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5 votes
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Chinese scholar and outspoken critic directly blames Xi Jinping for severity of viral outbreak
8 votes -
Vaping: What people are getting wrong
8 votes -
Undone science: When research fails polluted communities
5 votes -
The UK has one of the most equitable health care systems in the world. Here’s how.
11 votes -
Analysis of minimum unit pricing for alcohol in Scotland
5 votes -
China coronavirus spread is accelerating, Xi Jinping warns
29 votes -
Wuhan virus: China confirms human-to-human transmission, says medical workers infected
11 votes -
Why the government should tax unhealthy foods and subsidise nutritious ones
11 votes -
The Trump administration is preparing to significantly limit the scientific and medical research that the government can use to determine public health regulations
10 votes -
Dissecting racial bias in an algorithm used to manage the health of populations
6 votes -
Questions to Bill Gates about global health and more
6 votes -
World Mental Health Day 2019: Focus on suicide prevention
5 votes -
We are in the midst of a mental health crisis – advice about jogging and self-care is not enough
10 votes -
Juul boss Kevin Burns steps down amid vaping concerns
7 votes -
How to spread hep A without leaving your house
4 votes -
The message of measles - As public-health officials confront the largest outbreak in the US in decades, they’ve been fighting as much against dangerous ideas as they have against the disease
9 votes -
Suicide rate for girls has been rising faster than for boys, study finds
13 votes -
No, Lyme disease is not an escaped military bioweapon, despite what conspiracy theorists say
10 votes -
A ban on smoking in many public outdoor spaces in Sweden comes into effect on July 1st
5 votes -
San Francisco bans sales of e-cigarettes
16 votes -
European Drug Report 2019 directly contrasts US drug crisis, tells a story of relative calm
7 votes -
Science institute that advised EU and UN 'actually industry lobby group'
10 votes -
The cancer capital of America: Eastern Kentucky is poor, remote, and inadequately serviced, and those factors have led to alarming rates of cancer in the area
7 votes -
Water stays in the pipes longer in shrinking cities – a challenge for public health
5 votes -
Colorado becomes first state in nation to cap price of insulin
11 votes -
The politics of going to the bathroom
3 votes -
Not just for soldiers: Civilians with PTSD struggle to find effective therapy
8 votes -
249 babies born with syphilis in Thailand this year: Public Health Ministry
4 votes -
Why physicians are prescribing time in nature
6 votes -
'No Visible Bruises' upends stereotypes of abuse, sheds light on domestic violence
9 votes -
Shock rise in global measles outbreaks 'disastrous' for children, UN warns
8 votes -
Dollars on the margins - $15/hr minimum wage as a US public health measure
17 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 -
Anti-vax movement seen by World Health Organization as one of the top ten health threats for 2019
13 votes -
Americans more likely to die from accidental opioid overdose than in a car accident
12 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration cracks down on Juul and e-cigarette retailers
8 votes -
US invaded by savage tick that sucks animals dry, spawns without mating
5 votes -
Chronic - For big pharma, the perfect patient is wealthy, permanently ill and a daily pill-popper. Will medicine ever recover?
6 votes -
Italian upper house votes to overturn mandatory vaccinations despite surge in measles cases
9 votes -
'No jab no pay' possibly coming to the Netherlands—not vaccinating may mean you don't get child benefits
9 votes -
Is the "obesity crisis" a disguise for a deeper problem?
6 votes -
US is unprepared for the health challenges of climate change, experts warn
9 votes -
How suicide quietly morphed into a public health crisis
19 votes -
‘Disneyland for Big Tobacco’: How Indonesia’s lax smoking laws are helping next generation to get hooked
4 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: US President Donald 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