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19 votes
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‘Disneyland for Big Tobacco’: How Indonesia’s lax smoking laws are helping next generation to get hooked
4 votes -
US President Donald Trump signs 'Right to Try Act' aimed at helping terminally ill patients seek drug treatments
12 votes -
Obesity, discrimination and public health: What is the right balance to strike with government policy?
One of the stress points that seems increasingly correlated with modernity is a rise of obesity in many developed nations (most notably the United States, but also the United Kingdom, Canada,...
One of the stress points that seems increasingly correlated with modernity is a rise of obesity in many developed nations (most notably the United States, but also the United Kingdom, Canada, China, Mexico, and elsewhere). Japan instituted a fat tax that requires periodic weight measurements as a way to combat obesity. Denmark and India have taxed certain foods. New York City, while Michael Bloomberg was mayor, famously taxed soda as part of a policy package to address weight gains.
Meanwhile, groups have organized to attempt to reduce the amount of stigma associated with being fat, arguing that stigmatizing obesity and arguing for aggressive dietary change often creates runoff mental health issues among fat people, or worse that doctors' obsession with weight blinds them to other more serious health issues whose symptoms are being reported by fat patients.
This question is for everyone hailing from a nation dealing with some form of rise in obesity: What is the right balance to strike with public policy when it comes to dealing with the rise of obesity?
18 votes -
Bill Gates: Trump twice asked me the difference between HIV and HPV
18 votes -
Text messaging tool may help fight opioid epidemic
6 votes -
The incredibly frustrating reason there’s no Lyme disease vaccine
6 votes -
Americans are a lonely lot, and young people bear the heaviest burden
4 votes -
Cocaine deaths are rising at an alarming rate, and it’s because of fentanyl
5 votes