As officials struggle to fight the opioid epidemic that is plaguing the country, some big cities are considering creating "safe injection" sites. Addicts would be able to use their drugs under the watch of medical professionals, and they would be provided clean needles. While no city has submitted a formal plan, the idea is already stirring up controversy.
Dina Fine Maron, Health & Medicine Editor at Scientific American, explains the science behind safe injection sites. Allowing addicts to use drugs under supervision and with clean needles helps to reduce diseases associated with intravenous drug use such as HIV.
While no city in the United States has a "safe injection" site, Fine Maron says existing sites in Europe and Canada have proven to be a success. Data shows that opening these sites helps reduce opioid-related deaths and problems.
A hospital in China says a doctor who got in trouble with authorities for sounding an early warning about the coronavirus outbreak has died of the illness. Dr. Li Wenliang, 34, was reportedly reprimanded for “spreading rumors” in late December.
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Large white sheets covering them head-to-knee, people infected with a new virus were led by gloved and masked officials Wednesday off a Japanese cruise ship that's being quarantined amid growing worry about the spread of an outbreak.
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DirecTV's Spaceway-1 satellite is launching itself into a band of space junk called the graveyard orbit. The emergency measure became necessary after an unexplained battery malfunction in December put it in jeopardy of exploding.
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The Committee met twice last week but held off making the designation that allows the organization to ramp up the international response to the coronavirus.
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More than 100 investors, entrepreneurs, researchers, and psychedelic enthusiasts attended Green Market Summit's sold out psychedelic investing event last Friday.
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