regenerative materials, paving the way for personalized, blood-based, 3D-printed implants

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Nottingham

3D printed blood constructs 

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Researchers holding 3D printed PA-blood constructs.

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Credit: University of Nottingham

Scientists have created a new ‘biocooperative’ material based on blood, which has shown to successfully repair bones, paving the way for personalised regenerative blood products that could be used as effective therapies to treat injury and disease.

Researchers from the Schools of Pharmacy and Chemical Engineering at the University of Nottingham have used peptide molecules that can guide key processes taking place during the natural healing of tissues to create living materials that enhance tissue regeneration. The research published today in Advanced Materials.

Most of our body tissues have evolved to regenerate ruptures or fractures with remarkable efficacy, as long as these are small in size. This healing process is highly complex. The initial stages rely on liquid blood forming the solid regenerative hematoma (RH), a rich and living microenvironment comprising key cells, macromolecules, and factors that orchestrate regeneration. 

The team developed a self-assembling methodology where synthetic peptides are mixed with whole blood taken from the patient to create a material that harnesses key molecules, cells, and mechanisms of the natural healing process. In this way, it was possible to engineer regenerative materials capable of not only mimicking the natural RH, but also enhancing its structural and functional properties. 

These materials can be easily assembled, manipulated, and even 3D printed while maintaining normal functions of the natural RH, such as normal platelet behaviour, generation of growth factors, and recruitment of relevant cells important for healing. With this method, the team has shown the capacity to successfully repair bone in animal models using the animal’s own blood.

Alvaro Mata, who is Professor in Biomedical Engineering and Biomaterials in the School of Pharmacy and the Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering at the University of Nottingham and led the study, said: “For years, scientists have been looking at synthetic approaches to recreate the natural regenerative environment, which has proven difficult given its inherent complexity. Here, we have taken an approach to try to work with biology instead of recreating it. This “biocooperative” approach opens opportunities to develop regenerative materials by harnessing and enhancing mechanisms of the natural healing process. In other words, our approach aims to use regenerative mechanisms that we have evolved with as fabrication steps to engineer regenerative materials”

Dr Cosimo Ligorio from the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Nottingham is co-author on the study, he says: “The possibility to easily and safely turn people’s blood into highly regenerative implants is really exciting. Blood is practically free and can be easily obtained from patients in relatively high volumes. Our aim is to establish a toolkit that could be easily accessed and used within a clinical setting to rapidly and safely transform patients’ blood into rich, accessible, and tuneable regenerative implants”.

Peptide blood material [VIDEO] | 


 

‘Cool’ white car headlights more likely to dazzle moths




University of Exeter




“Cool” white lights – such as those in modern car headlights – endanger moths by causing them to fly erratically, new research shows.

University of Exeter scientists exposed moths to shorts bursts of light, simulating car headlights, then observed their flight patterns.

They found that the "cool" white phosphor-coated LEDs used in modern car headlights dazzled moths and affected their flight.

Moths exposed to this light were 80% more likely to fly erratically or towards the light, compared to those exposed to other lights – and 25 times more likely to fly in these abnormal ways compared to a control group not exposed to any light.

Moths are important pollinators, pests, and prey. In the UK alone there are over 2,500 species, many of which are showing rapid population declines, with similar trends worldwide.

Light pollution is implicated in their declines and most studies have focused on the effect of streetlights. However, vehicle headlights create intense pulses of light along road networks that extend deep into rural and “dark sky” areas.

“Vehicle headlights are becoming ever brighter and bluer,” said Dr Jolyon Troscianko, of the Centre for Ecology and Conservation on Exeter’s Penryn Campus in Cornwall.

“In humans, our pupils can change size in less than a second in response to dazzling glare, but in insects the process can take tens of minutes, potentially making them highly vulnerable.

“Moths that fly towards car headlights may be killed in a collision, while erratic flight also wastes energy and may increase the risk from predators such as bats.

“Many moths are only active for a very short time at night, so this disruption could interfere with their ability to feed and find mates.”

