
Her Fevers Returned Every Day. Would Anything Stop Them?
This had been a pattern, once or twice a day, for the past two weeks: bone-rattling cold quickly replaced by the heat of fevers that rose to 102 or 103 degrees and lasted until vanquished by acetaminophen. She already had been to the urgent-care center in Moline, Ill., just across the Mississippi River, where she was given a 10-day course of antibiotics. But that day she would take the last dose, and still the intermittent fevers raged on. Even when they subsided, as they always did, she still had some pain between her legs from the stitches she received when the baby was born. That pain disappeared a few days after she got home but suddenly reappeared with her fevers — a full month after her delivery.
That morning the worried young parents packed up their baby and headed to the OB-GYN clinic at the University of Iowa Health Care Medical Center in Iowa City where they had a previously scheduled follow-up visit.
Searching for an Infection
The midwife listened to their story and then gently examined the woman. It was clear that some of the stitches hadn't held, and the torn skin, carefully sutured at the time of the birth, had reopened, oozing purulence in a couple of places. The whole area was exquisitely tender. She was admitted to the hospital and immediately started on two broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotics.
The next day, she was taken to an operating room and put to sleep so that the region could be examined more fully. Under the bright lights of the O.R., it was clear that the open areas of the suture line had been infected, but after the antibiotics, they appeared to be healing well. An examination of the cervix was unremarkable. Nor did her breasts show any signs of the inflammation that can complicate breastfeeding. It was all very reassuring to her doctors. And yet she continued to have these dramatic daily fevers as she remained in the hospital.
So where was the infection? Cultures from the surgical site were uninformative. Samples of her blood and urine grew no bacteria. A CT scan didn't show any hidden areas of inflammation or clots that might have been seeded with germs. And the patient herself had no other complaints.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Manitoba Health warns of possible measles exposure at Winkler clinic last week
Members of the public who were at the Winkler Medical Clinic in Winkler, Man., last Wednesday may have been exposed to measles, Manitoba Health warned on Monday. Anyone who was at the 1st Street clinic on July 2 between 12:45 p.m. and 3:15 p.m. should monitor their symptoms until July 24, health officials said in a Monday news release. There have been 116 confirmed measles cases so far this year, according to the most recent data from the province available on Monday. Eight probable cases were also reported since the start of 2025. Measles is a highly infectious disease that spreads through air droplets formed when a person coughs, sneezes or talks. It typically takes between one to three weeks after exposure for symptoms to appear. Infected people may develop a red rash, fever, runny nose, drowsiness and red eyes. If you experience any of these symptoms, health officials suggest you isolate yourself at home. A full list of possible measles exposure sites across Manitoba is available on the province's website.


Forbes
19 hours ago
- Forbes
How Centene Cost Issues Show Future Glimpse Into Trump's Medicaid Cuts
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at a rally to kick off the July Fourth holiday weekend at the ... More Iowa State Fairgrounds on July 03, 2025 in Des Moines, Iowa. The president used the opportunity to tout his just passed "One Big Beautiful Bill Act" which outlines his administration's spending priorities that included $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid and other healthcare benefits for Americans. (Photo by) The problems Centene appears to be having managing the costs of low-income Americans covered by Medicaid and individual plans under the Affordable Care Act could only be the beginning of what's to come for more health insurers. Centene last week pulled its financial forecast for the rest of this year after an outside firm's review of data that showed subscribers in its ACA plans are sicker and need more care than the company anticipated. In addition, Centene is also seeing higher cost trends in its Medicaid business -- coverage for low-income Americans the insurer helps more than two dozen states manage. In the future, the management of Medicaid patients may get even trickier for health insurers after President Donald Trump last week signed into law legislation that cuts $1 trillion from Medicaid and ACA plans that is expected to eliminate coverage for nearly 12 million Americans over the next decade, data from the Congressional Budget Office shows. Analysts expect health insurers to find it more difficult to keep Americans signed up for Medicaid and ACA plans because the Trump-approved bill requires more eligibility checks and bureaucratic hurdles. These eligibility checks in the Medicaid program are called 'redeterminations' and they are already to blame for millions of Americans falling off of Medicaid coverage following the end of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2023. 