MIT spirit in Washington, D.C.

“‘I am deeply sorry for my conduct’: Biden’s top science adviser apologizes to staff” (Politico):

[MIT prof] Eric Lander, the president’s top science adviser and a member of his Cabinet, sent a Friday night email to his roughly 150-person staff apologizing for speaking to colleagues in a “disrespectful and demeaning way.”

“It’s my responsibility to set a respectful tone for our community. It’s clear that I have not lived up to this responsibility,” Lander wrote in an email provided to POLITICO. “This is not only wrong, but also inconsistent with our Safe and Respectful Workplace Policy. It is never acceptable for me to speak that way. I am deeply sorry for my conduct. I especially want to apologize to those of you who I treated poorly or were present at the time.”

Lander heads the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy and is leading President Joe Biden’s “Cancer Moonshot,” an initiative aimed at reducing cancer deaths that had its splashy launch event earlier this week.

The email appears to reference an investigation POLITICO has been conducting into Lander’s treatment of staff, which Lander acknowledges in his email. “I understand that some of you have been asked about this, and I thought it was important to write directly to you,” he wrote. “I also realize that my conduct reflects poorly on this Administration, and interferes with our work. I deeply regret that.”

Biden himself declared a zero-tolerance policy for improper conduct on the first day of his administration. He pledged that “if you are ever working with me and I hear you treat another colleague with disrespect, talk down to someone, I promise you I will fire you on the spot. On the spot. No ifs, ands or buts.”

Lander pledges in his email that “[w]e will take concrete steps to promote a better workplace. We will schedule regular forums to check in with staff on how we are doing in creating and upholding a safe and respectful workplace. We will also ensure that every employee knows how to report conduct that concerns them.”

Lander is probably one of the nicer people at MIT (like being a dwarf among midgets, admittedly), so perhaps this shows that Science is something to follow every day while scientists are best restricted to their labs.

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Report on a Southern Secession (Buckhead City)

On our return from Denver, we stopped overnight in Buckhead, the rich area of Atlanta that was annexed by the city in 1952 and that soon hopes to vote on seceding into “Buckhead City.” Our local host explained that the secession wouldn’t starve Atlanta of significant tax revenue, e.g., for schools. The big difference would be that Buckhead could fund and run its own police force (see “In Atlanta’s Buckhead Neighborhood, Rising Crime Fuels Move to Secede” (WSJ): “Potential loss of the city’s wealthiest and whitest area spurs debate as officials move to address homicides and property crime”).

From what I observed, Buckhead already essentially does fund and run its own police force. The restaurant where we dined and the hotel where I stayed both had hired off-duty police officers, clad in bulletproof vests and wearing guns, to make sure that roving thugs didn’t rob all of the customers. Immigrants from Caracas, Venezuela will feel right at home.

Here’s one from the only part of Umi, our inland sushi destination, that wasn’t too dark to photograph:

Faith in cloth masks is alive and well in Atlanta. Here are a couple of signs encountered on 1/29/2022:

Atlanta adheres to the proven-by-Science principle that if restaurant customers are wearing masks when walking in the door, it doesn’t matter how close together unrelated parties sit once unmasked and talking, drinking, or eating (we saw some counter-serve places with long communal tables that were completely jammed). The FBO where we parked had the obligatory signs reminding pilots and passengers that Uncle Joe’s 1/21/2021 order regarding masks at airports applied even to the world of private planes. Nobody inside was wearing a mask, however.

Our local host was in favor of secession. In his opinion, the city government was incompetent and plagued by nepotism.

(I am not sure how Georgia can compete with neighbors Florida and Tennessee in the long run. The state income tax rate is 5.75 percent (compare to 0% in FL and TN).)

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The 6-year-old hater responds to an interview with a World War II veteran

Follow-up to The 6-year-old hater

We took the kids to the National Navy SEAL Museum (a mask-free and indoor/outdoor experience, like most Florida experiences). The museum was showing an interview with a World War II veteran in his 90s. The 6-year-old asked “Is that Joe Biden?”

