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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, Jul 8 2022

Full Issue

Study Suggests Younger Black Leukemia Patients Die Earlier

In other research news, people with Down syndrome are sought to help with Alzheimer's studies; a smartphone-based device to diagnose ear problems; the difficulties of combating Leishmaniasis for HIV patients; and a study finds that being "hangry" may be a real thing.

Axios: Race May Factor Into Leukemia Survival, Study Suggests

Younger Black leukemia patients were likelier to die early or not go into complete remission than their white peers when receiving the same intensive treatment, according to a new study in Blood Advances. (Dreher, 7/7)

NPR: Scientists Look To People With Down Syndrome To Test Alzheimer's Drugs

People with Down syndrome are highly sought after for Alzheimer's research studies because many develop the disease in their 40s and 50s, and most will get it if they live long enough. The elevated risk for Alzheimer's comes from the extra copy of chromosome 21 carried by people with Down syndrome. (Hamilton, 7/7)

Stat: Scientists Design A Cheap, Smartphone-Based Device To Detect Ear Issues

On a chilly October evening a decade ago, physician Michael Cohen arrived at Boston’s Logan International Airport lugging a hefty contraption, built like a tiny tank, that immediately drew the attention of airport security officers. It was a device to detect ear problems, and he and a colleague were hauling it around the globe. (Chen, 7/8)

NPR: HIV Patients Who Get Leishmaniasis Face A Tough Road. But Now There's New Hope

"If you don't get the treatment, you're usually going to die from this," says Dr. Fabiana Alves, director of the leishmaniasis cluster at the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative. VL is even more devastating for a patient whose immune system has been compromised by HIV, simply because the existing VL treatments don't work as well. And in parts of the world where VL is rampant, like eastern Africa and Southeast Asia, a significant percentage of patients are HIV positive. (Barnhart, 7/7)

USA Today: Is 'Hangry' Real? New Study Says You Do Get Angry When Hungry

If you are someone who gets angry if you haven't eaten, also known as "hangry," a new study says you aren't being irrational. The findings, published in the peer-reviewed journal Plos One on Wednesday, come from one of the first studies to examine the relationship of hunger and anger, Viren Swami, lead author and social psychology professor at Anglia Ruskin University in the U.K., told USA TODAY via email. (Mendoza, 7/7)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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