“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Friday, June 5, 2020

D.C. Protest. June 5, 2020




Update: Important to note that this is a UDC Law-organized event and while we hope many friends will join us, we do not anticipate such a large crowd at the US Capitol that it will be difficult for individuals to maintain appropriate safe distancing as necessitated by the pandemic.

Dear Alumni and Friends,

The UDC Student Bar Association and UDC Black Law Students Association have asked me to share this invitation to join their peaceful and legal protest march this Saturday, June 6.

Meet up them at the SW corner of Pennsylvania and 3rd in NW Washington, DC at 1 pm. From there, we will proceed to the White House.

All are asked to wear masks - and to wear UDC T-shirts if you have them.

Also please note, Saturday is supposed to be rainy but hot so please come prepared to stay hydrated.

Please see the students' letter, protest rights and COVID-19 warning below.

You can donate in support of their ongoing efforts at www.law.udc.edu/donations.

Thank you,

Joe Libertelli


Dear Alumni,

The SBA would like to invite and encourage you to march with us this Saturday, June 6, 2020, from 1-5 pm.

We will meet near the United States Capitol (SW corner of Pennsylvania Avenue, NW & 3rd Street, SW) at 1 pm. From there, we will walk to the White House. We will hear speeches from UDC Law Dean RenĂ©e Hutchins, Alumna Amber Ivey, '17 and others. We will create awareness about the ongoing injustices surrounding our city and our nation. We wish for this protest to be an educational moment. We will provide “Know Your Rights” handouts to the crowd, as well as other important information about police reform and other actions that must take place for social justice to become a reality in our city and in our nation. Help ensure the collective power of our voices is heard by joining us!

This march will be a peaceful protest. As law students and members of the legal academic arena, we will carry ourselves with poise and elegance from start to finish. In this moment, we represent something bigger than our individual selves. Let us honor the memory of our fallen brothers and sisters, by channeling our justified rage into a united and solemn model of nonviolent organizing.

Because our nation is still in the middle of a pandemic, we urge all participants to take caution and stay informed about the current guidance regarding going out in public spaces. Please visit https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/index.html for up to date information on how you can stay safe. At minimum, we ask that you please wear a mask at all times while you are with us.

We hope to see all of you on Saturday, and encourage you to show your UDC Pride by wearing UDC paraphernalia to the march. If you would like to know how you can assist or for any general questions, please contact SBA@udc.edu.


UDC Law Student Bar Association & Black Law Students Association

KNOW YOUR RIGHTS WHILE PROTESTING

Right to Free Speech…

- You have a first amendment right to peacefully assemble and petition the government.
- You can engage in free speech activity in any public forum (sidewalks, parks, etc.).
- You have the right to hand out flyers on public sidewalks so long as you are not blocking private entrances to buildings.

If Stopped by Police…

- Remain calm.
- Do not run.
- Explain that you are expressing your 1st amendment right to free speech.
- Ask if you are free to leave.

If Under Arrest…

- Do not resist.
- Explain that you first, wish to invoke your right to counsel and second, that you wish to remain silent.
- Do not speak to police or sign any documents without the presence of a lawyer.

Right to Consent Being Searched…

- You have the right to refuse consent to a search of your personal belongings.
- Police can pat you down if they suspect you have a weapon or if you have been arrested.
- You do not have to consent to any further searches.

Right to Photograph & Record…

- You have the right to photograph anything in plain view in a public space.
- You have the right to take note of an officer’s badge number, patrol car information, or police unit if you feel your rights have been violated.
- Police cannot legally demand to see your photos or videos without a warrant.

Right to an Adequate Time to Disperse…

- Police may give a dispersal order if there is a clear and present danger.
- Officers must give a reasonable time and unobstructed path.
- This order must be clear and detailed, including how much time individuals have to disperse, and an explanation of the consequences for failure to disperse.

REPORT ANY COMPLAINTS OF VIOLATION OF RIGHTS TO THE POLICE AGENCY’S INTERNAL AFFAIRS DIVISION OR CIVILIAN COMPLAINT BOARD.

DC LEGAL ASSISTANCE HOTLINE FOR PROTESTERS:
(202) 888-1731

This material is for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. You should contact an attorney for advice pursuant to any particular issue or problem.


COVID-19 WARNING

TAKING PRECAUTIONS WHILE PROTESTING

The UDC Law Student Bar Association and Black Law Students Association understands the importance of taking measures to protect the health of individuals who engage in protesting.

