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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Jan 17 2023

Full Issue

Eating Just One Serving Of Fish Could Endanger Your Health, Study Suggests

The Hill reports that this study is the first to connect U.S. fish consumption to blood levels of "forever chemicals." Also: alcohol-related liver disease, PTSD treatments, zombie fungus, and more.

Eating just one serving of freshwater fish each year could have the same effect as drinking water heavily polluted with 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 for an entire month, a new study finds. The equivalent month-long amount of water would be contaminated at levels 2,400 times greater than what鈥檚 recommended by the Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 (EPA) drinking water health advisories, according to聽the study, published Tuesday in Environmental Research. (Udasin, 1/17)

In other health and wellness news 鈥

Going for a walk in a park or along a lake or a tree-lined space may reduce the need for medication for anxiety, asthma, depression, high blood pressure or insomnia, a new study found. (LaMotte, 1/16)

Jessica Due帽as was leading a double life. Named Kentucky's teacher of the year in 2019, she had also developed a heavy drinking problem.聽"The day that I won my award, I was in withdrawals,"聽she said. "I could not wait to go home so that I could drink."聽(Chen, 1/16)

Devastated by post-traumatic stress disorder, Jonathan Lubecky tried to take his own life in 2006.聽"I put a loaded nine-millimeter to my temple, and I pulled the trigger," he said. "That was the first suicide attempt that I had. I've had a total of five." (Lapook, 1/13)

Massachusetts doesn鈥檛 track statewide cardiac arrest survival rates, but some municipalities do, and their data shows that survival varies widely. In Boston, 11.2 percent of people who experienced a cardiac arrest in 2021 survived, but in Worcester, one recent study found those rates were between 3 and 4 percent. (Bartlett, 1/14)

KHN: Rural Seniors Benefit From Pandemic-Driven Remote Fitness Boom聽

Eight women, all 73 or older, paced the fellowship hall at Malmo Evangelical Free Church to a rendition of Daniel O鈥橠onnell鈥檚 鈥淩ivers of Babylon鈥 as they warmed up for an hourlong fitness class. The women, who live near or on the eastern shore of Mille Lacs Lake, had a variety of reasons for showing up despite fresh snow and slippery roads. One came to reduce the effects of osteoporosis; another, to maintain mobility after a stroke. (Saint Louis, 1/17)

KHN: Will Your Smartphone Be The Next Doctor鈥檚 Office?聽

The same devices used to take selfies and type out tweets are being repurposed and commercialized for quick access to information needed for monitoring a patient鈥檚 health. A fingertip pressed against a phone鈥檚 camera lens can measure a heart rate. The microphone, kept by the bedside, can screen for sleep apnea. Even the speaker is being tapped, to monitor breathing using sonar technology. In the best of this new world, the data is conveyed remotely to a medical professional for the convenience and comfort of the patient or, in some cases, to support a clinician without the need for costly hardware. (Norman, 1/17)

Also 鈥

The zombie apocalypse depicted in the popular video game series and newly adapted HBO series 鈥淭he Last of Us鈥 derives from a mutation to a type of fungus called cordyceps. Surprise! Cordyceps is real, and some 600 variations of it can be found around the world, primarily in Southeast Asia. (Hume, 1/15)

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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