Legionnaire’s Disease Outbreak Kills 2 And Sickens 58 In New York City- Know Symptoms And Risk

Updated Aug 20, 2025 | 05:12 PM IST

SummaryA Legionnaires disease outbreak has been reported in Harlem New York. Health officials have warned the citizens of the area to be careful as the disease is contagious and poses a risk of spreading.
Legionnaire’s Disease Outbreak 2 Dead And 58 Sick In New Your City - Know Symptoms And Risk

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2 people have died and about 58 people have been diagnosed with Legionnaire's disease in Harlem, New York. According to NYC Health statement, they are investigating a community cluster of Legionnaires' disease in Central Harlem.

They reported that the bacteria responsible for the outbreak, Legionella pneumophila, was found in 11 cooling towers. All of these towers have undergone the required cleaning and remediation.

Also Read: Legionnaires' Outbreak Sickened 108 And Kills 5 In New York City: Can It Spread From Person To Person?

Legionnaire’s disease is a type of of pneumonia that is caused by a bacteria called legionella, according to the Center of Disease Control and Prevention.

Acting Health Commissioner Dr. Michelle Morse is urging anyone in the affected areas who develops flu-like symptoms to seek medical attention immediately. Symptoms can include cough, fever, chills, muscle aches, or difficulty breathing. It is especially critical for high-risk individuals—such as those over 50, smokers, and people with chronic lung disease or weakened immune systems—to get care as soon as possible, as early treatment with antibiotics can be very effective.

How Legionnaire’s Disease Spreads

Legionnaires' disease is caused by breathing in mist or water vapor that contains the Legionella bacteria. This bacteria thrives in warm water and can be found in various water systems, such as cooling towers, hot tubs, humidifiers, and large air-conditioning units. The disease cannot be spread from person to person.

To prevent the spread of Legionella, building owners and managers should follow a water management program. At home, you can take steps to prevent the growth of waterborne germs. For example, in vehicles, it's important to only use genuine windshield cleaner fluid instead of water, as Legionella can grow in the windshield wiper fluid tank.

Risk Factors for Legionnaire’s Disease

A 2014 review published in the Emerging Infectious Diseases journal showed that cases from 2002 to 2011 showed that the number of people getting Legionnaires' disease in New York City was on the rise, increasing by 230% during that time. The highest number of cases was in 2009, when the rate was 2.74 per 100,000 people—much higher than the national average of 1.15.

The study found a clear link between the disease and poverty. The areas with the highest poverty rates also had the most cases of Legionnaires' disease.

Additionally, people with certain jobs were more likely to get sick. For those who caught the disease in their community, there was a higher chance they worked in jobs like transportation, repair, protective services, cleaning, or construction.

What Are the Complications That Occur?

The disease was first identified in 1976 following an outbreak among people at an American Legion convention in Philadelphia.

If a doctor suspects pneumonia, they will perform a chest x-ray. To confirm if the cause is Legionella, other tests are needed, such as a urine test or a lab test using a sample of sputum or lung fluid. If you are diagnosed with the disease, the healthcare provider will report it to the local health department for investigation.

Legionnaires' disease is treated with specific antibiotics, and most cases can be cured successfully, especially with early treatment. Although healthy people usually recover, they often need to be hospitalized. Complications can include lung failure or even death. About 1 in 10 people who get the disease will die from complications. The risk of death is higher, about 1 in 4, for those who get the disease while in a healthcare facility.

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Are Fluoride Levels In US Drinking Water Harmful? New Findings Link Them to Stronger Teen Cognition

Updated Nov 25, 2025 | 10:00 PM IST

SummaryNew research on fluoride in U.S. drinking water challenges long-standing safety concerns and suggests that recommended levels may support stronger cognition in teenagers. The study adds fresh insight to the growing national debate over fluoridation, public health policy, and children’s long-term wellbeing.
fluoride us drinking water

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The long-standing practice of adding fluoride to community drinking water in the United States is now under sharp review as questions rise about whether its advantages continue to outweigh possible risks. A fresh set of findings pushes back against recent warnings about fluoride in water and suggests that it might offer added benefits.

This renewed national discussion began after a government report from the National Toxicology Program stated that high fluoride exposure was tied to lower IQ in children. That report, however, assessed fluoride amounts that were at least twice higher than federal recommendations and had limited information about what happens at lower, commonly used levels, as per CNN.

However, the latest study examined fluoride quantities that match the usual suggested range in drinking water. Researchers found strong evidence showing that children who grew up with water containing these lower levels of fluoride performed better on cognitive assessments than those who had no fluoride exposure.

Fluoride in US Public Water Faces Renewed Questions

Dr. Rob Warren, lead author of the study released in Science Advances, said he was surprised by the National Toxicology Program’s earlier conclusions and felt the need to produce evidence more suitable for public policy. He explained that he pursued the work because it was a major question without a clear answer.

The national debate has also intensified as US Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has labeled fluoride an industrial waste and pointed to possible IQ loss while calling for a rollback of federal guidance. Utah and Florida have already moved to prohibit fluoridation of public water.

