Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed
Bodybuilders around the world are risking their lives and sometimes dying for the sport they love because of extreme measures that are encouraged by coaches, rewarded by judges and ignored by leaders of the industry, according to interviews with dozens of bodybuilders, coaches, judges, promoters, medical professionals and relatives of deceased athletes. (Abelson, Jones and Bauerova, 12/7)
"It鈥檚 time for your daily check-in,鈥 a pop-up notification prods me. I click on my phone鈥檚 Mental Fitness app, which offers up the text prompt 鈥淗ow are you feeling today?鈥 After I speak into the mic for 30 seconds, rambling about whatever comes to mind, the app churns out my well-being score on a 1-to-100 scale: 鈥51: Pay Attention.鈥 (Svoboda, 12/8)
The bathroom consisted of聽a tarp聽tied between two trees. When Katelyn Haruko Schmisseur used it, she made eye contact with a staff member. She squatted, they stared.聽A requirement of her wilderness therapy program, they told her.聽Because of her eating disorder, a聽staff member was with her at all times almost the entire length of her聽stay in the Utah desert.聽A bucket lined with a biohazard bag acted as a receptacle for solid waste. As the weather got warmer, the smell got stronger. The flies were聽incessant. (Moniuszko, 12/8)
The change was gradual. At first, Riana Alexander was always tired. Then she began missing classes. She had been an honors student at her Arizona high school, just outside Phoenix. But last winter, after the isolation of remote learning, then the overload of a full-on return to school, her grades were slipping. She wasn鈥檛 eating a lot. She avoided friends. Her worried mother searched for mental health treatment. Finally, in the spring, a three-day-a-week intensive program for depression helped the teenager steady herself and 鈥渨ant to get better,鈥 Alexander said. Then, as she was finding her way, a girl at her school took her own life. Then a teen elsewhere in the district did the same. Then another. (St. George and Strauss, 12/5)
As the rest of the world ages, South Koreans are getting younger. South Korea鈥檚 parliament passed laws Thursday abolishing the traditional method of determining ages, which will officially make everyone in the country a year or two younger starting in June 2023. Unlike in most of the world, people in South Korea turn 1 as soon as they are born and gain another year every New Year鈥檚 Day. In everyday life, South Koreans typically cite their 鈥淜orean age,鈥 which is also reflected on many government documents. (Yoon, 12/9)
When LaTunja Caster started working at the Olin Corp. chemical plant outside of McIntosh, Alabama, she had no idea that asbestos was used in the production process. But when she became a union safety representative around 2007, she started to pay attention. In certain parts of the plant, 鈥測ou would see it all the time,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou definitely breathed it in.鈥 (McGrory, 12/7)
A pandemic outbreak has erupted across the globe this year. It鈥檚 not COVID-19, monkeypox, or measles. It鈥檚 cholera, a diarrheal disease that has killed millions since it emerged from the Ganges delta in the 19th century. The current cholera pandemic, the world鈥檚 seventh, began in 1961. 鈥淢ore people are infected now on a yearly basis than at any other point,鈥 said Edward Ryan, Director of Global Infectious Diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital. Floods, armed conflict, and other emergencies have contributed to unprecedented outbreaks in 29 countries, including Haiti, Lebanon, and Malawi. (Bajaj, 12/7)