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Tuesday, Feb 7 2017

Full Issue

Not All Over-The-Counter Pain Relievers Are Created Equal

The New York Times breaks the options down by what pain they treat, side effects and other information the consumer should know before buying the drugs. In other public health news, breast cancer surgeries, crash test dummies, mysterious illnesses, supplements and salads.

Picking the pain reliever that鈥檚 best for you can be a confusing task. Pharmacy and supermarket shelves are lined with a dizzying array of boxes, names and labels describing the symptoms the medications are intended to address. While they all share the same goal, making you feel better, their active ingredients vary, and all have potential drawbacks. (Mele, 2/6)

A new device may hold the promise of eliminating an anguishing part of many breast-cancer surgeries: a follow-up operation to remove lingering cancer cells. Several surgeons are using a tool that shows promise in reducing the number of repeat procedures. (Lagnado, 2/6)

In an effort to more accurately reflect the U.S. car-driving population, at least one manufacturer is making crash-test dummies 鈥 the pretend people used to test automobile safety features 鈥 bigger and older. 鈥淭he typical patient today is overweight or obese 鈥 they鈥檙e the rule rather than the exception,鈥 said Dr. Stewart Wang, director of the University of Michigan International Center for Automotive Medicine, in a statement. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 talk about injuries without talking about the person.鈥 The new crash-test models include a 273-pound dummy, more than 100 pounds heavier than normal, as well as a prototype based on an overweight 70-year-old woman. (Buck, 2/6)

It was the most ordinary of family dinners, with pizza and cauliflower. Two exhausted parents sipped red wine. Two children giggled over silly jokes and squabbled over a stuffed animal named Baby Jaguar. A few moments later, 8-year-old Elijah Simpson-Sundell, his face slightly swollen and his speech slurred, walked unsteadily away from the table. His father gently reproached 6-year-old Genevieve: 鈥淲hen your brother wants something, and he doesn鈥檛 feel well, we should try to accommodate him.鈥 (McGinley, 2/6)

Why is he so tired, Jackie Mann wondered, not for the first time, as Evan, the middle of her three children, wandered off to his bedroom to take an after-school nap. Small for his age, the 12-year-old seemed to fall asleep easily and anywhere: in the car on the way to soccer or gymnastics, on the afternoons he came straight home from school, while doing his homework and, once, while waiting to see the pediatrician. (Boodman, 2/6)

Promoting fixes for fading memories has become big business.Yet consumer advocates and scientists like Dr. Bob Speth, of Nova Southeastern University in Davie, say some dietary supplement marketers are making millions by tapping into the deepest fears of seniors and aging baby boomers. They say there is little proof such products can stave off cognitive decline by beefing up brain function, as some of the companies selling them advertise. The latest example Speth and others are pointing to is the supplement Prevagen. (Lade, 2/6)

Yuma is the nation's largest supplier of winter greens 鈥 lettuce, cabbage, spinach, kale, spring mix and more. The speed of the process often astonishes those outside the industry. In some cases, leafy greens picked one day could end up on your plate the next. They are harvested, packaged and shipped from the field directly to the store.Before the fork gets to your mouth, lots of effort is put forth to assure the produce is safe. After E. coli聽outbreaks jolted the nation and industry a decade ago, the nation's food-safety net tightened up. (Anglen, 2/6)

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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