closer look
More measles misinformation
Annie Rice/AP
Amid a measles outbreak and a government response led by a health secretary who has repeatedly cast doubt on the safety and efficacy of the MMR vaccine, the public remains exposed to a torrent of misinformation regarding measles, according to a new KFF survey.
Over one-third of Republicans polled said the long-discredited theory linking the MMR vaccine to autism was definitely or probably true, compared to just 10% of Democrats. And roughly 3 in 10 adults overall falsely believe that Vitamin A can protect against measles transmission (limited, largely decades-old evidence shows it can reduce the disease's deadliness, not that it can prevent infection in the first place).
While the share of Americans with erroneous beliefs regarding measles has not risen across the board, nearly everybody is at least exposed to the misleading messaging, according to the survey. "This is what one would expect when people are confused by conflicting messages coming from people in positions of authority," said Kelly Moore, president and CEO of Immunize.org, a vaccination advocacy group.
environmental health
How safe is the air? Nobody knows
More than half of U.S. counties have no system in place for monitoring air quality, according to Penn State researchers. Rural counties in the South and Midwest in particular were less likely to have an air-monitoring site, according to a new paper published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. Those counties are home to roughly 50 million Americans, or about 15% of the country's total population.
While many rural counties may enjoy cleaner air than the typical American city, the paper notes that monitoring across the entire country is increasingly necessary due to higher frequencies of wildfires that can impact air quality hundreds of miles away. Low air quality, the study notes, is associated with a host of health issues including cardiovascular disease and reduced cognitive functioning.
That news became public the day before a separate paper in JAMA Network Open that showed a link between traffic-related air pollution and insulin resistance could be partially explained by higher BMI and BMI growth.
Opinion
Has 'government word search' cast a chill on cutting-edge science?
The Harvard biostatistician John Quackenbush suspects that one of his recent NIH grant proposals is "caught in limbo" before the agency's scientific reviewers due to increased scrutiny of topics the Trump administration considers to be controversial.
The grants, he wrote in a new First Opinion piece, may have been held up due to the presence of words like "sex" and "female" — which would be ironic, he notes, given that the administration "insists there are only two biological sexes."
"At best, new methods and potentially lifesaving developments will be delayed significantly while I search for alternative funding and try to overcome the substantial expertise I will lose if I have to lay off members of my team and stop accepting new trainees," Quackenbush wrote. "At worst, the new tools we have been working on will never be completed."
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