We learned that Anthony Fauci was a SEAL (“Using Science to Maximize Success”):

We did not enter the raffle to win a sniper rifle…

The Museum’s yard is filled with interesting boats, submarines, and a very-tough-visitors-welcome obstacle course:

Earlier in the day, we learned at the St. Lucie County Aquarium that high-fertility immigrants make life difficult for natives:

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Unmasked Vladimir Putin braves a stadium packed with the infected

There is a high demand for pageantry in our household, but we don’t have a TV, so I signed up for the “ad-free” “Peacock Premium Plus” streaming service and used an iPad to show the Olympics opening ceremony (which arrived… with ads, disrespectfully side-by-side with athletes from countries that NBC deems unimportant; the Chinese refused to insert commercial breaks, apparently, so the righteous American boycotters (see below) added commercials to the event itself).

Science tells us that only N95 masks stand any chance of blocking Omicron, yet the athletes paraded out using various forms of non-N95 masks. Other than some performers, Vladimir Putin seemed to be the only person at the event who wasn’t wearing a mask.

Given that nearly everyone in the stadium is vaccinated, was in quarantine before and after international flights, and has been tested multiple times for COVID-19, what’s the chance that SARS-CoV-2 got through to the stadium? The official stats page shows that 308 people involved in the Olympics have thus far tested positive:

See also “A COVID-Free Pacific Nation Opened Its Border a Crack. The Virus Came Rushing In” (TIME):

On Jan. 14, the first passenger plane for 10 months landed in the country, which is located about 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii. It may also be the last for the foreseeable future. The plane brought the first cases of COVID-19 to the country; more than two-thirds of the passengers tested positive. The flight subsequently set off a wave of COVID-19 cases in the archipelagos, where 120,000 people live across 33 islands with land area smaller than Rhode Island.

Thirty-six out of 54 passengers on the flight to Kiribati tested positive on arrival. Six others tested positive in quarantine. That’s despite the travelers spending two weeks in pre-departure quarantine, and only being allowed on the flight after testing negative for COVID-19.

The border closures also bought Kiribati and others time to roll out vaccinations. Over 93% of Kiribati’s eligible population has received one COVID-19 vaccine shot, but just over 50% are fully vaccinated.

A few times NBC’s commentators (sports experts?) mentioned “human rights abuses” in China, but their own coverage of the event contradicted their statements. The NBC reporters sounded relaxed. The people in the stadium looked happy and relaxed, including Chinese ethnic minorities such as the Uyghurs who are purportedly victims of “genocide” (we throw this word around and then show up en masse with $1 billion in TV rights cash?). See this statement from the Chinese embassy for another perspective:

The so-called allegations of “forced labor” and “genocide” in Xinjiang are nothing but vicious lies concocted by anti-China forces. Xinjiang’s economic development and social stability is recognized by the whole world. The fact that residents of all ethnic groups there enjoy happy and fulfilling lives is witnessed by all. The US side keeps using Xinjiang-related issues to create rumors and make trouble. Essentially it is engaging in political manipulation and economic coercion, and seeking to undermine Xinjiang’s prosperity and stability and contain China’s development under the pretext of human rights.

It is preposterous for the US, a country with a deplorable track record of human rights issues, to accuse and smear China. The US has serious problems of human trafficking and forced labor. Up to 100,000 people were trafficked into the US for forced labor annually over the past five years. Crimes against humanity against Native Americans in the past constitute de facto genocide. The US should save the labels of “forced labor” and “genocide” for itself.

Xinjiang-related issues are not human rights issues at all, but in essence about countering violent terrorism and separatism.

Who else watched the opening ceremony? What did you notice?

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New Orleans update

The Cirrus Vision Jet is a great machine, but one thing that it can’t do is go non-stop from South Florida to Denver against a winter headwind. We decided to stop at Flightline KNEW for fuel, muffulettas, and beignets in “The City That Care Forgot”.

After a 15-minute drive over falling-apart roads, we hit Cochon Butcher for the muffulettas and they were everything we dreamed they would be. It is counter service like Panera, but the staff check up on tables periodically, e.g., to make sure that water glasses are full and to see who wants more booze (not us!). This seems like a good system for a country where labor is scarce/expensive.

