- MLK fact of the day: black men are more likely to graduate from college than go to prison. In 2009, it was the other way around.
- Workers at 22 federal agencies plan a walk out today to protest Biden’s policies affecting Gaza.
- Last year Congress failed to reauthorize key parts of “the single-most impactful US government program ever, saving 25 million lives over the past 20 years.”
- FAA (which regulates the airlines) has a DEI policy that emphasizes recruiting and hiring people with targeted disabilities, including “hearing, vision, missing extremities, partial paralysis, complete paralysis, epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, psychiatric disability and dwarfism.”
- The University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine segregates and separates its first-year medical students based on their race, color and/or national origin. (WSJ)
- “Gas station heroin” peddled at convenience stores. (NYT)
Category: Direct Primary Care
Friday Links
- Why the federal debt grows: Spending, not taxes, explains it all.
- Newsom extends free healthcare to 700,000 Illegal Immigrants, despite record budget deficit.
- What part of the health care system does not have any organized lobby in Washington? Patients.
- What is the rate of return on exercise in terms of life extension? 5.8%
- The US has higher health care prices that other countries, but it also delivers more care than any other country.
- Rising syphilis rates linked to lack of prenatal care.
WSJ: Wearing Socks to Bed is Not Crazy. Just a Way to Sleep Better
My wife wears socks to bed because her feet get cold at night. I never wear socks to bed because my feet rarely feel cold. Plus, I do not like the feeling of something tight around my feet. Socks also grip the sheets and tug on them when I roll over. I never really thought wearing socks to bed was anything more than a personal choice by people with different attitudes about comfort while sleeping.
If Your New Year’s Resolution is to Improved Your Mental Health then Make No Resolution
Today is the start of another new year: 2024. There are numerous people who like to start the new year with New Year’s Resolutions that are supposed to make their lives better in some way. Indeed, according to a Forbes poll 62% of people feel pressured to make a New Year’s Resolution. Purportedly, women (64%) feel more pressure than men (60%). Resolutions such as losing weight or exercising more are the most common, representing one-third and one-half of resolutions, respectively. A lot of people also resolve to improve their finances over the year.