COVID-19 NEWS (image of covid cell)

LSU Health Shreveport Responds to COVID-19 Crisis   

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MEDIA CONTACTS:

If you would like more information on any story seen here, efforts of LSU Health Shreveport during the COVID-19 pandemic, or are interested in interviewing one of our faculty members, please contact: 

Lisa Babin
Executive Director of Public Affairs, Communications and Development
Email: lisa.babin@lsuhs.edu

   

NEWS ON COVID-19 / FROM LSU HEALTH SHREVEPORT

two gloved hands holding a syringe inserted into a COVID vaccine bottle

The Mercury News - “Through multiple immunizations, your repertoire of immune cells expands,” said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, who studies variant mutations. “Your body learns to make these very potent antibodies that are active against multiple strains of the virus."

Read More about Another COVID vaccine? Yes, and hereā€™s why (opens in new window/tab)
Text over covid cell list of symptoms for new variants: fever or chills, fatigue, brain fog, difficulty breathing, muscle aches, new loss of taste or smell

Shreveport Times - Dr. Krista Queen, Director of the Viral Genomics and Surveillance Center for Emerging Viral Threats at LSUHS, said, "FLiRT is an interesting name for this new variant and it's referring to a couple of different mutations that are present and actually it's not just one variant, it's a group of variants."

Read More about Is Louisiana headed for a COVID surge with new variants? LSUHS researcher explains (opens in new window/tab)
Coronavirus FAQ: How long does my post-COVID protection last? When is it booster time?

NPR Red River Radio -  Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, says that if you get a mild infection, "your body's not going to respond with its most heavy armaments as it would when you get a [more severe] infection." That latter bodily response is what triggers longer lasting immunity. 

Read More about Coronavirus FAQ: How long does my post-COVID protection last? When is it booster time? (opens in new window/tab)
first sequence of SARS-CoV-2 (shown in infected cells)  - NIAID/FLICKR

Science - Lawmakers say delay in making the sequence public held up vaccine work. The never-completed GenBank submission was “a huge missed opportunity” to start to develop drugs, diagnostics, and vaccines earlier, agrees virologist Jeremy Kamil of LSUHS.

Read More about First SARS-CoV-2 genome was deposited in U.S. database earlier than previously known (opens in new window/tab)
man wrapped in a blanket, woman with temperature thermometer and hand on man's head

NPR Red River Radio - "The most reliable data shows that a surge is happening," says Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS. If your whole family gets COVID, isolating will only "cause you inconvenience and additional misery on top of feeling tired and ill."

Read More about Coronavirus FAQ: Are we in a surge? How do you cope if your whole family catches it?
woman administering vaccine in arm of person

The Wall Street Journal - Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, says Covid-19 is constantly evolving and finding ways to evade our immune system. The antibodies produced in response to an earlier infection or vaccination might not be as effective at staving off a new variant.

Read More about Covid JN.1 Variant Is Driving Nearly Half of Cases: What to Know, Including Symptoms (opens in new window/tab)
woman wearing a surgical mask sitting in a plane

KTBS3 - Dr. John Vanchiere, LSUHS associate professor of Pediatrics, emphasizes the prudence of mask-wearing, especially within the confines of airports and aircraf, advocating for the use of a simple surgical mask, highlighting its effectiveness in reducing the risk of viral transmission. 

Read More about Infectious disease expert urges wearing masks on flights this Thanksgiving (opens in new window/tab)
man speaking, text overlay - covid-19 subvarient spikes

KTAL6 - The medical community advises high-risk people to continue to use precautions such as wearing a mask, keeping their distance, and washing their hands.  Most people who become infected will have a mild case.

Read More about NW Louisiana sees an increase in COVID infections; most have mild symptoms (opens in new window/tab)
three women in a lab

Shreveport Times - "Knowledge is power," said Dr. Krista Queen. "If you get tested and you're positive, you can implement some changes to make sure you reduce the risk to those around you."

Read More about Testing, vaccines, lockdowns and masks: LSU Health doctor explains new COVID variant risks (opens in new window/tab)
The names for COVID variants are a confusing alphabet soup. Hereā€™s why it got so muddled.

Webtimes.UK - Dr. Jeremy Kamil, Associate Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at LSUHS shares, "I’d rather have people complaining that we’re not naming enough than that we’re naming too many. It’s like if you sound a fire alarm all the time, people will stop evacuating the building quickly.”

Read More about The names for COVID variants are a confusing alphabet soup. Hereā€™s why it got so muddled. (opens in new window/tab)
three women in a lab

KTAL 6 - Dr. Krista Queen, Director of Viral Genomics and Surveillance for the Center for Emerging Threats at LSUHS, shares there’s increased transmissibility of the new variant, ... but we’re not seeing increased disease severity.

Read More about COVID-19 hospitalizations in Louisiana increasing amid new variant (opens in new window/tab)
PFIZER photo via Associated Press of vials of COVID-19 vaccine during production in Kalamazoo, MI

SB Advocate - LSUHS Associate Director for Clinical Outreach, Dr. John Vanchiere said, "Based on the pattern of COVID activity over the past three years, we do expect to see a winter-time spike in COVID cases, probably beginning in December and peaking in February..."

Read More about Could COVID become like the flu in Louisiana? Here's how the virus is changing. (opens in new window/tab)
three women in a lab

The Center for Emerging Viral Threats at LSUHS recently sequenced the first instances in Louisiana of the XBB.1.16 and XBB.1.9.1 variants. "Detecting these very recently emerging variants demonstrates the robustness of our efforts,” said Krista Queen, PhD, Director of Viral Genomics and Surveillance.

Read More about CEVT Continues to Expand Viral Sequencing Efforts, Sequences Two Omicron Subvariants Becoming More Prevalent in the U.S.
New Data Links Pandemic's Origin to Racoon Dogs at Wuhan Market

NY Times - Genetic samples from the market were recently uploaded to an international database and then removed after scientists asked China about them. LSUHS virologist, Dr. Jeremy Kamil said that fell short of conclusive evidence that an infected animal had set off the pandemic.

Read More about New Data Links Pandemic's Origin to Racoon Dogs at Wuhan Market (opens in new window/tab)
gate with police tape blocking entrance to wuhan market

ABC News - Researchers analyzed genetic data from samples taken at the Wuhan market. "In samples with a hot amount of virus, there was not a trivial amount of DNA and RNA of raccoon dogs," Dr. Jeremy Kamil, associate professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS, told ABC News.

Read More about New report suggests COVID pandemic's origins linked to raccoon dogs at Wuhan market (opens in new window/tab)
COVID lab-leak theory gets boost as Energy Department joins FBI in leaning toward it: WSJ

FORTUNE - "The studies don't exclude other hypotheses entirely. But they absolutely are pushing it toward an animal origin,” virologist Jeremy Kamil, at LSU Health Shreveport, told NPR at the time.

Read More about COVID lab-leak theory gets boost as Energy Department joins FBI in leaning toward it: WSJ (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS Virologist Urges People to get COVID Booster ahead of Mardi Gras

KTBS3 - “It’s important not to trivialize this virus. We’re all back to living as we did before, and I think the best tool we have in our arsenal is to stay current on the vaccine doses,” said Dr. Jeremy Kamil, virologist at LSUHS.

Read More about LSUHS Virologist Urges People to get COVID Booster ahead of Mardi Gras (opens in new window/tab)
Is Northwest Louisiana headed for a COVID surge in 2023? Wastewater may hold the answer

Shreveport Times - The Center of Excellence for Emerging Viral Threats (CEEVT) and its wastewater monitoring laboratory at LSU Health Shreveport have been testing wastewater samples to monitor the spread of COVID-19 in local communities.

Read More about Is Northwest Louisiana headed for a COVID surge in 2023? Wastewater may hold the answer (opens in new window/tab)
COVID making a comeback in Northwest Louisiana

KTAL6 - Dr. Krista Queen with LSUHS says the COVID positivity rate in our area population is six percent. About two months ago, it was just below five percent. She says this is due to social dynamics returning to pre-pandemic norms and people not taking the same precautions.

Read More about COVID making a comeback in Northwest Louisiana (opens in new window/tab)
A stunning 300 new COVID variants are circling the globe. Which ones will break through in the Bay Area?

Mercury News - The (new) variants look a lot like the virus that was the template of our new bivalent booster, so vaccination still works. “It’s not a perfect match … but it’s close,” said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, who studies variant mutations. “In most cases, that’s going to keep the infection in check.”

Read More about A stunning 300 new COVID variants are circling the globe. Which ones will break through in the Bay Area?
What you need to know about the Bivalent Vaccine for protection against COVID-19

318 Forum - Dr. John Vanchiere, professor of medicine and pediatrics, director of community testing and vaccinations and principal investigator for the Pfizer Vaccine Trial in north Louisiana at LSUHS, shares, "The CDC recommends that people ages 12 years and older receive one dose of the updated COVID-19 bivalent booster vaccine if it has been at least two months since their last vaccine dose."

Read More about What you need to know about the Bivalent Vaccine for protection against COVID-19 (opens in new window/tab)
Few getting omicron COVID-19 boosters despite Biden administration pleas

Washington Examiner - The Biden administration's fall campaign to get people vaccinated with the omicron booster has been off to a slow start. Dr. John Vanchiere, director for community outreach for Center for Emerging Viral Threats at LSUHS, anticipates that more people will get the updated booster as it gets closer to Thanksgiving in preparation for traveling and visiting family.

Read More about Few getting omicron COVID-19 boosters despite Biden administration pleas (opens in new window/tab)
syringe

Bloomberg - Jeremy Kamil, virologist and professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS, shares, "Vaccinated and previously infected people have robust and still-intact lines of defense, such as memory T-cells and B-cells. People previously infected also have additional immune cells that reside in the respiratory tract."

