『U.S. Public Health Alerts: Measles Outbreak Ends, New Street Opioids Emerge, Hepatitis C Deaths Rise』のカバーアート

U.S. Public Health Alerts: Measles Outbreak Ends, New Street Opioids Emerge, Hepatitis C Deaths Rise

U.S. Public Health Alerts: Measles Outbreak Ends, New Street Opioids Emerge, Hepatitis C Deaths Rise

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概要

Listeners, here's the latest on public health alerts across the United States as of today. South Carolina's Department of Public Health has declared its measles outbreak over, the worst in the U.S. in over 35 years, after nearly 1,000 people fell ill since October, with at least 21 hospitalized and response costs hitting $2.1 million. The state passed 42 days without new cases, crediting quick investigations and community cooperation.

In San Francisco, the Department of Public Health issued an urgent alert on two new deadly street opioids: N-desethyl-isotonitazine, known as "Iso" or "Tony," and cychlorphine, also called N-propionitrile chlorphine. These are undetectable by test strips, don't contain fentanyl, and cychlorphine is ten times more potent. They've caused the city's first overdose death this April, appearing in counterfeit pills mimicking licensed meds. Even one pill can kill—stick to pharmacy-issued medications only.

Globally, the World Health Organization's new report notes the U.S. among top countries for hepatitis C deaths in 2024, with 1.34 million global fatalities from hepatitis B and C combined and 1.8 million new infections yearly. Progress includes a 32% drop in new hepatitis B cases since 2015, but U.S. listeners should prioritize vaccination, testing, and treatment, as only 5% of chronic cases get care.

Nebraska's Fred & Pamela Buffett Cancer Center launched Cancer InFocus Data Dashboard and County Cancer Data Infographics, offering interactive county-level stats on incidence, screening, and risks to boost local prevention.

The AFL-CIO's 2026 Death on the Job Report reveals 5,070 U.S. workers killed on the job last year, plus 135,000 from occupational diseases—key for workplace safety awareness.

Stay vigilant, get vaccinated, test drugs if using, and consult healthcare pros. Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.

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