logo
Sewage lines: Cape Cod summer hotspot testing its waste for cocaine and other drugs to monitor abuse

Sewage lines: Cape Cod summer hotspot testing its waste for cocaine and other drugs to monitor abuse

New York Post7 hours ago

That's a crap load of partying!
A summertime island hotspot off Cape Cod will start testing its sewage for cocaine and other drugs to find out when and how often residents are getting high, officials said.
Nantucket health officials want to sniff out when drug use spikes — including seasonally and around holidays — to help folks with recovery outreach in the scenic town, the Nantucket Current reported.
Advertisement
'Everyone's got a good idea of what the [drug] situation is, but we have very little direct measurement,' the town's human services director, Jerico Mele, told the outlet. 'When we get away from our gut to getting data, we get a better picture of what's going on.'
Nantucket will start testing its sewage for cocaine and other drugs to find out when and how often residents are getting high, officials said.
Naya Na – stock.adobe.com
Biobot, a firm that specializes in wastewater epidemiology, will start testing the island's Surfside Wastewater Treatment Facility for drugs — also including fentanyl, opiates, methamphetamine and nicotine — later this month, according to the report.
Advertisement
The goal is to potentially team up with drug rehab centers and medical providers to help local addicts based on the results, Mele said.
'If we can get an idea of the standard usage of drugs, we can see if interventions and behaviors change the rate of consumption,' Mele said. 'That can give us a scorecard on the efforts and reducing usage.'
The data gathering project is Nantucket's, well, number two in the world of sewage: In 2020, it started testing its wastewater for COVID-19 and still does weekly.
Nantucket officials said the drug data gathering project will help with recovery outreach.
Kevin – stock.adobe.com
Advertisement
Officials don't plan to post the new drug testing results publicly but may share them with healthcare partners, they said.
It's unclear if the windswept island destination, which has a year-round population of roughly 14,000, currently has a drug use problem.
A report from the National Drug Intelligence Center from 2001 named cocaine — specifically crack— as the biggest drug threat for Nantucket and surrounding areas.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New COVID variant causes ‘razor blade throat'
New COVID variant causes ‘razor blade throat'

The Hill

time5 hours ago

  • The Hill

New COVID variant causes ‘razor blade throat'

Patients and doctors say the latest COVID-19 variant spreading in the U.S. in some cases causes a sore throat so painful it has earned the nickname 'razor blade throat.' The 'Nimbus' variant, which is officially known as NB.1.8.1., is a descendant of the Omicron is currently being monitored by the World Health Organization. 'Your throat is so dry, so cracked, it's so painful, it's even hard to drink sometimes,' Muhammad Azam, a physician with Sharp Community Medical Group in California, told ABC 10. The variant was first identified in January. It has since been found around the globe, including in Canada and at least 13 states in the U.S. Apart from 'razor blade throat,' it causes symptoms similar to other Omicron variants of the virus, like cough, fever, fatigue, muscle aches, congestion, headache, nausea, vomiting and loss of smell or taste, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 'Sore throat has been a part of the spectrum of COVID from the beginning,' said Amesh Adalja, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. 'It is something that we know occurs just like it occurs with many other respiratory viruses.' Most cases of COVID-19 in the U.S. are still caused by the LP.8.1. strain, but the NB.1.8.1 variant is becoming increasingly prominent. According to CDC data, 38 percent of COVID cases stem from the LP.8.1 strain while 37 percent of COVID cases now stem from the 'Nimbus' variant. The agency notes on its website that, given the low number of virus sequences being reported, its precision is low. NB.1.8.1 does not appear to be any more of a global threat than other variants, according to the WHO. The organization also said that the existing COVID-19 vaccines provide adequate protection against severe illness and hospitalization caused by the new variant. Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, a professor of medicine and infectious disease specialist at the University of California, San Francisco, told ABC News that most COVID patients are reporting sore throat. 'I think it's certainly amongst the spectrum of symptoms that you can get, and we know that sore throat is reported by about 70% of patients now with COVID, so it's not unusual, and like with everything in medicine, there's always a spectrum,' he said.

