PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Meatpacking plants increased COVID-19 cases in US counties

Study finds costs to rural economies exceeded $11 billion

2021-04-15
(Press-News.org) An estimated 334,000 COVID-19 cases are attributable to meatpacking plants, resulting in $11.2 billion in economic damage, according to a new study led by a researcher at the University of California, Davis. The study was published in the journal Food Policy.

It found that beef- and pork-processing plants more than doubled per capita infection rates in counties that had them. Chicken-processing plants increased transmission rates by 20 percent. The study looked specifically at large meatpacking plants generating more than 10 million pounds per month.

Conservative estimate

Researchers said both the economic impact and infection rate estimate is conservative. The study looked at infection rates within a county and did not account for cases that might have been contracted at a meatpacking plant but spread to other counties.

"Similarly, our study likely understates true economic losses," said lead author Tina Saitone, a livestock and rangeland economics cooperative extension specialist in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at UC Davis.

The study looked at lost wages and mortality and did not include long-term health care costs, or costs for measures put in place to protect worker safety.

"While we did see an initial ramp up in cases attributable to meatpacking facilities, over time infection rates were the same per capita as counties without them, partly because meatpacking plants implemented a lot of protocols to protect employees," said Saitone.

Driving factors

A variety of factors can drive county-level COVID-19 transmission rates. Saitone said the research controlled for those potential drivers, such as the number of nursing homes or correctional facilities in a county. It also considered stay-at-home orders and other regulations, population density, demographics, economic factors and health characteristics. The study looked at infections within 150 days after the first documented COVID-19 case in each county.

Essential industry

Increased COVID-19 transmission rates have prompted some critics to call for a smaller, more geographically dispersed industry to make it less susceptible to a pandemic and massive disruptions in the food supply chain. Researchers caution that such a move would come at a price, adding costs to a system designed to eliminate them and ultimately increasing food prices. Economists instead suggest research and investigation into the automation and technological innovations that made the poultry segment of the industry more resilient to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Study co-authors include K. Aleks Schaefer with Michigan State University and Daniel Scheitrum with the University of Arizona.

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study of marten genomes suggests coastal safe havens aided peopling of Americas

Study of marten genomes suggests coastal safe havens aided peopling of Americas
2021-04-15
LAWRENCE -- How did the first humans migrate to populate North America? It's one of the great scientific puzzles of our day, especially because forbidding glaciers covered most of Canada, Alaska and Pacific Northwest during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). These glaciers limited human movements between northern ice-free areas, like the Beringia Land Bridge, and southern ice-free areas, like the continental United States. Now, research from the University of Kansas into the whole genomes of the American pine marten and Pacific pine marten -- weasel-like mammals that range today from Alaska to the American Southwest -- could shed light ...

Estrogen status - not sex - protects against heightened fear recall

2021-04-15
Philadelphia, April 15, 2021 - A new study shows that markers of fear recall differ between men and women, but in a hormone-dependent manner. Aberrant fear-memory processing in the brain is thought to underlie anxiety disorders, which affect hundreds of millions of people worldwide. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying these disorders remain poorly understood, but recent studies suggest that neural oscillations in the prefrontal cortex can reflect the strength of fear recall activity, providing a physiological measure. Women suffer from anxiety disorders at twice the rate of men and indeed ...

Water purification system engineered from wood, with help from a microwave oven

Water purification system engineered from wood, with help from a microwave oven
2021-04-15
Researchers in Sweden have developed a more eco-friendly way to remove heavy metals, dyes and other pollutants from water. The answer lies in filtering wastewater with a gel material taken from plant cellulose and spiked with small carbon dots produced in a microwave oven. Reporting in the journal Sustainable Marials and Technologies, researchers from KTH Royal Institute of Technology, in collaboration with Politecnico di Torino, engineered a more sustainable technique for producing hydrogel composites, a type of material that is wteidely studied for wastewater decontamination. Minna Hakkarainen, who leads ...

New research shows breast cancer treatment in patients over age 70 can be safely reduced

New research shows breast cancer treatment in patients over age 70 can be safely reduced
2021-04-15
PITTSBURGH, April 15, 2021 - Oncologists faced with treating older women with breast cancer often must decide if the treatment may be more detrimental than the cancer. A study published today in JAMA Network Open by researchers at UPMC Hillman Cancer Center and the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine sheds new light on this choice and suggests the rate of cancer recurrence or survival may be no different in treated vs. untreated elderly patients diagnosed in the early stages of the cancer diagnosed most commonly in women. "As a breast surgeon, I want to give my patients the best chance of survival with the best quality ...

Forest elephants are now critically endangered - here's how to count them

Forest elephants are now critically endangered -  heres how to count them
2021-04-15
LIBREVILLE, Gabon (April 15 2021) - A team of scientists led by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and working closely with experts from the Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux du Gabon (ANPN) compared methodologies to count African forest elephants (Loxodonta cyclotis), which were recently acknowledged by IUCN as a separate, Critically Endangered species from African savannah elephants. The study is part of a larger initiative in partnership with Vulcan Inc. to provide the first nationwide census in Gabon for more than 30 years. The results of the census are expected later this year. Contrary to savannah elephants (Loxodonta africana) which can be counted directly, usually through aerial survey, accurately censusing elusive forest ...