Read More about New Covid Variants Have Arrived. How Worried Should You Be? (opens in new window/tab)
Health officials expect COVID-19 cases to rise as colder weather sets in

KSLA12 - Health officials expect a rise in the number of COVID-19 cases as the colder months set in. That’s due, in part, to the fact that people will be in more confined spaces.But Dr. John Vanchiere, infectious disease specialist at LSUHS, noted also that vaccination rates are lower.

Read More about Health officials expect COVID-19 cases to rise as colder weather sets in (opens in new window/tab)
CENTER FOR MEDICAL EDUCATION: New research, training opportunities

318 Forum - The 155,000-square-foot Center for Medical Education will be home to large classroom spaces, clinical skills labs and simulation suites – each designed to encourage collaboration, active engagement and innovative thinking. 

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New Omicron strains on the horizon could drive future COVID waves

CBC News - A recent spike in cases and hospitalizations in the U.K. have scientists bracing for potential winter waves. Dr. Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS shares, "But the possibility that they're going to cause hospitals to be overwhelmed is what I want to dial people back on because we're not seeing any signs of that."

Read More about New Omicron strains on the horizon could drive future COVID waves (opens in new window/tab)
LSU Health Shreveport Offers Bivalent COVID-19 Vaccinations at North Campus Vaccination Site

Bossier Press-Tribune - The FDA-authorized bivalent COVID-19 vaccines, or updated boosters, are now available at LSUHS and include an mRNA component of the original strain to provide an immune response that is broadly protective against COVID-19.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport Offers Bivalent COVID-19 Vaccinations at North Campus Vaccination Site (opens in new window/tab)
Effect of omicron-specific boosters 'remains to be seen,' vaccine experts say

Washington Examiner - Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, said the months it will have taken to get an updated booster since identifying the omicron variant last November is "unacceptable," resulting in many people getting infected with omicron and needlessly getting sick as previous vaccines proved less effective against the variant.

Read More about Effect of omicron-specific boosters 'remains to be seen,' vaccine experts say (opens in new window/tab)
two scientists in lab

The Louisiana Board of Regents has supported full five-year approval for the Louisiana Addiction Research Center (LARC) and Center for Emerging Viral Threats (CEVT), with the CEVT continuing to be a designated Center of Research Excellence. The Board of Regents approval follows unanimous approval of both centers by the LSU Board of Supervisors earlier this year. Both centers were previously granted provisional approval and applied for full center approval earlier this year.

Read More about LSUHS Research Centers Receive Full Authorization from LSU Board of Supervisors and Louisiana Board of Regents
LSU Health Shreveport holds COVID news conference

KSLA 12 - Research experts and medical professionals from LSU Health Shreveport were joined by community leaders to provide an update on the COVID-19 pandemic. Speakers informed the community about the latest case numbers and efforts to increase vaccination rates.

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Center For Emerging Viral Threats  Reaches Milestone Of Sharing 15,000 Sars-Cov-2 Sequences To Global Database

The Center of Excellence for Emerging Viral Threats’ (CEVT) Viral Genomics and Surveillance Lab has surpassed uploading its’ 15,000th sequence to GISAID (Global Initiative on Sharing Influenza Data). The LSU Health Shreveport CEVT team has worked tirelessly since early in the COVID-19 pandemic to sequence and track variants of SAR-CoV-2, the virus that causes the COVID-19 disease.

Read More about Center For Emerging Viral Threats Reaches Milestone Of Sharing 15,000 Sars-Cov-2 Sequences To Global Database
woman teaching children seated in circle in classroom

KSLA 12 - Dr. John Vanchiere, professor of pediatrics at LSU Health Shreveport said Louisiana ranks 45th and 46th in vaccination for COVID among those ages five to 11 and 11 to 15, respectively. He said he expects the number of cases to grow when students go back to school.

Read More about Health expert, parent share concerns about COVID-19 & sending kids back-to-school
I'm a Virologist and I'm Setting the Record Straight on Variants and Reinfection

NY Times - Opinion - Dr. Jeremy Kamil, ... , shares "As a virologist, it’s important to me that people understand Covid-19 remains a great concern. But this does not excuse or license a misdiagnosis of the current situation."

Read More about I'm a Virologist and I'm Setting the Record Straight on Variants and Reinfection (opens in new window/tab)
Omicron variants keep getting better at dodging our immune systems

Popular Science - The BA.5 wave may not overwhelm hospitals to the degree seen last winter, although emergency rooms and ICUs are already stretched thin. “But there’s definitely going to be an increase to some degree,” says Dr. Jeremy Kamil, a virologist who has led sequencing at LSUHS.

Read More about Omicron variants keep getting better at dodging our immune systems (opens in new window/tab)
New coronavirus variant becomes dominant strain in NWLA

KTAL6 -  Local health experts say the BA.2 omicron variant of the coronavirus has been on the rise across the country and is now the dominant strain in NW Louisiana. “As mysteriously as the virus came on, it’s kind of evolved and become a little less problematic when people get it,” said Dr. Michael Sewell, Section Chief for Division of Internal Medicine / Hospitalist Program.

Read More about New coronavirus variant becomes dominant strain in NWLA (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS to no longer offer COVID testing at North Campus site

KSLA12 - Beginning Tuesday, April 19, the Center for Emerging Viral Threats (CEVT) at LSUHS will no longer offer COVID-19 testing at its North Campus site. This change is due to the low number of COVID-19 cases reported in recent weeks. A look at the Louisiana Department of Health’s COVID case map shows the cases are low across the state.

Read More about LSUHS to no longer offer COVID testing at North Campus site (opens in new window/tab)
COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise in Mass.

Boston25 - “We are seeing the prevalence of BA.2 increasing as the overall Omicron wave has crashed,” said Jeremy Kamil, PhD, associate professor of Microbiology and Immunology at Louisiana State University in Shreveport. “It is spreading. It can infect people who were previously vaccinated, particularly if they didn’t have a case of BA1.”

Read More about COVID-19 hospitalizations continue to rise in Mass. (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS COVID Team Coordinator discusses low rates in recent data

KTBS3 - Shelly Raley, the Program Coordinator for the LSUHS COVID Strike Team, says that circumstances make this current slowdown more calming than previous ones. "Currently there is no big delta or omicron that we see headed our way in the immediate future."

Read More about LSUHS COVID Team Coordinator discusses low rates in recent data (opens in new window/tab)
Bill Cassidy photo

Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy was instrumental in the receipt of this funding for LSUHS, which will enhance the impact of the Center for Emerging Viral Threats (CEVT) as it is able to expand significantly in the new Center for Medical Education building. Additional medical education and research opportunities will yield enhanced economic impact to the region and the state.

Read More about Senator Bill Cassidy Secures $7M Federal Appropriation for LSU Health Shreveport Center for Medical Education and Emerging Viral Threats
What is the hybrid 'deltacron' variant of the coronavirus?

NBC News - Scientists have detected a handful of cases of the delta-omicron hybrid but say it's unlikely to cause a new surge. Dr. Jeremy Kamil, an associate professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS says, "Delta basically grabbed omicron's spike protein. This is essentially delta trying to hang on by plagiarizing from omicron."

Read More about What is the hybrid 'deltacron' variant of the coronavirus? (opens in new window/tab)
In the U.S., Identifying Your Variant Isnā€™t So Easy

Bloomberg - “No tests can tell you for sure what variant you have without full viral genome sequencing,” says Jeremy Kamil, a microbiologist and immunologist at LSU Health Shreveport. In the U.S., current federal guidance prevents labs from informing patients or their physicians about the specific genome-sequencing results.

Read More about In the U.S., Identifying Your Variant Isnā€™t So Easy (opens in new window/tab)
Is an omicron infection as good as a booster? What the science says about ā€˜hybridā€™ immunity

The Philadelphia Inquirer - In addition to becoming more abundant with each exposure, the antibody response becomes more “mature,” saidDr. Jeremy Kamil, associate professor at LSUHS.

Read More about Is an omicron infection as good as a booster? What the science says about ā€˜hybridā€™ immunity (opens in new window/tab)
Omicron Offers Hope Pandemic Could Stabilize, W.H.O. Official Says.

New York Times - “Expect the next variant to come out of left field,” said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSU Health Shreveport. He added, “It’d be a hugely foolish thing for anyone to speak with excessive certainty about what’s coming in the next two years.”

Read More about Omicron Offers Hope Pandemic Could Stabilize, W.H.O. Official Says. (opens in new window/tab)
Omicron Surge - Severity, Testing and Treatments

NPR/Red River Radio - Health Matters: As the Omicron variant is surging in our region and across the country, Dr. Sanford Katz hosts this episode of Health Matters with guests Dr. John Vanchiere, Director of LSU Health Shreveport COVID-19 Community Testing and Vaccinations.

Read More about Omicron Surge - Severity, Testing and Treatments (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS working with Mercer University to track COVID-19 variants

41NBC - Mercer University School of Medicine, in partnership with the Department of Biomedical Sciences and LSU Health Shreveport, was recently awarded a $25,000 grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. The money will help to guide Covid-19 research about possible variants of the virus.

Read More about LSUHS working with Mercer University to track COVID-19 variants (opens in new window/tab)
Muhammad Sabir Mazhar/Anadolu Agency/Getty

iNews.co.uk - Jeremy Kamil, virologist and associate professor at Louisiana State University Health Shreveport, told i: “SARS-Cov-2 is not going to become a ‘common cold’ / ordinary ‘seasonal’ coronavirus within the span of the next few months or even years.”

