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Twinkletoes , in Scientists create vaccine with potential to protect against future coronaviruses

Now do one for bird flu!

ghostface ,

Achoo! Yes pls! Ive been into this new kick for raw milk

BubbleMonkey , in A decades-old FDA rule is keeping Americans from having better sunscreen
@BubbleMonkey@slrpnk.net avatar

So the real question here is how can I, as an American who gives no fucks about the law (but can’t afford to travel to get it or whatever), get the good sunscreen? Gimme that black market sunscreen bb.

I am pasty white Casper, and I lobster right up in the sun before returning, after days of misery shedding my exoskeleton, to my Casper pale whiteness, never to develop a hardened shell 😔

Aux ,

Order some from Korea or Europe directly.

Jarix ,

Come up to canada, get some good shit

candybrie , in A decades-old FDA rule is keeping Americans from having better sunscreen

Regulating sunscreen as a drug seems fairly reasonable to me. Sunscreens should be required to be effective and proved to be so before being on the market. Cosmetics don't have that requirement. Maybe they should make the process easier and relax the animal testing requirement in cases where it's been used on humans for decades. But I still want corporations to jump through some hoops proving something I'm trusting my health to actually works.

MechanicalJester ,

Agreed, but also, maybe someone should prove or disprove those newer ingredients pronto

streetfestival , in A decades-old FDA rule is keeping Americans from having better sunscreen
@streetfestival@lemmy.ca avatar

That skin cancer is the most common type of cancer in the US and yet a dumb almost 100-year old rule means that Americans have less effective sunscreen - a key cancer prevention tool - than many other countries is pretty wild. Do any of the industrial/governmental players involved actually care about reducing cancer risk in their population?

YarHarSuperstar ,
@YarHarSuperstar@lemmy.world avatar

Hi, I can field that question. The answer is no. Thank you!

Source: live in the imperial core under this hellish capitalist system.

streetfestival ,
@streetfestival@lemmy.ca avatar

I agree with your answer. People who are sick or have chronic conditions are lifelong customers. There's one version of corporate regulation and paternalism for tobacco, and all other industries get a free pass to drum up business I'd say

athos77 , in A decades-old FDA rule is keeping Americans from having better sunscreen

Well, what's preventing the corporations from lobbying to change the rules to benefit them, just like every other time? I'm not going to cry because corpos haven't bought enough congresscritters.

notfromhere ,

Why can’t they get FDA approval? Seems sus as fuck.

athos77 ,

Well, if you read the article ................ :/

a 1938 U.S. law that requires sunscreens to be tested on animals and classified as drugs, rather than as cosmetics as they are in much of the world.

companies are wary of the FDA process because of the cost and their fear that additional animal testing could ignite a consumer backlash in the European Union, which bans animal testing of cosmetics, including sunscreen.

Won't someone think of the poor corpos! Corpos like BASF and L’Oréal, which only had profits last year of €225,000,000 and €32,000,000,000!

notfromhere ,

So they are “afraid” eh? Still sus as fuck. Fuck those corpos they can play by the rules they don’t want to.

GreyEyedGhost ,

The "poor corpos" are saying the benefit of adding another market isn't worth the expense, and the risk of reducing their sales in established markets, so they are unwilling to jump through the hoops to enter that new market.

...and the hoop in question is animal testing. Of products that have been used by humans for decades.

LilDumpy , in A decades-old FDA rule is keeping Americans from having better sunscreen
@LilDumpy@lemmy.world avatar

Bemotrizinol.

Zetta ,

Thank you!

magiccupcake ,

What does this do that American sunscreen like zinc oxide doesn't?

The article just implies it's better but doesn't get specific.

ProdigalFrog ,
@ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net avatar

Zinc Oxide is safe for the environment as well, I don't see a downside to it.

CookieOfFortune ,

Not sure about scientifically, but anecdotally as we’re currently in Asia on vacation, even the cheap 7-11 sunscreen works better than anything in the US: It feels lighter and it seems you need a lot less to be effective.

We went on a two hour hike and thought we’d just sweat away all the sunscreen but we were fine afterwards. The US sunscreen would’ve had to be reapplied to be as effective.

