I hadnβt watched it in years, I just appreciate its minimalism (basically non stop pace, 1 hr and 46 mins) when you consider what the Craig series had become by Spectre and No Time to Die (almost 3 hours!!)
I hadnβt watched it in years, I just appreciate its minimalism (basically non stop pace, 1 hr and 46 mins) when you consider what the Craig series had become by Spectre and No Time to Die (almost 3 hours!!)
quantum of solace is underrated
I talked to the authors of the disputed brain study and this comment stuck out to me: βWeβre living longer than ever. Letβs not panic.β
Just maybe avoid microwaving food in a plastic container and live your life:
www.vox.com/health/47530...
We have to find a better equilibrium for thinking about plastic.β¬
βͺIt has enabled wonderful things we enjoy as modern humans. It also presents health risks worth taking seriously. β¬
βͺBoth things can be true!β¬
βͺhttps://www.vox.com/health/475307/plastic-microplastics-waste-human-effects-guardianβ¬
Here is, I think, a more productive mindset for most of us:
- Plastics do harm human health
- Take "low pain" steps to mitigate risk without upending your life
- Don't overreact, in either direction, to new research or new media fixations
www.vox.com/health/47530...
I spoke with co-authors on the brain study critiqued in the Guardian article.
βNobodyβs getting it perfect. But when you start combining the best practices, all of a sudden, I think in a year, maybe two, weβre going to have this unassailable approach."
www.vox.com/health/47530...
Lost in the public squabbling about microplastics research is this reality: This is a young field and new research should be critiqued for its methods. That's how the research will improve. This is how science is supposed to work:
www.vox.com/health/47530...
βͺThe science on microplastics is hard to do and it is multifaceted. This weekβs bombshell was about a specific kind of study. β¬
βͺWe need a better framework for absorbing new developments:β¬
βͺhttps://www.vox.com/health/475307/plastic-microplastics-waste-human-effects-guardianβ¬
We have to stop freaking out about every new microplastics study
www.vox.com/health/47530...
oh my god. More details are surfacing about the catastrophic incompetence that led to the dietary guidelines' inaccurate claims about a litany of nutrient gaps in plant-based diets
Itβs one particularly wonky example of how politicians warp reality to bend it to what they want people to believe β not what actually happened.
And at the end of the day, even if they misled people, they won the fight. Thatβs politics, I guess:
www.vox.com/health/47472...
Itβs a subtle thing. But the industry and Congress clearly felt they had a stronger argument if they portrayed the Biden admin alcohol study as coming after the industry-preferred study β and they have consistently twisted these facts to advance that story.
But this is false β and contradicted BY THE HOUSE REPORT ITSELF.
Look at this page. They say the Biden admin authorized their alcohol study in APRIL 2022 β*after* Congress already authorized theirs.
But follow the footnote. They cite a spending bill passed in DECEMEBER 2022
A key talking point was this was a crusade and one that began AFTER Congress had
authorized what would become the more pro-alcohol study.
House Oversight published their final report on the controversy and they repeat this talking point throughout:
oversight.house.gov/wp-content/u...
There was a coordinated effort between the alcohol industry and Congress to discredit both the findings of the study that found negative effects at low levels of drinking and the researchers themselves. Again read all about it here:
www.vox.com/health/46008...
You can read the whole saga, but in short, two different studies analyzing alcohol and health were produced ahead of the dietary guidelines. One study found negligible negative effects, while the other found a serious mortality risk at low drinking levels
www.vox.com/health/46008...
Thereβs an interesting lesson in DC spin and misinformation when it comes to the new dietary guidelines and alcohol and the studies produced to justify these new changes.
A short thread β>
I gotta say, it was pretty rich hearing Dr. Oz claim there is no evidence for a more specific limit on drinking alcohol:
www.vox.com/health/47472...
And you can sign up for Good Medicine here:
www.vox.com/pages/good-m...
Hey! I'll be hanging out over on Reddit in 15 minutes, talking about our newsletter (sign up!), the health care beat, and anything else you'd like! Check it out:
www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comme...
In the near feature, you could get your inflammation checked at your annual check-up along with your blood sugar and cholesterol.
βI can envision a future where inflammation is a pre-symptomatic warning sign β something you notice before you feel sick."
www.vox.com/health/47438...
Inflammation is on everybody's minds these days.
But the social media remedies miss the complex biology underneath. I tried to get a picture of what the real, evidence-based future of managing inflammation looks like. Here's what I found:
www.vox.com/health/47438...
TOMORROW, a new health care newsletter that promises to be a little different from all the other wonderful health care newsletters.
Sign up --> www.vox.com/pages/good-m...
We're launching a new newsletter, Good Medicine, on a simple premise: These are chaotic times, with so much distrust and confusion around our health and our health care system.
So our goal is to help all of us navigate through the cacophony, together:
www.vox.com/pages/good-m...
Don't call it a VoxCare comeback. We're cooking up a new health care newsletter that I think you're really going to like -->
βWeβre going through a cycle, and there will be casualties. There will be needless deaths and illnesses,β a Texas pediatrican told me. βI think that the only generation that is going to learn from this will be maybe the next one.β
www.vox.com/health/47333...
βIt only takes one generation to forget the progress weβve made on certain things," one Arizona family doctor told me. "Twenty-five years ago, we were a measles-free nation. Now weβre back one generation later because we forgot how terrible it was.β
www.vox.com/health/47333...
Measles came back because, paradoxically, our public health efforts worked so well. People lost their fear of a dangerous virus.
www.vox.com/health/47333...
The ACA tax credit catastrophe revealed that after a decade-plus of the ACA, Republicans are no closer to having a serious, coherent plan for fixing the US health system and lowering costs:
www.vox.com/health/47196...