Read More about ā€˜Endemicā€™ Covid? The pandemic will only be over when the world is jabbed (opens in new window/tab)
WHO image of Omicron Cells

Today UK News - Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, agreed the world is now “well equipped” for the fight but viruses are always coming up with “countermeasures”. He suggests Covid could become more stealthy, like tuberculosis or HIV, with a longer “silent” phase of infection. (image: WHO)

Read More about Covid may become stealthier like HIV in ā€˜silentā€™ infection phase, experts warn (opens in new window/tab)
Health Matters: Omicron Surge - Severity, Testing and Treatments

NPR / Red River Radio - As the Omicron variant is surging in our region and across the country, Dr. John Vanchiere, Director of LSUHS COVID-19 Community Testing and Vaccinations, talks about how people are faring with this variant, testing and treatments, new isolation recommendations, and more.

Read More about Health Matters: Omicron Surge - Severity, Testing and Treatments (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS team conducts record number of COVID tests

KTBS3 - The LSUHS COVID-19 Strike team and Emerging Viral Threats lab hit a record high with over 14,000 COVID-19 tests conducted last week. This is quite a feat, considering many areas across the country have had to scale back testing to symptomatic people only because staff members and labs were overrun.

Read More about LSUHS team conducts record number of COVID tests (opens in new window/tab)
These Omicron Symptoms are Ones to Watch For

Eat This, Not That! - For many people, respiratory symptoms are the first sign of Omicron. "It's mostly that runny nose, sore throat and nasal congestion," Dr. John Vanchiere, the associate director of the Center for Emerging Viral Threats at LSU Health Shreveport, told NPR.

Read More about These Omicron Symptoms are Ones to Watch For (opens in new window/tab)
What we know about the symptoms ā€” and the severity ā€” of the omicron variant

NPR - "It's mostly that runny nose, sore throat and nasal congestion," says Dr. John Vanchiere, the associate director of the Center for Emerging Viral Threats at LSU Health Shreveport. "The cough is milder [than previous variants], if there's any cough at all, and fever seems to be a little less common."

Read More about What we know about the symptoms ā€” and the severity ā€” of the omicron variant (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS Moves Community Testing and Vaccination Activities  Back to Louisiana State Fairgrounds

Effective Wednesday, January 5, LSUHS will move its community COVID-19 testing and vaccination efforts back to the Louisiana State Fairgrounds located at 3701 Hudson Ave. to reduce wait times and accommodate more individuals each day. 

Read More about LSUHS Moves Community Testing and Vaccination Activities Back to Louisiana State Fairgrounds
ā€˜All the telltale signs are thereā€™: Louisiana on cusp of another COVID-19 surge, doctors say

Dr. John Vanchiere, an infectious disease specialist at LSU Health Shreveport, agrees. “We are seeing significant increases in our positivity rates in our community testing and, unfortunately, also in our nursing home testing.

Read More about ā€˜All the telltale signs are thereā€™: Louisiana on cusp of another COVID-19 surge, doctors say (opens in new window/tab)
Can faster testing for the omicron COVID variant help slow the spread in Northwest Louisiana?

Shreveport Times - Despite the increased attention of omicron, delta continues to be the main variant in Louisiana, however, Dr. John Vanchiere, an infectious disease expert and Associate Director of the Center for Emerging Viral Threats at LSUHS, believes that could change much faster than some might think.

Read More about Can faster testing for the omicron COVID variant help slow the spread in Northwest Louisiana? (opens in new window/tab)
Do we need a new vaccine for omicron? Fauci says not yet, other experts disagree

TheBulletin.org - Associate professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS Jeremy Kamil said he is “not at all convinced” that the current vaccines will continue to be protective “indefinitely.” "We just need to update our shot to show our body a repertoire that encompasses the variability at the key sites for neutralization"

Read More about Do we need a new vaccine for omicron? Fauci says not yet, other experts disagree (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS experts use genomic sequencing to identify Omicron variant in Louisiana

KSLA12 - Sequencing is a multi-step process that includes using robotic technology to help make the process faster, more efficient and to reduce human error. "While this new variant has more mutations than others, her team is much more equipped this time around," says Dr. Krista Queen, Director of Viral Genomics and Surveillance for LSUHS.

Read More about LSUHS experts use genomic sequencing to identify Omicron variant in Louisiana (opens in new window/tab)
Getty Images: Omicron Variant

Shreveport Times - "The definitive 'are we protected' is not known yet, and won't be for a couple of weeks. Based on the sequencing and what we know about the protection of the vaccine, we expect there will be some protection," shared Dr. John Vanchiere, Infectious Disease Specialist at LSUHS. CDC updates on Omicron Variant

Read More about Probable COVID omicron variant cases are in Northwest Louisiana; more found statewide (opens in new window/tab)
Adrian Almodovar and Dr. Krista Queen, lab photo, Shreveport Times

Shreveport Times - Research Notebook: Since the earliest days of the COVID-19 pandemic scientists around the world have been working together on critical genomic sequencing efforts to better understand how the SARS-CoV-2 virus spreads and evolves and help guide and evaluate public health response. 

Read More about LSUHS contributes to COVID sequencing milestone for global database (opens in new window/tab)
image of proposed Center for Wellness building

Roy O. Martin III and Kathy Martin have donated $500,000 to the Center for Medical Education as part of a larger LSU system-wide gift supporting top capital priorities for the Fierce for the Future Campaign. The Martin’s gift will be directed to the Center of Excellence for Emerging Viral Threats (CEVT) to be housed on the top floor of the Center for Medical Education.

Read More about Thanks for the Martin's Gift to support the Center for Medical Education
Pfizer booster study promising vs omicron, but time will ultimely tell

KTAL/KMSS - Local infectious disease expert and LSU Health Shreveport Director of Testing and Vaccines says the findings of a small study showing Pfizer’s booster offers strong protection against the fast-spreading omicron variant are promising, but it will be a few more weeks before we know just how effective it is.

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Doctors encourage people to roll up their sleeve for National Flu Vaccination Week

“It is very important for folks to get vaccinated against flu and COVID so that we can, prevent illness and death in the community and keep folks out of the hospital. And reduce the transmission of these to other people who may not be able to be vaccinated,” said Dr. John Vanchiere, infectious disease specialist at LSUHS.

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The race to decipher Omicron: will it take days, weeks or months?

Financial Times - Labs are scrambling to answer 3 fundamental questions: is it more transmissible, can it evade the vaccination, and does it cause more severe disease? Jeremy Kamil, a virologist studying Sars-Cov-2 evolution at LSUHS, describes his shock when this genome was released. “It was like coming home from vacation and seeing that someone hasn’t just planted a few flowers in your garden. They’ve remodeled the whole landscape.”

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Omicron variant much different than past variants, with more mutations

KTBS3 - Jeremy Kamil, PhD., a virologist at LSU Health Shreveport, says the Omicron variant was first found on Nov. 11. What the South African scientists discovered was that this new variant is a lot different than the ones that have been seen so far. "This one is very extensively mutated.”

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Omicron Undetected in U.S. So Far, Testing Biden Sequencing Plan

Bloomberg - While the U.S. is sequencing a much higher percentage of Covid samples than earlier, the bigger issue may be that not enough virus testing is done in the first place, said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at Louisiana State University Health Shreveport.

Read the Full Article in PDF

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La. Tech, Grambling, LSU Health Shreveport are partnering to learn how COVID-19 is spreading

News Star - Louisiana Tech University, Grambling State University, LSU Health Shreveport and several health clinics across the region are working together to sequence the COVID-19 virus to learn how it's spreading and if any new variants arise. Research from the three universities is made available for the public online at nla-health.com.

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LSUHS partners with Film Prize Junior for COVID-19 Vaccine Public Service Announcements

An official release of five PSAs created by five student filmmakers from the Northwest Louisiana area was held on November 22nd at LSUHS as part of a collaboration between the Film Prize Junior program and LSUHS, followed by Q&A sessions about this project.

Read More about LSUHS partners with Film Prize Junior for COVID-19 Vaccine Public Service Announcements
Dr. John Vanchiere, Professor of Pediatrics, LSU Health Shreveport (photo)

KTBS3 - “It's not an emergency, it's not a ‘got to do this before the winter’ kind of thing,” said Dr. John Vanchiere, director of COVID-19 community testing and vaccinations at LSUHS. “We’d rather have more young adults get vaccinated, than use boosters in that age group at this point. That would be much more effective."

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LSU Health Shreveport administers 100,000th vaccine  and Announces Availability of Pfizer Vaccine for those ages 5 ā€“ 11

The LSU Health Shreveport COVID-19 Strike Teams reached a major milestone today having administered just over 100,000 VACCINATIONS. Over 175 individuals have been a part of the LSUHS vaccine teams comprised of physicians, nurses, nursing, medical and allied health students, and the Louisiana National Guard.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport administers 100,000th vaccine and Announces Availability of Pfizer Vaccine for those ages 5 ā€“ 11
LSUHS infectious disease expert weighs in on lifting of mask mandate

KTBS3 -  As mask mandates are lifted across the state, the medical community is waiting to see what effects may come from the decision. Dr. John Vanchiere, an infectious disease expert at LSU-Health Shreveport, said overall, he thinks that it was the right decision. 

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Doctors: Donā€™t underestimate COVID-19 as Louisianaā€™s indoor mask mandate expires

KTAL/KMSS -  Shreveport doctors are urging the public to not underestimate COVID-19 as Governor Edwards has lifted the state’s mask mandate for at least the next four weeks. Dr. Andrew Yurochko with LSUHS says the virus spread has followed a pattern and therefore, one must continue to protect him or herself.