As per CNN, Warren compared the situation to testing a heart medication. If the advised dose is 100 milligrams, but a study measures reactions to nearly a million milligrams, the results do not reflect what happens at the normal dose. He said that this is how much of the fluoride research has been structured and that only extremely high doses have shown harmful effects, which is not helpful for policy decisions.

Warren directs a long-running program that began in the US Department of Education and has followed tens of thousands of Americans from their high school years in the 1980s through several decades.

Fluoride and Cognition: What The Study Found

For the current analysis, the team linked math, reading and vocabulary test scores from nearly 27,000 participants to the level of fluoride in their childhood drinking water. These measurements were based on older records from the US Geological Survey and the Department of Health and Human Services, as per CNN.

Researchers worked under the assumption that participants spent their entire upbringing near their high schools. They sorted people into three groups. One group had steady exposure to recommended fluoride levels either through natural sources or public water treatment. Another group never had fluoride in their water. A third group had mixed exposure because their community changed its water policy at some point.

Students who had fluoride for only part of their childhood scored higher on tests than peers who never had it. Those who grew up with fluoride throughout all their childhood years scored even better. Follow-up testing that continued up to 2021, when many had reached about 60 years of age, also showed no sign that fluoride contributed to cognitive decline.

Warren clarified that cognitive tests are not exact IQ scores, although they relate strongly. Test results reflect both mental ability and the learning opportunities a person receives. He is currently working on a follow-up project that will look more closely at fluoride and IQ with improved childhood location data.

Other studies this year suggested that removing fluoride from public water in the United States could lead to more than 25 million extra cavities among children and teenagers in five years along with nearly 10 billion dollars in dental treatment costs. Although the new study did not measure dental health, experts noted that pain from untreated cavities can interfere with a child’s ability to attend school or stay focused, which may influence academic scores.

Why Experts Still Differ on Fluoride Policy

Fluoride occurs naturally in some groundwater and foods. It protects teeth by strengthening enamel, which can be damaged by acids formed from bacteria, plaque and sugar. Communities in the United States started adding fluoride to water systems in 1945 to improve oral health in a cost-effective way.

The American Dental Association and numerous specialists continue to support community water fluoridation. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has also kept its recommendations unchanged. The agency does not have authority to require fluoridation, but it considers 0.7 milligrams per liter the ideal amount.

Recently, the US Food and Drug Administration restricted the use of prescription fluoride supplements. The agency noted that unapproved fluoride products may alter the gut microbiome and that better options exist to protect teeth.

In a written response published with the new research, Dr. David Savitz from Brown University argued that before ending a decades-long public health practice, there must be clear proof of harm at commonly used fluoride levels. He wrote that there is still no convincing evidence that fluoridation lacks benefit or causes damage at recommended doses.

He quoted a well-known saying, noting that if something is not broken, there is no reason to fix it. He said the new study suggests that fluoridated water remains on the side of being effective and safe.

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Neuralink: Can Elon Musk’s Brain Chip Help Reverse Paralysis In The Future?

Updated Nov 25, 2025 | 07:55 PM IST

SummaryNeuralink, Elon Musk’s brain-computer interface project, aims to study how implanted chips might one day support people with severe paralysis. Researchers are exploring whether this technology could help restore movement or communication, though findings are still in early stages.
neuralink elon musk

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The Neuralink chip is a piece of technology that’s hoped will one day allow people to operate devices like phones and computers using their thoughts. Its creator, tech mogul Elon Musk, describes it as a “Fitbit in your skull with tiny wires.” Elon Musk's brain implant company Neuralink said recently that 12 people worldwide have received its chips. The device is meant to have several applications, from restoring motor functionality within people to enabling a brain-computer interface. The question now is whether it will be able to reverse paralysis in the future or not.

Neuralink: What Is Neuralink, And What Does It Do?

Neuralink is a neurotechnology company Musk set up in 2016. The device is roughly the size of a coin and is implanted into the skull, with hair-thin threads placed inside specific parts of the brain to form a working brain-computer interface.

The implant records brain signals and transfers them to an external device, such as a smartphone, through Bluetooth. Its first product, Telepathy, is designed to let a person operate their phone or computer through intention alone. By placing the chip in regions that manage movement, Neuralink believes it could help people living with neurological conditions. Musk has said that early users would likely be people who cannot use their limbs.

Neuralink: What Testing Has Neuralink Carried Out In The Past?

As per Reuters, the company has run trials using monkeys and pigs. Demonstrations have featured monkeys moving a cursor or playing simple on-screen games using the implant. Neuralink maintains that no monkey died because of the device itself, though reports have circulated describing complications in some animals, including paralysis, seizures and swelling in the brain.

Neuralink: Can Neuralink Cure Paralysis?

The human brain contains millions of neurons responsible for movement, emotion and thought. These neurons send electrical signals down pathways that run from the brain to the rest of the body. If a person tries to stand up, the brain sends electrical instructions to the legs, and the reaction is instant. Paralysis develops when pathways in the spinal cord are damaged or blocked, according to the description on Neuralink’s website.

