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8 votes
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Where's masculinity headed? Men's groups and therapists are talking.
14 votes -
249 babies born with syphilis in Thailand this year: Public Health Ministry
4 votes -
Why physicians are prescribing time in nature
6 votes -
Highly potent weed has swept the market, raising concerns about health risks
7 votes -
Avoiding "health washing" at the grocery store
7 votes -
The American Dream is killing us
14 votes -
'I'd rather go to heaven than live here as a boy': Inside the lives of Australian trans children
9 votes -
Do trigger warnings actually work? Researchers are divided over whether warnings about sensitive content help or harm people who have experienced trauma.
7 votes -
Taking mushrooms for depression cured me of my atheism: Psilocybin not only eased my depression, it showed me a new way to live.
22 votes -
Long school commutes are terrible for kids
10 votes -
'No Visible Bruises' upends stereotypes of abuse, sheds light on domestic violence
9 votes -
A psychedelic renaissance
12 votes -
Silicon Valley's health-tech start-ups need to focus more on medical rigor and less on growth
10 votes -
Burger King is the latest brand to use depression as a marketing tool
11 votes -
I went down a rabbit hole trying to figure out why my medication costs $6,600 a month
11 votes -
The happiest cats on Earth
7 votes -
Of all the meaningless terms in the food labeling world—and there are a lot—”natural” might be one of the worst
10 votes -
Rare and strange ICD-10 codes
7 votes -
The first ever World Health Organisation physical activity guidelines for under-fives, recommend no screen time for one-year-olds and no more than an hour for two- to-four-year-olds
An article on a parenting website: Guidance recommends no screen time for under-twos An article in Time magazine: World Health Organization Issues First-Ever Screen Time Guidelines for Young Kids....
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An article on a parenting website: Guidance recommends no screen time for under-twos
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An article in Time magazine: World Health Organization Issues First-Ever Screen Time Guidelines for Young Kids. Here's What to Know
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The WHO's press release: To grow up healthy, children need to sit less and play more
26 votes -
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Is prison necessary? Ruth Wilson Gilmore might change your mind.
20 votes -
Women suffer needless pain because almost everything is designed for men
18 votes -
Far infrared radiation (FIR): Its biological effects and medical applications
5 votes -
Does empathy have a dark side?
10 votes -
Ketamine may relieve depression by repairing damaged brain circuits
12 votes -
On poisoning children
5 votes -
New Zealand parliament to consider Euthanasia/Assisted Dying Bill in conscience vote
5 votes -
Millennials are sick of drinking, but they’re not giving up booze just yet
6 votes -
Bigger than that - complex thoughts on a life spent being the short guy
10 votes -
Death of the calorie
19 votes -
A plea to make fiber cool
3 votes -
Canterbury measles outbreak: 22 people infected
4 votes -
What if you could diagnose diseases with a tampon?
7 votes -
Bigger, saltier, heavier: Fast food since 1986 in three simple charts
8 votes -
This is what the life of an incel looks like
32 votes -
Theranos: How a broken US patent system sustained its decade-long deception
8 votes -
Going to work in South Africa, with a depression prescription
Good news: I'll be starting my new work in Cape Town, South Africa soon. Not so good news: I have depression, and is currently on the antidepressant Sertraline. My question would be the following:...
Good news: I'll be starting my new work in Cape Town, South Africa soon.
Not so good news: I have depression, and is currently on the antidepressant Sertraline.
My question would be the following:
How are prescriptions of the antidepressant handled in the South African health care system? Can I obtain, from either a GP or a Specialist, a sort of "long-standing" prescription, valid for (say) a few months, that will allow me to refill at pharmacies or dispensing GPs, without me having to be referred to a Specialist each time I need a refill? I understand that recurring examinations by a Specialist are likely necessary, but I don't expect those to be frequent, as my condition is fairly stable now.
Also a related question: I'm otherwise young and physically healthy, not affected by chronic conditions except depression. However, it seems that any health insurance schemes there that cover my condition would be rather expensive. Those policies typically include a broad coverage of chronic conditions, most of which I don't foresee a need. For one like myself, what suggestion would you give in terms of health insurance selection?
Many many thanks <3
7 votes -
Not another boring creatine guide: Answers to FAQs and lesser-known benefits
9 votes -
Shock rise in global measles outbreaks 'disastrous' for children, UN warns
8 votes -
The small, small world of Facebook’s anti-vaxxers
6 votes -
Dollars on the margins - $15/hr minimum wage as a US public health measure
17 votes -
Loneliness
41 votes -
Raw milk drinkers in nineteen states at risk of rare, dangerous infectious disease
10 votes -
Links between gut microbes and depression strengthened
10 votes -
Health - Black Static (2019)
3 votes -
Study shows that "beer before wine" makes no difference to a hangover
10 votes -
The ‘coal curtain’ is the new Iron Curtain
5 votes -
Forgotten man, forgotten disease—Aniru Conteh and the battle against Lassa fever
3 votes -
For Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, US shutdown is no joke
10 votes -
How are you?
It's usually a question with a two word answer, but I'm sure there's more that could be said - that you wouldn't normally say because you don't want to waffle on. Either way, I'm elated and...
It's usually a question with a two word answer, but I'm sure there's more that could be said - that you wouldn't normally say because you don't want to waffle on.
Either way, I'm elated and excited. I revised a few hours for a test instead of watching a TV show, and my result went from shit to actually pretty bloody great. I'm really happy about it, but I'm not going to revise until GCSE's because it's made me absolutely knackered.
I'm pretty excited because I've got work experience next week. I haven't the foggiest about what it'll be like (fearing a very, very boring week), but I'm looking forward to it. It'll probably be a bit awkward without my friends around, but I'll get used to it.
So, onto you. How are you?
20 votes