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Friday, Oct 7 2016

Full Issue

As Traditional Genome Sequencing Becomes Obsolete, Scientists Find New Ways To Tell 'Human Story'

It's becoming clear that the original method is prone to mistakes, so researchers are thinking of different ways to map the human genome.

Sixteen years ago, two teams of scientists announced they had assembled the first rough draft of the entire human genome. If you wanted, you could read the whole thing 鈥 3.2 billion units, known as base pairs. Today, hundreds of thousands of people have had their genomes sequenced, and millions more will be completed in the next few years. But as the numbers skyrocket, it鈥檚 becoming painfully clear that the original method that scientists used to compare genomes to each other 鈥斅燼nd to develop a better understanding of how our DNA influences our lives 鈥 is rapidly becoming obsolete. (Zimmer, 10/7)

In other public health news聽鈥

[Wayne] Eskridge felt fine, and he didn鈥檛 drink alcohol or have hepatitis C like many people with liver disease. Instead, the cause was non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, or NASH, which is what leads to cirrhosis in one-quarter of people with the condition. It is increasingly common, for reasons that are unclear, and there is no known cure. Eskridge isn鈥檛 alone聽鈥斅爌eople with NASH usually have no symptoms. It鈥檚 estimated that roughly 2 percent to 5 percent of adults in the United States have the disease, and that another 10 percent to 20 percent may have its milder cousin, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, or NAFLD, according to the National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. NASH is expected to become the most frequent reason for liver transplants by 2020. (Bond, 10/6)

The teenage brain has been characterized as a risk-taking machine, looking for quick rewards and thrills instead of acting responsibly. But these behaviors could actually make teens better than adults at certain kinds of learning. "In neuroscience, we tend to think that if healthy brains act in a certain way, there should be a reason for it," says Juliet Davidow, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard University in the Affective Neuroscience and Development Lab and the lead author of the study, which was published Wednesday in the journal Neuron. (Ross, 10/6)

A month鈥檚 stay is typical聽for聽people who go to an inpatient facility to treat drug or alcohol addiction. But why? 鈥淎s far as I know, there鈥檚 nothing magical about 28 days,鈥 said聽Kimberly Johnson, director of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment at聽SAMHSA, the federal agency that studies treatment services. (Allen, 10/7)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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