The World Health Organization renamed the Congo Basin and West African monkeypox variants; irregular daily eating patterns can throw off circadian rhythm and negatively impact mood; concussion studies primarily have male participants.
WHO Renames Monkeypox Variants
To avoid references to geography, specific individuals, and animal species in the names of viruses, the World Health Organization (WHO) has renamed the Congo Basin and West African monkeypox variants to Clade I and Clade II, respectively, effective immediately. According to the WHO news release, the best practice since 2015 when naming viruses and related variants or diseases is to avoid names that could offend any cultural, social, national, regional, professional, or ethnic groups, or negatively impact trade, travel, tourism, or animal welfare. Additionally, with the monkeypox virus being named when it was first discovered in 1958, well before the current best practices took effect, the WHO is working to rename the virus.
Unpredictable Eating Schedule Can Harm Mental Health
According to a Wall Street Journal interview with researchers from Queen’s University School of Medicine in Canada, not having an eating schedule or pattern can have a negative impact on mental health. Elena Koning, doctoral student at Queen’s University Centre for Neuroscience Studies, explained the body’s circadian rhythm can be desynchronized when eating irregularly or at times when our body thinks we should be asleep and that the gut microbiome also changes throughout the day and night. This desynchronization can have a negative effect on mood; however, the exact cause is still being explored.
Female Athletes Underrepresented in Concussion Research
Research on sports-related concussions almost exclusively includes male athletes, The Washington Post reported. This finding is based on a review published in British Journal of Sports Medicine, where researchers analyzed 171 sports-related concussion studies and found that 80.1% of participants were male. Further, 40.3% of the studies did not include any female athletes and only a quarter had fairly even male and female athlete participation. Because of this research gap, it is still unclear whether men and women respond to concussions differently. Researchers suggest this gap could be due to several reasons, including women’s historic exclusion from sports, professional sports organizations with no female counterpart, and the general lack of female representation in scientific research.
Urticaria Diagnosis Challenged by Overlapping Pruritic Skin Conditions
April 23rd 2025Urticaria is complicated to diagnose by its symptomatic overlap with other skin conditions and the frequent misclassification in literature of distinct pathologies like vasculitic urticaria and bullous pemphigus.
Read More
New Research Challenges Assumptions About Hospital-Physician Integration, Medicare Patient Mix
April 22nd 2025On this episode of Managed Care Cast, Brady Post, PhD, lead author of a study published in the April 2025 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care®, challenges the claim that hospital-employed physicians serve a more complex patient mix.
Listen
Personalized Care Key as Tirzepatide Use Expands Rapidly
April 15th 2025Using commercial insurance claims data and the US launch of tirzepatide as their dividing point, John Ostrominski, MD, Harvard Medical School, and his team studied trends in the use of both glucose-lowering and weight-lowering medications, comparing outcomes between adults with and without type 2 diabetes.
Listen
ACOs’ Focus on Rooting Out Fraud Aligns With CMS Vision Under Oz
April 23rd 2025Accountable care organizations (ACOs) are increasingly playing the role of data sleuths as they identify and report trends of anomalous billing in hopes of salvaging their shared savings. This mission dovetails with that of CMS, which under the new administration plans to prioritize rooting out fraud, waste, and abuse.
Read More