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Alzheimer's drugs and the mystery of the shrinking brain; why the U.S. doesn't need a new "essential hospital" designation; and more

    

 

First Opinion

As November gave way to December, First Opinion authors explored the connection between the newest crop of Alzheimer's drugs and brain shrinkage, the damage administrative harm wreaks in medicine, and more. If you are a fan of podcasts, check out Color Code, STAT's award-winning podcast on racism in the health care system.

Anti-amyloid drugs and the mystery of treatment-associated brain shrinkage

By Madhav Thambisetty

Adobe

Brain shrinkage, observed in trials of anti-amyloid antibodies used to treat Alzheimer's disease, needs closer scrutiny.

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Minimizing administrative harm: a key step to improving health care

By Walter J. O'Donnell

APU GOMES/AFP via Getty Images

Health systems need to reduce administrative harm to their workforces just as they work to prevent clinical injuries to their patients.

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The U.S. doesn't need a new 'essential hospital' designation

By Elise Amez-Droz

Adobe

A call to create a new "essential hospitals" designation would do little to improve the quality or cost of care in the U.S.

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Breakthrough Therapies Act: Good idea, wrong solution

By Arthur L. Caplan and Kenneth I. Moch

Adobe

The Breakthrough Therapies Act is the wrong way to expand access for therapeutic purposes to Schedule I substances like psilocybin and LSD.

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Congress: Close the gap between funding for nutrition research and the toll diet-related disease takes on Americans

By Bill Frist and Dariush Mozaffarian

Adobe

Funding for nutrition research has been flat even as diet-related conditions have become the leading cause of death and disability in the U.S.

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Rushing into the World Bank's Pandemic Fund is a bad idea

By Vineeta Gupta

Adobe

The World Bank has rolled out The Pandemic Fund, a new financial intermediary fund, on an improbable and harmful timetable.

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Better lab test standards can ensure precision medicine is truly precise

By Jeff Allen and Lisa Lacasse

SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images

The oversight of lab tests for targeted cancer therapies and other treatments has not kept pace with innovation.

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Excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol, and sugary beverages benefit health and public budgets

By Mauricio Cárdenas and Cesar Purisima

Adobe

Excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol, and sugary beverages could help countries close revenue shortfalls and improve public health.

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Sunday, December 4, 2022

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