There are just 7 long COVID symptoms

People experiencing long-lasting effects from COVID-19—known as “long COVID” or post-COVID conditions—are susceptible to developing only seven health symptoms for up to a year following the infection.

They are: fast-beating heart, hair loss, fatigue, chest pain, shortness of breath, joint pain, and obesity.

To develop their findings, researchers reviewed Oracle Cerner real-world data from electronic medical records containing de-identified information for medical research purposes.

After examining data from a total of 52,461 patients at 122 health care facilities across the United States, the researchers selected the top 47 most commonly reported health symptoms from long COVID to examine for the study.

Then, the researchers looked for any comparisons in the reported health symptoms—many also shared by other viral respiratory infections—among people in three different subgroups:

  • People diagnosed with COVID-19 but do not have any common viral respiratory infections like influenza or pneumonia
  • People with common viral respiratory infections but do not have COVID-19
  • People who do not have COVID-19 or any other common viral respiratory infections.

“Despite an overwhelming number of long COVID symptoms previously reported by other studies, we only found a few symptoms specifically related to an infection from SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19,” says Chi-Ren Shyu, director of the University of Missouri Institute for Data Science and Informatics and corresponding author of the study, published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases.

“Before we examined the data, I thought we would find an ample amount of the symptoms to be specifically associated with long COVID, but that wasn’t the case.”

Shyu, who is also a professor in the electrical engineering and computer science department, says the results could benefit ongoing efforts by fellow researchers to study various impacts of COVID-19.

“Now, researchers will be able to better understand how SARS-CoV-2 may mutate or evolve by creating new connections that we may not have known about before,” Shyu says. “Going forward we can use electronic medical records to quickly detect subgroups of patients who may have these long-term health conditions.”

The findings will give health care providers much-needed information about what to ask and look for when visiting with a patient who has symptoms of long COVID, says coauthor Adnan Qureshi, a professor of neurology in the School of Medicine, and doctor of neurology with MU Health Care.

Qureshi says the study’s results could also benefit researchers examining other aspects of COVID-19, such as the impact of the virus on the brain or the immune system. He says the concept of long COVID was developed after clinicians started noticing a group of people who were dubbed “survivors” of COVID-19 were “not necessarily normal anymore.”

“The survivors still have symptoms that are at times disabling and preventing them from going back to work or the activities of their daily life,” Qureshi says.

“This is not because the COVID-19 infection is still active, but instead the infection has caused long-term consequences, or sequelae, in the form of a post-COVID syndrome that could persist for months or even years. Our research was able to identify long-term sequelae that are distinctive to COVID-19 and separate the post-COVID syndrome from other post-viral syndromes.”

Additional coauthors are from the University of Minnesota and the University of Missouri.

The National Institutes of Health supported the work. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the funding agencies.

Source: University of Missouri

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DC Studios boss James Gunn sinks cancel culture effort against star: Don’t keep a list of ‘what people think’

DC Studios co-head and Marvel’s “Guardian of the Galaxy Vol. 2” director James Gunn announced he won’t be joining the cancel culture chorus attacking one of his actors. Gunn isn’t looking to part ways with, nor will he punish, DC film star Zachary Levi for his recent tweet slamming the COVID-19 vaccine manufacturer Pfizer.

Despite a substantial wave of backlash against the “Shazam: Fury of the Gods” star for his statement agreeing that Pfizer is a “danger to the world,” Gunn insisted that he would not be looking to throw Levi under the bus or search for a replacement.

The director and studio head insisted that just because Levi said something he and others disagree with does not mean will change plans in terms of working with the actor. 

JAMES GUNN SPEAKS OUT ABOUT MARTIN SCORSESE’S PAST CRITICISM OF MARVEL MOVIES

James Gunn defended "Shazam: Fury of the Gods" actor Zach Levi after he put out a tweet critical of vaccine manufacturing company Pfizer.

James Gunn defended “Shazam: Fury of the Gods” actor Zach Levi after he put out a tweet critical of vaccine manufacturing company Pfizer.
(Daniel Knighton/Getty Images)

Levi, who plays the titular character in DC Studios’ “Shazam” superhero series, ignited a firestorm of internet criticism on Sunday when he tweeted out his negative impression of Pfizer.