The research team caught and released 428 moths from 64 species on the Penryn Campus, exposing each moth to one of the following for 10 seconds immediately before release:

  • “Cool” (blue-shifted) white phosphor-coated LEDs.
  • “Warm” (amber-shifted) white phosphor-coated LEDs.
  • “Cool” RGB (Red-Green-Blue) LEDs – light from three LEDs of different colours.
  • “Warm” RGB LEDs.
  • No light (control group).

On release, moths from the light-free control group typically flew either up or down.

Those exposed to the cool phosphor-coated LEDs were more likely to fly towards the light, or in tight circles (something rarely seen in moths when night-lighting is not present).

“Simply by switching to warmer-coloured LEDs or different LED technology, we can dramatically reduce their impact on moths,” said Madeleine Fabusova, who collected the data as part of her MSci in Conservation Biology and Ecology at the University of Exeter.

“The phosphor-coated cool LEDs were more harmful than RGB LEDs that have an identical white colour to human vision.

“Our results were remarkably consistent across different moth species.

“Reducing the blue spectrum in headlights may therefore benefit moths, the flowers they pollinate, and the animals that feed on them.”

Commenting on the trend for brighter, bluer headlights, Professor Kevin Gaston, of the Environment and Sustainability Institute at the University of Exeter, said: “There’s no safety benefit to humans from these blue lights compared to lights with more red and green – the current trends appear to come from car manufacturers.

“Car manufacturers, consumers and policymakers could all play a role in making a fairly simple change to reduce our impact on the natural world.”

The study was funded by the Natural Environment Research Council.

The paper, published in the journal Biology Letters, is entitled: “Pulsed artificial light at night alters moth flight behaviour.”

 

New study provides first evidence of African children with severe malaria experiencing partial resistance to world’s most powerful malaria drug




American Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene




NEW ORLEANS (November 14, 2024) — A new study from Uganda provides the first evidence to date that resistance to a lifesaving malaria drug may be emerging in the group of patients that accounts for most of the world’s malaria deaths: young African children suffering from serious infections. The study, presented today at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene and published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), documented partial resistance to the malaria drug artemisinin in 11 of 100 children, ages 6 months to 12 years, who were being treated for “complicated” malaria, that is, malaria with signs of severe disease caused by the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum.

Also, 10 patients who were thought to have been cured suffered a repeat malaria attack within 28 days from the same strain of malaria that caused the original infection, suggesting that the initial treatment did not fully kill the infecting parasites.

“This is the first study from Africa showing that children with malaria and clear signs of severe disease are experiencing at least partial resistance to artemisinin,” said Chandy John, MD, MS, director of the Indiana University School of Medicine Ryan White Center for Infectious Diseases and Global Health, who is a co-author of the study along with colleagues Ruth Namazzi and Robert Opoka from Makerere University in Kampala in Uganda, Ryan Henrici from University of Pennsylvania, and Colin Sutherland from London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

John, who is a former ASTMH president said, “It’s also the first study showing a high rate of African children with severe malaria experiencing a subsequent malaria episode with the same strain within 28 days of standard treatment with artesunate, a derivative of artemisinin, and an artemisinin combination therapy (ACT).”

The arrival of artemisinin therapies some 20 years ago was a major advance in the global fight against malaria due to their power to rapidly cure infections — and because malaria parasites had developed resistance to other drugs. In 2008, there were reports from Cambodia noting partial resistance to artemisinin. By 2013 there was evidence that in some patients, the drug was completely failing. In the last few years, there has been increasing evidence that artemisinin resistance has now spread from that region into East Africa. The prospect of artemisinin losing its efficacy is particularly alarming for Africa and especially for African children. The region accounts for 95% of the 608,000 people who die from malaria each year and a large majority of malaria deaths in Africa are children under 5.  

While all of the children in the study eventually recovered, 10 of them were infected with malaria parasites that harbor genetic mutations that have been linked to artemisinin-resistance in Southeast Asia. The study noted that while these mutations have been documented in Africa in less severe cases, this was the first time they have been seen in parasites that were causing complicated malaria in hospitalized African children. The term “complicated” malaria is used to define cases where the disease is at risk of causing potentially life-threatening complications, like severe anemia or brain-related problems known as cerebral malaria.

