Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Study links early cannabis use and health problems
Adolescents who start using cannabis early and often are more likely to need health care for both mental and physical problems as they enter adulthood, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers.
Global Health NOW: U.S., Canada Risk Measles-Free Status; WHO Warns of Tobacco Treaty Interference; and Brazil's Teen Pregnancy Turnaround
The consequences of teetering government commitments to vaccines and falling vaccination rates are emerging across North America. Measles-free no more: Canada and the U.S. are poised to lose their status as countries that have eliminated measles, CNN reports. Canada’s year of continuous measles transmission and its 5,000+ cases this year make it likely that a November PAHO meeting will determine the country is no longer measles free. The U.S. may soon get the same label. Muzzled experts: Doctors and public health experts in Florida have been reluctant to speak out about a state plan to end required childhood vaccinations, per KFF News.
- Pediatricians are afraid of losing business, county health department officials refer reporters to state officials, and University of Florida infectious disease experts were told not to speak to reporters without supervisor approval.
Threat to U.S. vaccines as CDC staff supporting key advisory panel laid off – The Guardian Kansas City health experts say confusing CDC vaccine guidance risks wider spread of infections – KCUR / NPR Kansas City Measles outbreak in South Carolina grows; Canada’s elimination status threatened – CIDRAP DATA POINT
9 of 10
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Portion of air pollution-linked deaths attributable to noncommunicable diseases in 2023. —Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
The Latest One-Liners The Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia is committing grave atrocities in Darfur’s regional capital, El Fasher, the UN human rights office (OHCHR) warns, citing ethnically motivated killings, summary executions of civilians attempting to flee the area, and attacks on humanitarian volunteers attempting to administer aid. UN News
Thousands of stillbirths—nearly 30%—occur without clear warning signs or clinical risk factors, per a large Harvard and Mass General Brigham analysis of ~2.8 million U.S. pregnancies that documented ~19,000 stillbirths between 2016 and 2022—with Black families and poorer communities bearing a disproportionate toll. The Washington Post Cigarette butts are an “overlooked yet potent” vector for antibiotic resistance genes, according to a Chinese-led PNAS report that detected 95 potential pathogens in cigarette butts collected from 105 urban green spaces and 35 cities across China. CIDRAP
Weight loss drugs are lowering the U.S. obesity rate, albeit slowly—from a high of 39.9% three years ago to 37% of U.S. adults this year, according to a new Gallup poll that shows a doubling in the number of people taking the drugs over the past year and a half. NPR Shots BIG TOBACCO WHO Urges ‘Vigilance’ Against Tobacco Treaty Interference
The tobacco industry is ramping up efforts to undermine an international treaty to reduce smoking and vaping, the WHO is warning ahead of a key meeting in Geneva next month, reports The Telegraph.
Background: The meeting will involve updates to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, a 20-year-old treaty with 183 signatories that includes policies on advertising limits, health warnings, and smoking bans.
Big Tobacco tactics: But ahead of the meeting, the WHO is urging governments to “remain vigilant” to various ways the tobacco industry is infiltrating and manipulating delegations, including posing as consumer, economic, or scientific groups to promote misinformation in “a deliberate strategy to try to derail consensus.” Meanwhile, in the UK: A British lawmaker who is pushing against a proposed ban on tobacco to anyone born after 2008 has a relative who is “very high up” at British American Tobacco, reports The Examination. GLOBAL HEALTH VOICES FAMILY PLANNING Brazil Turns Around its Teen Pregnancy Epidemic Brazil once had one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates in Latin America, with ~750,000 Brazilian girls ages 15–19 giving birth in 2000. But over 25 years, births among that age have plummeted 44%, falling below 400,000 in 2019, with ~281,000 projected for 2025. Contraception intervention: The primary driver for the reversal has been the rapid expansion of birth control access, with free birth control, condoms, and IUDs provided by the country’s national health system, Sistema Unica de Saude. Outreach: Community health program Saude da Familia sends educators door to door to share family planning options. Broader change: Poverty reduction, improved education, and expanded internet access have transformed opportunities for young women. The Telegraph OPPORTUNITY QUICK HITS Texas sues Tylenol company over autism claims – The Texas Tribune
Behind the Dismantling of the C.D.C.: Reform or ‘Humiliation’? – The New York Times (gift link)
This 'minor' bird flu strain has potential to spark human pandemic – Nature
Anti-abortion pregnancy centers are looking to offer much more than ultrasounds and diapers – AP Some viruses can play a deadly game of hide and seek inside the human body – NPR Goats and Soda Clocks to go back: Three impacts Daylight Saving Time changes can have on you - what the science says – The Scotsman Picture of health: going to art galleries can improve wellbeing, study reveals – The Guardian Issue No. 2812
Global Health NOW is an initiative of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
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