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HomeTechnologyHappy Festivus 2023: Here’s The Airing Of 10 Health Grievances

Happy Festivus 2023: Here’s The Airing Of 10 Health Grievances

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Frank Costanza (R), the character on the TV show Seinfeld played by the late Jerry Stiller, helped It’s December 23. Time once again to celebrate Festivus—you know that unofficial secular holiday that originated in the 1960’s and was popularized by the TV character Frank Costanza, played by the late actor Jerry Stiller. On one of the episodes Costanza indicated that each Festivus holiday would be punctuated by the airing of grievances followed by demonstrating some feats of strength.

And as and previous years, why not use this occasion to once again to air some major ongoing health and public health-related grievances? After all, frankly, many health and public health experts have got a lot of problems with the year 2023. So without further adieu, here are 10 such grievances to consider while you are dancing round the Festivus Pole: Mounjaro Umm, no. Sure, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists like Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro have shown impressive weight-loss results.

Sure, these are now important additions to what doctors can use to help patients who have been struggling with obesity. But these medications are not magic bullets against the obesity epidemic. Evidence suggests that you may regain whatever weight you lost once you stop taking these injectable medications.

And it remains to be seen what their efficacy and safety profiles will look like over the long-term. , the obesity epidemic remains a growing public health crisis. Have you noticed the number of medication contamination warnings over the past year, including the eye-popping U.

S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) warning about how many different brands of eye drops may have been contaminated with dangerous bacteria ? With many pharmaceutical companies increasingly using manufacturing plants in other countries and the FDA stretched in terms of person-power and resources, one has to wonder how well-monitored and regulated our medication supply is these days. has shown that in 2022 6.

9% of adults had suffered from long Covid at some point. That’s over one in 20 adults, which is by no means insignificant. That number will likely continue to increase as the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) keeps spreading, which is what happens when not a whole lot is being done to stop its spread (see Grievance 2).

So, the big question is what is the national plan on how our country is going to deal with this growing disease burden? The long and short of it is America is still waiting. Remember all those long, overtime hours that healthcare professionals were working in 2020? And in 2021? And 2022 and 2023? Oh, and before 2020? indicated that “More than double the number of health workers reported harassment at work in 2022 than in 2018”, “Nearly half of health workers reported often feeling burned out in 2022, up from 32% in 2018” and “Nearly half of health workers intended to look for a new job in 2022, up from 33% in 2018. ” Yet, have the medical profession, hospital administrators and other executives really done enough to address these burning problems? How about “No,” in the words of Doctor Evil from the Austin Powers movies? Speaking about not doing enough to deal with an ongoing problem, gun violence in the U.

S. keeps happening and happening and happening, despite all those, you know, “hopes and prayers. ” shows that at least 41,932 people, which would amount to over 117 gun-related deaths each day.

Want something else that people aren’t addressing adequately? Here’s something hot off the presses: 2023 will end up being the hottest year on record with the world’s average temperature for the first 11 months of the year topping 15°C (59°F). With global temperatures continuing to trend upwards and businesses continuing to dump carbon and other pollution into the air, don’t expect this record to hold for too long. If you have been dealing with feelings of loneliness and other mental health challenges, you are not alone.

In May of 2023, U. S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, MD, MPH released a report entitled “ ” that equated the health effects of loneliness to smoking up to 15 cigarettes a day, .

AI could transform health and healthcare in a super positive way if done the right way but could be destructive if done in the wrong way. Case in point. In April 2023, led to headlines like “ChatGPT Rated as Better Than Real Doctors for Empathy, Advice” that could kind of be misinterpreted.

Umm, if anyone believes that hospital executives can simply replace doctors with lower cost AI, why stop there? Why not replace your significant other, your friends and, oh, all those hospital executives with AI as well? This week emergency department visits for Covid-19 have been . Yeah, Covid is not over. #Covidisnotover.

In his book published this year, , Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine warned about how anti-science and the spread of misinformation and disinformation have been killing people and could usher in new authoritarian regimes such as what happened in Stalinist Russia and Nazi Germany when leading scientists and academics got imprisoned. What is our society doing to combat this threat? Well, this year saw the “pausing” of a National Institutes of Health (NIH) initiative to study health communications that could have helped combat misinformation and disinformation. , one might wonder what role politicians may have played in quashing this initiative.

A couple more grievances. As was the case last year, 10 slots just ain’t enough room to cover all of the health-related grievances from 2023. The list above doesn’t even include major continuing problems such as antimicrobial resistant organisms like super gonorrhea—which certainly isn’t super—, racism, sexism, a lot of other -isms and those ridiculously small microbags that people are carrying around.

Why even carry around a microbag? Another grievance is about grievances. Some of the grievances from the 2022 list have remained on this year’s list, which suggests that our society hasn’t been taking many public health problems seriously enough. Will our society end up demonstrating some feats of strength in 2024 and actually address these problems.

Or will they simply remain and get worse so that we can complain about them yet again during next year’s Festivus?.


From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucelee/2023/12/23/happy-festivus-2023-heres-the-airing-of-10-health-grievances/

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