'Due to new red tape and barriers to enrollment and re-enrollment, people losing eligibility for Medicaid will find an individual market with less choice and higher premiums,' the trade group and lobby America's Health Insurance Plans (AHIP) said. AHIP represents some of the biggest providers of individual coverage including Centene, Oscar Health, Elevance Health, Cigna and an array of Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans. In the individual market, millions more Americans face the possibility of losing coverage because the legislation written by Republicans in Congress doesn't extend tax credits signed into law by former President Joe Biden beyond this year. As the bill Trump signed into law takes effect, the reduced spending on these tax credits, or subsidies, means buyers of ACA plans will face higher premiums and out-of-pocket costs. In Centene's case, the actuarial firm Wakely found subscribers to ACA plans, also known as Obamacare, were sicker and needed more healthcare services that what the company planned for. 'We believe a key issue could be a structural shift in the cost profile of the (ACA health insurance exchange) population due to Medicaid Redeterminations,' Ann Hynes and colleagues at Mizuho Securities USA wrote in a report last week. 'We would not be buyers on weakness and look for increased clarity on Centene's ability to reprice (health insurance exchange plans) for 2026 and increased visibility on the extent of Medicaid (medical loss ratio) pressures.' Analysts see sicker patients buying health plans while healthier people will go without, leaving the risk pools filled with those needing more services, costing health insurers even more. Mizuho's Hynes is already hinting Centene will 'reprice' its 2026 plans and they will be more expensive for buyers.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
9 Things These Women's Health Doctors Would Never Do
Between periods, menopause, perimenopause and pregnancy, being a woman can be a lot on the body. More, women's health just isn't as studied as men's health. Women largely weren't included in medical research and clinical trials until the early 1990s (yes, you read that right, only 30 years ago), which has caused gaps in knowledge when it comes to health treatments for women. Now, there are entire practices and specialities that focus on the differences in health outcomes for women, and doctors who are passionate about furthering research. We spoke with doctors who focus on various aspects of women's health about the health habits they avoid and what they wish all patients knew about their well-being. Here's what they'd never do: 'I'm moving all day long. And I think if everyone can make it a habit to just keep moving, our general health would be better in so many ways,' said Dr. Priya Freaney, a cardiologist and women's heart health specialist at Northwestern Medicine in Illinois. Freaney added that she stretches every day at a minimum to prep her body for a day of rushing around. 'I run a postpartum hypertension clinic where I see new moms who have had blood pressure or other heart problems during pregnancy, and I tell people that as new moms, you have to be kind of creative in where you get your movement because there's not a lot of time and there's a lot of other responsibility,' Freaney said. Trying to fold in movement whenever you can is key, whether that's taking the stairs, going on stroller walks or walking instead of driving to your errands, she noted. 'Certainly compared to generations previous to us, we have more of an emphasis on exercise. Most people have sitting jobs, we spend most of our day sedentary, and we know that the biggest killer of women is heart disease, so as we get older, it becomes more and more important to protect our hearts, keep those arteries clear by doing things like exercising,' added Dr. Brintha Vasagar, a family physician in Wisconsin. Exercise can also lessen feelings of anxiety and depression, help you sleep better and lowers the risk of certain cancers, including breast cancer. All three experts told HuffPost that healthy eating is one of the pillars they stick to for their current health and future health. This means fresh foods and less meat for Dr. Clara Paik, the co-chief of the division of general obstetrics and gynecology at UC Davis Health in California. Vasagar described diet as well-being 101 and said she limits processed foods and focuses on lean meats, fresh fruits and veggies. Freaney said she follows an 80-20 rule, where 80% of the time she eats nutritious foods and the other 20% of the time she chooses foods that may not have a big nutritional benefit but are celebratory or joy-inducing. Freaney also tries to limit bready sweets, overall, because of their high levels of cholesterol and saturated fats. She also cooks at home often and makes extra so she has easy, healthy meals throughout the week. Both Vasagar and Freaney said it's important that you know your numbers — meaning, the factors that are generally checked through routine wellness and blood tests such as your blood pressure, blood sugar levels and cholesterol, in addition to your weight. Many people wait until they have a problem to get their numbers checked, but that isn't the way to live a long, healthy life, noted Vasagar. 'It's those prevention strategies — knowing what your blood pressure is, knowing what your ideal weight should be for your body size, knowing what your sugars are and if you're at risk for diabetes — catching those things early,' Vasagar said. Having high blood pressure and high cholesterol can put you at heightened risk of developing heart disease, but, lifestyle changes like diet and exercise can help get these numbers in a healthy range, and medication can help, too, noted Vasagar. 'That's why it's so important to know your numbers early, so you can do something about it, attack it and keep your health as optimal as possible for as long as possible,' Vasagar said. As mentioned above, heart disease is the No. 1 killer of women in the United States — a fact that many people don't realize, said Freaney. 'Sixty million women in the United States have some form of heart disease and 80% of that is preventable to some degree,' Freaney noted. 