In response to a Twitter user who asked, “Do you agree or not that Pfizer is a real danger to the world?” Levi tweeted, “Hardcore agree.” Social media users slammed the actor for being an anti-vaxxer. 

The furor over Levi’s tweet has made for a potentially more complicated press tour for the upcoming “Shazam” sequel, which premieres in March.

Gunn, who was recently named co-head of DC Studios, was asked about Levi’s tweet during a press event on Monday. He responded by acknowledging that he is willing to accept that actors and other filmmakers may have different opinions than him.

In Variety, he said, “Just real simply: Actors and filmmakers that I work with are going to say things that I agree with and things that I don’t agree with. And that’s going to happen. I don’t have a list of things that somebody should say because of what I think.”

Gunn also stressed that he’s not willing to alter or reconsider his own filmmaking plans just because someone he works with has different opinions. He added, “And you know, I can’t be changing my plans all the time because an actor says something that I don’t agree with.”

Though Gunn suggested he’d be more willing to take action if someone he worked with was “doing something morally reprehensible.”

HENRY CAVILL TO BE REPLACED BY LIAM HEMSWORTH IN ‘THE WITCHER’ AFTER ‘SUPERMAN’ NEWS

James Gunn was fired by Disney after tweets he wrote about rape, pedophilia, 9/11 and child abuse resurfaced. The director apologized for his tweets and was later reinstated.

James Gunn was fired by Disney after tweets he wrote about rape, pedophilia, 9/11 and child abuse resurfaced. The director apologized for his tweets and was later reinstated.
(Rodin Eckenroth/WireImage)

Gunn’s lenience towards Levi may be partially motivated by his own experiences when it comes to confrontation with “cancel culture.” In 2018, he was fired from Disney/Marvel for years-old tweets joking about rape and child molestation that resurfaced and went viral. 

At the time Gunn claimed he was simply being “provocative,” though he expressed regret for making the jokes. Disney eventually reinstated Gunn as director of the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise that same year. 

During a Fox News interview on his “The Suicide Squad” press tour in 2021, Gunn expressed some sympathy for people who have been canceled for outrageous or unpopular statements. He said, “I mean, listen, I’m always attracted to outsiders.”

Gunn has also expressed support for other Hollywood people, who have generated backlash for their behavior. Recently Gunn pledged support on behalf of DC Studios for “The Flash” actor Ezra Miller’s mental health recovery. Both he and fellow DC Studios co-head Peter Safran claimed they were “supportive” of Miller’s announcement that he would be seeking mental health treatment last year.

The actor claimed he would be going into recovery after he was recently charged with felony burglary last May. The DC bosses stated they would also be willing to talk to the actor about future plans with D.C. studios once he was ready to resume. 

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Gunn also defended “Guardians of the Galaxy” star Chris Pratt after fans called for him to be replaced in the series last year. All of this was connected to Pratt’s religious faith. 

The director slammed the calls to cancel Pratt, tweeting, “For what? Because of your made-up, utterly-false beliefs about him? For something that someone else told you about him that’s not true? Chris Pratt would never be replaced as Star-Lord but, if he ever was, we would all be going with him.”

Cast member Zachary Levi attends the Warner Bros. "Shazam!" press line at the Comic-Con International: San Diego on July 23, 2022.

Cast member Zachary Levi attends the Warner Bros. “Shazam!” press line at the Comic-Con International: San Diego on July 23, 2022.
(Reuters/Aude Guerrucci)

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'Pamela, a love story' works to help Pamela Anderson reclaim her narrative



CNN
 — 

The word “Intimate” is frequently used when describing celebrity documentaries, but it certainly applies to “Pamela, a love story,” which at one point shows Pamela Anderson lounging in the bathtub as portions of her diaries are read as voiceover. The result is a humanizing look at a woman often reduced to cartoon caricature, while occasionally feeling too conspicuously like a licensed product.