How about the vaccine papers check that resulted in a family trip cancellation? (see Karen orders two dozen beignets and a three-gallon Hurricane and “Children as Young as 5 Now Under New Orleans Vaccine Mandate” (U.S. News, 12/17/2021) and “New Orleans residents prepare for school vaccine mandate for kids as young as 5” (NBC, 1/22/2022)) It was done with a similar degree of precision as refugee screening during the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. My friend was ordering while I was parking the crew car. Prior to ordering, he was asked to show a photo of a vaccine card, but not a photo ID. So the restaurant had no way to know whether the card had any relationship to the customer. I walked in from the street directly to the table and never went to the counter, so my vaccine status was never investigated.

We proceeded to the French Quarter to walk off the sandwiches and build up our beignet appetite. “Most of these people look like they’re on meth and haven’t bathed,” said my companion. The buildings and infrastructure in general seemed to be in rough shape. It was a Monday, admittedly, but the streets did not seem busy enough to sustain the shops and restaurants. Café du Monde is operating in a degraded COVID-19-safe fashion. There are no waiters. You order and pick up beignets and coffee from some ladies working behind a counter, then carry them to a table.

Nearly every shop had a significant amount of signage regarding masks. Following CDC guidance, virtually any piece of fabric qualifies as PPE. An official city poster for businesses, downloaded 1/27/2022:

A saliva-soaked bandana not only qualifies as PPE, but is officially recommended. Alternatively, if you’re visiting from New England, pack a scarf to block aerosol Omicron.

Here’s an example of some disrepair and, if you click to enlarge then zoom in, you’ll see that all of the people walking on the sidewalk are wearing masks of various types:

Voodoo is powerful enough to heal or kill people, but its magic isn’t effective against SARS-CoV-2 without cloth masks:

Hot sauce was powerful enough to propel Hillary Clinton to the forefront of American politics (BBC), but it is also insufficient in the fight against Omicron:

The physical shop behind https://www.themaskstore.com/:

How well have these orders from Covidcrats worked? From the NYT, 1/27/2022:

Cases have decreased recently but are still extremely high. The numbers of hospitalized Covid patients and deaths in the Orleans Parish area have risen. The test positivity rate in Orleans Parish is very high, suggesting that cases are being significantly undercounted.

How does this compare to our home of Palm Beach County, Florida, which is not under any vaccine or mask orders?

#CurveFlattened? Our impression was that “The City that All Recent Economic Booms Forgot” would be a better sobriquet for New Orleans than its trademark “Care Forgot.” Yet median household income does not seem to explain the mournful condition of the city:

(Is the Broken Windows Fallacy actually a fallacy? Katrina (2005) seems to have resulted in an income boost.)

Income in the New Orleans metro area is lower than in the U.S. overall, but higher than in Louisiana overall and it should still be sufficient to keep public infrastructure, such as roads, in decent condition.

Our take-away from the visit: “Covid is the least of this city’s problems.”

See also, OpenTable data from 1/26/2022 back to 1/6/2022:

The tourism-dependent cities of Miami Beach, Naples, and Orlando are much more active, relative to 2019, than New Orleans.

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Adult life at MIT

Excerpts from today’s email from MIT Hillel (Jewish organization on campus):

One trend we have seen is students are still craving IRL (in-real-life) interactions and events, even if MIT rules say no food at events, at least for the first two weeks of the semester. As this new term begins, coffee meet-and-greets have involved in-person conversations and to-go gift cards. Students in some of our on-going weekly classes have voted to still meet at lunchtime, despite the fact they won’t be fed or eat together. We are exploring “wellness break rooms” for puppy petting, or even coloring books and doodling, that students can pop into.

Within the same email, but from a student….

… as COVID seized the globe in early 2020, it became increasingly apparent that I would spend (at least) my first semester of college at the same desk I used for my kindergarten English homework.

Let’s hope that the above-mentioned puppies don’t grab and run with the cloth masks that the #FollowersOfScience typically wear! Here’s Mindy the Crippler (September 2020; see What to do when a family member is an anti-masker?) sharing her opinion of the effectiveness of non-N95 masks….

