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Morning Briefing

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Tuesday, Oct 10 2023

Full Issue

People Drank Their Way Through The Pandemic. Now Liver Disease Is Soaring

Perhaps inevitably, after the pandemic the rates of alcohol-associated liver disease to the point of needing transplants are said to be "skyrocketing." In other news, California scientists have found high levels of bacteria in self-serve soda fountains.

Excessive drinking during the COVID-19 pandemic has led to skyrocketing rates of alcohol-associated liver disease to the point of needing transplants, according to doctors. Transplant centers across the United States are reporting more patients in need of a new liver than ever before, sometimes seeing double the number of patients needing transplants compared to pre-pandemic levels. (Kekatos, 10/8)

In other public health news 鈥

Scientists in Southern California are asking the kind of questions that make soda drinkers uneasy after a recent study that found fast-food soda fountains were serving up high levels of bacteria along with self-serve drinks. Researchers from Loma Linda University found bacteria levels that surpassed U.S. Environmental Protection Agency regulations for drinking water at fast-food restaurants in the eastern Coachella Valley, where largely low-income, Latino farmworker families have struggled with accessing potable water. (Cuevas, 10/9)

A fortnight camping on the mosquito-ridden, muddy banks of the Kolyma River in Russia may not sound like the most glamorous of work trips. But it鈥檚 a sacrifice virologist Jean-Michel Claverie was willing to make to uncover the truth about zombie viruses 鈥 yet another risk that climate change poses to public health. His discoveries shine a light on a grim reality of global warming as it thaws ground that had been frozen for millenniums. Claverie, 73, has spent over a decade studying 鈥済iant鈥 viruses, including ones nearly 50,000 years old found deep within layers of Siberian permafrost. (Tetley and Shrivastava, 10/9)

Children across all grade levels are taught nutrition concepts aimed at improving health, but I find these well-intended lessons can end up backfiring, harming kids鈥 eating habits and their overall well-being. Nutrition lessons 鈥 largely driven by state education standards 鈥 can be damaging because they unintentionally convey the same messages as an eating disorder: cut out certain foods, limit calories and fear weight gain. (Hanson, 10/9)

More than 45 school districts in Oklahoma are taking advantage of the USDA program to buy meats, produce and livestock from local producers to help feed their children and reduce the cost of school lunches, which have risen thanks to inflation at the same time pandemic-era funding to subsidize school meals has ended. ... For two years, pandemic federal funding helped provide free school meals for all students, which studies have shown significantly impact children鈥檚 physical and cognitive development, but that program ended in 2022. (Kemp, 10/6)

麻豆女优 Health News: Epidemic: Bodies Remember What Was Done To Them聽

Global fears of overpopulation in the 鈥60s and 鈥70s helped fuel India鈥檚 campaign to slow population growth. Health workers tasked to encourage family planning were dispatched throughout the country and millions of people were sterilized 鈥 some voluntarily, some for a monetary reward, and some through force. This violent and coercive campaign 鈥 and the distrust it created 鈥 was a backdrop for the smallpox eradication campaign happening simultaneously in India. (10/10)

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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