Produced by, among others, Anderson’s son Brandon Thomas Lee, director Ryan White (whose biographical documentaries include “Ask Dr. Ruth” and “Serena”) had access not only to her diaries but a collection of home movies – including, yes, the one stolen and posted for the world to see, of Anderson having sex with her then-husband, drummer Tommy Lee.

Anderson, now 55, speaks at length of that interlude, the invasiveness of having private material shown and exploited in that fashion, and what she clearly sees as a reopening of those wounds with Hulu’s limited series “Pam & Tommy,” which dramatized those events.

Anderson’s account actually does little to detract from that Emmy-nominated production, which was quite sympathetic in portraying the hurt she felt and the way the media treated her. Indeed, the clips presented here of late-night comics cashing in on Anderson as a punchline, or interviewers Matt Lauer and Larry King asking her about her breasts, do as much to endorse the Hulu version as undermine it.

“Pamela” makes clear that Anderson is letting her guard down right from the outset, as she appears makeup-free, hanging out in the small British Columbia town where she grew up, before getting discovered at a football game (fans “oohed” when she appeared on the scoreboard camera) launched her as a model and into the pages of Playboy.

Brandon Thomas Lee, a producer on "Pamela, a love story," with his mom, Pamela Anderson.

As Anderson tells it, during that time she reclaimed her sexuality, having experienced abuse on more than one occasion as a child.

International stardom on “Baywatch” followed, and it’s amusing to hear Anderson reminisce not only about all the celebrities she dated during that stretch, but the whole “Running on the beach in slow motion” imagery. (There’s no mention of “Home Improvement,” or Anderson’s recent allegations in her memoir of being flashed by its star, Tim Allen, which the comic has denied.)

The indignities of that “blond bombshell” status are nicely documented here. Ditto for the intrusions of the paparazzi, who dogged her particularly after the whirlwind romance with Lee.

The feeding frenzy surrounding the sex tape “solidified the cartoon image” of her, Anderson recalls, adding, “I knew at that point my career was over.”

While “Pamela” handles all of that quite well, too much of the rest of it plays like the Hallmark Card version of Anderson’s story, from the cloying, saccharine music to the interviews with her sons, whose protectiveness toward their mother is admirable but not especially enlightening.

The last part of the documentary also feels a bit scattered, venturing into areas like Anderson’s animal-rights activism through PETA, her advocacy for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and, finally, her Broadway debut in “Chicago.”

At its best, “Pamela, a love story” strips away what in hindsight looks like misogynistic media coverage – obsessed with her looks and relationships – to consider the person behind all of that, while proving a little too determined and pliable in the goal of helping Anderson assert ownership over her narrative.

At those moments, “Pamela” might work as a love story, but it fares a little less well as a documentary.

“Pamela, a love story” premieres January 31 on Netflix.

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New approach cuts number of CT scans for kids

A new effort significantly reduces the number of unnecessary CT scans in children, limiting exposure to harmful radiation and reducing health care costs with no negative effect on outcomes.

Every time a child gets a computed tomography (CT) scan from a hospital they are exposed to radiation that—according to research—creates a 1-in-1,000 risk of developing a fatal tumor later in life.

These CT scans—which use several x-ray images and computer processing to create cross sectional images—are important to get a precise diagnosis in specific situations, but carry extra risks and additional costs that are best avoided if other methods are possible.

“Clinicians often feel compelled to do a CT scan and not risk missing something really important,” says Derek Wakeman, associate professor in the departments of surgery and pediatrics at the Pediatric Trauma Center at the University of Rochester Medicine Golisano Children’s Hospital (GCH).

“But, there are alternative ways to rule out conditions without a CT scan. If a child is awake and alert, we don’t necessarily need a CT scan to determine concussion risk. If blood work looks normal and the child does not have significant abdominal pain, we can often omit an abdominal CT. For possible cervical spine injuries, x-rays can help pick up significant injuries.”

For the initiative, described in the Journal of Pediatric Surgery, the researchers adapted existing CT scan guidelines and developed new ones around four areas of the body: head, neck, chest, and abdomen/pelvis.