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New COVID variant found in Louisiana by LSU Health Shreveport scientists

A new variant of COVID-19 has been identified in Louisiana by scientists at the LSU Health Shreveport Emerging Viral Threats Center. LSUHS announced this month that the B.1.630 variant had been sequenced and reported by the center, though health officials believe this variant's predominance is very low and much less transmissable than the deadly delta variant.

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African American Celebration Committee hosts COVID-19 vaccination clinic with LSUHS

KSLA12 - “We can do it. We know there is no reason why we can’t do it. Most of the people who have been hospitalized or have severe disease now have not been vaccinated. We know that getting vaccinated reduces the likelihood that you end up in the hospital, at least 25-fold,” said Former State Representative Barbara Norton.

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LDH reports alarming increase in Severe Pregnancy Outcomes due to COVID-19

KSLA12 - “What we tended to see with the Delta variant is it has impacted our pregnant populations very very hard, especially at the height of the Delta variant we had transfers from all over the state of pregnant woman who were in respiratory distress and significantly decompensating,” said Dr. Caitlin Busada, associate program director of residency of Obstetrics & Gynecology at LSUHS.

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LSU Health Shreveport first to detect New COVID-19 Variant in Louisiana

The EVT Viral Genomics and Sequencing Lab at LSU Health Shreveport is first in the state to sequence and report that a new variant of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, has been detected in Louisiana. The new variant, B.1.630, was sequenced last week from two samples collected in Baton Rouge.

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FDA review of Pfizer data for child vaccinations could take weeks

KTBS3 - Dr. John Vanchiere, the lead investigator in the Pfizer vaccine study at LSUHS said, “We expect that to take at least four to six weeks of time. And Pfizer and Moderna are both starting additional enrollment in the pediatric studies in that 5- to 11-year-old age range, so that they can get more data under the research protocol to submit to the FDA when it’s appropriate.”

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Immunobridging data used in Pfizer vaccine study for kids

KTBS3 - Dr. John Vanchiere, an infectious disease and pediatrics specialist and the lead investigator on the Pfizer vaccine study at LSU Health Shreveport, shares "Demonstrating effectiveness that is preventing hospitalization and death or severe disease is very challenging in the pediatric population, because kids don't get generally very sick."

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Deltaā€™s highly infectious nature positions it to outcompete new variants, scientists say

Wall Street Journal - Some virologists believe the Delta variant evolved to maximize transmissibility and that its ability to spread rapidly will eventually reach a ceiling as more of the global population gets vaccinated. “It looks like this virus is already driving a Lamborghini right now in terms of transmissibility, so I’m not sure it can get much faster,” said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSU Health Shreveport who is studying coronavirus genetics. Read the full article.

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LSUHS Infectious Disease Professor sees signs Delta may be slowing in NWLA

KTAL/KMSS - “It seems that we’re past our peak of this delta variant surge,” said LSUHS Professor Dr. John Vanchiere. “Most of the rest of the nation is still in the climbing phase of this delta surge, so we’re a few weeks ahead of many places in terms of, our numbers seem to be slowing down on hospitalization side.”

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Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport addresses President Bidenā€™s vaccine mandate for employers with 100 or more workers

KTAL/KMSS - “By November 1st, if people are not vaccinated then they would not be able to work inside of the various Ochsner facilities,” says Dr. Charles Fox, the chief medical officer at Ochsner LSU Health. 

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Lambda, B.1.621 variants: How many cases of new COVID-19 variants have been found in Utah

ABC4 - “We do not know whether this is going to be better or worse than Delta, there’s not enough information,” Dr. Andrew Yurochko with LSU Health Shreveport tells NewsNation. “Forty-four states have reported Lambda cases and WHO has labeled it “a variant of interest.”

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ā€œWorst surge weā€™ve seenā€: Some hospitals in delta hot spots close to breaking point

AAMC.org - Despite more than 70% of adults in the country having received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose and 81% of people 65 and older being vaccinated, a dramatic spike in infections among unvaccinated younger people, coupled with staffing shortages, is testing the surge plans hospital systems developed for previous waves.

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LSU Health Shreveport physician that help oversee Pfizer COVID vaccine trial says FDA full approval is a milestone

LA Radio Network - “Those who have been hesitant to take this as a very important milestone that should allow them just to breathe a sigh of relief and go get their vaccine,” said LSUHS Infectious Disease Specialist Dr. John Vanchiere.

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Viral evolution 101: Why the coronavirus has changed as it has, and what it means going forward

StatNews - By cutting how much the virus replicates — both through preventing infections and by shortening the infections that do occur — vaccines limit the likelihood of additional, more dangerous variants. Says Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, “The virus has to replicate in order to mutate, but each virus doesn’t get many lottery tickets in a vaccinated person who’s infected.”

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Children caught in Covid culture wars as US politicians defy health advice

The Guardian - Dr. John Vanchiere, a professor of pediatrics and infectious diseases at LSUHS, shared that caring for seriously ill children is always distressing, but more so when “we know the vast majority of these infections are preventable." 

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Masks required for runners at Falmouth Road Race

Cape Cod Times - “I would say (the road race) is probably minimal risk” for the spread of the novel respiratory virus,” said Jeremy Kamil, PhD, associate professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS, where he leads COVID-19 genomic sequencing. “It’s a lot of people running, breathing hard, but they’re breathing outside. The ventilation factor is enormous.”

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LSUHS to administer third dose of COVID vaccine for immunocompromised

KSLA - Emerging data have demonstrated that immunocompromised people who have low or no protection following two doses of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines may have an improved response after an additional dose of the same vaccine. No appointments are necessary to get the additional shot, but LSUHS suggests you come based on a schedule shown here.

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Pfizer vaccine study for kids younger than 12 continues

KTBS - With children headed back to school during yet another COVID-19 surge, many parents of young children are wondering when those under age 12 will be able to get vaccinated. Dr. John Vanchiere, lead investigator on Pfizer vaccine trials at LSUHS, said the hospital is seeing an increase in vaccinations for the 12-18 age group. As for kids ages 5-11, the trials are ongoing and expanding.

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COVID ā€˜Doomsday Variantā€™ Report Criticized for ā€˜Fear Mongeringā€™

Heavy.com -  Dr. Jeremy Kamil, Associate Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at LSUHS leads COVID-19 sequencing at the institution shared that he believes a doomsday variant is extremely unlikely and that people should be talking instead about the importance of getting vaccinated because variants can develop when large numbers of people do not.

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Clinical Leaders address COVID-19 at LA-CEAL Town Hall

Dr. John Vanchiere, Professor of Pediatrics and Infectious Disease at LSUHS served as was one of eight clinical leaders in Louisiana invited to participate in The Louisiana Community Engagement Alliance Against Covid-19 Disparities (LA-CEAL) Town Hall meeting which was designed to provided updated information on COVID-19.

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Parents encouraged to observe their childā€™s mental health as they return to school

KNOE - Dr. Shawn McNeil, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine at LSUHS says mental health is as important and in some cases more important than a person’s physical health. He says some children are going through a lot of stressful events right now. including their sleep schedule changing, more expectations in a new grade level, or the pandemic, including mask mandates.

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Indoor mask mandate ordered across Louisiana

KSLA12 - Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards has implemented a statewide indoor mask mandate to combat the spread of COVID-19 and the delta variant of the virus. Gov. Edwards made the declaration during a news conference Monday, Aug. 2. The new mask mandate is set to expire on Sept. 1, 2021, but could be extended if needed, the governor said.

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LSUHS awarded contract for K-12 COVID testing in 32 parishes

KTAL/KMSS - LSUHS was awarded one of three contracts in Louisiana to deliver FREE COVID-19 testing in kindergarten through twelfth grade (K-12) for the 2021-2022 school year. The agreement is in partnership with the Louisiana Department of Education (LDOE) and the Louisiana Department of Health (LDH) with funding provided by the Center for Disease Control (CDC).

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Protocol for the fully-vaccinated as Delta Variant is spreading fast

KTAL - Dr. Yurochko, a Professor and Vice-chair of Microbiology and Immunology at LSU Health Shreveport, said by now one ought to know that “masks absolutely work” — and his stance on it is abundantly clear, citing Delta variant is more infectious and anyone who is more vulnerable or who has underlying health issues should mask up.

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In Louisiana, Vaccine Misinformation Has Public Health Workers Feeling ā€˜Stuckā€™

New York Times - Facing deep mistrust stoked by rampant conspiracy theories, local health officials are fighting for influence when the only sure strategy for beating back the virus is getting more people vaccinated. “It’s a lot of small battles in different places,” Dr. John Vanchiere said, “and every battle is going to be different.”

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In Louisiana, vaccine misinformation and Delta variant grow

Boston Globe - Dr. Jeremy Kamil, an associate professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS, oversees a team of scientists reading the genomes of positive virus samples each week. A run of samples this week found the number of cases involving the delta variant had exploded. Dr. John Vanchiere, a professor of infectious disease at LSUHS said a growing public awareness of local delta cases was one reason his team was now vaccinating twice as many people as a month ago — as many as 100 a day.

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Local clergy and Vaccination providers are joining forces to administer free vaccinations to all citizens at TEEN FEST

Local clergy and Vaccination providers, including LSU Health Shreveport, are joining forces to administer free Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccinations to all citizens with particular emphasis on teenagers.  Also, other health screening services will be offered including blood pressure checks, COVID-19 Rapid Test, glucose/blood sugar check and physical fitness activities for the whole family.

