Most Recent Content
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- Saturday, Jan 05, 2013
ZNet Article Medical tourism in India can greatly reduce the cost to westerners of the best and fastest surgery. It can also lead to an infection by the latest and nastiest superbugs -
- Monday, Apr 30, 2012
Commentary The sad truth is that each wonder drug we’ve thrown at malaria—and every other infectious disease—has fallen to drug-resistant pathogens -
- Saturday, Mar 31, 2012
ZNet Article Over the past two decades, antibiotic drugs have started to fail one by one, as bacteria with resistance to them have emerged and spread -
- Wednesday, Feb 23, 2011
Commentary For decades, deadly outbreaks of cholera were attributed to the spread of disease through poor sanitation. But recent research demonstrates how closely cholera is tied to environmental and hydrological factors and to weather patterns — all of whic... -
- Tuesday, Oct 12, 2010
ZNet Article It’s technically straightforward to eliminate malaria from an area. At least in theory. You reduce the ability of mosquitoes to bite people, treat every sick victim with curative drugs and prevent any infected person from bringing new parasites in... -
- Tuesday, Mar 16, 2010
Commentary Doesn’t Nathan Myhrvold get enough attention? The guy is the former chief technology officer of Microsoft, a multimillionaire, a gourmet chef, a prize-winning photographer and keeper of multiple higher degrees from prestigious institutions. As the... -
- Tuesday, Feb 23, 2010
Book An urgent, far-reaching examination of one of the deadliest diseases in history.
In recent years, malaria has emerged as a cause célèbre for voguish philanthropists. Bill Gates, Bono, and Laura Bush are only a few of the personalities who have ... Commentary Compared to, say, espionage or alien warfare, the drug development business rarely appears on the big screen, and its few cinematic portrayals generally involve sinister white-coated characters doing shadowy experiments. In that sense, the new fil... -
- Saturday, Jan 09, 2010
Commentary Originally published in Yale Environment 360, Sonia Shah writes that in the past dozen years, three new diseases have decimated populations of amphibians, honeybees, and — most recently — bats. Increasingly, scientists suspect that low-level e... -
- Friday, Apr 24, 2009
Commentary Last weekend, the mosquitoes emerged from the narrow stream that trickles by our house outside Baltimore, flitting around the ankles of my 9-year-old son, skipping stones with his pants rolled up to his knees. -
- Tuesday, May 20, 2008
ZNet Article With hardly a word in the mainstream press, the FDA has gutted the rules restraining drug companies from exploiting clinical trial subjects in developing countries. -
- Thursday, Apr 24, 2008
Commentary There is a disease that annually sickens over one-half billion people, killing over 1 million. Because of climate change, increasingly aggressive resource extraction, and growing multi-drug resistance, every year, the disease fells 16 percent more... -
- Friday, Oct 12, 2007
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- Tuesday, Jun 12, 2007
ZNet Article
Many medicines dev... -
- Tuesday, Jan 31, 2006
Commentary This week's New York Times series on diabetes in New York City throws much needed light on the silent epidemic of chronic disease brought on by our sedentary, fast-food culture. But diabetes is not just an American problem. It is spreading fast to... -
- Sunday, Sep 19, 2004
ZNet Article 1. Can you tell ZNet, please, what your book CRUDE: THE STORY OF OIL is about? What is it trying to communicate?