This Saturday, we ask that attendees:
·    WEAR MASKS
·    BRING HAND SANITIZER OR ANTIBACTERIAL WIPES
·    DO NOT ATTEND IF YOU HAVE ANY SYMPTOMS OF COVID-19




Practice Law. Promote Justice. Change Lives.

Global Health Now. June 5, 2020


Jun 5, 2020

GHN News


Allison Bracy hugs her daughter Brielle Bracy, 10, at a protest in Riverside, California yesterday.
Image: Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times/Getty

How to Undo Racism’s Attack on Public Health

America, reeling from crises brought on by police brutality and a virus that takes disproportionate aim at people of color, must now reckon with the racism that paved the path for both.

Racism's impact on health “starts from infancy”: African-American babies die at twice the rate of white babies before their first birthday, says Lisa Cooper, director of the Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute.

The protests against racism are happening against the backdrop of a  pandemic and "the financial stresses of being poor, the social stresses of being from a marginalized group with a history of institutionalized, sanctioned mistreatment by law enforcement," says Cooper.

Here's how the public health community can help, she says:
  • Make the links between social conditions and health clear—it's not about individual behaviors


  • Set the tone for other sectors to follow—like health care, law enforcement, transportation, and housing


  • Bring some of the health equity and social justice aspects of public health into the curricular mainstream—not just in courses and concentrations
Copoer is particularly excited about her Institute's anti-racism training for bystanders that ensures racist and biased behavior doesn’t go unchecked.
"Our fates are intertwined … If we want to be healthier and have more opportunities, it’s not enough to just worry about ourselves," she says.

Dayna Kerecman Myers for Global Health NOW

Global Health Voices




covid-19 watch

The Latest


Global Numbers
  • 6,663,729 cases
  • 391,656 deaths
  • 2,890,799 recovered

Key Developments

2 major retractions: Top medical journals have pulled 2 widely publicized papers on potential COVID-19 treatments: the Lancet paper had raised doubts about the safety of chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine; the New England Journal of Medicine paper examined blood pressure medication as a COVID-19 treatment. STAT

US labs will be required to include data on race, ethnicity, and other demographic data in the results of COVID-19 tests, the Trump administration announced Thursday after facing backlash for failing to collect such information earlier in the pandemic. NPR

Rohingya refugees with COVID-19 are fleeing quarantine in Bangladesh, fearful of being relocated to an isolated island in the Bay of Bengal. New Straits Times

CDC chief Robert Redfield said that police violence protesters need to get tested for COVID-19 amid concern that gatherings could “seeding” events, particularly those in regions where the outbreak is not yet contained—including Minneapolis and Washington, DC. The Washington Post

Related

Does drug touted by Trump work on COVID-19? After data debacle, we still don't know – Reuters

Coronavirus Rips Into Regions Previously Spared – The New York Times

Why scientists are struggling to show how the coronavirus passed to people – Nature

‘People are looking at me’: For many who lost jobs in the coronavirus epidemic, hunger comes with shame – The Washington Post

Egyptian girls 'tricked into FGM' with COVID-19 vaccine – Al Jazeera

COVID-19 Can Last for Several Months: The disease’s “long-haulers” have endured relentless waves of debilitating symptoms—and disbelief from doctors and friends. – The Atlantic

Coronavirus and the Flu: A Looming Double Threat – Scientific American

Pandemics from history - how they inform our response now – BMJ talk medicine

Vanessa Kerry: I treat COVID patients and work with WHO. Trump is risking our health by cutting ties. – USA Today (commentary)

Face coverings to be made compulsory on public transport in England – The Guardian

Science Alone Can’t Solve Covid-19. The Humanities Must Help. – Undark (commentary)


covid-19: vaccines

Gavi’s Shots for All Plan 


One of the biggest questions around an eventual COVID-19 vaccine: Will it be equitably deployed throughout the world?

Inspired by previous efforts around Ebola and pneumococcal vaccines,
Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance has launched a $2 billion funding mechanism aimed at ensuring a COVID-19 vaccine reaches the most vulnerable.

The plan—which is only the first step in a larger effort—incentivizes drug makers to ramp up production capacity by offering volume guarantees before candidates are licensed, which would speed up deployment when the vaccine arrives.

World leaders are getting behind the push, more aware than ever that global vaccine collaboration will be key to ending the pandemic, Quartz reports.

And with rising vaccine skepticism, communication will be key to convincing the public that a super-expedited approval process didn’t skimp on safety, CNN reports.


