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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jul 21 2021

Full Issue

Gallup Says 2020 Is Record-Setting Year For World's Negative Emotions

Although covid added to the stress, the pollsters say other issues such as global hunger, rising corruption and income inequality also contributed. Other reports look at new research on Alzheimer's disease and concerns about monkey pox.

More people said they experienced negative emotions and feelings in 2020 than any other year in recent history, according to Gallup's latest Negative Experience Index. "2020 officially became the most stressful year in recent history," Gallup writes. Gallup surveyed adults in 115 countries, finding that 4 in 10 said they experienced worry or stress last year. (Gonzalez, 7/20)

In other public health news 鈥

Playing puzzles, card games, reading books and engaging in other mentally stimulating activities later in life can help delay the onset of Alzheimer鈥檚 dementia by five years, researchers found. Findings published in Neurology on July 14 analyzed nearly 2,000 patients about 80 years old on average and free of dementia at the study start. During seven years of follow-up with annual exams and cognitive tests, some 457 people about 90 years old on average developed dementia, or "impaired ability to remember, think, or make decisions that interferes with doing everyday activities," according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). (Rivas, 7/20)

More than 200 people in 27 states are being monitored for possible exposure to monkeypox after they had contact with an individual who contracted the disease in Nigeria before traveling to the United States this month, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. To date, no additional cases have been detected. State and local health authorities are working with the CDC to identify and assess the individuals, and follow up with them daily until late this month, said Andrea McCollum, who leads the poxvirus epidemiology unit at the agency鈥檚 National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases. (Branswell, 7/20)

KHN: Though Millions Are At Risk For Diabetes, Medicare Struggles To Expand Prevention Program聽

Damon Diessner tried for years to slim down from his weight of more than 400 pounds, partly because his size embarrassed his wife but even more because his doctors told him he was at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes. His hemoglobin A1c level, a blood sugar marker, was 6.3%, just below the diabetes range of 6.5%. Then, two years ago, one of his doctors helped get him into a YMCA-run Diabetes Prevention Program not far from his home in Redmond, Washington. The group classes, at first held in person and then via Zoom during the covid-19 pandemic, were led by a lifestyle coach. He learned how to eat better, exercise more and maintain a healthier lifestyle overall. He now weighs 205 pounds, with an A1c level of 4.8%, which is in the normal range. (Meyer, 7/21)

A resurgent COVID pandemic is pushing Apple to delay its return-to-office deadline by at least a month, to October at the earliest, people familiar with the matter said. The Cupertino iPhone giant was responding to the new coronavirus variants that are dramatically increasing case rates and hospitalizations around the world, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because they were discussing the firm鈥檚 internal policy. Apple last month told employees to be back in the office at least three days a week starting in early September, prompting more than 1,700 workers to sign a letter to company executives asking for more flexibility to work remotely, tech website The Verge first reported. This month, Apple employees again wrote to their leaders, objecting to a lack of action on flexibility, according to tech site Recode. (Barron, 7/20)

In obituaries 鈥

Paul S. Auerbach was an adventurer 鈥 a deep-sea diver, a trekker and, in his vocation as a physician, a doctor who instinctively ran toward the scene of disaster. Early in his career, he discovered that when adventure and disaster combined, and a hiker developed frostbite, a camper was struck by lightning or a swimmer was stung by a stingray, even many doctors were ill-prepared to respond. Just a few years out of his residency, Dr. Auerbach established himself as a father of the field that came to be known as wilderness medicine. With Edward C. Geehr, a fellow specialist in emergency medicine, he co-edited the volume 鈥淢anagement of Wilderness and Environmental Emergencies鈥 (1983), a reference guide that a reviewer for the New England Journal of Medicine described as 鈥渓ong overdue鈥 and one that 鈥渄oubtless will be a fixture in every emergency room.鈥 (Langer, 7/20)

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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