34 yrs as a doctor with experience in GP, ID, IPC, AMS/AMR, public health,MCH, medical & other health education- mostly in LMIC.Gardener, traveler, nature lover

Joined June 2021
36 Photos and videos
Frances Daily retweeted
“The Socceroos aren’t just a team. We’re a reflection of modern Australia.” A desperately needed message for Australia, and Australians of all hues and backgrounds. Bravo @Socceroos!!! 👏🏾 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
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Frances Daily retweeted
#ResearchHighlight from Stuart Blacksell @MORUBKK Neglected #rickettsial diseases in Southeast Asia: Twenty-five years of progress in surveillance, diagnostics, and clinical research Read more 👉 ndm.ac/tropmed-res-hi Full publication 👉 journals.plos.org/plosntds/a…
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Frances Daily retweeted
Main message is that for Australia, Ebola is more of a message than a threat - infectious epidemics/pandemics are more likely now than they have been in a long while, & when they do arrive they will be different to what we’ve experienced before.
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Frances Daily retweeted
THE REACTIONS❗️ Just doesn't get better than that... 🙏 ✝️
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RT @BigBadDenis: 🇸🇬Singapore: COVID-19 cases rise 19% in one week. 🔹COVID cases increased to 15,100 during the week of May 17–23, up from…
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Frances Daily retweeted
Just reviewed these #Ebola and #Marburg #PPE guidelines, dated 2026. It's shocking for those of us who advocated for better Ebola PPE in 2014. It uses the 1m rule and states "Paradoxically, wearing excessive PPE can increase a person’s risk of infection." Where is the evidence? 1/4 iris.who.int/server/api/core…

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Frances Daily retweeted
"Ebola – the case against expressing scientific uncertainty as certainty" An excellent quick article that lays out additional pieces of information, including the epi results of investigations. I guarantee y'all that you all have not seen some of this. web.archive.org/web/20180403…

