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Rabies outbreaks caused by vampire bats in Latin America cost farmers an estimated US$50 million every year. (Avalon.red/Alamy)
Bat vaccine can be spread lickety-split
An oral vaccine could curb rabies infections among vampire bats (Desmodus rotundus) in Central and South America. The vaccine is applied to the bats’ fur in a thick gel. The bats can then spread the vaccine among themselves through mutual grooming — licking one another’s fur to keep clean. In a small test, researchers applied the gel to 24 bats in a colony of 117. After seven days, they found that the vaccine had been spread among 88% of the colony. Vaccinating the bats against rabies could stop them from spreading the virus to farm animals without resorting to harmful measures such as poisons.
Reference: bioRxiv preprint (not peer reviewed)
Medical groups sue RFK Jr over vaccines
Six US medical organizations and an anonymous pregnant physician have filed a lawsuit against US health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and the Department of Health and Human Services over recent decisions to remove COVID-19 vaccines from a list of those recommended to children and pregnant people. The plaintiffs assert that the decision that limits access to these vaccines — made by Kennedy without the input of independent experts — is harmful to the public and unscientific. “The secretary’s intentions are clear,” says Richard H. Hughes IV, a lawyer leading the effort. “He aims to destroy vaccines.”
The New York Times | 4 min read
Features & opinion
Time to take stress seriously
When George Slavich’s father died suddenly, the clinical psychologist was well aware of how the stress could affect his health, but his health-care providers weren’t as interested. “The experience highlighted a paradox between what I know stress is doing to the brain and body, and how little attention it gets in clinical care,” says Slavich. He is among the researchers investigating how the body reacts to stress and how it contributes to deadly diseases.
The forgotten, failed alphabet experiment
In the 1960s, groups of children in some English-speaking countries learned a different alphabet to everyone else. The Initial Teaching Alphabet (ITA), made up of more than 40 characters that each represented a distinct sound, was designed to be more phonetically intuitive than the standard one. The idea was to use the ITA to teach children to read quickly, and transition to teaching with the normal alphabet later. But the ITA was scrapped in the 1970s, leaving some children stuck only knowing an alphabet that was alien to the rest of the English-speaking world, with lifelong impacts on their literacy.