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The official BlueSky feed of the Brown University School of Public Health | Learn public health by doing public health. #BrownSPH
Brown University School of Public Health









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Measles? Norovirus? Ebola? West Nile virus? The World Cup has public health officials on high alert.⚽
We invite the @brown.edu community and our friends around the world to join together in observing a moment of silence to mark six months since the shooting that occurred on our campus on December 13, 2025. We are grieving, we are healing, we are ever true. #evertrue https://evertrue.brown.edu/
More research is needed, investigators caution, but a new study has linked #shingles vaccination to lower dementia risk. “It’s really amazing to see that something that’s supposed to prevent a physical ailment can also help keep our brain healthy,” Professor Kaley Hayes says.💉🧠
Speaking before the Subcommittee on Health of the US House Committee on Energy & Commerce yesterday, Professor @cwhaley.bsky.social called on Congress to improve healthcare #transparency. “Transparency is foundational,” Whaley said.https://www.brown.edu/news/2026-06-10/whaley-congressional-testimony
New Mexico's first human case of plague in 2026 has killed a woman & raised concerns of ongoing public risk, especially in the midst of the World Cup. Professor Will Goedel says “considering the high density of people from all over the world, we are more focused on COVID-19, measles and norovirus.”
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"It's completely stunning that we would not allow Americans to return to the U.S.," Professor @jennifernuzzo.bsky.social tells @npr.org. "We have specialized, taxpayer-built units that exist solely for this purpose: to provide life-saving care to people who may be exposed to deadly diseases."
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New paper from my group led by PhD student Aleksandra Stamper on the environmental drivers of influenza across tropical and temperate locations. @pandemiccenter.bsky.social @brownpublichealth.bsky.social @brown-ibes.bsky.social academic.oup.com/pnasnexus/ar...
Health officials will be on high alert for germs as millions of soccer fans gather for World Cup matches. A heat wave may be the most obvious health threat.
apnews.com
Health sleuths are watching for disease threats during the World Cup
9h
Brown University School of Public Health
Brown University School of Public Health
Brown University School of Public Health
The administration imposed mandatory quarantine orders on two passengers from the cruise ship hit by hantavirus and is blocking Americans who catch Ebola from returning home for treatment.
www.npr.org
Brown University School of Public Health
White House response to hantavirus and Ebola contrasts with COVID criticisms
Alcohol Intake and Health Study: No Protective Effect at Low Levels, With Mortality Increasing to 1 in 25 at 14 Drinks Per Week (new #openaccess in @jsadjournal.bsky.social) @camhnews.bsky.social @uviccisur.bsky.social @brownpublichealth.bsky.social @hsph.harvard.edu www.jsad.com/doi/full/10....
Brown University School of Public Health
At #GHS2026, we joined RAND & @cepi.net for a #The100DaysMission simulation, and exercises like this bridge gaps and spark strategy. Thanks to Claire Standley, @drsethberkley.bsky.social, @jennifernuzzo.bsky.social, @bethcameron-dc.bsky.social, Andrew Hebbeler & others!
Brown University School of Public Health
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By cutting #USAID & withholding funding from orgs working on treatments, the Trump Admin risks increasing US exposure to infectious diseases. @craigspencer.bsky.social shares, "The longer we allow this outbreak to go uncontrolled, the greater the risk is not just to the region but to the US”.
Rachel E. Baker
Objective: The purpose of this study was to estimate the lifetime risk of alcohol-attributable mortality and morbidity in the United States based on a person’s average lifetime weekly alcohol consumption to assess the impact of per-occasion alcohol consumption on health. Method: Lifetime risks were estimated using a cause-specific modeling approach that combined exposure data from national health surveys, relative risks, population data from the U.S. Census Bureau, mortality data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and morbidity data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. A narrative review assessed the health impact of per-occasion alcohol consumption on health. Results: At low levels of consumption, no protective net effect of alcohol consumption on health was observed. Elevated mortality and morbidity risks were associated with alcohol consumption starting at relatively low levels. Males consuming >6.5 (95% CI [<1, 13.5]) and females consuming >7.0 (95% CI [<1, 11.5]) drinks per week had life-time alcohol-attributable mortality risks >1:1,000. At >8.5 (95% CI [2.5, 13]) drinks per week for both males and females, these risks increased to >1:100. At 14 drinks per week for males (the upper limit of the former Dietary Guidelines for males), the risk of an alcohol-caused death was 1:25 (4%). Drinking patterns also impacted risk. Above 1 drink per occasion, higher consumption was associated with progressively increased risks of breast cancer, cardiovascular disease, and injury. Conclusions: Alcohol consumption, including at what may be perceived as “moderate” levels, is associated with increased mortality and morbidity risks. These results support tightening alcohol use guidance in the United States, for both males and females, to no more than 1 drink per day. Public health significance statement: The Alcohol Intake and Health Study shows that for Americans, even what is socially considered “moderate drinking” increases the risk of dying or developing health problems, helping people better understand the net health impact of alcohol. Furthermore, by identifying the levels of alcohol use that raise the risk of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and injury, these findings can guide individuals, families, and communities in making safer choices about drinking patterns. The results also support changing the U.S. Dietary Guidelines on alcohol to recommend that current adult drinkers consume 1 drink or less in a day.
www.jsad.com
Alcohol Intake and Health Study: No Protective Effect at Low Levels, With Mortality Increasing to 1 in 25 at 14 Drinks Per Week: Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs: Vol 87, No 4
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Study suggests shingles vaccine may lower dementia risk
A study led by Brown University researchers found that older adults who received the shingles vaccine currently used in the U.S. were less likely to be diagnosed with dementia within four years.
www.brown.edu
Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs
Pandemic Center at Brown University’s School of Public Health
Pandemic Center at Brown University’s School of Public Health
Plague death joins list of US health concerns–but what's the public risk?
A New Mexico plague death is raising questions--but experts say rare diseases pose little risk to World Cup crowds compared to highly contagious infections like measles.
www.newsweek.com
WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Ranking Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, highlighted the disastrous impact...
ICYMI: Ranking Member Shaheen Discusses Ebola Outbreak with Ebola Survivor Dr. Craig Spencer | United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations
www.foreign.senate.gov
Abstract. Influenza represents a source of considerable morbidity and mortality worldwide, exhibiting seasonal outbreak patterns that vary by location. Tem
academic.oup.com
Unified climate factors predict influenza outbreak seasonality across tropical and temperate regions