Related:

Top U.S. scientists left out of White House selection of COVID-19 vaccine shortlist – Science

Bill Gates’ bold plan for when a Covid-19 vaccine finally arrives – WIRED

COVID-19: Three Reasons Why It Is Unlikely that We Get Vaccinated before 2021 – IS Global

COVID-19 vaccine development pipeline gears up – The Lancet

In the race for a vaccine, children may be last to be vaccinated – ABC


violence

Not-So-Nonlethal Weapons


Rubber bullets. Tear gas. Flash grenades.

Used by police since the 1880s, so-called “nonlethal” weapons have been deployed by police to quell protesters this week. Their name obscures how dangerous they can be, Popular Science reports.

The rubber bullets shot into crowds of protesters can potentially “disable, disfigure and even kill,” NBC reports. In Minneapolis, a photojournalist was blinded in one eye after being hit with one.

But not much is known about how police deploy rubber bullets‚ as they are not required to document their use. There are also no national standards for their use. 

Guidelines advise only aiming them at the lower body under of a “violent individual.” But when fired at close range, they can break bones, “explode the eyeball,” or cause traumatic brain injuries—shot from a distance, they could easily hit the wrong target.   


Related: 

I Can’t Breathe: Braving Tear Gas in a Pandemic – The Atlantic 

Rubber bullets can seriously mess you up – Vox

Global Health Voices




covid-19 expert reality check

Immune-Suppressing Drugs and COVID-19


If I take immune-suppressing medication, should I stop so I'll have a better chance of avoiding COVID-19 infection?

Research into COVID-19 and patients who take immunosuppressing drugs is still scarce. However, investigations from Italy found that patients with systemic autoimmune diseases do not seem to have an increased risk of becoming infected.

Needless to say, immunosuppression impairs innate and adaptive immunity and is a risk factor for severe COVID-19 illness. While this holds true for the majority of patients, a subset of COVID-19 patients exhibit “hyper-inflammation"—an immune system activation triggered by the virus. The impact of initiating immunosuppression in these COVID-19 patients is being tested in several ongoing clinical trials.

Patients should consult with their physician on the need to take immune system-suppressing medication. Some circumstances, such as organ transplantation, require long-term intake of immunosuppressing drugs, and abrupt withdrawal poses a risk to patients to have organ failure due to rejection. This, in turn, would lead to hospitalization and the need to intensify treatment—increasing not only the chance of becoming infected but also the risk of a severe COVID-19 disease course.

Andreas Kronbichler, MD, PhD, is a researcher at the Medical University Innsbruck, specializing in glomerular diseases and autoimmunity.

Ed. Note: This insight and others are available in Global Health NOW's COVID-19 Expert Reality Check. Have a COVID-19 question? We'll try to find an expert to tackle it. Email Dayna: dkerecm1@jhu.edu.


your friday diversion

Got Plague? Try Powdered Toad.


Twitter

If you thought injecting disinfectant to cure COVID-19 was the most asinine medical suggestion of all time, imagine trying to cure the plague with a lozenge made of powdered toad and toad vomit.
   

That idea wasn't Donald Trump's. It was from Isaac Newton—yes, that Isaac Newton—“the world’s greatest scientific mind.”

Newton’s musings on the matter are being auctioned off this week, hopefully not to researchers considering COVID-19 treatments.

Specifically: “the best is a toad suspended by the legs in a chimney for three days, which at last vomited up earth with various insects in it, on to a dish of yellow wax, and shortly after died.” 

But to Newton’s credit, we’ve all had to kiss a few frogs before getting it right.

The Guardian

Quick Hits


Earth’s carbon dioxide levels hit record high, despite coronavirus-related emissions drop – The Washington Post

Experts: Floyd’s health issues don’t affect homicide ruling – AP

Yemeni women will die, aid workers warn, as U.N. cuts maternity services – Reuters

Brazil’s Zika Epidemic Worsens – Zika News

A Lyme disease vaccine doesn’t exist, but a yearly antibody shot shows promise at preventing infection – The Conversation

Opioid Addiction Treatment Is More Widely Available, but Only for Adults – Columbia University Irving Medical Center

All this chaos might be giving you 'crisis fatigue' – WIRED

Missed Opportunities for Prevention of Congenital Syphilis — United States, 2018 – CDC

Telehealth wasn't designed for non-English speakers. – The Verge

Latent TB infection associated with very high alcohol use among people with HIV – Healio

'I know they aren't healthy': the energy drink craze sweeping Afghanistan – The Guardian
Issue No. 1597

Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Views and opinions expressed in this email do not necessarily reflect those of the Bloomberg School. Contributors include Brian W. Simpson, MPH, Dayna Kerecman Myers, Annalies Winny, Melissa Hartman, Lindsay Smith Rogers, and Jackie Powder. Write us: dkerecm1@jhu.edu, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @GHN_News.