University Seeks Volunteers For 'Hotel Influenza' (fortune.com) 51
The National Institutes of Health is paying a St. Louis university to study the effectiveness of flu vaccines. An anonymous reader quotes Fortune:
The university wants volunteers to live in "hotel influenza," where they'd be either given a vaccine or a placebo, be exposed to the flu, and be quarantined for 10 days in the Extended Stay Research Unit. Compensation for such an experiment is around $3,500 (for time and travel), according to a SLU release... "In a traditional flu study, we vaccinate people and see if their immune systems respond by creating antibodies that fight flu," Dr. Hoff said in a release. "In a human challenge study, we vaccinate people, then deliberately challenge their bodies by exposing them to flu to see if they get sick"...
The 24 volunteers living in the "hotel influenza" would have private rooms and bathrooms, common areas with with chairs and TVs, along with exercise equipment, and catered meals in a dining room. They will be observed, "have blood and lung tests and nose swabs to see if they are infected with flu and shedding the virus." If they come down with the flu, they won't be able to leave until they've tested negative for the virus for two days. Nurses would be available around the clock.
One St. Louis newspaper jokes that it will either be a "sickathon" -- or "an indoor vacation complete with catered meals, TV, internet, a gym and views of the Arch".
The 24 volunteers living in the "hotel influenza" would have private rooms and bathrooms, common areas with with chairs and TVs, along with exercise equipment, and catered meals in a dining room. They will be observed, "have blood and lung tests and nose swabs to see if they are infected with flu and shedding the virus." If they come down with the flu, they won't be able to leave until they've tested negative for the virus for two days. Nurses would be available around the clock.
One St. Louis newspaper jokes that it will either be a "sickathon" -- or "an indoor vacation complete with catered meals, TV, internet, a gym and views of the Arch".
Vitamin D3 (Score:3)
I'd be interested to see what role vitamin D3 plays as well. It would be easy to test serum levels of D3 before and after the trial, and see if there's any correlation in the results.
Re: (Score:3)
Why?
There are plenty of existing studies on that, and they are only kind-of useful. There's an effect but it's probably not worth worrying about:
https://www.nhs.uk/news/food-a... [www.nhs.uk]
(P.S. Thank the UK taxpayer for that information, won't you, as they have NO INCENTIVE to mislead you as regards trying to sell you something).
THE FUTURE (Score:1)
This is awesome! This is how testing should be done -- one humans and not on animals.
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Re: THE FUTURE (Score:2)
Surely this is a sci-fi work somewhere..
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Kinda lingers (Score:2)
Re:Kinda lingers (Score:5, Informative)
So how long after the study has concluded would any flu virus remain viable in the "hotel"
At most they will survive for 24 hours on hard surfaces if the temperature is low and the humidity is high.
They will be viable for a shorter time on soft surfaces, or if the temperature is higher or the humidity lower.
Cold viruses can last longer, up to 7 days.
I signed up (Score:1)
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You probably won't get sick either. I bet they've matched the vaccine with the particular strains of flu they'll expose you to. Pretty much guaranteed to work.
The difficult bit about flu vaccines is predicting which strains will be prevalent and then quickly ramping up production and distribution of those. Some years they get it right and some years they get it wrong, with the predictable consequences.
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More like torture prison... (Score:2)
Actual influenza, not common cold which most people confuse for flu, is deadly. 500k to million people die from it every year, globally.
Even if it doesn't kill you, the toll on your immune system is enormous.
You are very likely to end up with secondary infections, pneumonia and various inflammations including but not limited to heart and brain.
It really does a number on your immune system, and unless you're taking NSAIDs like ibuprofen, you can also expect joint and muscle pain during AND after you're virus
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Nah... If it feels like a bad cold - it's a cold.
ALL strains of influenza do actual damage to the tissue. Cold doesn't.
That's why you can get back to work in a week or less after a cold - but you might end up in a hospital or dead when you catch the flu.
It's actually that most people THINK they have the flu when all they have is a bad cold.
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Nah... If it feels like a bad cold - it's a cold.
ALL strains of influenza do actual damage to the tissue. Cold doesn't. That's why you can get back to work in a week or less after a cold - but you might end up in a hospital or dead when you catch the flu.