John said that researchers classified patients as suffering from partial resistance based on the World Health Organization’s defined half-life cutoff for parasite clearance of more than five hours, meaning requiring more than five hours to reduce a patient’s parasite burden by 50%. Two children required longer than the standard maximum of three days of artesunate therapy because they failed to clear their parasites with three days of therapy. He said longer treatment times increase the risk of poor outcomes. Also, he said that in Southeast Asia, the path to broadly resistant malaria parasites started with evidence of partial artemisinin resistance, and the concern is that pattern will be repeated in sub-Saharan Africa.

The Ugandan children in the study received what is considered to be the gold standard for treating complicated malaria infections: an intravenous infusion of artesunate followed by oral treatment with an ACT that combines another derivative of artemisinin, a drug called artemether, with the malaria drug lumefantrine.

John said the relatively high number of recurrent cases raises concerns that the efficacy of lumefantrine also may be declining. The drug is paired with artemether to make it harder for parasites to develop artemisinin resistance and also because lumefantrine stays in the body longer than artemether. Therefore, it can kill any remaining parasites not cleared by the shorter-acting artemisinin. 

John said the study emerged from ongoing work in Uganda that is investigating outcomes of children who experience episodes of severe malaria. He said researchers pivoted to a focus on drug resistance because they noticed some children appeared to be slower to respond to the infusion of artesunate followed by an oral ACT.

“The fact that we started seeing evidence of drug resistance before we even started specifically looking for it is a troubling sign,” John said. “We were further surprised that, after we turned our focus to resistance, we also ended up finding patients who had recurrence after we thought they had been cured.”

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About the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, founded in 1903, is the largest international scientific organization of experts dedicated to reducing the worldwide burden of tropical infectious diseases and improving global health. It accomplishes this through generating and sharing scientific evidence, informing health policies and practices, fostering career development, recognizing excellence, and advocating for investment in tropical medicine/global health research. For more information, visit astmh.org.

 

Unregulated experts can cause harm to children in family courts in England and Wales




University College London




Unregulated experts appointed by family courts in England and Wales have caused harm to children by separating them from their mothers and forcing them to live with and have contact with fathers accused of violence and abuse, according to a new study by a UCL (University College London) researcher.

The study, published in the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, describes three devastating cases where older children (aged nine to 17) were removed from their mothers against their will, and were forced to live with their fathers despite allegations and sometimes court findings of abuse.

These family court orders were made on the advice and guidance of unregulated experts who proposed to have identified so-called “alienation” – or that the mother was manipulating the children and had unjustly turned them against their father.*

In one of the cases analysed, two children were removed from their mother to live with their father and undergo a “therapeutic residential reunification plan”. The children, who had described coercive and controlling behaviour from the father, escaped in the middle of the night by smashing and jumping through a first-floor window.

In another court case, two children were forced to live with their father and saw contact restricted with their mother despite a previous court having determined that their father had been “coercive and controlling”.

The author Dr Sonja Ayeb-Karlsson (UCL Risk & Disaster Reduction, UCL Everyday Disasters and Violences Research Group) said: “In these shocking cases, the children expressed clear wishes to stay with their mother but were ignored. Once they had been labelled as ‘alienated’, they ended up legally entrapped with their voices silenced and thereby unable to influence proceedings determining their lives.

“These cases show the harm of the ‘alienation’ belief system, which has become a legal weapon that serves to punish and control those who speak up about their lived abuse experiences. They also show the potential harm of the family court-appointed ‘experts’, unregulated as well as regulated, who claim to be trained and able to identify so-called alienation.

“In the analysed case law, the courts went to brutal lengths to reconcile children with their fathers despite the children’s feelings and fears related to living with them.

“We do not know how common these alienation treatment plans and interventions are, but six children are six children too many to be coerced and have their rights violated in this way.

“We must ensure that these High Court cases serve as a cautionary tale rather than providing us with a window into the future conduct of our family courts.”