Read More about Local clergy and Vaccination providers are joining forces to administer free vaccinations to all citizens at TEEN FEST
More Variants Are Coming, and the U.S. Isnā€™t Ready to Track Them

Bloomberg News - Given the patchy start to COVID surveillance last year, some experts have expressed concern over whether the CDC can create a system that will help bring the pandemic to a true end. Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, points out that the agency takes weeks to provide data from sequencing including diseases such as influenza, too.

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LSUHS Pediatrician on masks in schools debate

KSLA 12 - On Monday, July 19, the American Academy of Pediatrics suggested all kids age 2 or older should wear a face mask. “The ages 12 and under, they are a vulnerable population and the argument from the AAP that wearing mask in schools will help lessen the risk of transmission and infectivity for those, I think is a very strong argument,” said Thomas.

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Hospitals responding to latest surge in COVID-19 hospitalizations

KSLA 12 - Dr. Jonathan Eaton, a critical care doctor with LSUHS shares his main concern during this latest surge in COVID-19 cases is the new age group being impacted. “The best thing we have is being vaccinated. Don’t think because your 30 to 40 years old you’re invincible to this.”

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Facts Not Fear: Top Shreveport Doctor Has Delta Variant Answers

KEEL Radio - LSUHS Dr. John Vanchiere talks about the medical community's growing concern over the new COVID Delta variant. "We've gone from a hundred cases a day to over twelve hundred cases a day," he says, addressing the increase across the state, "We're seeing a lot more infections now, locally as well as statewide. It's a big surge in infections."

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As Delta variant rises, so do second-dose skippers

Boston 25 News - Dr. Jeremy Kamil, an associate professor of microbiology and immunology at LSU Health in Shreveport, Louisiana, calls the two-dose data very clear and very strong. “You can control your behavior and go back and get that second shot and do your part to protect our community and to protect our country from the pandemic having another big wave here."

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COVID-19 boosters likely not needed for first year

KTBS 3 - Dr. John Vanchiere, an infectious disease specialist and the principal investigator in the Pfizer vaccine study at LSU Health Shreveport, said they are now in the 10th month of the initial clinical trials and no booster is needed so far. “So our current look is that for the vast majority of people, boosters are not on the horizon, at least for the first year after injection.”

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Getting the vaccine gets easier, multiple agencies collaborate to bring it to communities

KTBS 3 - A mobile vaccination effort continued at the Renaissance of Allendale Apartments. This was a collaborative effort of multiple agencies: City of Shreveport, HUD, Department of HHS, LSU Health Shreveport and Shreveport Housing Authority. "The way that we combat that virus, the way that we get back to normalcy is through being vaccinated and I do not want us to let our guard down," said Shreveport Mayor Perkins. 

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Delta plus India: Scientists say too early to tell risk of Covid-19 variant

BBC World - Even with 166 examples of Delta plus shared on GISAID, "we don't have much reason to believe this is any more dangerous than the original Delta," according to Dr Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSU Health Shreveport. "Delta plus might have a slight advantage at infecting and spreading between people previously infected earlier or who have weak or incomplete vaccine immunity."

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Nurse with COVID syringe

NOLA.com - “This virus can get past the defenses that our bodies made against earlier pandemic viruses,” said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist who has been sequencing variants at LSU Health Shreveport. Being infected last summer will not necessarily protect someone from being infected by the delta variant.

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CDC: Higher number of Myocarditis cases reported after second dose of mRNA Covid vaccines

Louisiana Radio Network - LSU Health Shreveport infectious disease professor Dr. John Vanchiere said cases have been the highest amongst men under the age of 18. “The cases that have been reported in-depth on, about 400 cases, they have said that all of those who’ve been effected have recovered.” (image from Amelia Heart & Vascular Center)

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Delta coronavirus variant: scientists brace for impact

Nature - The rapid rise of the highly transmissible strain in the United Kingdom has put countries in Europe, North America and Africa on watch. Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSU Health Shreveport, expects Delta to eventually become dominant in the United States, “but to be somewhat blunted by vaccination”.

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COVID vaccination efforts continue into summer months

KSLA 12 - Across Louisiana, more than 3 million doses of the vaccine have been placed in arms, while 1.4 million Louisianans are fully vaccinated — about 32% of the state. “The faster we can vaccinate ... the more difficult it is for these variants to emerge across the world, and we are seeing it,” LSUHS Dr. John Vanchiere said.

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LSU Health Shreveport receives grant for global response to pandemic threats

Louisiana Radio Network - The objective of the grant is to strengthen global capabilities to detect and respond to pandemic threats in the future. Director for Emerging Viral Threats at LSUHS Dr. Andrew Yurochko said the award is indicative of LSU Health Shreveport’s strides in detecting variants and assisting with vaccine rollout.

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LSU Health Shreveport Receives $730,000 in NIH Funding for Sequencing of COVID-19

Red River Radio - Work by Drs. Jeremy Kamil and Rona Scott along with COBRE principal investigators Drs. Andrew Yurochko and Chris Kevil has produced and shared 2,839 full coverage SARS-CoV-2 genomes, which amounts to over 60% of the SARSCoV-2 genome surveillance from Louisiana, and 1.2 % of the total US data submitted to GISAID which is the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data.

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Rockefeller Foundation announces grant funding to LSUHS to build coalition to detect and respond to pandemic threats

The Rockefeller Foundation - LSU Health Shreveport (LSUHS) is receiving funding ($340,000) from the Rockefeller Foundation. This follows the announcement yesterday of LSUHS being awarded $730,000 to further its work in genomic sequencing of COVID-19 through a NIH supplemental grant.  LSUHS joins Harvard and the Broad Institute at MIT among others in the US Regional Accelerators for Genomic Surveillance.

Read More about Rockefeller Foundation announces grant funding to LSUHS to build coalition to detect and respond to pandemic threats
As Vaccines Turn Pandemicā€™s Tide, U.S. and Europe Diverge on Path Forward

New York Times - The split is particularly stark in Britain, which is facing the spread of a new variant, while America has essentially lifted all rules for people who are vaccinated. “Globally, it’s a nightmare, because most of the world is still not vaccinated,” said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at Louisiana State University Health Shreveport. “It raises the stakes.”

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LSU Health Shreveport detects first reported B.1.617.2 (Indian) COVID-19 variant in Louisiana

LSU Health Shreveport has identified two cases of the novel COVID-19 variant of concern, B.1.617.2, which was first identified in India and is rapidly spreading around the world. LSU Health Shreveport sequencing also reveals that B.1.1.7, sometimes called “the U.K. variant,” remains dominant in North Louisiana, as is the case in the rest of the United States, as well. 

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Fully vaccinated can mostly forgo masks; shots still recommended

Daily Iberian - "What we know is that people who were vaccinated, if they do get sick, if they catch COVID, their symptoms are generally mild, and the amount of virus in their nose is generally less,” said Dr. John Vanchiere, infectious disease and pediatrics specialist at LSU Health Shreveport.

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Why second shot is critical for COVID-19 protection

ArkLaTex Homepage - “Why the second shot is so important, is the first one gives you a good response, the second one is better, and the third one gets even better and better and better. And so it just primes your immune response,” Dr. Andrew Yurochko, professor of microbiology and immunology at LSUHS said.

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brain cell image

Los Angeles Times - Scientists have found that the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 is capable of infecting two types of brain cells — neurons and astrocytes. Scientists have been trying to understand why and how it causes these issues in the brain, said study leader Diana Cruz-Topete, a molecular endocrinologist at LSU Health Shreveport.

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A COVID-19 patient receives treatment at a hospital in Bangalore, India

China Daily - "Despite a few mutations here and there, the virus is still SARS-CoV-2 and the disease is still COVID-19. Risk will be highest to the elderly, and to those in high-risk groups, such as people who are diabetic, overweight, (have) high blood pressure, or who have inborn errors of immunity," warned Dr. Jeremy Kamil, LSUHS associate professor.

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Jose Guzman-Wug, 16, received a COVID-19 vaccination on April 15 in Los Angeles, California, while his mother looked on. (All

The74Million - “Until you get upwards of 80 percent of children vaccinated, you’re going to have a hard time going back to pre-pandemic practices without some risk of illness and death,” Jeremy Kamil, associate professor of microbiology and immunology at Louisiana State University Health Shreveport, told The 74.

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syringe

KTBS - Dr. John Vanchiere, lead investigator on the Pfizer vaccine study at LSUHS said, “The vaccine is effective at several things. Number one, reducing people from getting sick from COVID and spreading it to other people. Big time important is that vaccination reduces hospitalization and death.”

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Community Testing and COVID-19 Vaccine Efforts

LSU Health Shreveport continues COVID-19 testing, while simultaneously offering large scale vaccine clinics and leading Louisiana in sequencing the virus from positive test samples. Testing and vaccine sites are located throughout Northwest Louisiana—including Minden, Monroe, Ruston and rural outlying cities like Tallulah. A concerted effort has been made to deliver testing and vaccines regardless of the ability to register or travel far outside of one’s home as “access for all” has been a guiding principle for the delivery these services.

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Nurses prepare vaccine shots

KPVI 6 News - "A bit of low-grade fever, or muscle aches, fatigue for a couple of days, even headaches after getting your vaccine are not uncommon,” states Dr. John Vanchiere, the lead investigator on the Pfizer vaccine study at LSU Health Shreveport. “That’s an indicator that your immune response is kicking in."

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People in line for COVID19 testing in Jammu, Kashmir by EPA

BBC News - A coronavirus variant identified in India is being investigated by scientists across the world. However, it is not yet known how far it has spread or whether it is driving the deadly second wave of Covid in India itself. Dr Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSUHS, says, "I doubt whether the Indian variant is more infectious than the UK variant - and we must not panic."