It's actually that most people THINK they have the flu when all they have is a bad cold.
The problem is that if you ring up work and say you're not coming in because you've got a cold, everyone just thinks you're malingering. So you have to ramp it up into something along the lines of 'I've got some sort of viral infection, maybe flu, I'll see how I feel in a few days time'.
But yes, actual 'flu is at the least a horrible couple of weeks, and at worst fatal.
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Check out the CDC: "Because colds and flu share many symptoms, it can be difficult (or even impossible) to tell the difference between them based on symptoms alone. Special tests that usually must be done within the first few days of illness can tell if a person has the flu." https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/... [cdc.gov]
So yes, flu is usually more severe than a cold but not always. Again, the easiest way to tell the difference between flu and a severe cold is the time it takes to take on full effect after the first sy
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You are confusing difficulty of early detection based on symptoms alone with severity and the nature of the disease.
Protein [sciencedaily.com] which does damage to the tissue is necessary for multiplication of the influenza virus.
Rhinovirus doesn't do that as it has a completely different structure.
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Then again... (Score:2)
There is something to be said to similarities between cruises and torture prisons.
Psychological pain is still pain...
So what happens if they do leave? (Score:3)
Re:So what happens if they do leave? (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, TFA uses the word Quarantine [ncsl.org], so perhaps you should read up on what that means? Even though influenza is naturally occuring and relatively common, it doesn't mean that health authorities are going to want to create and release new sources of infection.
Depending upon how rigorously they construct their protocol, it's cute that you think that a participant would need to be brought back. Most hospitals have a "secure wing" where they can treat people who don't want to be there -- prisoners and people on psychological holds -- and neither simply handcuff people to their beds nor rely upon a pinky-swear. "Deciding to leave" may be more theory than practice.
I read this book (Score:2)
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the evil group that conducted the experiment has run off to a hidden compound in the Amazon, and a secretive multinational paramilitary organization has to hunt them down.
I was imagining that you said "compound at Amazon".
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Do you at least get to ride on the ninja plane before they melt you?
Hotel Influenca (Score:2)
You can cash out the 3.500$ check any time you like,
But you can no leave for ten days (or more)!
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You can cash out the 3.500$ check any time you like, But you can no leave for ten days (or more)!
That sounds like something weird and European that wouldn't be worth much in the US. Better make it a $3,500 check.
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I was trying to make a reference to https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]
I don't know how "U.S.ians" handle money. I knew they used to use checks a lot, but I half assumed they'd use "plastic" (credit/debit cards like VISA etc.) now.
Just like my office (Score:3, Funny)
I mean, this is really no different than my office during the winter. Might as well get paid.
Other Studies (Score:1)
Excercise equipment (Score:3)
The 24 volunteers living in the "hotel influenza" would have private rooms and bathrooms, common areas with with chairs and TVs, along with exercise equipment, and catered meals in a dining room.
All very well if you find yourself in the successfully vaccinated group, but you might not have much interest in excercise, meals or even TV if you get full-blown influenza. The last time I had it, all I needed was the bedroom and the bathroom, and shivering deliriously in front of a fan heater with the central heating turned up to max I would happily have paid $3500 to make it go away.
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Extended Stay Enrichment Center? (Score:3, Funny)
Last time I stayed at an "Extended Stay" Enrichment center I got stuck in suspension for 999999 days, and some fool called Gladys or GladDOS or something ruined everything.
Would not volunteer for testing again.
Great song (Score:2)
Almost sounds good (Score:3)
On second thought, I could use $3500. Count me in, St. Louis and all, but those catered meals had better include some good local barbecue.
Just make it a LAN party (not really) (Score:2)
Just make this a LAN party and they'll get plenty of younger male study subjects: free food and fast internet to play videogames for 10 days.
That will lead to bad science, though. Too much medical science is already dominated by younger people, males, and white people. Older people, women and especially ethnic minorities are under-represented in medical trials. That leads to treatments and drugs that don't work as well on older people, women and especially ethnic minorities.
( eg, https://www.acog.org/Clinic [acog.org]