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News Articles: Health

E-bike use is increasing quickly, but many people do not wear helmets. And head injuries from e-bike accidents are rising fast too, a study in JAMA Surgery shows.

Tagged as: 

  • Your Health

E-bike head trauma soars as helmet use falls, study finds

A new study shows that nearly 8,000 e-bike riders sought hospital care for head injuries in 2022. It's a huge increase and the majority of the injured riders were not wearing helmets.

February 21, 2024
|
By:
  • Ronnie Cohen
The decision stems from a case brought by three couples that had pursued in vitro fertilization treatment.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

How Alabama's ruling that frozen embryos are 'children' could impact IVF

Frozen embryos are people and you can be held legally responsible if you destroy them, according to the Alabama Supreme Court. The decision could have wide-ranging implications for IVF clinics.

February 21, 2024
|
By:
  • Ailsa Chang,
  • Alejandra Marquez Janse,
  • and 1 more
Julie Silverman had a very rare condition that went undiagnosed for years.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

Doctors didn't think much of her cough. A nurse practitioner did and changed her life

After Julie developed a persistent cough, no one seemed to be able to identify the cause. Then, her unsung hero stepped in and saved her life.

February 21, 2024
|
By:
  • Autumn Barnes
New Georgia House Speaker Jon Burns poses for a portrait at the Georgia State Capitol, Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023, in Atlanta.

Tagged as: 

  • News

Georgia House leaders signal Medicaid expansion is off the table in 2024

A bill introduced Tuesday by a top lieutenant to Republican House Speaker Jon Burns proposes to create a Comprehensive Health Care Commission. That could lead to more health coverage in the future, but not this year.

February 21, 2024
|
By:
  • Associated Press
Despite being addictive and deadly, menthol cigarettes were long advertised as a healthy alternative to "regular" cigarettes — and heavily advertised to Black folks in cities.

Tagged as: 

  • Race

The minty past and cloudy future of menthol cigarettes

In the U.S., flavored cigarettes have been banned since 2009, with one glaring exception: menthols. That exception was supposed to go away in 2023, but the Biden administration quietly delayed the ban on menthols. Why? Well, an estimated 85 percent of Black smokers smoke menthols — and some (potentially suspect) polls have indicated that a ban on menthols would chill Biden's support among Black people. Of course, it's more complicated than that. The story of menthol cigarettes is tied up in policing, advertising, influencer-culture, and the weaponization of race and gender studies. Oh, and a real-life Black superhero named Mandrake the Magician.

February 21, 2024
|
By:
  • Gene Demby,
  • B.A. Parker,
  • and 7 more
Over two dozen abortion-rights supporters attend a rally outside the South Carolina State House in Columbia, S.C., on Aug. 23, 2023. The South Carolina Supreme Court ruled to uphold a law banning most abortions except those in the earliest weeks of pregnancy.

Tagged as: 

  • Politics

'Something needs to change.' Woman denied abortion in South Carolina challenges ban

The state law has been interpreted as banning abortion after six weeks of pregnancy. Planned Parenthood argues the ban is vague and shouldn't apply until at least three weeks later in pregnancy.

February 20, 2024
|
By:
  • Victoria Hansen
Drug consumers line up outside of the SAOM van for a methadone cocktail and supplies in the city center of Porto, Portugal last spring.  There are very few overdose deaths in the country where drug addiction is treated as an illness rather than a crime.<a href="https://www.gettyimages.com/license/924064702?adppopup=true"></a>

Tagged as: 

  • News

Does Portugal Have The Answer To Stopping Drug Overdose Deaths?

Brian Mann covers the U-S opioid and fentanyl crisis for NPR. That means he talks to a lot of people struggling with addiction. Again and again, he's heard stories of people who have succumbed to their addiction — last year 112, 000 — more than ever in history.

But when Mann traveled to Portugal to report on that country's model for dealing with the opioid crisis, he heard a very different story. Overdose deaths in Portugal are extremely rare.