An unregulated expert is someone who is not registered with and controlled by the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC). Currently, the HCPC only regulates a few specific psychologist titles such as “clinical psychologist”, meaning that titles such as “psychologist”, “child psychologist”, and “family psychologist” are not protected and there are no legal requirements for using them. “That poses a risk to the public as family court users may be persuaded into believing that a professional put forward in the court is clinically trained to assess and diagnose their children,” said Dr Ayeb-Karlsson. “Unregulated experts should not be guiding the courts on something as valuable as our children’s futures.”

Other actions that could minimise future risk to children, Dr Ayeb-Karlsson said, were a cap on experts’ fees, more transparency in family courts, better evaluations and control of health professionals assessing and treating children through the family court system, and an end to the use of the alienation belief system in court.

The study noted that unregulated experts may seem better placed to be instructed by the family court than regulated psychologists by, for example, calling themselves “child psychologists” who specialise in assessing children.

Cases

In one case, not reported by the media, two girls aged 11 and 13 were ordered by the family court to have contact cut with their mother and moved to the residence and care of the father for 90 days, despite the girls alleging coercive and controlling behaviour including digital surveillance, physical and sexual abuse. The older girl, Z, had previously called mental health emergency services providers from her father’s bedroom, saying she would hang herself if she was unable to go home to her mother.

The plan was proposed by an independent social worker, who moved in with the father and the girls to facilitate their so-called reconciliation. The treatment plan ended disastrously after five days when the sisters escaped by smashing and then jumping through a first-floor window. They were found by roadside workers in the early hours of the morning and transferred to police custody.

A number of judgments later, following a period in foster care and efforts to enforce contact with the father while limiting contact with the mother and her social network, Z was allowed to return to her mother but only after an extended period of suicidal ideation and self-harm, while her younger sister X was allowed to live with the parents of her mother’s new partner as also she was refusing to stay in the father’s care.

In the final High Court judgment, the judge criticises the label of “parental alienation”, saying it had been “thoroughly unhelpful, by embedding conflict” and a sense that one parent was right and justified and the other parent was wrong and had acted inappropriately. She lamented that “somewhere in the history of this case we have lost our humanity”.

In another case described in the study, two children aged nine and 12 were removed by the family court from their mother to live with their father on the grounds of “alienating” behaviour towards the father.

This was despite a district judge previously finding that the father had been “coercive and controlling” towards the mother, with “considerable emotional abuse” in their relationship, indicating the children’s rejection of their father may have been appropriate.

The order also went against the wishes of the children, one of whom had described their father as drunken and violent and alleged they had been hit by him.

The order was made on the advice of another unregulated “parental alienation” expert and the use of a tool from England's Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service (Cafcass) that is intended to assess whether “alienating” behaviour is causing or contributing to a child’s refusal to see a parent.

Dr Ayeb-Karlsson said: “It is unclear why the Cafcass Alienating Behaviour Tool was applied in a case where the court had made findings of coercive and controlling behaviour, as Cafcass work according to a framework that acknowledges the existence of domestic abuse as reason for justifiable resistance by the children.

“We may also argue that Cafcass should abandon the use of any working tools and checklists that incorporate the ‘alienation’ belief system, especially after the progress made by the UK Government with the 2021 Domestic Abuse Act, the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women and Girls report on custody violence published last year, and the wonderful progress made by Cafcass this year through their new approach to dealing with domestic abuse cases.”

The family court also ordered the children to continue seeing a therapist with their father, despite the older child, B, saying the therapy was “making things worse, not better”, as their father had not owned up to what he had done.

In the third case described in the study, two children aged 14 and 11 were forced to move in with their father despite the mother having disclosed a history of abuse by him, including against the children. Their relationship with their mother was also severely damaged due to a no-contact order from the court.

The children wrote a letter to their school alleging physical and emotional abuse – “he hurts us physically and breaks us mentally” – but the judge overseeing proceedings stepped in and hindered the Metropolitan Police and social services from appropriately investigating and interviewing the children on the grounds that he had already deemed the allegations to be unfounded. This decision was thereafter overturned by the Court of Appeal.

After almost two years, the children’s feelings were reported to have changed, or their hopes to reunite with their mother lost, as the final order concludes that they are happy and content with their father’s care. The study notes that the court-induced estrangement from their mother “did not cause the same concern and urgency as their previous ‘estrangement’ from the father”.

