Health Alerts - United States
Public health officials in the United States are currently emphasizing several key alerts and advisories that listeners should know as summer activity ramps up. According to recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updates summarized by Medical Daily, COVID-19 levels are very low nationwide, and hospitalizations have been declining in most states. However, the CDC’s June 2026 COVID Summer Outlook warns that a regional summer surge is possible, especially in the South and West, where prior winter activity was milder and where large World Cup–related gatherings are expected. Health officials advise listeners to stay up to date on vaccination, stay home when sick, and consider masks in very crowded indoor settings, especially if they or their household members are at higher risk. The same Medical Daily report highlights an unusually early start to the West Nile virus season. Positive mosquito samples have already been detected in multiple states, earlier than in typical years. Because West Nile virus can cause severe neurologic disease, the CDC urges precautions against mosquito bites: use EPA-registered insect repellents with DEET, picaridin, IR3535, or oil of lemon eucalyptus; wear long sleeves and pants at dusk and dawn; remove standing water around homes; and ensure window and door screens are intact. Medical Daily also reports an ongoing multistate outbreak of drug-resistant Salmonella infections linked to moringa leaf dietary supplements. At least 119 people in 36 states have been sickened, and 32 have been hospitalized. Brands named in federal investigations include Live it Up, TNVitamins, Doctor’s Pride, MOGO, and Why Not Natural. Health authorities advise listeners to stop using any moringa supplement immediately if it is subject to recall and to check the Food and Drug Administration’s active recall information before continued use or purchase. Anyone with severe diarrhea, high fever, or dehydration after taking these products should seek medical care and mention the supplement. The World Health Organization’s European office and U.S. health agencies are also stressing heat-health planning as extreme heat events become more common. They recommend staying hydrated, limiting outdoor activity during peak heat, checking on older adults and those without air conditioning, and never leaving children or pets in parked cars. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe for more health updates. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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