RvTV95XBeo , in Texas dairy farm worker’s case may be first where bird flu virus spread from mammal to human, scientists say

Hear me out. What if we just kinda ate less meat, so we didn't need as many of these virus incubators spread across the planet?

iiGxC , in Texas dairy farm worker’s case may be first where bird flu virus spread from mammal to human, scientists say

Yeeaaaah, it's time to end animal agriculture

ThePantser , in Texas dairy farm worker’s case may be first where bird flu virus spread from mammal to human, scientists say
@ThePantser@lemmy.world avatar

Fool, you doomed us all!

ThrowawayPermanente , in Women live more years in ill-health than men, finds gender health gap study

Do women experience more years in poor health because they're living longer than men, and those extra years are all while they're older and poor health is much more common?

kandoh ,

I can only speak anecdotally, but almost all the women in my life have some sort of chronic health issue. Weird stuff too like blisters on their wrists during their period, or a slanted cervix causing pain during sex.

Son_of_dad , in Women live more years in ill-health than men, finds gender health gap study

Interesting, I always figured it would be guys, since we're stubborn and don't go to the doctor till shit hits the fan

HubertManne ,

no, see. that helps you die sooner.

Sizzler , in Women live more years in ill-health than men, finds gender health gap study

Dunno, living in pain sounds better than death. Might just be me.

Duke_Nukem_1990 ,

How much chronic pain are you in?

Sizzler ,

Comes and goes, some days better than others. Better than no days at all.

shuzuko ,

How many times has your chronic pain been dismissed as "hysteria", "anxiety", "all in your head", "are you sure it's not just your period honey", "maybe if you got pregnant you'd feel better"? How many years did it take for you to receive a diagnosis? How likely is it that your spouse/significant other will just up and leave you while you're sick because "you're too much trouble"?

It's a lot harder to want to live with chronic pain and health conditions when you're constantly dismissed and ignored and you know that the person who promised to be with you through thick and thin has a 7x higher chance to leave you than if the situation were reversed.

Sizzler ,

Better smeg than dead.

Tobberone ,

I'm sorry for your pain. How long have you been contemplating ending it all?

As for the matter at hand: there are two issues here, neither should be ignored. Having said that, it is a bit jarring to hear that it is alright if one sex dies as long as the other doesn't have to suffer. Say that to a domestic abuse survivor.

And for the matter you brought up: Being the SO of someone chronically sick is a whole other bucket of issues. Chronic disease hits far wider than the single individual, but the one being sick is not in a position to see that. "What are you whining for, I'm the one being sick" is to easy a retort, thereby stating that support should only go one way in the relationship...

ChexMax ,

I believe they're referring to the stat that the female partner of a chronically sick male is much more likely to stay, while a male partner of a chronically sick female is much more likely to leave.

shuzuko , (edited )

Suicidal ideation comes and goes, much like all the rest 🤷🏻‍♀️

I don't think I said anything about it being ok for one sex to die if the other doesn't have to suffer, though? Not sure where that came from at all. Just pointing out that your view of "better living and in pain than dead" doesn't take into account the very different experience of fem-coded chronic disease sufferers. Men are more likely to be believed, more likely to receive quick and accurate diagnosis, more likely to receive appropriate support. Women and other minorities often are disbelieved, told they're imagining things, expected to suffer in silence, or outright told that they are lying for sympathy/attention/drugs. It's a lot harder to want to stay alive in spite of the pain when you don't receive proper support from family, friends, and medical institutions. The goal, obviously, is for everyone to receive the appropriate support. And before anyone jumps down my throat: not all men are lucky enough to have a perfect experience. Not all women and minorities have bad experiences. Yeah, we all know that. But the numbers are there and they speak for themselves.

As to the last point, the other commenter is correct; the divorce rate when the man has a chronic or terminal illness is 3%. In the reverse situation, with the woman being ill, the divorce rate is a whopping 21%. This is what I was referring to. Men are wildly disproportionately more likely to leave a spouse who is suffering from a chronic disease. Again, it's hard to want to live when the person who was supposed to be with you for better or worse decides you're too much trouble to deal with, and this is a thing that affects women far more than men. That's all I meant. I am certainly aware that support needs to go both ways even when one partner is chronically ill and I am lucky enough to have a supportive spouse who has their own (mental) health issues which lends itself to mutual support anyway.

