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Friday, May 26 2023

Full Issue

Longer Looks: Interesting Reads You Might Have Missed

Each week, 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News finds longer stories for you to enjoy. This week's selections include stories on children's health, menopause, Huntington鈥檚 disease, and more.

"Silence is kind of a peak achievement in a child's ability to control themselves," Mej铆a-Menendez says. "We create the conditions for children to concentrate." Unlike this classroom, the city outside is full of noise. And studies show that too much noise, particularly loud noise, can hurt a child's cognitive development, notably for language-based skills such as reading. That's because if noise is just, well, noise, it distracts developing brains and makes it more difficult for children to concentrate. But when their environment is quiet enough for them to pay attention to sounds that are important or particularly interesting to them, it is a powerful teaching tool. (Johnson, 5/24)

Anne Corliss loves babies 鈥 so much, that somehow, quietly and without her noticing, she spent 25 years cradling them in her arms at a Bangor hospital鈥檚 neonatal intensive care unit. She is considered a master cuddler. Corliss, 66, is one of 18 volunteers involved in the Carter鈥檚 Quiet Care Cuddlers program, which tends to the hospital鈥檚 tiniest patients when parents aren鈥檛 around. She began volunteering at Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center鈥檚 pediatric unit in 1990 and moved to the NICU when the cuddlers program began in 1998. (Royzman, 5/23)

There鈥檚 a 鈥渞eally robust body of evidence鈥 that suggests that creating art, as well as activities like attending a concert or visiting a museum, can benefit mental health, said Jill Sonke, research director of the University of Florida Center for Arts in Medicine. Here are a few simple ways to elevate your mood with the arts. (Caron, 5/22)

For as long as I have been feeding myself鈥攚hich, for the record, is several decades now鈥擨 have been feeding myself fast. I bite big, in rapid succession; my chews are hasty and few. In the time it takes others to get through a third of their meal, mine is already gone. You could reasonably call my approach to eating pneumatic, reminiscent of a suction-feeding fish or a Roomba run amok. (Wu, 5/22)

In the last few years, managers at Nvidia, the global computer graphics company, began hearing a new kind of complaint: Some of their female employees were struggling with hot flashes, fatigue and brain fog 鈥 common symptoms of the menopause transition 鈥 and their regular doctors weren鈥檛 offering guidance or relief. 鈥淭hey came to us and said, 鈥榃ho do I go to?鈥欌 Denise Rosa, the company鈥檚 head of U.S. medical programs, said. 鈥淭hey were like, 鈥榃e have fertility support, we have egg freezing, we have surrogacy and adoption. What about me?鈥欌 (Otterman, 5/22)

The drug could reroute the trajectory of a kid's life鈥攐r throw it off course. (Tayag, 5/25)

Four decades ago, medical researchers reached out to ailing families in Colombia for insights into Huntington鈥檚 disease. Scientists are just now following up, hoping it鈥檚 not too late. (Smith, 5/23)

There鈥檚 a lack of appreciation of the impact RSV infections have on older adults, experts who research this virus acknowledge. (Branswell, 5/26)

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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