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MiGS image

Pitt News - “A variant is like a unique constellation of mutations while a mutation will be like one star in that constellation,” stated Jeremy Kamil, virologist at LSU Health Shreveport. “Alternatively, if a variant was a fingerprint, then a mutation will be one line that’s part of the fingerprint.”

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Center for Medical Education building draft image

KEEL 101.7FM - The local medical community has stepped up on several fronts to battle COVID-19 on the front lines and in the lab. The Commission has approved the donation of as much as $1 million dollars for the Center for Excellence for Emerging Viral Threats (CEVT). This money will be used for a new building to expand the local medical school and for continued research.

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woman receiving covid19 vaccine

KTBS 3 - "Those who are hesitant, and I would say that's the vast majority ... those who are hesitant, than refusing ... will see very quickly that their colleagues have gotten the vaccine and no adverse side effects or long term complications or other issues," said Dr. John Vanchiere of LSU Health Shreveport.

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Image of nurse with vaccine vial from BBC News Russia

BBC.com/Russia - Scientists from the United States and Argentina came to this conclusion after analyzing the neutralizing ability of the sera of those vaccinated with the Russian vaccine. But Sputnik still protects against a severe form of the disease, the authors emphasize.

Read More about Sputnik may be less effective against South African strain of coronavirus
Health officials focus on helping the homeless receive a COVID-19 vaccine

KTBS 3 - It's been difficult for much of the homeless to get to sites like the Louisiana State Fairgrounds. That's why Dr. John Vanchiere, an infectious disease specialist with LSU Health Shreveport, looked at all options, even transportation to get the homeless population there.

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vaccine vials in distribution machine

KSLA12 - LSUHS Dr. John Vanchiere said as a country we have a long history of producing vaccines and it’s normal for manufacturing issues to occur. The fact that it’s recognized and there’s a transparency to the reporting should give us even more trust.

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Health experts turn to younger people as eligibility expands for COVID-19 vaccines

KSLA 12 - “If you can minimize the spread in the group that’s spreading it the most, you, of course, dramatically drop the infection rate,” explained Dr. Andrew Yurochko, a professor in LSU Health Shreveport’s microbiology and immunology department.

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Health expert speaks on vaccine apprehension, herd immunity

“There are still folks who are still a little nervous that the vaccine was produced in a relatively short length of time think the important thing to note here is the technology is not new while the vaccine is the technology is something, we’ve been working on for decades,” Dr. John Vanchiere shares.

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Multitude of coronavirus variants found in the US ā€” but the threat is unclear

Nature.com - Ramped-up sequencing efforts are helping to identify mutations that might boost transmission or help a virus evade immune responses. For the scientists who have spent the past year poring over hundreds of thousands of coronavirus genomes, the United States has been an enigma.

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ā€˜Now, itā€™s about trust:ā€™ With more people able to get the COVID-19 vaccine

“LSUHS is adjusting our strategy to accommodate more folks,” Dr. John Vanchiere said. “I would like to see longer lines and more people there getting vaccinated. And we have (the) capacity to vaccinate more than 2,000 or 2,500 people per day.”

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COVID Variant Hunter: Even Vaccinated Should Keep Wearing Masks

NBC CT - LSU Health Shreveport Virologist Jeremy Kamil told NBC Connecticut Investigates that halting their spread will require other measures. Kamil was among a team of researchers that discovered seven new COVID-19 strains, known as "variants," aside from the variants first identified in the UK, South Africa, and Brazil. 

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Dr. Michael Sewell - LSU Health Shreveport

Louisiana Radio Network - LSU Health Shreveport Chief of Hospital Medicine Dr. Mike Sewell said the current case fatality rate is far lower than it was this time last year when, according to one study last year, it was as high as four percent in New Orleans. He estimated we’re closer to one in one thousand cases.

Read More about Outcomes for COVID patients significantly better one year later (opens in new window/tab)
LSU Health Shreveport holds Saturday and Tuesday vaccine clinics aimed at those working traditional hours

To date, LSU Health Shreveport has administered over 48,000 vaccines as the first large-scale vaccine clinic in Louisiana. In order to accommodate those who work standard hours throughout the work week, and to maintain the health and wellbeing of our staff and volunteers, several changes are being made to the vaccination schedule moving forward. 

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport holds Saturday and Tuesday vaccine clinics aimed at those working traditional hours
The vaccines are working. That's why we shouldn't panic about variants.

NBC News - "There are certain variants that are more transmissible, and we have strong data on that, but the thing people should take away from the variant story is just: Don't let your guard down," said Dr. Jeremy Kamil, an associate professor of microbiology and immunology at Louisiana State University Health Shreveport.

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hand holding vaccine vial

Four thousand three hundred (4300) doses of the Johnson and Johnson COVID-19 vaccine will be available during the twelve-lane vaccination clinic to be held at the Brookshire Grocery Arena located at 2400 Century Link Center Drive from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport and Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport partner to bring first large-scale vaccination clinic to Bossier City this weekend (opens in new window/tab)
Large number of Americans don't want COVID vaccines right now

KTBS3 - As more and more coronavirus vaccines becomes available, it's becoming clear that a lot of people don't want it. Whether it's reluctance, hesitancy or flat out refusal, a huge percentage of Americans are not interested in getting a COVID-19 vaccine, according to surveys.

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So, you got your vaccine. What should you do now?

KSLA12 - According to the CDC, medical experts are still working to learn whether or not the vaccine slows transmission rates, even if you don’t get sick. That’s why, for now, even after you get the vaccine, you are urged to continue behaviors that are proven to slow the spread of the virus.

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Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards press conference

Baton Rouge Advocate - In Shreveport, LSUHS - in partnership with Christus Shreveport-Bossier Health and Willis Knight Health System - had been doing about 1,500 shots a day at a drive up community vaccination site. That was shut down Monday because of the storm, said LSUHS spokesperson Lisa Babin, and won’t resume until next week.

Read More about Louisiana expanding coronavirus vaccine, distribution affected by winter storms (opens in new window/tab)
Dr. G.E. Ghali to speak at National Forum on COVID-19 Vaccine

We are proud to announce that on February 24, 2021, 2:00 PM – 3:30 PM EST Dr. G.E. Ghali, Chancellor for LSU Health Shreveport has been invited to be part of a panel of four people on one of the Town Hall Sessions on the topic of Building Bridges between Public Health and Healthcare Systems to Ensure Access to Vaccination.

Read More about Dr. G.E. Ghali to speak at National Forum on COVID-19 Vaccine
LSUHS COVID-19 Community Vaccine Site Receives Visit & Thank You from Governor John Bel Edwards

Governor John Bel Edwards visited Louisiana’s first mass community vaccine clinic to see firsthand just how well the community effort involving LSU Health Shreveport faculty, students and staff, Region 7 Office of Public Health, Louisiana National Guard, BPCC nursing students, CHRISTUS Shreveport-Bossier Health System and Willis-Knighton Health System is working

Read More about LSUHS COVID-19 Community Vaccine Site Receives Visit & Thank You from Governor John Bel Edwards
Dr. John Vanchiere at media conference, photo by Scott Ferrell, Shreveport Times

Shreveport Times - Dr. John Vanchiere, professor and chief of pediatric infectious diseases at LSUHS, talked about the benefits of getting the vaccine and its safety. “We know that early on when people get infected with COVID-19, most people have no symptoms at all and that is one of the very critical features of this type of infection compared to influenza."

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doctor walking down hall in hospital

KSLA's Christian Piekos asked our local healthcare heroes to write a reflective letter to their 'pre-pandemic' selves highlighting the unthinkable challenges they'd face responding to the pandemic. (You have to be logged in to Facebook to watch the video.)

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video clip image of LSU Health Shreveport building

KTBS-3 - The Center of Excellence for Emerging Viral Threats at LSU Health Shreveport plays a big role in COVID-19 testing and community vaccinations. But another important role it plays involves the identification of COVID-19 mutations and the variants they cause.

Read More about LSUHS's Center of Excellence for Emerging Viral Threats is a major player in the fight against COVID-19 (opens in new window/tab)
Vaccines appear to be effective against COVID variants

KTBS 3 - “The quicker that people get vaccinated, the less chance of any virus being around and given the opportunity to mutate,” Dr. Ghali, LSU Health Shreveport Chancellor explained. “The longer a virus is around, the longer they're going to be able to mutate. It's a natural course in the development of the virus.”

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LSU Health Shreveport faculty address questions, concerns about current state of pandemic

KSLA12 - According to professor and pediatrics chair Dr. Maroun Mhanna, the COVID-19 vaccine takes about one week to 10 days to become effective. Therefore, it is still possible to test positive for the virus, even after getting the vaccine. Also, in order to ensure maximum effectiveness, it is important to get both doses of the vaccine.

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ā€˜Weā€™re in the darkā€™: The U.S. is way behind on testing for dangerous COVID variants

Fortune.com - Even the type of sequencing done in the U.S. has been lacking, some experts say, with much of the effort focused on finding cases of the U.K. variant, rather than casting a wider net for any variant, including ones not previously identified, said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at Louisiana State University Health Shreveport.

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scientist in lab

Bloomberg.com - Even the type of sequencing done in the U.S. has been lacking, some experts say, with much of the effort focused on finding cases of the U.K. variant, rather than casting a wider net for any variant, including ones not previously identified, said Jeremy Kamil, a virologist at LSU Health Shreveport. “It’s the Wild West,” he said. “Every state, city, county is doing its own thing. It’s a bunch of random cats and no one is trying to herd them.”