Sewage lines: Cape Cod summer hotspot testing its waste for cocaine and other drugs to monitor abuse
Sewage lines: Cape Cod summer hotspot testing its waste for cocaine and other drugs to monitor abuse

New York Post

time7 hours ago

  • New York Post

Sewage lines: Cape Cod summer hotspot testing its waste for cocaine and other drugs to monitor abuse

That's a crap load of partying! A summertime island hotspot off Cape Cod will start testing its sewage for cocaine and other drugs to find out when and how often residents are getting high, officials said. Nantucket health officials want to sniff out when drug use spikes — including seasonally and around holidays — to help folks with recovery outreach in the scenic town, the Nantucket Current reported. Advertisement 'Everyone's got a good idea of what the [drug] situation is, but we have very little direct measurement,' the town's human services director, Jerico Mele, told the outlet. 'When we get away from our gut to getting data, we get a better picture of what's going on.' Nantucket will start testing its sewage for cocaine and other drugs to find out when and how often residents are getting high, officials said. Naya Na – Biobot, a firm that specializes in wastewater epidemiology, will start testing the island's Surfside Wastewater Treatment Facility for drugs — also including fentanyl, opiates, methamphetamine and nicotine — later this month, according to the report. Advertisement The goal is to potentially team up with drug rehab centers and medical providers to help local addicts based on the results, Mele said. 'If we can get an idea of the standard usage of drugs, we can see if interventions and behaviors change the rate of consumption,' Mele said. 'That can give us a scorecard on the efforts and reducing usage.' The data gathering project is Nantucket's, well, number two in the world of sewage: In 2020, it started testing its wastewater for COVID-19 and still does weekly. Nantucket officials said the drug data gathering project will help with recovery outreach. Kevin – Advertisement Officials don't plan to post the new drug testing results publicly but may share them with healthcare partners, they said. It's unclear if the windswept island destination, which has a year-round population of roughly 14,000, currently has a drug use problem. A report from the National Drug Intelligence Center from 2001 named cocaine — specifically crack— as the biggest drug threat for Nantucket and surrounding areas.

RFK Jr.'s past claims shadow vaccine panel agenda
RFK Jr.'s past claims shadow vaccine panel agenda