CRUDE is what I'd call a critical popular-science book: it describes the science, technology, and politics behind how oil is formed, ... -
- Sunday, Apr 11, 2004
Commentary As I approach the tiny, blue bucket of wizened, cracked plastic propped near the sink, various molded plastic and rubber items in hand, the servants washing up start to snicker. I falter, standing there in a crumbling tenement apartment in Mumbai,... -
- Tuesday, Jun 10, 2003
Commentary The American empire on recent display in Iraq rose from a vast, primordial ooze of cheap, abundant petroleum, one of the most energy-intense liquids on earth, packing over 36,000 kcal of heat in every gallon-more energy than produced by 5 kilogram... -
- Thursday, Nov 14, 2002
Commentary Even when we first touched down on this flat, salty, ancient continent, we knew we were on the other side of the world. The moon was half-full, but just the bottom half was visible, a porcelain tea-cup. We were in the far north, it was winter, and... -
- Tuesday, Jul 10, 2001
Commentary While outrage over the Taleban's requirement that Afghan women wear a head-to-toe veil continues, a new comprehensive study shows that the majority of Afghan women consider the Taleban's dress codes a non-issue, and many choose to wear the burqa o... -
- Friday, Jun 22, 2001
Commentary Senator Feinstein surprised the civil rights organizers who threw her an informal wine-and-cheese shmoozer a couple months ago with an impromptu speech warning of the gathering speed of anti-China sentiment in Congress and the impending fallout fo... -
- Monday, May 14, 2001
Commentary You get so used to walking around feeling like a big smart smartypants, understanding (and disapproving of) most things around you (come on, you know what I mean) and then something simple happens that shows you, in a flash, how fragile and circum... -
- Tuesday, Apr 10, 2001
Commentary Anti-formula activists and development officials often claim that millions of infants die every year because they are not breastfed (this is probably based on the fact that millions of infants die of diarrhea from contaminated water every year--wh... -
- Sunday, Apr 01, 2001
ZMag Article The Celebrated Immigrant -
- Monday, Mar 05, 2001
Commentary Part OneOne night, a small American boy slipped into bed with his mother and suckled at her breast for a few minutes before dropping off to sleep. The next day, he told his babysitter he wanted to stop doing so, but "Mommy wouldn't let me." The ch... -
- Thursday, Feb 15, 2001
Commentary Labor and civil rights groups were outraged at Bush's nomination of anti-affirmative action, anti-minimum wage Linda Chavez for labor secretary. But strangely, when Bush quickly replaced Chavez with anti-affirmative action, anti-minimum wage (and ... -
- Sunday, Apr 30, 2000
Commentary Did you miss me? YouÕve been busy, with world-shaking, front-page social change happenings. In my sleep-deprived fog even I noticed that things were getting exciting, and I missed you. My six-month leave from work to look after my 2 kids, aged 3 a... -
- Sunday, Nov 21, 1999
Commentary "Do people in India leave their dead in the street?" This was the question posed to my family by a coworker invited for dinner. (She wasn't invited back.) - All Most Recent Content

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Featured Content
-
- Saturday, Jan 05, 2013
ZNet Article Medical tourism in India can greatly reduce the cost to westerners of the best and fastest surgery. It can also lead to an infection by the latest and nastiest superbugs -
- Monday, Apr 30, 2012
Commentary The sad truth is that each wonder drug we’ve thrown at malaria—and every other infectious disease—has fallen to drug-resistant pathogens -
- Saturday, Mar 31, 2012
ZNet Article Over the past two decades, antibiotic drugs have started to fail one by one, as bacteria with resistance to them have emerged and spread -
- Wednesday, Feb 23, 2011
Commentary For decades, deadly outbreaks of cholera were attributed to the spread of disease through poor sanitation. But recent research demonstrates how closely cholera is tied to environmental and hydrological factors and to weather patterns — all of whic... -
- Tuesday, Mar 16, 2010
Commentary Doesn’t Nathan Myhrvold get enough attention? The guy is the former chief technology officer of Microsoft, a multimillionaire, a gourmet chef, a prize-winning photographer and keeper of multiple higher degrees from prestigious institutions. As the... -
- Tuesday, Feb 23, 2010
Commentary Compared to, say, espionage or alien warfare, the drug development business rarely appears on the big screen, and its few cinematic portrayals generally involve sinister white-coated characters doing shadowy experiments. In that sense, the new fil... -
- Saturday, Jan 09, 2010
Commentary Originally published in Yale Environment 360, Sonia Shah writes that in the past dozen years, three new diseases have decimated populations of amphibians, honeybees, and — most recently — bats. Increasingly, scientists suspect that low-level e... -
- Friday, Apr 24, 2009
Commentary Last weekend, the mosquitoes emerged from the narrow stream that trickles by our house outside Baltimore, flitting around the ankles of my 9-year-old son, skipping stones with his pants rolled up to his knees. -
- Thursday, Apr 24, 2008
Commentary There is a disease that annually sickens over one-half billion people, killing over 1 million. Because of climate change, increasingly aggressive resource extraction, and growing multi-drug resistance, every year, the disease fells 16 percent more... - All Featured Content

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