Read More about U.S. Falters in DNA Testing to Detect Dangerous Covid Mutations (opens in new window/tab)
man holding a sticker that says I got the COVID-19 vaccine at LSU Health Shreveport

This week LSU Health Shreveport took a historic step towards stopping the spread of the coronavirus. In addition to continuously testing for COVID-19, the Emerging Viral Threat Lab has now organized the distribution of the vaccine to individuals age 70 and up. On the first day of testing, over 1100 seniors were able to get the vaccine from the safety of their vehicles.

Read More about COVID-19 Vaccinations at the Fairgrounds
Pfizer Offers COVID-19 Shots to Health Workers Who Got Placebo

Bloomberg - On Monday, John Vanchiere, the principal investigator for a trial site at LSU Health Shreveport, emailed 245 participants to let them know the COVID-19 vaccine trial would be slowly unblinded. By Wednesday afternoon, seven placebo recipients got their first shot, all of them health-care workers.

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Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine vial

KSLA 12 - Dr. Robert Rhoads, professor and emeritus chairman of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at LSU Health Shreveport, developed key components of the mRNA over years of work. The vaccine uses messenger RNA, or mRNA, which essentially provides instructions to the body on how to fight the novel coronavirus.

Read More about Technology developed at LSU Health Shreveport played key role in COVID-19 vaccine development
COVID-19 vaccine arrives at Ochsner-LSU Health Shreveport

KSLA 12 - “It is gratifying to see LSU Health Shreveport’s contributions to the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine through licensing of a LSUHS patent to BioNTech for mRNA-stabilizing cap analogs and in serving as the only north Louisiana vaccine trial site. Additionally our numerous COVID-19 clinical trials are providing access to novel therapies reflecting the benefit of having an academic medical center in our community,” shared Dr. G.E. Ghali, Chancellor of LSU Health Shreveport.

Read More about COVID-19 vaccine arrives at Ochsner-LSU Health Shreveport
video clip image

KSLA 12- “If the EVT Lab had not existed, quite frankly, I think we’d be in a much darker place here in the northern part of the state,” said Dr. Chris Kevil, vice chancellor of research and one of the leading minds behind creation of the lab. “The EVT Lab has been fundamental in our ability to monitor COVID infections in patients out in this community."

Read More about Amid dark days of pandemic, LSU Health Shreveportā€™s Emerging Viral Threat Lab stands as a beacon of hope (opens in new window/tab)
Patients can experience Chronic fatigue as aftereffect of COVID-19

According to Sharon Dunn, the dean of LSU Health Shreveport’s School of Allied Health Professionals and the president of the American Physical Therapy Association, chronic fatigue is one of the aftereffects of COVID-19 on some patients.

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LSU Health Shreveport Leads Louisiana  in COVID-19 VIRAL GENOME SEQUENCING

The Emerging Viral Threat (EVT) Lab at LSU Health Shreveport has now sequenced a total 651 Louisiana SARS-CoV-2 virus genomes making them the largest contributor to date of genetic data on SARS-CoV-2 in the state. SARS-CoV-2, which is short for ‘Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2,’ is the virus that causes COVID-19, and viral genome sequencing is contributing to a worldwide effort to fight the ongoing pandemic.

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LSU Health's Emerging Viral Threat Lab makes big impact in first 6 months

KTBS 3 - Andrew Yurochko, Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at LSUHS, shares, “When you think about total tests, 0.1% of the total tests of the entire country are done right here in Northwest Louisiana, where we’ve focused on our own citizens, not just in Shreveport or Caddo Parish, but in all of Region 7 which is Northwest Louisiana.”

Read More about LSU Health's Emerging Viral Threat Lab makes big impact in first 6 months
LSUHS COVID Surveillance Strike Team honored as a Patriot of the Pandemic

The Bossier Chamber of Commerce honored “Patriots of the Pandemic” to recognize those in the community who played key roles in fighting back the pandemic. LSU Health Shreveport’s COVID Surveillance Strike Team received a special Eagle Award for testing coordination inside nursing homes.

Read More about LSUHS COVID Surveillance Strike Team honored as a Patriot of the Pandemic
Syringe. Pixabay

LSUHS is expanding enrollment in the Pfizer-sponsored COVID-19 vaccine study for the next two weeks to include individuals ages 16-18 and those older than 85 years of age.  Those interested in participating in this important vaccine trial should sign up as quickly as possible.  

Read More about Pfizer-sponsored COVID-19 Vaccine Study at LSUHS Expands Enrollment Ages
COVID-19 testing administered in drive up testing. LSU Health Shreveport

Health Matters host, Dr. Sanford Katz, was  joined by LSUHS's Andrew Yurochko, PhD, Professor of Microbiology and Immunology and Carroll Feist Chair of Viral Oncology and Dr. John Vanchiere, Chief of the Department of Pediatrics Infectious Diseases. to discuss testing, treatments and vaccines for COVID-19.

Read More about Testing and Treatment for COVID-19 (opens in new window/tab)
map of COVID19 cases on July 30, 2020

The state's peak in April came mostly from widespread infections in New Orleans. Now the rest of Louisiana is surging, reports William Taylor Potter and Michael Stucka, Lafayette Daily Advertiser and USA TODAY.

Read More about New COVID-19 surge in Louisiana worse than first, and unique as only state with two spikes (opens in new window/tab)
NWLA hospitals actively managing COVID-19 are counting on the communityā€™s help to reduce the spread

The number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in NW Louisiana has increased in recent weeks. Our teams are rising to this challenge with incredible compassion and professionalism; however, we need your help. 

Read More about NWLA hospitals actively managing COVID-19 are counting on the communityā€™s help to reduce the spread
KTBS-3 ABC Shreveport story on more people under 30 are positive for COVID-19 than over 60

There are more than 7,500 positive cases; more than those in the 60 to 69 age range, where there are close to 6,900 cases. LSUHS Chancellor Dr. G.E. Ghali said it could be due to more testing. But he says this age group is also less likely to practice social distancing.

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LSU Health Shreveport one of five sites in world studying inhaled nitric oxide vs COVID-19

KTBS 3 - “What makes this so exciting is not only are we on the forefront, we are on the forefront of the forefront,” said Dr. Keith Scott, the principal investigator for the trial at LSU Health Shreveport. This is not the first time inhaled nitric oxide has been used to fight a coronavirus. It was used in 2004 during the SARS outbreak.

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(Photo: Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times)

"As a result of a lot of sacrifice by our community, including importantly the business sector, the number of new cases, hospitalizations and patients needing (help) for COVID-19 is declining," shared Chancellor Ghali.

Read More about LSUHS Chancellor joins business leaders to unveil website for reopening economy (opens in new window/tab)
Photo courtesy of KSLA: ambulance at St. Mary Medical Center in Shreveport, LA

St. Mary Medical Center will now be able to accommodate inpatient pediatric, labor and delivery, Neonatal ICU and Pediatric ICU patients. This move will allow the hospital system to add 100 more beds that’s part of their ICU expansion to mee the need for COVID-19 patients.

Read More about Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport moving patients to St. Mary Medical Center Apr. 27
EVT Lab testing equipment, photo arklatexhomepage.com

We are very appreciative of this generous gift from Mr. Organick and Inferno Manufacturing Corp. It will be put to invaluable use in expanding the access to both viral and antibody testing, particularly in underserved areas of north Louisiana,” stated Chancellor Ghali.

Read More about Private donation helps support LSU Health Shreveportā€™s mobile COVID-19 testing (opens in new window/tab)
Feist-Weiller Partners in Wellness van repurposed for COVID-19 screenings photo

Dr. Andrew Yurochko shares that in some areas of NW Louisiana, Feist-Weiller's "Partners in Wellness", while focused on mammography and other cancer screening, also provided the only health care available. Now, the program’s three vans offer testing for COVID-19.

Read More about Feist-Weiller mammography vans repurposed to screen for COVID-19 in northwest Louisiana (opens in new window/tab)
News story by WBRZ-2 with update on clinical trials

WBRZ News - “We know a lot of these things work, we just don’t know when they work the best. And that’s what we’re trying to figure out really right now is when, how much and where. And that’s the confusing part of this whole disease. It’s nothing like we’ve ever seen, nothing like medicine has ever seen,” Dr. Keith Scott said.

Read More about Researchers say more time, data will determine if nitric oxide therapy is effective against COVID-19 (opens in new window/tab)
LSUHS Chancellor: It's a mistake to open too early, state should remain closed through May

“I'm afraid that if these social mitigation factors are released too early that we could be seeing a second peak, which would be a really bad deal,” Ghali told The Ouachita Citizen in an interview.

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Image: National Guard member cleans hospital bed

Multiple wings serving the needs of women and children are being moved from the Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport Medical Center to the St. Mary Medical Center to free up more ICU units to better treat COVID-19 patients.

Read More about MEDIA CONFERENCE announces opening of St. Mary's Hospital as additional site for care of COVID-19 patients
Close up of 3D Printed Nasal Swab

As part of a national cooperative with the University of South Florida (USF) Health, Northwell Health, New York’s largest healthcare provider, and Formlabs, LSU Health Shreveport has obtained the printing files for a patented swab design, becoming the first in Louisiana to produce these patented 3D-printed swabs.

Read More about LSUHS Faculty Producing 3D-Printed Nasal Swabs for COVID-19 Testing
Dr. Robert Walter on KTBS-3

Dr. Robert Walter, LSUHS lung specialist, said about a week after contracting the virus a patient’s respiratory system begins to weaken. Patients with severe symptoms require a breathing tube and ventilator.

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Donating Plasma

MyArkLaMiss.com - Scientists at LSU Health Shreveport continue to have a significant impact on the fight against COVID-19 in Louisiana with their latest achievement being able to offer serology testing to support the Convalescent Plasma Therapy clinical trial and help identify ideal plasma donors.