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Medical School 2020, Year 3, Week 30 (family medicine, exam week)

The clinic staff throws a party for my last day. One of the secretaries brought in homemade rhubarb turnovers. I express my gratitude and they respond with “We take any excuse to throw a party!” I am sorry to bid farewell to Doctor Dunker.

Family Medicine students then go to a culinary medicine workshop at the YMCA. Our school gives us each of the five groups a Visa gift card to buy food for a hypothetical family of four, one of whom has a medical issue, e.g., a diabetic child or an adult with a heart condition. A recently graduated dietician leads the class. She teaches different ways to cut an onion, but is unable to answer our questions about the current popular diets (e.g., ketogenic versus intermittent fasting versus carnivore). After an hour cooking our respective meals (paella, lentil soup, and Korean chicken with rice, etc.), it was time to eat and rate. Our paella won!

Gentle Greg organized a musical variety night at a local bar for Tuesday. Several weeks ago, 15 classmates had agreed to perform, but only 5 showed up due to exam pressure. Greg had to sing every song (examples: Silver Lining by Mt. Joy, Going to California by Led Zeppelin, and Mama, You Been on My Mind by Bob Dylan). 

Exams begin with two standardized patients. The first is a 65-year-old female active smoker presenting for cardiovascular risk assessment and blood pressure management. We had to indicate all the USPSTF grade A/B recommended screenings and appropriate medications to deal with elevated blood pressure. 

The second standardized patient was a 78-year-old cheerful female presenting at the behest of her daughter who wrote a note expressing concern about her ability to drive: “She is forgetting where she parked.” I perform most of a mini mental status exam (MMSE) by asking her to recall three words, name a few objects (a pencil, watch), and serial sevens. I mistakenly forgot to ask the standard “orientation” questions (person, place, and time). Afterwards in the debrief, I learn that the patient believed that it is 1961 and the president is Richard Nixon.

[Editor: Maybe she was cheerful because Nixon was an awesome president compared to Donald Trump!]

The main exam is a 100-question multiple-choice exam on Blackboard. There were several questions on differentiating gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) from peptic ulcer disease (PUD), and on the workup of PUD (proton-pump inhibitor trial versus Helicobacter pylori stool antigen test). Every time a question had statin as an answer, it was always correct. A challenging question: A patient on warfarin for atrial fibrillation recently started treatment for symptoms suggestive of GERD. What medication caused an elevated INR (delayed clotting) test? (answer: Prilosec). I missed a question on what antihypertensive medication is contraindicated in gout (answer: thiazides because it decreases urate excretion).

After the exam, we have a debrief with the clerkship director. Pinterest Penelope complained about the limited time on family medicine: “We learn about all the different stress-relieving practices like mindfulness in this rotation, but we don’t have enough time to practice what you preach.” Clerkship Director: “Yeah, you’re going to be busy as a doctor, get used to it.” Gigolo Giorgio complained about the different format of the exam: “I couldn’t mark questions for review.” Father Fred: “I thought we could’ve done without a day at the nursing home, and instead spend a day with Sports Medicine. I don’t feel comfortable with a lot of fractures.”

Statistics for the week… Study: 5 hours. Sleep: 8 hours/night; Fun: 1 night. For Gigolo Giorgio’s birthday, he requests to go to the gay nightclub for a night of dancing after several margaritas at his downtown apartment.

The rest of the book: http://fifthchance.com/MedicalSchool2020

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What are folks reading in Boulder?

Pictures from the Boulder Book Store.

SARS-CoV-2 has achieved much more mindshare in Colorado than in Florida. Boulder and Denver are the centers of concern regarding COVID-19. As you enter the store…

The #1-selling book is The 1619 Project, which “aims to reframe the country’s history by placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of Black Americans at the very center of the United States’ national narrative.”

(Black Americans may be at the very center of the United States national narrative, but I did not see any employees or customers at the bookstore who appeared to identify as “Black”)

Another prominently displayed book reminds customers that there wouldn’t be any Black or white people here if the Native Americans had been more successful militarily.