The peer reviewed article is the first of its kind to investigate the experiences of the so-called “alienated child” facing “reunification interventions” in the family court system in England and Wales. The author points to a serious gap in the research of studies investigating family court experiences from the point of view of the child.

The legal narrative case law study was published in a special issue of the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law dedicated to the pioneering feminist family law and legal scholar Professor Felicity Kaganas of Brunel University London, edited by Professor Alison Diduck (UCL Laws) and Dr Adrienne Barnett of Brunel University London.

* The highly contested concept of “parental alienation” was criticised last year by the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women and Girls, who called upon governments to ban the use of the label in custody and family law proceedings, citing “the tendency of family courts to dismiss the history of domestic violence and abuse in custody cases, especially where mothers and/or children have brought forward credible allegations of domestic abuse, including coercive control, physical or sexual abuse”. 

 

How conflicting memories of sex and starvation compete to drive behavior




University College London





Two conflicting memories can both be activated in a worm’s brain, even if only one memory actively drives the animal’s behaviour, finds a new study by UCL researchers.

In the paper published in Current Biology, the researchers showed how an animal’s sex drive can at times outweigh the need to eat when determining behaviour, as they investigated what happens when a worm smells an odour that has been linked to both good experiences (mating) and bad experiences (starvation).

The scientists were seeking to understand how an animal’s brain decides if something it encounters is good or bad, and how this determines the animal’s response.

They found that by conditioning male worms to have both positive and negative associations with an odour, both memories will be activated when the worm smells the odour, but only one will impact the animal’s behaviour.

The researchers say their findings can be further investigated to gain insight into health conditions where this process goes wrong, such as in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), where memories that should remain latent (dormant) are still problematically influencing behaviours and emotions.

Lead author Dr Arantza Barrios (UCL Cell & Developmental Biology) said: “For our study, we were looking into the brain of the male worm, in order to understand the cellular or molecular mechanisms that determine if a particular memory impacts behaviour. An important part of how we learn is that our brains are able to adapt to new information and override previous associations.”

Co-first author Dr Susana Colinas Fischer (UCL Cell & Developmental Biology) added: “By understanding what a very small worm is thinking, we are able to learn more about the processes underlying our own more complex thinking patterns.”

The study was undertaken with male C. elegans roundworms, a species of worm 1mm in length that is very commonly used as a model organism in scientific research. The worms were presented with an odour that is innately attractive to them, which the researchers say is akin to a person smelling a delicious dinner.

In a series of experiments, the researchers modified the worms’ preference for the odour and monitored their behaviour and brain activity.

The worms’ instinct to approach the odour was overridden with aversive conditioning, in which the worms experienced the odour together with a punishment of starvation. The researchers then sought to override this learned avoidance with further conditioning, whereby the odour was presented alongside a female mate and some sexual experience, so that the male worms developed a new positive association with the odour.

The analysis identified a circuit of brain cells that represents both positive and negative associations with things the animal has encountered previously, centred on a particular neuropeptide (a chemical messenger in the brain) that stores the memories of both the starvation and mating associations with the odour.

The researchers found that in worms that had been conditioned to associate the odour with starvation and mating, both memories were activated in the brain. But only one of them – the mating association – still caused the worm to approach the odour.

The researchers say this indicates that the prospect of a mating reward overrode the prospect of a starvation punishment, even though both memories remained intact – while the worm no longer avoided the odour, the negative memory of starvation was still represented in the brain activity.

Co-first author Dr Laura Molina-GarcĂ­a (UCL Cell & Developmental Biology) said: “We found that even in an animal with a very small brain like that of a roundworm, two conflicting memories can both be activated at the same time, with one memory impacting behaviour and one memory remaining latent.

“The way an animal’s brain can flexibly represent something that is partly good and partly bad helps it to learn and adapt to new information. By understanding how some memories can override other conflicting memories, we hope to inform research into treating the maladaptation of this process such as in PTSD.”

The research was supported by the Royal Society, Wellcome and Leverhulme Trust.