“Guidelines have always been available for these areas, but the methods in which our department rigorously applied them, tracked the results, and looked to continuously improve are unique,” says Wakeman.

After adapting guidelines for these four body regions, clinicians examined the CT scanning rates prior to the initiative (01/2016-06/2017) and after implementation (07/2017-08/2021) to determine how many scans were not indicated by the guidelines.

Before the program launched, 61 patients underwent 171 CT scans, of which 87 scans (51%) were not indicated by guidelines. Post-implementation, 363 patients had 531 scans and only 134 CTs (25%) were not indicated.

This significant reduction of CT scans has multiple benefits for patient safety and operational efficiency, Wakeman says. “It reduces a lot of waste in the system and more importantly minimizes exposure to radiation, as young children are at a much greater risk of injury from this exposure than adults.”

The study estimated that a total of 146 children were spared excessive radiation with no clinically significant missed injuries since the guidelines were implemented. The GCH clinical teams achieved this by using alternative means of diagnosis, while still applying best-practices, for the different areas of the body. Existing guidelines were more widely adapted for head, neck, and abdomen/pelvis, while new guidelines were developed at GCH for the chest area.

In addition to preventing unnecessary exposure to radiation, charges related to scans in the GCH emergency department decreased from $1,490.31 per patient to $408.21 per patient, saving an estimated $218,000 in total medical costs for this group of children.

Implementing these changes required a collective education effort among all the teams to review and revise guidelines, and then the guidelines were integrated into the technological process to diagnose patients.

“It’s built into the culture now. People know it’s safe to utilize this approach and they’re not going to miss clinical injuries,” says Wakeman.

Source: University of Rochester

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NBC News insider says Miguel Almaguer 'f—ed up' by running Paul Pelosi story carelessly on just one tip

An NBC News insider feels Miguel Almaguer “f—-d up” and could have been terminated for carelessly relying on a single source for his Paul Pelosi report that was retracted last year.

In a viral “Today” segment days after the brutal attack, Almaguer seemed to imply Pelosi, husband of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, might not have been in immediate danger when police arrived at his San Francisco home the night he was assaulted by suspect David DePape. Police bodycam video has since put a spotlight on what appeared to be accurate and inaccurate, but a well-placed insider doesn’t think Almaguer’s infamous report was fit to air either way. 

The insider, a former NBC News executive with knowledge of the way the Almaguer situation played out internally, said the veteran reporter relied on a lone source for the story that should have required confirmation. 

“It was more a tip than a source,” the former NBC News exec told Fox News Digital of the information Almaguer used in the report that was retracted hours after it aired last Nov. 4.

BODYCAM VIDEO OF PAUL PELOSI ATTACK SHEDS LIGHT ON NBC NEWS’ MYSTERIOUSLY RETRACTED REPORT

“The first thing that was wrong with it, there is a real question as to how much he knew. Then, there is a question as to what the second source was,” the former exec said. “What was the confirmation?” 

The insider said those two factors are “Miguel’s part of the problem,” but NBC News standards and practices also played a role in what has emerged as a public relations nightmare with media watchdogs calling for transparency from the Comcast-owned network.   

Ultimately, the former NBC News executive believes the company had “grounds to fire” Almaguer, a step they said was considered by current executives.  

“Miguel f—-d up,” they added. “It’s not clear that he had anything approaching two sources, and it’s not clear that the first source was more than a tip.”  

CALLS FOR TRANSPARENCY FROM NBC NEWS GROW LOUDER IN WAKE OF PAUL PELOSI ATTACK BODYCAM VIDEO 

David DePape, left, and Paul Pelosi are seen in an image from bodycam footage. 

David DePape, left, and Paul Pelosi are seen in an image from bodycam footage. 
(San Francisco County Superior Court)

Longtime NBC News standards and practices head Marian Porges stepped down in 2021 after a 25-year run at the company. Chris Scholl, who has also been at the company for over two decades, was promoted to vice president of news standards. 

“The standards guy falls down on the job and does not question Miguel properly on ‘who is the source,’ ‘what’s the second source.’ He totally fails to do his job,” the source said.  

Scholl did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The source believes NBC News standards department botching the story helped save Almaguer’s job.  