Edit, I've just noticed you're not the person I initially responded to. That said, this is all directly in response to their belief that living with chronic health issues is always preferable to dying, so that that as you will.

Sizzler ,

I've read what you've put, you speak thoughtfully and with passion, it's clearly something you feel strongly about.

"Men are more likely to be believed, more likely to receive quick and accurate diagnosis, more likely to receive appropriate support."
They still die. I think it has to do with how late they tend to admit that something is wrong.

Totally agree that there is an issue with women and minorities not getting the diagnosis's they deserve in a quick manner

I'll admit I have a sadness about assisted death, I've never been in their position but Terry Pratchett was my first public example of it and that hurt.

shuzuko ,

Thanks for being open minded about it. I am passionate about it, as I've had several femme/minority friends be much worse off than I and struggle greatly with their conditions, and have lost a few as a result. I've also experienced firsthand the disparity in treatment, though I've been luckier than many with a comparatively "mild" condition and a robust support system. I don't disagree that there are problems in the system for every chronic patient, regardless of their sex, gender, race, etc and every loss is sad. I just get frustrated when people are flippant about the reality that many of us face - "well, at least you're alive" is of no comfort when death may feel like the only chance at peace.

Thanks for the discussion, regardless, and I wish you as many years of happiness and relatively pain-free enjoyment as you are able and wish to find. It's certainly not a competition out here, we should all be trying to advocate for all of us :)

HubertManne ,

depends on the pain and the individual.

Sizzler ,

Really? Really? ffs

kandoh ,

Depends on the individual and the amount of pain. Living is a detriment of you're suffering.

Bluefalcon , in A Doctor at Cigna Said Her Bosses Pressured Her to Review Patients’ Cases Too Quickly. Cigna Threatened to Fire Her.

Never forget that Doctors work for the insurance company, not the hospital. Healthcare in the US is a fuckin joke and we are the punchline.

toxicbubble , in Mentally stimulating work plays key role in staving off dementia, study finds

how about: no work

wise_pancake ,

Its probably safe to extrapolate that repetitive daily stuff like grinding video games would be comparable to a repetitive job

Dasus ,
@Dasus@lemmy.world avatar

You're comparing playing video games, an explicitly recreational activity, to mind numbingly boring jobs?

Filling up the same form hundreds of times is rather different than fighting virtual monsters. I did a shift covering workers at a printing house. My job for the day consisted of sitting on a chair and waiting for a machine to spit out a stack of magazines. When it did, I'd place a small piece of paper on top of the stack before it got wrapped in plastic, due to the regulations of the country the stacks were went to.

The machines were stuck all the time, so in practice, I sat in a chair and slapped a small piece of paper on a stack like 3-12 times an hour. There were no smart phones back then, and you wouldn't have been allowed to use one anyway. Even music was strictly forbidden, because you need to be alert because the machines are dangerous.

And that was a stress free boring job. Most jobs are super stressful and bosses demand more than you can do.

pop , in A new study linked intermittent fasting to cardiac death — but don't worry just yet

The study had some key limitations, which weren’t really reflected in the headlines about its bombastic findings, namely that this analysis has yet to be peer reviewed or published in full (and, as pointed out by the British Heart Federation, includes different numbers in the study summary and press release). The observational study also relied on self-reported dietary information, which may include errors or distortions, and it’s unclear whether the subjects continued time-restricted eating beyond the two days they reported

Why are people posting non peer-reviewed content that's based on self-reporing from a country that has a obesity problem that isn't going to go away by gorging on Mcdonald's in the 4 hour window.

Calling it viral-study is diminishing what scientific study does. Click bait

jeffw OP ,
@jeffw@lemmy.world avatar

I would call it viral. Like they said, it’s not poor reviewed but it’s still being posted/referenced a lot in media and social media

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