Politico

time9 hours ago

  • Politico

RFK Jr.'s past claims shadow vaccine panel agenda

Presented by With help from Amanda Chu and Danny Nguyen Driving the Day ACIP AGENDA CHANGE — The agenda for next week's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices meeting includes some notable differences from the notice posted in the Federal Register earlier this month, Sophie reports with POLITICO's Lauren Gardner. Most notably, the panel will hold two separate votes for the flu shot: one on influenza vaccines and another on influenza vaccines that contain thimerosal. In 2014, before he became health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrote a book in which he alleges the vaccine preservative thimerosal likely caused autism and should be banned — a claim that health agencies now under his control have said is unfounded. Thimerosal continues to be used as a preservative in multidose vaccine vials to inhibit germ growth. But its use in FDA-licensed flu vaccines has declined over the past 25 years as manufacturers reformulated their products and shifted to single-use vials. Most of those contain little or no thimerosal, according to the CDC. The meeting marks the first for Kennedy's revamped ACIP roster — following the firing of the previous 17 members — which includes several vaccine skeptics. No Covid vote: The agenda does not include a vote on Covid-19 vaccines, despite the Federal Register notice saying a vote is planned. Last month, Kennedy updated the CDC's Covid recommendations without a vote from the panel, breaking from tradition. Kennedy removed the recommendation that pregnant women get the shot, and the CDC changed the recommendation for healthy children to 'shared clinical decision making' — meaning children 'may' get vaccinated if their doctors and parents want them to. The HPV vaccine and meningococcal vaccine were also slated for a vote according to the meeting's Federal Register notice but aren't included in the draft agenda. Cut short? The agenda for the advisory committee's meeting includes only two days, June 25 and 26, but the initial Federal Register notice said the panel would also meet on June 27. A spokesperson for HHS did not comment on the thimerosal vote or why the agenda for the 27th wasn't included. WELCOME TO FRIDAY PULSE. For more on what next week's ACIP agenda holds, keep reading. Send your tips, scoops and feedback to khooper@ and sgardner@ and follow along @Kelhoops and @sophie_gardnerj. Vaccines 'THEY CROSSED THE LINE' — Dr. Fiona Havers, a CDC scientist who collected and compiled data on Covid-19 and respiratory syncytial virus before stepping down this week, told POLITICO that HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s overhaul of the agency's outside panel of vaccine experts was her final straw. 'I knew at that point that they had crossed the line,' Havers said. 'As a physician and a scientist, and for my own personal integrity, I did not feel like I could stay and legitimize this process.' The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices votes on vaccine recommendations, playing an integral role in developing childhood and adult vaccine schedules. Last week, Kennedy fired the entire panel and replaced them with members he hand-selected. The first meeting of the new members is scheduled for next week. Havers often presented data to the panel to inform its decisions. I spoke with Havers about her decision to resign and what she will be watching for at next month's meeting. Here's our conversation, edited for length and clarity. What made you resign? [It was a] culmination over the last one to two months of RFK Jr. trashing the vaccine policy recommendation process at CDC. This has been building for a while. Several events have really undermined the vaccine policy process. One was in late May, when FDA officials released this regulatory framework suggesting that only those 65 years older and people with underlying medical conditions should receive [updated] Covid-19 vaccines. Then the following week, the HHS secretary announced on X that the Covid vaccines for healthy children and healthy pregnant women had been removed from the CDC recommended vaccine immunization schedule … Basically, RFK Jr. was making CDC vaccine policy on X without involving CDC. And that was pretty shocking, because there's a very rigorous process in place. Then last week, when they announced the firing of all 17 ACIP members, I knew I was done. Can you share any thoughts on Kennedy's replacement picks? These people are, for the most part — with very few possible exceptions — not the people that should be sitting on ACIP. What will you be watching at the meeting next week? If CDC is presenting the data … the data coming out of CDC is still solid. As of now, I can speak to the fact that the COVID-NET and RSV-NET data is high-quality evidence and can be believed. How those data get used to make vaccine policy decisions is really what's in question right now. Seeing the kind of questions that they ask and what they say may give some clue as to how they may vote in the future. I am very concerned that there's going to be a restricting of access to vaccines for people that otherwise should be getting them, and we'll get some sense of if that's actually going to happen. HHS response: HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon told POLITICO that HHS is 'committed to following the gold standard of scientific integrity,' and 'vaccine policy decisions will be based on objective data, transparent analysis and evidence — not conflicts of interest or industry influence.' AROUND THE AGENCIES GAIN-OF-FUNCTION CUTS — The National Institutes of Health is cutting and suspending funding for gain-of-function research, a move that will impact biomedical projects conducted globally, Danny reports. The NIH's directive, released Wednesday, will immediately terminate funding and other support for gain-of-function research conducted by 'foreign entities in countries of concern or foreign countries where there is no adequate oversight.' The order didn't explicitly name the targeted groups and countries. The NIH did not respond to a request for comment. The agency will also suspend funding and additional support for all other gain-of-function research and has asked researchers who receive NIH funds to identify other projects not yet identified by the agency that fit the category by June 30. Gain-of-function research involves genetically altering biological organisms to enhance transmission or other functions, which can help scientists identify therapeutic targets. Key context: The move comes months after the Trump administration marked gain-of-function research as dangerous. Earlier this year, the administration said the Covid pandemic was caused by a lab leak from gain-of-function research at a virology research institute in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the virus first appeared. Many scientists, however, believe the disease was caused by natural spillover from an animal to a human. The Trump administration's theory, memorialized in a glossy website unveiled in April, prompted President Donald Trump to issue an executive order last month to eliminate federal funding for gain-of-function research in countries such as China, which Trump has criticized for inadequate research oversight. The NIH's latest missive delivers on this executive order. In other research news: The FDA announced Wednesday it would immediately review new clinical trials that 'involve sending American citizens' living cells to China and other hostile countries for genetic engineering and subsequent infusion back into U.S. patients — sometimes without their knowledge or consent.' The order, endorsed by the NIH, is another swipe at foreign research — particularly studies performed in China, which the administration has characterized as poorly regulated. Industry Intel BURR'S LOBBYING GIG — The Biotechnology Innovation Organization, the world's largest biotech organization, has tapped former Republican Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) to lobby on issues related to drug pricing and supply chains, Medicare and Medicaid and reauthorization of the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act, Amanda reports. Now health policy chair at law firm DLA Piper, Burr was the top Republican on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and was a champion of reforming the FDA. Jamie Gregorian, a former senior policy adviser at the FDA and assistant to Burr in the Senate, will also represent BIO at DLA Piper, according to the law firm's disclosure submitted today. The outside hire from BIO marks the third for the group this year and comes as the biotech industry faces a steep drop in investor funding amid President Donald Trump's cuts to regulatory agencies. Earlier this week, BIO hired former Trump White House adviser Matt Mowers and Trump's campaign deputy director Bill Killion, who both now work at Valcour, a Washington-based lobbying firm. WHAT WE'RE READING POLITICO's Jordain Carney and Robert King report that Senate Republican leaders are seeking ways to tamp down moderates' worries about the megabill's possible impact on rural hospitals. The New York Times' Roni Caryn Rabin reports on the Trump administration's travel restrictions impacting medical residents.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store