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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Apr 21 2023

Full Issue

Youth Suicide Attempts By OTC Drug Poisonings Surge In US

Rates of suspected suicide attempts using drugs such as acetaminophen and ibuprofen leaped 30% over pre-pandemic levels, Bloomberg reports. The news outlet also covers how TikTok's algorithm is allegedly "pushing" suicide content to vulnerable teens. Also in the news, weed's impact on creativity, dangers of "new car smell," and more.

Rates of suspected suicide attempts by poisoning among US children and teenagers surged 30% from pre-pandemic levels, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Peng, 4/20)

TikTok鈥檚 algorithm doesn鈥檛 know Chase Nasca is dead. More than a year after Nasca killed himself at age 16, his account remains active. Scroll through his For You feed, and you see an endless stream of clips about unrequited love, hopelessness, pain and what many posts glorify as the ultimate escape: suicide. (Carville, 4/20)

If you are in need of help 鈥

In other health and wellness news 鈥

New research suggests that cannabis may not be a gateway drug to creativity after all. 鈥淎lmost everyone thinks that cannabis makes them more creative. And it seems like that assumption is not supported by the data,鈥 said Christopher Barnes, professor of organizational behavior at the University of Washington鈥檚 Foster School of Business and an author of the study. (Sima, 4/20)

There's just nothing like that "new car smell," many people believe. There is a health angle to consider, though. A recent study by the Beijing Institute of Technology and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, published in the journal Cell Reports Physical Science, found that the cabin of a new vehicle contained 20 common "volatile organic compounds" (VOCs), which could potentially contain cancer-causing agents. (Rudy, 4/20)

The Biden administration is proposing a widespread ban on a toxic chemical used in paint strippers that has been linked to dozens of accidental deaths, the first of several long-awaited moves planned for this year to bolster the country鈥檚 chemical-safety rules. The Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday its plan would ban methylene chloride for all consumer use and most industrial and commercial uses. EPA officials say that would go much further than past efforts, though it falls short of a total ban some health groups have called for in the past. (Puko, 4/20)

Americans may want to think twice about reaching for that cool glass of lemonade this summer after a study published this week found sugary drinks may be linked to an increased risk of heart disease and death in certain people. (Rodriguez, 4/21)

A medical student spoke emotionally about grappling with a diagnosis his classes told him little about. A young queer man took one test, got a different result on the next, and is now saving up the money needed for the most advanced diagnostics, which insurers rarely cover. A young woman tested positive, got little guidance from her doctor and found information on government sites that she interpreted as pushing abstinence. (Mast, 4/21)

Older adults are increasingly drinking excessively and dying of alcohol-related deaths, and the problem has been compounded by ageism, stigma,聽a lack of interest from policymakers and health care providers and聽few聽age-appropriate treatment options, experts say.聽(Hellmann, 4/20)

It has happened to tons of people: strands of hair that were once brown, black, or other shades now appear gray. Why does that happen? Hair color is determined by melanocyte stem cells that multiply inside hair follicles, previous research has shown. These stem cells get聽signals to mature and make proteins that produce hair color. (Martin, 4/20)

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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