The country has taken a radically different approach to drugs – decriminalizing small amounts and publicly funding addiction services – including sites where people can use drugs like crack and heroin.

Portugal treats addiction as an illness rather than a crime. No one has to pay for addiction care, and no one scrambles to navigate a poorly regulated recovery system. Could Portugal's approach help the U-S fight its opioid epidemic?

For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.

Email us at considerthis@npr.org.

February 20, 2024
|
By:
  • GPB Newsroom
Guillermo A. Santos on his high school graduation day in 2021, with his father, Guillermo Jose Santos. The elder Santos died later the same year of a drug overdose.

Tagged as: 

  • Perspective

In Philadelphia's Kensington neighborhood, heroin is far from 'chic'

A young poet and writer who lost his father to opioid addiction says there's nothing cool about what the drugs did to his dad. So why are peers trying to look like emaciated people with addiction?

February 20, 2024
|
By:
  • Guillermo A. Santos
Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs online pharmacy is adding the oral contraceptive Yaz from Bayer to its list of discounted medicines.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

Bayer makes a deal on popular contraceptive with Mark Cuban's online pharmacy

Bayer is adding two of its name-brand drugs to the roster of Cost Plus Drugs: the birth control pill Yaz and the menopause treatment Climara.

February 19, 2024
|
By:
  • Sydney Lupkin
John Simon, a teenager who had a bariatric surgery in 2022, watches as his sister, Haley, opens a refrigerator for food in their apartment in Los Angeles, Monday, March 13, 2023

Tagged as: 

  • Children's Health

Investment in early childhood mental health may reduce crime, boost national security, veterans say

Members of the Council for a Strong America are calling on the Georgia legislature to ensure that the state budget prioritizes and promotes early childhood priorities, including mental health.

February 19, 2024
|
By:
  • Ellen Eldridge
About 4.6 million adults in the U.S. have a peanut allergy, according to a study published by the <em>Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology</em> in 2021.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

FDA approves a drug to treat severe food allergies, including milk, eggs and nuts

Xolair is considered the first medication approved by the FDA that can help protect against severe allergic reactions brought on by accidental exposure to certain foods.

February 19, 2024
|
By:
  • Juliana Kim
This tuna, chickpea and parmesan salad bowl packs a protein punch, which is crucial for building muscle strength.

Tagged as: 

  • News

Millions of women are 'under-muscled.' These foods help build strength

We start to lose muscle in our 30s, and the loss accelerates with age, putting us at risk of frailty later in life. But what you eat — specifically how much protein — is a big part of the solution.

February 19, 2024
|
By:
  • Allison Aubrey
A scene from the Oscar-nominated documentary <em>To Kill a Tiger,</em> about the gang rape of a 13-year-old girl and how she and her father pursued justice even though many of the people in their village did not support their efforts — and even believed she should marry one of the rapists.

Tagged as: 

  • Movies

Oscar-nommed doc: A 13-year-old and her dad demand justice after she is raped

In "To Kill a Tiger," director Nisha Pahuja follows the case of a girl who is gang-raped in her Indian village. The villagers say she should marry one of the rapists.

February 19, 2024
|
By:
  • Kamala Thiagarajan
Prisoner and patient Alton Batiste, 72, in Angola's nursing unit in 2017. The prison had to change some of its rules when it introduced hospice, allowing inmates to touch each other, for instance.

Tagged as: 

  • Health

Death and redemption in an American prison

More than a quarter century after an inmate helped start a hospice program in one of the nation's most notorious prisons, he is trying to spread the idea.

February 19, 2024
|
By:
  • Markian Hawryluk
Activists march through the Central Business District of Nairobi on Jan. 27 at a demonstration calling for government action to address the murders of young women.

Tagged as: 

  • Global Health

Murders of women in Kenya lead to a public outcry for a law on femicide

A brutally violent series of murders of women has been documented. Thousands of Kenyans are protesting to demand government action on gender-based violence.

February 18, 2024
|
By:
  • Jacky Habib
  • Load More

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