AltWeeklies Wire

Leave No Child Inside: How Nature-Deficit Disorder is Affecting Our Kidsnew

Despite all the benefits that outdoor play offers, more and more kids are spending their time inside instead of out. In fact, according to a recent report put out by the National Wildlife Federation, children are spending half as much time outside as they did 20 years ago.
Boulder Weekly  |  Dana Logan  |  07-21-2008  |  Children & Families

An Unpaid Intern's Guinea Pig Guide to Inexpensive Portland Health Carenew

Despite the big downside of living in a wonderful dream town: It is fucking impossible to find a well-paying job. So while Portland may have one of the nation's highest densities of college grads and a progressive approach to health care, a vast 40 percent of Portlanders between ages 21 and 24 still don't have insurance.
The Portland Mercury  |  Sarah Mirk  |  07-17-2008  |  Science

Cutters Write Through the Pain of Self-Harmnew

Kate's goal with her blog is twofold. For one thing, she wants to eliminate even just some small part of the stigma associated with cutting. She also hopes to achieve some insight and closure related to her own cutting history, both by writing and by reading other people's stories.
Portland Phoenix  |  Deirdre Fulton  |  07-15-2008  |  Science

Big Pharma is After Your Confidential Medical Recordsnew

A state bill that would have eroded California's strong medical privacy laws nearly passed last month. The Mental Health Association of California, the National Association of Cancer Patients, and other important health advocacy organizations supported the measure, saying they believed it would improve compliance and save lives. But the bill's opponents, which included the California Medical Association and many consumer groups, asserted that the legislation was not really about helping patients.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Jake Whitney  |  07-02-2008  |  Science

Medicare: One Doc's Opinionnew

Ted Mazer, an ear-nose-and-throat guy who has been involved in the Medicare fight for seven years, takes on a national problem.
San Diego CityBeat  |  David Rollan  |  07-02-2008  |  Science

What Happens When Chronically Ill Kids Grow Upnew

Physically disabled young adults who weren't supposed to live this long find themselves hemmed in by an unprepared heath care system.
Houston Press  |  Paul Knight  |  07-01-2008  |  Science

Sheryl Grossman Suffers from One of the Rarest Diseases the World Has Ever Knownnew

People with Bloom's Disease -- there are fewer than 300 worldwide -- seldom grow taller than four and a half feet or weigh more than 90 pounds. Most develop cancer by their mid-twenties, and they are prone to diabetes, allergies, asthma, pulmonary disease, ear infections and immune disorders. The men are sterile. There is no cure, and no one with this genetic disorder has ever lived past 48.
Riverfront Times  |  Aimee Levitt  |  06-27-2008  |  Science

How One Ginseng Farmer is Rolling Back America's Trade Deficit with Chinanew

At a time when the Chinese are getting rich exporting to Americans, Larry Harding is a countertrender: an American getting rich exporting to the Chinese. In the world's most populous country, ginseng is like coffee, Viagra, and Prozac all rolled into one, with a dollop of quasi-religious mysticism on top.
Washington City Paper  |  Franklin Schneider  |  06-26-2008  |  International

A Look Inside the Complicated Politics of Lyme Diseasenew

Lyme, the most politicized and contested disease since the emergence of AIDS, is also the fastest-growing infectious illness since AIDS. The medical establishment debates over almost every aspect of Lyme, and of course the wars rage on two levels: There are white-haired dudes pushing paperwork in offices, and there are the people in the trenches who deal with the fallout.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Tara Murtha  |  06-23-2008  |  Science

Wash. U. is at the Forefront of New Research to Find the Cause of Autismnew

Washington University psychiatrists Kelly Botteron and John Constantino are part of a national study that will use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to scan the brains of babies, specifically the brothers and sisters of autistic children. "No one has looked at kids this young," says Botteron, who specializes in brain imaging.
Riverfront Times  |  Kathleen McLaughlin  |  06-20-2008  |  Science

Wisconsin Fails Health Insurance Protectionsnew

Conservatives' solution to the health care crisis is to provide tax credits to allow individuals to buy their health insurance in a competitive marketplace. But in Wisconsin, as in many other states, the individual health insurance market does little to protect the consumers it is supposed to serve.
Shepherd Express  |  Lisa Kaiser  |  06-20-2008  |  Science

Michigan's HIV Stats Show Young African-Americans Hit Hardnew

African-Americans are twice as likely as whites to be diagnosed with HIV, with people younger than 25 at the highest risk, according to the annual report analyzing new HIV diagnoses in 2006 by race, sex and age.
Metro Times  |  Staff  |  06-17-2008  |  Science

Global Warming Means Sweating it Out This Summernew

"Going green" may be an annoying trendy catch phrase, but there's something to be said for turning down the global thermostat before we all drown in a pool of our own sweat.
Boston Phoenix  |  Clif Garboden  |  06-12-2008  |  Science

Canadian Health Care System Faces Its Flawsnew

New reports offer the most radical rethinks of Canadian health policy in 40 years, with an emphasis on "health determinants" -- social, economic and environmental factors.
NOW Magazine  |  Wayne Roberts  |  06-06-2008  |  Science

Spotty Insurance Coverage for Prosthetic Limbsnew

Advocates for Utah amputees rally for fair health-insurance coverage for prosthetics.
Salt Lake City Weekly  |  Eric S. Peterson  |  06-05-2008  |  Science

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