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Press Conference announcing expanded rural mobile COVID-19 Testing

Realizing the need for more testing in rural and other underserved locations in Northwest Louisiana, the Caddo Parish Commission voted to provide up to $175,000 to LSU Health Shreveport for the Clinic’s mobile unit. The allocation will assist with operations and testing. Expanded testing is north Louisiana will occur thanks to a $125,000 gift by Inferno Manufacturing Corporation.

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image of scientist working in lab

LSU Health Shreveport has become one of the leaders in the fight against COVID-19, through its healthcare services, testing and innovative research.The work likely will earn the medical facility a place in the history books as 2020 will undoubtedly be known as the year of the coronavirus. 

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LSU Health Shreveport has a van that will be used to go into rural/hot spots in the community to offer COVID-19 testing. Test

Mayor Perkins said, “To combat this virus, we have to put our resources where they are most needed. This partnership between Caddo Parish and LSU Health Shreveport does just that; it provides rapid testing to medically underserved communities in our area.”

Read More about LSUHS Mobile testing lab headed to underserved COVID-19 cluster neighborhoods (opens in new window/tab)
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards photo at press conference provided by The Advocate

To begin opening the state back up, Edwards has said officials need far more diagnostic tests, along with serological tests that could tell whether people have immunity to the virus. 

Read More about Governor Edwards says 'too many people moving around' and warns of possible coronavirus spike (opens in new window/tab)
LSU Health Shreveport doctors begin Nitric Oxide trial for COVID-19

“What we’re so excited about is this, it’s FDA approved. Almost any hospital of any size already has a ventilator, already has the gas and if this is something that does work it could start being applied immediately,” said LSUHS Professor, Keith Scott, MD.

Read More about How Nitric Oxide can help coronavirus patients as clinical trial gets underway at LSUHS (opens in new window/tab)
Caddo commissioner Steven Jackson photo

Commissioner Jackson said, “This is particularly for individuals who are medically underserved or have access barriers. We want to go off data with the Health Unit to see where there is significant community spread and be aggressive with testing.”

Read More about Caddo Commission will vote to allocate funding for COVID-19 testing at LSUHS EVT Lab (opens in new window/tab)
KTAL News image of Louisiana data

“Louisiana is doing a good job with testing. On a per capita basis Louisiana is number two in the total number of tests done in their state,” said Dr. G. E. Ghali. He says the new numbers show the efforts of the governor are working and if we continue social distancing, the predicted number of deaths will also go down.

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WWL News image of coronavirus

Research from LSU Health Shreveport has shown that nitric oxide is a strong protector against tissue hypoxia. “It’s just really a raging phenomenon that occurs in the lung and if we can just calm that down a little bit and allow the body’s natural systems to come in an heal it, that’s the real goal,” said Scott.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport testing if inhaled nitric oxide can fight COVID-19 (opens in new window/tab)
photo still from video on plasma transfusion to treat COVID-19

The plasma transfusion is a clinical trial to see whether anitbodies that their immune systems created would help those who are battling a more advanced stage of the coronavirus. The trial is the first of its kind in Louisiana and the third of its kind in the U.S.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport first in state to test plasma treatment for coronavirus (opens in new window/tab)
Staff working on preparation of Nitric Oxide clinical trial for COVID-19 at LSU Health Shreveport

The LSU Health Shreveport Department of Medicine has joined up with the Massachusetts General Hospital and the University of Alabama-Birmingham to enlist patients in a test study using inhaled nitric oxide to heal lungs damaged by COVID-19.

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Lifeshare Blood Centers sign

The FDA just released new guidelines allowing us to investigationally use convalescent plasma for patients with moderate to severe COVID-19 infections.  The only source of this convalescent plasma is donations from people that have recovered for at least two weeks from COVID-19 and have produced antibodies. 

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport and LifeShare Blood Center provide first COVID-19 convalescent plasma therapy in Louisiana (opens in new window/tab)
LSU Health Shreveport among the first in US to offer inhaled nitric oxide clinical trial for COVID-19 patients

Research from LSU Health Shreveport has shown that nitric oxide is a strong protector against tissue hypoxia, which occurs during severe Covid-1 infection”, said Dr. Chris Kevil, Vice Chancellor for Research at LSU Health Shreveport.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport among the first in US to offer inhaled nitric oxide clinical trial for COVID-19 patients
Lifeshare Blood Centers sign

Officials say a critically ill COVID-19 patient at Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport Academic Medical Center is being treated with the first convalescent plasma therapy in Louisiana, donated at LifeShare Blood Center just hours before the treatment began Saturday.

Read More about First use of plasma therapy in Louisiana for coronavirus done by LSU Health Shreveport
Margaret Place image

Due to some forward thinking by Dr. G.E. Ghali, chancellor of LSU Health Shreveport, three years ago, northwest Louisiana might be in better shape to fight complications from COVID-19 than other areas of the state.

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LSUHS doctors go to New Orleans to assist with COVID-19 on KTBS News

Some doctors from LSUHS have made the long haul to the front lines of the COVID-19 fight in Louisiana: New Orleans. Guided by Dr. Angela Cornelius, the seven residents come from various specialties but have the same mission: providing much needed aid to an overwhelmed hospital.

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Dr. Ghali video about COVID-19 efforts on KTAL News

“Certainly we’ve ramped up our testing,” Dr. G.E. Ghali, LSUHS Chancellor, said. “We’ve increased our capacity by 60 percent right off the bat of number of ICU beds that we have.” The increased testing is thanks to the new Emerging Viral Threat Lab that can provide results in less than 48 hours, freeing resources.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport ramping up efforts in COVID-19 fight (opens in new window/tab)
Dr. Yurochko in the lab

The Shreveport Times reached out to Professor Andrew Yurochko, Carroll Feist endowed chair of viral oncology and department vice-chair of microbiology and immunology, LSUHS, with the Emerging Viral Threat lab which began processing COVID-19 samples last Wednesday.

Read More about Why are so many people testing positive in Caddo/Bossier? LSUHS Expert provides answers (opens in new window/tab)
medical student video on how she is helping others during covid-19

If you are a frontline medical worker in the Shreveport-Bossier area, and could use some additional help, click here to take a survey. Once completed, you’ll be connected with a volunteer who will be able to assist you. You are also able to email olsugroceries@gmail.com with any questions you may have.

Read More about LSUHS Medical Students volunteer to help their fellow workers in medical care (opens in new window/tab)
Dr. Chris Kevil presenting at LSUHS Research Celebration, Feb. 25, 2020

Dr. Kevil, in reference to the EVT lab says, "We're ramping up to get to get from about 1,000 to a peak of 2,000 tests a day. Right now we're in the process of working out...a system (between) the clinical laboratory, the hospital and the community so that we can provide the turnaround time of the test of 48 hours, working to get it down to 24 hours."

Read More about LSUHS is all hands on deck in fighting COVID-19 (opens in new window/tab)
image of scientist working in lab

Chancellor Ghali explains the medical school's growing role in the COVID 19 fight. "We already have a robust and incredibly well known virology department," he says, adding that their experience in SARS virus research laid the groundwork for this challenge. "What (our) lab allows us to do is test up to about 2,000 samples a day." Ghali says these samples are coming to LSUHS from all over the country.

Read More about LSUHS is a leader in COVID-19 testing for Louisiana and beyond. (opens in new window/tab)
The alarming message of Louisiana's sharp rise in Covid-19 cases

Dr. Puja Nambiar, an infectious disease specialist at LSUHS, states that Shreveport experts have been able to work closely with the team at the Ochsner Health in New Orleans, adopting protocols and surge planning developed by experts a week ahead of the epidemic. Hopefully, that will help stem the tide. (CNN.com)

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Ochsner LSU Health Shreveport

Working together with Governor John Bel Edwards and following the guidance of state public officials that we improve surge capacity for COVID-19 patients, we are rapidly modifying our St. Mary Medical Center, located in the Highland neighborhood of Shreveport.

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Academic Medical Labs, like LSU Health Shreveport, have Stepped up to Fill a Void

As the coronavirus spreads, researchers at academic medical institutions have jumped into the containment battle by developing and deploying tests to detect the virus. They hope to help fill a nationwide shortage of such tests. (AAMC.org)

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LSU Health Shreveport announces creation of COVID-19 testing laboratory

Dr. G. E. Ghali, chancellor of LSUHS, said during a Wednesday press conference that, “Around the 17 of March, I approached the governor and said we have a few road blocks to this and we need your help. Without any questions he jumped right in and created an executive order and by March 25, today, the lab is up and running.”

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image of scientist working in lab

During a virtual press conference Wednesday morning, Chancellor G. E. Ghali said the facts around Louisiana’s confirmed cases are “really scary” because studies show the state has the fastest growth rate of confirmed cases in the entire world, third in per capita, and the steepness parallels that of Italy and Spain.

Read More about Testing Laboratory for COVID-19 coming to LSU Health Shreveport (opens in new window/tab)
image of state of louisiana with coronavirus

Top scientists at LSUHS have created the Emerging Viral Threat Lab in a remarkable amount of time to take on the global pandemic. The (EVT) Lab can initially test 50 samples per day and expects to tests in the hundreds by end of the week and into next week. The test results are determined with 24 to 48 hours. 

Read More about Testing Lab for COVID-19 created by LSU Health Shreveport (opens in new window/tab)
Scientists working in lab

Having an academic medical center is a “gem” touted frequently throughout north Louisiana and beyond. While many in the nation are fearful of having appropriate access to testing and quality care during the Covid-19 pandemic, thanks to LSU Health Shreveport, north Louisiana is infinitely better positioned than most communities to face Covid-19.

Read More about LSU Health Shreveport continues mission to Teach, Heal and Discover