'The common forms of heart diseases that can affect and ultimately kill women start early in life and accumulate silently in the body without us realizing it ... before they come to clinical significance, before we feel something that leads our doctors to discover it,' she said. The earlier you can understand and address your heart disease risk factors (things like diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure) the better, Freaney said. 'So, one piece of advice is that it is never too early for a woman to seek advice about their heart health,' she noted. 'I really tell people, and I myself, never douche or put something to cleanse your vagina,' Paik said. 'You're basically getting rid of the normal flora that's supposed to be there,' she said. Flora is necessary for maintaining a healthy pH balance, maintaining a barrier against bacteria and fungal infections and more. So, disrupting it can cause problems. 'Women are extremely, almost too, hygienic in that area because they want to smell nice, and that's a particular area of concern,' Paik noted. While lots of brands market lotions and soaps for the genital region, they aren't necessary or even safe. 'Just normal showering and washing with water is all you need to do in that area. You do not need to use soaps, perfumes, bath bombs, douching. I avoid any of that,' she said. 'For pregnant women, I always tell them to take prenatal vitamins,' Paik said. 'The folic acid in the prenatal vitamins is not the same as in multivitamins, it has an extra dose of folic acid, which is important for preventing spinal cord abnormalities in the baby,' she said. People who are trying to get pregnant should also take prenatal vitamins, Paik said. According to Freaney, pregnancy complications such as preeclampsia and gestational diabetes can put you at higher risk of heart disease later in life. Research shows that people who had preeclampsia are at higher risk of stroke and those who had gestational diabetes are more likely to have heart artery calcification. This is true even if your blood sugar levels and other heart health markers go back to normal after pregnancy, Freaney noted. 'Individuals who have had pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia or gestational diabetes should have a proactive discussion with their doctors about how they can reduce their risk of heart disease,' Freaney said. 'Menopause is a big topic these days ... every woman is so different in terms of how they view and feel during menopause,' Paik said. Some folks have hot flashes and night sweats for a few months while others are plagued with tough symptoms for years and years, she noted. No matter how menopause impacts you, it isn't a time to throw your hands up and say 'oh well' or think you have to silently push through the discomfort. 'I, myself, just realized, 'Wow, this is the latter half of my life, I have one life to live. I better take good care of myself,'' Paik said. 'I really kicked into the nutrition and exercise and just trying to keep myself healthy, rather than dealing with illness once it happens,' she noted. And going on hormone treatment is also a good option for many women, Paik added. 'I know that estrogen has been a really hot topic, and that also is one of those things where our medical opinions on hormone replacement and the benefits and risks of estrogen have changed over time as we've gotten more information,' Vasagar said. For a while, women strayed away from hormone treatments because of fears of breast cancer risk, Vasagar noted. 'Now, I think we're starting to get back into how can we use hormones to benefit women, protecting their heart health, protecting from osteoporosis, while also mitigating any risk that each individual has towards breast cancer and some other things that estrogen can contribute to,' Vasagar said. Not only does menopause bring hot flashes, mood changes and bone density loss, it also brings negative changes to heart health. 'There's a big shift that happens there. We lose our natural estrogen levels, and with the loss of natural estrogen, our whole cardiometabolic profile shifts for the worst,' Freaney said. 'I try to counsel my female patients that the years around menopause are really a time of accelerating cardiovascular risk, and we need to go into that decade of life in the most optimal cardiovascular health to brace ourselves for this transition that is going to inevitably come to every woman,' she said. Around menopause, your blood pressure increases, your LDL cholesterol (also known as the bad cholesterol) goes up and your HDL cholesterol (your good cholesterol) goes down, according to Freaney. Your fat mass goes up while your muscle mass goes down, she added. Your sleep and mood worsens, too, which can have downstream effects on exercise and nutrition — because who wants to go for a bike ride after a night of bad sleep? 'There's a whole batch of things that happen together that, when taken in full, create an overall riskier cardiovascular environment for a woman,' Freaney said. 'A lot of this people don't realize it's going to happen, and so they haven't gone into the menopausal years optimizing for it,' she noted. If you can focus on strength training to build muscle mass and setting good cardiovascular exercise habits and nutrition habits, you'll be more equipped to handle these changes and counteract them, Freaney said. And, this is true no matter if you're in menopause, post-menopausal or pre-menopausal — it's never too early or late to make a change. We're Gen X Doctors. Here Are The 5 Rules We Swear By For Longevity. Depression Symptoms May Look Different For Black Women. Here's How. 7 Things You'd Be Shocked People Don't Know About Menopause