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RT @BigBadDenis: 🇦🇺Australian Respiratory Surveillance Report – 22 May 2026 Reported cases in the last fortnight (4 May 2026 to 17 May 202…
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Frances Daily retweeted
'STORM' is a short documentary about Scott Hugo. A story of Long COVID's impact on his life and family - a reminder of what is at stake in research on Long COVID. His resilience humbles me. Please watch and share 🙏🏼 youtu.be/rLtXh28Eejw
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Frances Daily retweeted
I’m so incredibly frustrated. We have an outbreak report for the cruise ship, published in NEJM, and great clinical, epidemiological, and genomic reporting, and… NOT A SINGLE MENTION OF VENTILATION/FILTRATION SETUP ON THE SHIP Folks, we keep doing this. A lot of MD/PhD coauthors on the “Andes Virus Outbreak Working Group”, and no one with expertise on mechanical systems. And no one on the team even thought to check or investigate it. It’s malpractice at this point, and I’m not exaggerating in my use of the term. I do investigations in buildings and if I failed to check the status of the mechanical systems I’d be sued. (It’s actually *the first* thing I check) @NEJM: see our report from The Lancet COVID-19 Commission on this in the thread. Include this in your reviews. Mandate this info in every outbreak investigation report. The reason I first called the doctor on the ship was because I wanted to see if he could get info on the ship’s systems before he left it, bc I knew the official investigations would miss it. Because they always do.
May 20
𝗣𝘂𝗯𝗹𝗶𝗰 𝗛𝗲𝗮𝗹𝘁𝗵 𝗔𝗹𝗲𝗿𝘁𝘀 𝗥𝗲𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁: On April 27, 2026, a man (later classified as Patient 3 in the outbreak) was medically evacuated to Ascension Island from the Dutch-flagged expedition cruise ship 𝘔𝘝 𝘏𝘰𝘯𝘥𝘪𝘶𝘴; he had severe acute respiratory infection (SARI) and reported shortness of breath and fever that had begun on April 21. He had signs of pneumonia, although findings on chest radiography were unremarkable. While he was on Ascension Island, his condition worsened, and he was transferred to Johannesburg, South Africa, for ventilator support and intensive care. He was in shock and had acute respiratory distress syndrome; findings on chest radiography were consistent with atypical pneumonia. The differential diagnosis in this clinical context is very broad and includes atypical pneumonias, bacterial or fungal sepsis, and vectorborne diseases such as malaria or dengue. The diagnostic evaluation, including respiratory pathogen panels, malaria smear and antigen, fungal biomarkers, blood cultures, and legionella urinary antigen, was unrevealing. On May 2, the cruise ship had a total of 147 persons on board, including 88 passengers and 59 crew members, from 23 countries. As of May 13, 2026, a total of 10 cases had been identified (an 11th was subsequently reclassified as not a case), including 3 resulting in death (seen in figure). However, because not everyone on board was tested, 3 deaths among 10 cases may represent an overestimation of the case fatality ratio. All cases to date have been among passengers or crew on board the ship. Beyond the first 3 cases, 7 additional confirmed or probable cases have been identified. A German national (Patient 4) died from a SARI on May 2, and later testing in the Netherlands confirmed Andes virus (ANDV). Two crew members — the doctor on the ship (Patient 5) and an expedition guide (Patient 6) — were medically evacuated to the Netherlands, tested positive by PCR and sequencing for ANDV on May 7 and 8, respectively, and were in stable condition at the time of this report. Read “Andes Hantavirus Outbreak on a Cruise Ship, 2026,” which includes clinical details, case timeline, genetic sequencing of the virus, and unresolved transmission questions, by the Andes Virus Outbreak Working Group: nej.md/4uQDeMQ
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Frances Daily retweeted
1/ Las enfermedades pueden propagarse entre viviendas a través de los sistemas de ventilación compartidos EN ESPANA, según un estudio estadounidense La nvestigacion analizó un brote de COVID-19 ocurrido en un edificio residencial de Santander al empezar la pandemia
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Frances Daily retweeted
Recently, I've received several emails requesting H13 or even higher-grade filters. I would still like to explain here why H13 and higher-grade filters are not a good choice for air purifiers. A good air purifier's primary goal is to clean the air in a room as quickly as possible. There is a specific metric to describe this: CADR (Clean Air Delivery Rate). The higher the CADR, the faster the purifier captures airborne particles on the filter. Achieving a high CADR requires two conditions: High filtration efficiency – the filter should capture a high percentage of particles that pass through it. Large airflow volume – a large amount of air should flow through the filter per unit of time. If the airflow is large but the filtration efficiency is low, only a few particles are captured each pass. Conversely, if the efficiency is high but the airflow is small, the total number of captured particles is also low. But these two factors contradict each other. With the same fan, using a higher-grade filter improves efficiency, but it also increases resistance, which reduces the airflow. So a higher-grade filter is not always better. Filters like H13 or H14 commonly found on the market have very high resistance, significantly reducing airflow and thereby lowering CADR — meaning slower purification. After extensive testing, I found that the E11 filter offers the best balance. With about 95% filtration efficiency, its airflow loss is minimal, resulting in the highest overall CADR and thus the fastest cleaning speed.
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Frances Daily retweeted
Ignore Pauline's hatred by actually spending time with non-white folks 💚
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Frances Daily retweeted
"Is there any situation or scenario in which somebody could produce a droplet, but not produce a significant amount of aerosol?" "No" - Professor Clive Beggs Right question, right answer 👏👏👏
Replying to @DrFiliatrault
Professor Beggs, UK Covid Inquiry
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Frances Daily retweeted
So let’s get this straight. Australian citizens are apparently the only people who deserve support. Everyone else? According to Angus Taylor and Pauline Hanson, they’re just a burden. But here’s the reality. To become an Australian citizen, you must first be a permanent resident for years. For many migrants, becoming Australian also means giving up the citizenship of the country they were born in. Plenty choose not to do that because they want to keep their heritage and family ties. That is their right. Then you have people on skilled working visas and permanent residents raising families here. Their kids go to school with Australian kids. They work here. They pay taxes here. They contribute to the community every single day. Yet apparently Taylor thinks they should receive no assistance at all. Now let’s look at the numbers. Taylor claims non-citizens cost Australia $15 billion a year. What he doesn’t tell you is they contribute around $40 billion a year in taxes alone. That’s a net contribution of roughly $25 billion annually before you even count the businesses they build, the jobs they fill, the skills shortages they solve, and the communities they help support. So what exactly is the logic here? Punish one of the most economically valuable groups in the country to distract from decades of policy failures on housing, wages and infrastructure? This is what scapegoating looks like. Blame migrants. Blame permanent residents. Blame foreigners. Anything except the governments and policies that actually created the problems. And once again, they stand in front of Australians assuming nobody will check the facts.
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Frances Daily retweeted
We are not in good hands if infectious disease medical doctors are SO afraid of one of the main modes of disease transmission (aerosols / airborne) that they don't even want to talk about it... They control @WHO, @CDCgov, and Public Health everywhere as it relates to this topic
Bioaerosol scientist @brosseau_lisa:"This whole discussion about aerosols is something...infectious disease physicians…don't want to talk about...I think it frightens them." Why is this even accepted? Would we allow engineers to build bridges if they’re afraid of mathematics?
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Frances Daily retweeted
“The burden of proof should not be on those arguing for caution. It should be on those arguing to relax it.” In other words, @WHO & others must prove that it’s not airborne before removing airborne precautions.
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