A neuromagnetic view through the skull

A neuromagnetic view through the skull
2021-04-15
The processing of information inside the brain is one of the body's most complex processes. Disruption of this processing often leads to severe neurological disorders. The study of signal transmission inside the brain is therefore key to understanding a myriad of diseases. From a methodological point of view, however, it creates major challenges for researchers. The desire to observe the brain's nerve cells operating 'at the speed of thought', but without the need to place electrodes inside the brain, has led to the emergence of two techniques featuring high temporal resolution: electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG). Both methods enable the visualization ...

Nerve stimulation reduces pain and opioid use after orthopedic surgery

2021-04-15
A technique called percutaneous peripheral nerve stimulation yields "impressive" reductions in pain scores and opioid use during the first week after common orthopedic surgery procedures, concludes a randomized clinical trial published Online First in Anesthesiology, the official peer-reviewed journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), today. The benefits of postoperative nerve stimulation were "much greater than what we had anticipated, concurrently reducing pain scores by more than 50 percent and opioid consumption by 80 percent," according to the randomized trial report by Brian M. Ilfeld, M.D., MS, and colleagues. With further study, they believe that ...

Lung cancer screening predicts risk of death from heart disease

Lung cancer screening predicts risk of death from heart disease
2021-04-15
OAK BROOK, Ill. - A deep learning algorithm accurately predicts the risk of death from cardiovascular disease using information from low-dose CT exams performed for lung cancer screening, according to a study published in Radiology: Cardiothoracic Imaging. Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of mortality worldwide. It even outpaces lung cancer as the leading cause of death in heavy smokers. Low-dose CT lung scans are used to screen for lung cancer in high-risk people such as heavy smokers. These CT scans also provide an opportunity to screen for cardiovascular disease by extracting information about calcification ...

Potential ways to improve survival for cancer patients who receive fragmented care

2021-04-15
Key takeaways Pancreatic, liver, bile duct, and stomach cancer operations are inherently complex and initially often take place at large cancer centers where surgical teams perform a large volume of procedures. Readmission to a different hospital from where patients had these operations initially performed markedly increases death risk. There are ways to address care fragmentation with newly identified risk factors for readmission; cancer hospitals should seek to determine safe sites of care for readmissions after these types of operations. CHICAGO: New research reveals that 28 percent of patients who are readmitted ...

Patients who are overweight or obese at risk of more severe COVID-19

Patients who are overweight or obese at risk of more severe COVID-19
2021-04-15
Patients who are overweight or obese have more severe COVID-19 and are highly likely to require invasive respiratory support, according to a new international study. The research, led by the Murdoch Children's Research Institute (MCRI) and The University of Queensland and published in Diabetes Care, found obese or overweight patients are at high risk for having worse COVID-19 outcomes. They are also more likely to require oxygen and invasive mechanical ventilation compared to those with a healthy weight. MCRI researcher Dr Danielle Longmore said the findings, which highlighted the relationship between obesity and increased COVID-19 disease burden, showed the need to urgently introduce strategies to address ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

GeoFlame VISION: Using AI and satellite imagery to predict future wildfire risk

Nationwide study suggests that water treatment methods may impact the risk of legionnaires’ disease

Oyster larvae on drugs move slowly and are stressed

Targeting a specific brain circuit may help prevent opioid relapse, WSU study finds

Tec-Dara combination offers substantial improvement over standard second-line therapies for relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma

Improving treatment for an autoimmune bleeding condition

Drug reduced need for blood transfusions during hospitalization for non-cardiac surgery

Novel agent ianalumab added to standard therapy extends time to treatment failure in patients with previously treated immune thrombocytopenia

Pirtobrutinib outperforms bendamustine plus rituximab for previously untreated CLL/SLL

Online tracking and privacy on hospital websites

A freely available tool to document wartime destruction

Residential solar panels can raise electricity rates

Scientists use synthetic platelets as ‘Trojan horse’ drug-delivery system

Cooperative Intermolecular Interactions Regulate Supramolecular Polymer Assembly

Korea University researchers develop ultrasensitive method to detect low-frequency cancer mutations

First patient enrolled in GOG-3133/ FRAmework-01 phase 3 study evaluating sofetabart mipitecan (LY4170156), a novel ADC targeting folate receptor alpha (FRα), in recurrent ovarian cancer

Two Hebrew University researchers win prestigious ERC consolidator grants

ERC grant helps to quantify the impact of anthropogenic air pollution particles on climate

Exercise might help improve mobility during aging

New online tool detects drug exposure directly from patient samples

Learn the surprising culprit limiting the abundance of Earth’s largest land animals

Study reveals new ways the brain regulates communication between neurons

Research reveals new hybrid state of matter where solids meet liquids

Researchers develop a new computational tool to understand how genetic interactions impact human traits

Elephants, giraffes and rhinos go where the salt is

Cancer loses its sense of time to avoid stress responses

The twisted nanotubes that tell a story

Flaring black hole whips up ultra-fast winds

Study explores the link between newspaper preference and attitudes towards autism

Artificial turf in the Nordic climate – a question of sustainability

[Press-News.org] Meatpacking plants increased COVID-19 cases in US counties
Study finds costs to rural economies exceeded $11 billion