It's not a fungus apocalypse. But it's a serious,fisting sex video growing problem.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced this week that the fungus Candida auris (C. auris) "spread at an alarming rate in U.S. healthcare facilities" during 2020-2021. This fungus is particularly problematic because it's a strain that has emerged in recent years, can be resistant to some, or all, antifungal drugs, and has caused outbreaks in hospitals, Dr. Luis Ostrosky, an M.D., fungal infection expert, and professor of infectious diseases at UTHealth Houston, recently told Mashable.
The CDC is taking the spread, which can cause severe and fatal blood infections, seriously.
"The rapid rise and geographic spread of cases is concerning and emphasizes the need for continued surveillance, expanded lab capacity, quicker diagnostic tests, and adherence to proven infection prevention and control," CDC epidemiologist Dr. Meghan Lyman, lead author of the new research, said in a statement.
SEE ALSO: Why the scary fungus in 'The Last of Us' won't cause an apocalyptic outbreakThe research, entitled, "Worsening Spread of Candida auris in the United States, 2019 to 2021," is published in the medical journal Annals of Internal Medicine.
The fungus Candida auris, which is a yeast, infects people who are quite ill and have compromised immune systems.
"To experience a fungal infection, there has to be something wrong with your immune system," Dr. Ostrosky, who is also chief of epidemiology at the academic hospital Memorial Hermann, explained. This includes people who have had organ transplants or other major, life-saving surgeries, as well as those undergoing cancer treatments, he said.
"In general, C. auris is not a threat to healthy people."
People in hospitals who are unwell are particularly susceptible to Candia auris. "People who are very sick, have invasive medical devices, or have long or frequent stays in healthcare facilities are at increased risk for acquiring C. auris," the CDC said.
Fortunately, like with most fungal spores, healthy people are not the group being infected or at risk. "In general, C. auris is not a threat to healthy people," the agency noted. That's because our advanced, healthy immune systems constantly combat fungal spores, and keep such foreign fungi microbes at bay. (For example, we inhale fungal spores every time we go outside.) "Humans are really, really good at staving off fungal infections," Vincent Bruno, a scientist at the Institute for Genome Sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine who researches fungal diseases, told Mashable this year.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Want more scienceand tech news delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newslettertoday.
But for those infected with Candia auris, the CDC is raising the alarm because it's often resistant to multiple antifungal drugs that doctors use to treat Candida infections. Candida auris is a newly emerged strain of the fungus Candida, which already causes some 25,000 infections annually. Some 30 to 60 percent of people infected with C. aurishave died, the CDC said. "However, many of these people had other serious illnesses that also increased their risk of death," the agency noted.
Since 2016, the CDC has been increasingly concerned about Candida auris. That's when the health agency received reports that the fungus was resistant to medicines in other parts of the world.
"It seemed hard to believe," the CDC wrote. "CDC fungal experts had never received a report describing a Candida infection resistant to all antifungal medications, let alone Candida that spreads easily between patients."
Reported cases, though overall low in numbers, have been rising significantly since 2015. Cases increased 318 percent in 2018, compared to the previous few years, resulting in a total of 323 clinical cases.
Crucially, Candida auris cases have only increased each year since 2016. "Nationwide, clinical cases rose from 476 in 2019 to 1,471 in 2021," the CDC just concluded.
Case counts again increased in 2022, the agency noted.
A number of factors may contribute to these rising numbers, the agency notes. This includes poor infection control, more screening to detect the infection (a good thing), and increased fungal spread during a time of great strain on the healthcare system during peaks of the COVID pandemic hospitalizations.
To limit the spread, the CDC is sounding the alarm to aid healthcare facilities in identifying the infectious fungus, and how to contain the microbe in places like hospitals and nursing homes.
This story was originally published on March 21, and has been updated with more information about Candida auris.
'Despacito' is officially the song of summer, and here’s whyRyan Seacrest will host new 'American Idol'Socially responsible investing is getting easier with help from BettermentNew iOS update fixes a very dangerous bugThe ban on laptops on flights from the Middle East is finally overWhatsapp users in China report issues sending pictures and video, fearing censorshipAtari's Speakerhat with builtKids narrate the tough parts of growing up in cheeky animated videosA melty duck is the biggest internet mystery of our timeAre Amazon's prices too good to be true? The U.S. government wants to find out.Side Hustle Pro is the perfect entrepreneurship podcastDonald Trump's presidency will impact your Lana del Rey concert experience'Stargate' returns with new digital series based on the early life of Catherine LangfordThe legacy of Boaty McBoatface lives on with ... Trainy McTrainfaceMozilla will record your voice for the next generation of voice apps'Game of Thrones' has brought winter to ComicOur first look at Donald Glover as Lando Calrissian is a major teaseIt turns out Apple is funding a legal battle against a rivalThe internet is having none of this ice creamHackers stole $85 million in Ether to save it from *the real crooks Poetry Rx: You Have Become Everything You Needed To Become by Claire Schwartz Wordle November 29: See the answer and hints Shein exploited marginalized women for their brand trip. It worked. Cooking with Bohumil Hrabal by Valerie Stivers Apple Card ends partnership with Goldman Sachs: 3 reasons we saw it comin' The Faces of Ferrante by Miranda Popkey Staff Picks: Good Guys, Goose Fat, and Ghosts of Mars by The Paris Review Cyber Week unlocked phone deals: Apple, Google, Samsung, more ChatGPT's 'make it more' is a new trend that takes images to their absolute limit Toward a More Radical Selfie by India Ennenga Yan Lianke Illuminates Contemporary China by Carlos Rojas One Missing Piece by Jill Talbot On Can Xue’s ‘Love in the New Millennium’ GTA 6 release date may be closer than you thought — preorders reportedly launch soon Poetry Rx: There’s No Going Home by Claire Schwartz Harry Potter and the Secret Gay Love Story by James Frankie Thomas Is the internet bad for mental health? New study has an answer. Staff Picks: Sports, Sontag, and Scheherazade by The Paris Review Why is everyone delulu online? The Labyrinth of Saul Steinberg by Harold Rosenberg
2.7984s , 10521.5703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【fisting sex video】,Warmth Information Network