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Monday, Sep 11 2023

Full Issue

Viewpoints: Extreme Heat Is Taking A Toll On Health; 9/11 Still Causing Illness In Those Who Were There

Editorial writers discuss extreme heats health effects, 9/11, world-wide medication supplies and more.

Heat and drought are slow disasters, ones we don鈥檛 jump to respond to, like we do for a hurricane or a tornado. The destruction is piecemeal鈥攁 buckled road here, a broken water main there, water tables and aquifers that aren鈥檛 filling as fast as we drain them. In this kind of disaster, bodies are damaged and lives are lost each day, day after day. (Megha Satyanarayana, 9/8)

Even now, 22 years later, the death toll from the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, continues to climb. Even this long after the last embers were extinguished and the acrid smoke of three crash sites settled on now-sacred soil, the dying goes on. First responders continue to succumb to certain cancers and respiratory ailments connected to their heroism on that day and connected to their work in the weeks and months after the horror. Every one of these fresh victims, many falling after years of fierce battles with illness, leaves friends and family who also become victims of that deadly day, the day that hasn鈥檛 stopped killing. (Frank Figliuzzi, 9/11)

Over the past two decades, India emerged as the 鈥減harmacy of the developing world,鈥 the leading manufacturer of generic drugs and medicines, producing more than 20 percent of the world鈥檚 supply. This has helped to make a range of medicines available to poor patients around the world who previously had to do without. (Vidya Krishnan, 9/11)

This summer, disability rights advocates sued California over its so-called End of Life Options Act. Under this 2016 law, assisted suicide is available to persons deemed terminally ill with less than six months to live. But, as argued in the lawsuit, the act violates the legal rights of disabled Californians and worsens the dehumanization they already face. (Lisa Blumberg, 9/11)

We like to think we understand the drugs we take, especially after rigorous trials have proved their efficacy and safety. But sometimes, we know only that medications work; we just don鈥檛 know why. (Aaron E. Carroll, 9/9)

Israeli doctors are bracing for a fight. On Sept. 12, the Israeli Supreme Court is set to hear challenges to a core component of Prime Minister Netanyahu鈥檚 judicial overhaul 鈥 and he has refused to commit to abide by the ruling. Thousands of Israeli doctors have announced they will go on strike if Netanyahu chooses to ignore an adverse ruling. (Mical Raz and Naftali Kaminski, 9/11)

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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