Because the Neuralink implant reads the brain’s signals, it can forward those signals to the limbs even when the spinal cord no longer relays them. This would require one implant in the brain and another placed below the injured area of the spinal cord. With steady training, a person could regain movement, raising the possibility that Neuralink may one day help restore mobility.

Neuralink Ethical Concerns

Experts have questioned the company’s experiments on animals and the general risks linked to brain operations, which can include seizures or bleeding. They have also pointed to worries about data privacy and long-term surveillance, since there is limited detail on how much control users will have over their neural information.

Earlier this year, the US Department of Transportation fined the company for failing to register as a carrier of hazardous biological material, including implants removed from primates, according to agency records reviewed by Reuters.

Neuralink Is FDA Approved

In late May 2023, the FDA granted Neuralink permission to start human testing. The company said on Twitter that the approval marked the beginning of its first clinical study in people, calling it a vital step toward making the technology accessible in the future.

Neuralink has continued to share updates, and in July 2025, it announced that it had completed two brain-implant procedures on the same day. Both individuals are said to be recovering well. Musk responded soon after, expressing confidence in what the technology might achieve in the coming years.

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A Fast-Spreading Flu Variant Is Circulating In The US: Symptoms To Watch For

Updated Nov 25, 2025 | 07:00 PM IST

SummaryA fast-spreading mutated strain of influenza H3N2, known as subclade K, is now circulating. Early reports from global health agencies show that this variant has become dominant in several countries and may lead to higher fevers and more complications. Keep reading for more details.
new flu variant us

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A newly mutated version of the familiar flu virus, Influenza H3N2, known as subclade K, is moving quickly across the northern hemisphere. This rise has raised concerns that the United States may be facing a tougher flu season. This specific offshoot of influenza has become the leading strain in several countries, including the US, Japan, the UK and Canada.

In the Southern Hemisphere, H1N1 led most of the flu activity this year, and H3N2 subclade K only began to spread near the end. Early figures from the UK and Japan show that about 90 percent of flu samples were linked to H3N2 subclade K, according to a report from the University of Minnesota. With a fresh variant circulating and fewer Americans choosing to get vaccinated, the coming months could be quite challenging.

Where Has The H3N2 Subclade K Strain Been Detected?

The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control reports that this strain has appeared across all continents and makes up roughly one third of all A (H3N2) sequences submitted to the Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data between May and November 2025 worldwide, and nearly half in the European Union. The agency notes that clear data on how well the current vaccine performs in real-world conditions remains limited. Even so, existing vaccines are still expected to help protect against serious illness.

The possibility of a flu season led mainly by H3N2 subclade K is considered moderate, based on the agency’s assessment. The threat is higher for people more likely to develop severe outcomes, including adults over 65, individuals with metabolic, lung, heart, neuromuscular or other long-term medical conditions, pregnant people and those with weakened immune systems.

H3N2 Subclade K Strain: Symptoms To Watch For

The symptoms linked to H3N2 mirror those seen with most influenza viruses and include:

  • Fever
  • Cough
  • Runny nose
  • Fatigue
  • Muscle aches and chills

This strain may, however, push fevers higher and increase the chances of complications.

Will the New Flu Strain Make for a More Severe Flu Season?

It remains unclear how flu activity will evolve in the United States, and specialists say delays in reliable information have made it trickier to monitor patterns. During the 44-day government shutdown, the CDC paused all updates on respiratory illness. In the most recent “FluView” report for the week ending Nov. 15, national flu activity stayed low, though numbers are climbing, particularly in children. Test positivity and hospital admissions are also going up.

What To Know About The Flu Vaccine?

The CDC advises that everyone aged 6 months and older, with very few exceptions, should get their flu shot.

Still, despite this guidance, fewer people seem to be getting vaccinated each year. CDC figures show that flu vaccine distribution has steadily fallen since the 2021–22 season.

Is the Flu Shot Effective Against the New Strain?

Scientists select the strains for each year’s vaccine based on the viruses circulating globally early in the year, Hopkins explains. The 2025–2026 vaccine includes H1N1, H3N2 and influenza B.

Because the mutated subclade K appeared too late in the cycle, researchers could not adjust this season’s formula. It is not an exact match for the chosen H3N2 strain, but experts stress that the vaccine will still provide valuable protection during the season.

A flu shot does not always stop infection, but it does lower the chances of developing serious illness, needing hospital care or facing life-threatening complications. “The goal of vaccines is to reduce the severity of illness, and reduce the disease impact on our population,” Hopkins says.

This year’s vaccine is also expected to be a strong fit for the H1N1 and influenza B strains that are circulating, Hopkins adds. “You’ll get the protection against two other strains of flu, even if H3N2 isn’t optimal,” Pekosz notes.

As flu activity intensifies, getting vaccinated remains one of the simplest ways to build protection, even against the mutated strain, as doctors continue to underline.

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