Joe Biden might be able to find his next Supreme Court nominee in the children’s section:

Speaking of the Supreme Court, AOC stands next to RBG. Perhaps my dream that Joe Biden will nominate thought-leader AOC to the Supreme Court is shared by others?

(Fortunately, no Deplorable had snuck in to set up a Willie Brown action figure next to Kamala.)

The best way to deal with climate change is stoned and drunk:

If you need pocket-sized constant inspiration:

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Medical School 2020, Year 3, Week 29 (family medicine, week 5)

We start at 7:45 am to read up on the ten patients we’ll see this morning at the clinic. 

The 37-year-old nurse (from week 25) with a large MCA stroke and amputation after subacute bacterial endocarditis (presumably from a dental procedure) is the first to arrive. Two days ago, she presented to the ED as a stroke alert. “We were driving back from physical therapy,” said her husband, “and she just seemed confused. She would ask me something that I had just answered a few minutes ago. I was frustrated and annoyed until I realized that something was amiss. I turned the car around and we headed for the emergency room.” The community hospital ED physician called a stroke alert, which initiated her ambulance transfer to the stroke center and the ensuing work-up: CT head non-contrast, CT head angiogram, CT perfusion study, MRI brain, and transesophageal echo. The headline bill could easily exceed $50,000. After six hours, she’d gotten through the first CT scans and her symptoms had resolved. I look at the imaging studies from the Epic web-link to the picture archiving and communication system (PACS, made by Sectra, a Swedish company ). The patient has no memory of the incident prior to reaching the second hospital. Great anatomy for me to go over, especially with her prior MCA infarct, but nothing acute.

The husband repeats the story when Doctor Dunker arrives. “Did she ever slur her words?” asks Dunker. “No, she just kept asking the same questions.” Doctor Dunker: “And she never had any weakness or sensory deficit on her notes. I don’t think she had a transient ischemic attack [TIA, a “mini” stroke that resolves within 24 hours]. This sounds like transient global amnesia where you are unable to remember new events [anterograde amnesia].”

If she was an “observation patient,” their private insurance might have paid only 80 percent of the hospital bills. Between the previous physical therapy bills and the new flood of charges they’re nervous. I ask if they might qualify for Medicaid. The nurse: “We would have to spin down all our assets, we’ve worked too hard. My husband worked two jobs to pay off the mortgage.” The husband: “It’s demoralizing though, we don’t know what to do.” Dunker: “I am so sorry to hear this. First, if she has another episode like this you don’t have to go to the emergency room. Call here. Of course, if she has slurred speech or weakness in the face or arm, head straight to the ED, but what she had is not a stroke.” He also informs the family about our health system’s charity programs.

After the visit, he explains to me: “I don’t understand some of these ED providers. Why did they order a full stroke work up? She didn’t have any focal neurologic deficits. I can understand getting an MRI to rule out a small infarct, but why does she need a $10,000 CT perfusion study? She is not a candidate for endovascular treatment, and is way outside the window for tPA [tissue plasminogen]. These patients break your heart.”

My next patient: A 61-year-old presents for a two-day history of pain and swelling in his left big toe that started two days ago after his daughter’s wedding. I ask how much he drank? “You know, a couple beers. I was celebrating!” What was served? “A bit of everything, fish, steak, chicken.” My diagnosis: “It looks like a gout flare to me” and explain that we will get some lab work and probably start him on high dose NSAIDs for the pain.” Doctor Dunker agrees that this is his first gout flare and we ordered a uric acid level and started him on ibuprofen. 

Our clinic holds a party to celebrate one of the doctors becoming a citizen. He went to medical school in his native Philippines and then did a U.S. residency. He explains, “There are two options for a foreign medical resident. You can go back to your home country for two years and reapply to work in the US, or you can work two years in an underserved area.”

The area continues to be “underserved” for the afternoon because I have to leave to attend a required “Bystander Awareness and Responsibility” seminar. This is organized by our university’s dean and head of the Office of Inclusion and Diversity and subtitled “A sexual and relationship violence prevention workshop for establishing a community of responsibility.”

