The shooter in the mass gun shooting in Orlando early Sunday morning, which killed at least 50 people and wounded dozens of others, was initially characterized as a “lone gunman.” But for those of us in public health, who have seen the deadly merger of access to weapons and senseless hate play out again and again, with no government action to stop it, the gunman, Omar Saddiqui Mateen, was by no means alone. He was aided and abetted by our inertia.
Can Your Genes Really Predict the Future of Your Health? | Fortune
Earlier this month, Nature Communications published an analysis of the genetic mutation process that can lead to breast cancer. The research team looked at the genomes of cells from 560 tumors in order to pinpoint the differences between mutated cells and the cells of healthy patients. They were able to locate 93 genes that, if subject to mutation, could cause the disease. These findings have been called a “milestone,” and have added to the already considerable hype over the potential of genomics to predict disease in individuals.
Too Many Dead: The Need To Reframe Gun Violence As A Public Health Issue | Cognoscenti
Is it too much to hope that America may be nearing the point of progress over the urgent — and long overdue — issue of gun violence? More than 5,000people have been killed by guns since the start of this year. More than 10,000have been injured. There have been more than 112 mass shootings. Just this week, a murder-suicide claimed two lives on the UCLA campus. In 2013, the U.S. saw more than 30,000 gun-related deaths. There's cause to believe that 2016 will see a similarly horrifying tally.
A Gold Medal in Fear Mongering | HuffPost
As the Olympics draw near, is it time to reassess the Zika risks of holding them in Brazil, or even to initiate a travel ban on Rio? 100 “experts” seem to think so. On May 27, they released an open letter to the World Health Organization urging that the Olympics, scheduled for August, be postponed or moved “in the name of public health.” They are entitled to their opinion, but they have no special warrant to speak in the name of public health. Their letter is naked fear mongering, and their call to isolate Rio from the rest of the world should be ignored.
What can physicians do to increase empathy about the health of populations? | KevinMD.com
As physicians, we are charged with extending empathy to our patients. In addition to a professional responsibility, empathy is also a mechanism for improving patient care and professional satisfaction. It has been associated with better patient satisfaction, clinical outcomes, fewer medical errors and lawsuits, as well as provider happiness. However, while physicians can be expected to pursue the ideal of empathy towards individual patients, that of empathizing with populations is more challenging. As the old saying goes, a single death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic.
Is bacon really bad for you? | Fortune
It is a familiar ritual. Periodically we are told that—for the good of our health—we must cut something out of our diet. Such pronouncements are often prompted by a new study; the message tends to be delivered in rather alarming tones and results in public anxiety when it is revealed that a hitherto beloved food product actually causes harm. The organizations that make these statements are clearly acting with people’s best interests at heart, but how effective are their communications at motivating healthy behavior? To what extent is spotlighting individual risk factors good for the promotion of wellbeing?
Leaving Behind "Methadone Mile" | HuffPost
A video report released last week by WCVB portrays “methadone mile”—the stretch of road in the South End of Boston, Massachusetts, where the effects of the nationwide opioid crisis are on full display. Running by Boston Medical Center, one of the city’s main hospitals, the street is home to a number of drug treatment facilities, a homeless shelter, and, yes, a methadone clinic.
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