“Standards really falls down on the job,” they said. “The editorial process fell down, so you can’t just blame Miguel.” 

NBC News did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Almaguer has not responded to multiple requests since his story was retracted in November. 

NBC News has not publicly explained what was wrong with the retracted report aside from a brief line that it didn’t meet standards. Media watchdogs have called for greater transparency from NBC, and the bizarre handling of the situation has led to all sorts of speculation.

Bodycam video of the October attack on Paul Pelosi shed light on what appeared to be accurate and inaccurate with Miguel Almaguer’s NBC News report that was retracted last year.

Bodycam video of the October attack on Paul Pelosi shed light on what appeared to be accurate and inaccurate with Miguel Almaguer’s NBC News report that was retracted last year.
(Screenshot/NBC News)

PAUL PELOSI VIDEO SHOWS HAMMER ATTACK AFTER POLICE ARRIVE

Friday’s release of bodycam footage from the incident was supposed to clear things up, and some media watchdogs have since claimed the footage vindicates Almaguer, while others aren’t so sure. The insider believes that the report was botched, as it gave an impression that Pelosi wasn’t in immediate danger when police arrived. At one point, Almaguer reported Paul Pelosi walked several feet back toward the inside of his house after answering the door, but bodycam footage showed DePape holding his arm already when the door opened.

“The body camera footage clearly shows that one of the inferences that Miguel reported was inaccurate,” the insider said. 

DePape has pleaded not guilty to all state charges in the case, including attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon and elder abuse. He also has pleaded not guilty to federal charges of assaulting an immediate family member of a federal official and attempted kidnapping of a federal officer for the alleged home invasion. He unexpectedly called in to KTVU San Francisco following the release of bodycam and surveillance footage and took credit for attacking Pelosi and said, “I’m so sorry I didn’t get more of them.”

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Indian guru Asaram given life sentence in second rape case


New Delhi
CNN
 — 

An Indian court on Tuesday sentenced self-proclaimed spiritual guru Asaram Bapu to life imprisonment on charges of rape and sodomy, according to his lawyer.

The verdict is the second life term against the octogenarian, who is already serving a life sentence following his 2018 conviction for raping a 16-year-old girl.

Asaram’s lawyer C.B. Gupta told CNN the court in the western state of Gujarat also ordered him to pay 50,000 rupees (about $600) in compensation to the victim.

“We may appeal the judgment in the high court,” the lawyer said.

Asaram, 81, described on his website as a “spiritual revolutionist” and “great teacher,” is one of India’s best-known spiritual gurus.

Known as “Bapuji” or “father” among his followers, he rose to prominence in the 1970s before building a vast religious empire that includes hundreds of thousands of followers, about 400 religious schools across India, and numerous global outreach programs.

The latest ruling against him comes at a time when India’s poor track record on violence has been under the spotlight.

Last August, an Indian court freed 11 Hindu men who had been sentenced to life for the gang-rape of a pregnant Muslim woman during deadly riots in 2002, angering rights groups and activists.

On average, there is one rape reported every 17 minutes in India, according to government figures. Campaigners say deeply-entrenched misogynistic and patriarchal values in the country of 1.3 billion are partly to blame.

Spiritual gurus in India can draw millions of devotees to religious schools known as ashrams that are spread across the country.

In recent years, sexual assault accusations against some of these gurus have sparked violent skirmishes.

After Asaram was arrested in 2013 on the first rape charge, clashes broke out between his supporters and police in several major cities.

In 2019, Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, head of the spiritual sect Dera Sacha Sauda, was sentenced to life in prison for the 2002 murder of a journalist who helped expose the sexual abuse of women within his group. The guru was already serving a life sentence for raping two of his followers.

After the first verdict against Singth, riots erupted that left 36 people dead and hundreds injured.

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Biden zeroes in on the newly powerful House GOP as a threat to the rebounding economy



CNN
 — 

President Joe Biden is fine-tuning his argument for reelection in an intensive stretch of travel and fundraising, homing in on the newly powerful House GOP as a threat to the rebounding economy as the pieces of his expected campaign come together.