The first activity involves the lecturer and her two full-time coordinators asking students to shout out examples of inappropriate conduct. Each is placed on an axis of socially recognized “inappropriateness”. Rape and murder are on the far right; “a bystander would recognize someone being raped is bad and act on seeing this.” We learn that a man yelling at a significant other rates lower on the agreed-inappropriate scale than rape and murder. (Every example of inappropriate conduct featured a male perpetrator.)

Next is a PowerPoint on the Pyramid of Oppression. The small sliver at the top is labeled “core offender” and is supposed by “facilitators” and “apathetic bystanders”. The foundation of the pyramid is labeled “sexism, transgenderism, strict gender roles”. “By changing these stereotypes we can stop the cycle of violence,” explains the dean. “The power dynamics in society camouflage and empower perpetrators.”

She then asks the audience to read out loud in unison statistics from the powerpoint slide:

1 in 4 women will be a victim of assault

30 percent of college couples report at least one incidence of physical aggression.

90 percent of college couples report at least one incidence of psychosocial aggression.

(No sources for these statistics were provided on the slide or elsewhere in the presentation.)

The Dean of Inclusion and Diversity adds “The vast majority of women tell the truth about rape. Only two percent are considered false stories, but this is probably an overestimate because many of those ‘false’ statistics are because of recantation. We can speculate that many of those recanted accounts were withdrawn because of fear and embarrassment.”

We then discussed several cases in groups of 8. “How does the power hierarchy impact the way you as a bystander would behave?”

Case 1: As a bystander, you walk by the surgeon lounge and notice a resident is making two medical students watch pornographic content on his phone.

Reponses:

  • Pinterest Penelope: “I would never question the resident, we’d get bad evaluations!”
  • Straight-Shooter Sally: “I’d provide feedback on the anonymous evaluation form.”
  • Lanky Luke: “I felt that residents were just as afraid of medical students as vice versa because we write evals about them as well.”

Case 2: Several students are having a discussion in a hallway. A male patient comes out looking for ice chips. He asks for assistance from one of the students, referring to her as “honey” and slaps her backside before walking away.

Suggestions from the handout: “I never thought something like this would happen – it’s 2019!… No one is reacting… maybe it’s not that big a deal?… That student looks mortified… I’m uncomfortable with what just happened… does this have to do with gender?… This is a patient, though. Can we say anything?… What if we say something and the patient gets mad?… Should we just let this go?… If we do, will this patient continue to treat all of us and the other staff this way?… What should I do?”

Case 3: A student is asleep in a call room. Someone else (another student) goes into the room even though they know it is occupied. They don’t come out right away, and you aren’t sure that anyone else has noticed.

On Facebook, Type-A Anita comments on Joe Biden’s remarks about asking permission before hugging onstage at a campaign event: “If you think it’s appropriate to joke about making a woman uncomfortable by touching her without her permission, you’re not only out of touch, you’re also an asshole. Boy, bye.” [reference to Beyonce’s song “Sorry”]

Statistics for the week… Study: 6 hours. Sleep: 6 hours/night; Fun: 1 night. Example fun: Grilling with Lanky Luke and Sarcastic Samantha.

The rest of the book: http://fifthchance.com/MedicalSchool2020

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Do universities force students to wear masks forever?

Here are some young people at the University of Colorado, January 28, 2022:

It didn’t look as though anyone over the age of 25 was in the room (a good thing, considering that most were wearing the cloth masks that #Science now says are worthless). The university has forced vaccinations and boosters. “Cases” are plummeting in Colorado (NYT). If the mask order can’t be dropped right now, when can it be dropped? What is the university waiting for? If SARS-CoV-2 isn’t going away, does that mean that the (mostly cloth) masks can never go away?

Some of the nearby signs:

A monument to The Boulder Six, who died from car bombs detonated in 1974:

(The father of students in the Boulder public schools related asking his sons why the cafeteria was self-segregated into Hispanic and non-Hispanic sections. The boys replied that the Hispanic students were “always getting into trouble” and that they therefore didn’t want to associate with them.)

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