Articles: pandemics.
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Pol. Arch. Med. Wewn. · Sep 2024
ReviewPost-COVID-19 pandemic increased incidence of invasive bacterial infections: potential links with altered herd trained immunity.
A global increase in the incidence of various infectious diseases has been observed since the end of the COVID‑19 pandemic. This may be due to 2 independent phenomena. One of them is impaired immunity of long‑COVID patients. ⋯ Altogether, it might be speculated that trained innate immunity within an entire population can lead to the development of herd trained immunity (HTI), a newly‑coined medical term. HTI can supplement classic, antigen‑specific herd immunity (memory B and T cells), and it plays a key role in preventing the spread of various infectious diseases, including invasive GAS infections. Unfortunately, the global HTI has been overthrown during the COVID‑19 pandemic; however, it should be restored shortly.
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Practice context is known to influence the deployment of competencies. The COVID-19 pandemic created a major disruption in many practice contexts. The objective was to understand the lived experience of rehabilitation clinicians during a major disruption of their practice context, namely, the COVID-19 pandemic. ⋯ A disruption in the practice context may have positive effects on professional expertise through the mobilization of reflective practice.