With several weeks to go before Biden is expected to announce his intention to run again, White House officials have crafted a travel schedule and series of speeches that will see the president opening infrastructure projects, promoting union jobs and laying out the progress he believes the American economy has made under his watch.

“It’s about good jobs. It’s about the dignity of work,” Biden said Tuesday in front of a tunnel on the West Side of Manhattan that will be improved with the help of the $1 trillion infrastructure law he signed in 2021. “It’s about respect and self-worth. And folks, it’s about damn time.”

In a string of events along the eastern seaboard, from northern Virginia to Baltimore to Philadelphia to New York City, Biden is setting a multiple-days-per-week travel schedule that aides expect will continue as the presidential contest begins in earnest.

Last week, he told a steamfitters union hall in Virginia that his agenda was about “seeing communities all over America, not just on the coasts, but all over America, reborn.” He stood at another tunnel on Monday, this time in Baltimore, where improvements will help Amtrak trains triple their speed on one of the busiest rail corridors in the nation.

He also headlined a high-dollar Democratic fundraiser in Manhattan, kicking off what is expected to be a campaign cash blitz. Donors have been made aware of potential events over the coming months in multiple states, including traditional fundraising enclaves in California and Florida.

“There’s two things that I think we have to run on: What we stand for – what we did – and what we need to do more of,” Biden told the donors, offering a tacit preview of his 2024 message. Recalling that he ran in 2020 to restore the soul of the country, rebuild the middle class, and unite the country, Biden suggested his work wasn’t finished.

“The third is turning out to be the hardest thing to do, but we’re getting there,” he said.

On Friday, Biden will tout lead removal efforts in Philadelphia before addressing the Democratic National Committee’s winter meeting – a gathering where his likely reelection bid is top of mind.

Speaking ahead of Biden in New York on Tuesday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer underscored the progress Biden has made in implementing his infrastructure bill, readying a message that Biden has accomplished what his predecessor – and currently his only Republican challenger – Donald Trump could not.

“For four years, the former president was shoveling you know what. And now, we’re gonna put real shovels in the ground, wielded by real American workers,” Schumer said.

Biden’s aides and other Democrats have been working for months to put in place a campaign infrastructure that will be ready when he decides to make his intentions known. The campaign is expected to draw some staff from the DNC and the White House, and will need to coordinate with both.

Already, Biden’s West Wing team is reorienting with the upcoming departure of chief of staff Ron Klain. Klain’s replacement, Jeff Zients, is expected to focus on managing the White House and implementing Biden’s legislative and policy agenda, while other top advisers – namely senior adviser Anita Dunn and deputy White House chief of staff Jen O’Malley Dillon, who managed Biden’s successful 2020 campaign – will take the lead on Biden’s political operation.

Other political hires are also expected as the likely reelection campaign takes shape, according to a White House official.

Casting a shadow over Biden’s preparations is the special counsel investigation into his handling of classified material, which is expected to formally get underway this week. Biden has denied any wrongdoing after documents with classified markings were found at his private office and home, but the specter of the probe will hang over the White House for at least the coming months.

White House aides have felt vindicated by polls showing the documents controversy hasn’t weighed down Biden’s overall approval ratings. And Biden himself shrugged off a question Monday about whether he would sit for an interview with special counsel Robert Hur.

“I don’t even know about the special counsel,” Biden told reporters at the White House, moving quickly to another question.

For now, Biden’s principal focus is next week’s State of the Union address, a speech his team has been crafting to act as a launchpad to his reelection run. His string of policy speeches this week have foreshadowed the expected themes of Tuesday night’s address.

Afterward, Biden is expected to continue traveling the country – including potential stops in Michigan and Wisconsin, two battleground states – as he prepares for his formal campaign announcement.

Officials said the yearly speech will continue to evolve as Biden and his advisers work on writing it. The text is not expected to be finalized until the final moments before he delivers it in the House chamber next week. The team working on the address, including senior advisers Mike Donilon and Bruce Reed, have held lengthy writing and preparation sessions with Biden over the last several days.

White House officials said the president’s recent speeches touting the bipartisan infrastructure law that he signed into law in 2021 are designed to signal a shift: whereas much of Biden’s first two years in office was focused on what he hoped to accomplish, officials said now is the time to tout what he has achieved.

The US jobs market is robust, GDP growth continues to be strong, wages are up, and critically, inflation finally seems to be moderating – all points Biden has made in his public remarks recently. In contrast, the president has warned that lawmakers who he calls “MAGA Republicans” are trying to reverse some of that very progress by proposing ideas like a national sales tax.

He’s also offered sharp warnings to Republicans looking to use the national debt ceiling as leverage to negotiate spending cuts – setting up a battle that will play out in the opening weeks of his campaign.

As Biden was speaking in Virginia last week, new Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy wrote on Twitter that if Biden was “so eager to speak on the economy, then he should set a date to discuss a responsible debt ceiling increase.”

He’ll get that date this week, when Biden and McCarthy sit down at the White House for their first one-on-one since McCarthy was elevated to the role earlier this month.

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How to approach love and loneliness this Valentine’s Day

Here are five questions and expert answers about relationships during the Valentine’s Day season.

February 14 can be a pleasant or painful reminder about the relationships in your life. From romantic partnerships to deep friendships, the hyper-focus around how we connect with others is on full display.

Tristan Martin is an assistant teaching professor of marriage and family therapy in Syracuse University’s Falk College. Clinically, in private practice, Martin provides support for the LGBTQ community, with specialization in supporting gender transition. He teaches classes in family therapy and has a research focus on transgender sexuality within the intersection of relational and erotic diversity.

Here, Martin answers five questions about relationships, approaching the topic of therapy with your partner, and dealing with loneliness around Valentine’s Day:

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Texas man allegedly murdered DJ girlfriend in Colombia, stuffed body in suitcase and tossed in dumpster

A Texas man is accused of killing his girlfriend, a popular DJ in Colombia, and stuffing her body inside a suitcase before trying to flee the country.

The body of Valentina Trespalacios, 23, was found in a blue suitcase wrapped with tape and thrown into a dumpster last week near an airport in Colombia’s capital city of Bogota, the New York Post reported.

It was determined Trespalacios, who was a popular DJ with 16,000 followers on Instagram, was killed by “mechanical asphyxia” or “strangulation.”

John Nelson Poulos, the 35-year-old boyfriend of Trespalacios who had met her on a dating app last year, left Colombia for Panama days before her body turned up. He was arrested Jan. 24 as he was about to board a flight to Montenegro, a country that does not have an extradition agreement with Colombia or the United States.

CHARGES DROPPED AGAINST US-TRAINED AFGHAN SOLDIER DETAINED WHILE CROSSING BORDER AFTER ESCAPING TALIBAN

Valentina Trespalacios and John Nelson Poulos

Valentina Trespalacios and John Nelson Poulos
(Jam Press)

Poulos, who is said to be married with three kids, reportedly told police he was fleeing the country to escape from a drug cartel and says the cartel is responsible or the death of Trespalacios.

In his mugshot, a visible scratch can be seen on Polulos’ face, and El Pais reported that Trespalacios’ family said he was “jealous and controlling” and hired a private investigator to track her movements last year. 

AMERICANS TRAVELING BETWEEN MEXICO, US SEE VACATIONS TURN INTO NIGHTMARES AT THE BORDER

Valentina Trespalacios was a DJ with over 16,000 followers on Instagram

Valentina Trespalacios was a DJ with over 16,000 followers on Instagram
(Jam Press)

Poulos has been charged with aggravated femicide.

“He was the one who hurt my daughter, and he doesn’t deserve to be around like if nothing happened. I want justice done,” Laura Hidalgo, Trespalacios’ mother, said, according to Daily Mail.

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Valentina Trespalacios was killed shortly after finishing a DJ set last week

Valentina Trespalacios was killed shortly after finishing a DJ set last week
(Jam Press)

“It is not fair that a foreigner comes to excite a Colombian girl and ends up like this. I hope this case does not go unpunished. He was the last person to see her alive, and he didn’t have to hurt her.”

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