The Surrogacy Cycle
Carrying babies for foreign couples was once touted as a win-win for everyone involved. Indian women, however, were often left with little to show for their efforts.
Carrying babies for foreign couples was once touted as a win-win for everyone involved. Indian women, however, were often left with little to show for their efforts.
Abby Rabinowitz VQR Apr 2016 25min Permalink
Is the oldest person who ever lived a fraud?
Lauren Collins The New Yorker Feb 2020 35min Permalink
The wrong way to fight the opioid crisis.
Paige Williams New Yorker Feb 2020 30min Permalink
An organ transplant recipient cycles across the country to meet the people who gave him his heart.
A.C. Shilton Bicycling Jan 2020 Permalink
How is it that literature has produced a wealth of information about the sex lives of straight white men and yet so little about the abortions they have or have not paid for?
Wyatt Williams The Believer Jan 2020 15min Permalink
On the plight of indigenous suicide in Alaska.
Devon Heinen New Statesman Jan 2020 25min Permalink
A new genetic engineering technology could help eliminate malaria and stave off extinctions — if humanity decides to unleash it.
Jennifer Kahn New York Times Magazine Jan 2020 30min Permalink
Confronting a body excluded from beauty amid Italy’s natural splendor.
Chloé Cooper Jones The Believer Jun 2019 25min Permalink
Does hurting make us human?
Ariel Levy New Yorker Jan 2020 25min Permalink
At the world’s largest gathering of psychics and mediums, two brothers confront a painful secret.
Barrett Swanson The Atavist Magazine Dec 2019 40min Permalink
Antonio Carrion was headed for the NFL when the voices started and he drifted away. Then his estranged mother finished her time for robbery and saved him from a system that’s unkind to the mentally ill.
Vince Beiser Los Angeles Magazine Dec 2019 20min Permalink
When jail healthcare is outsourced to for-profit medical providers, inmates pay the price.
Max Blau Atlanta Magazine Dec 2019 25min Permalink
How social media, FaceTune, and plastic surgery created a single, cyborgian look.
Jia Tolentino New Yorker Dec 2019 20min Permalink
As psychiatrists and philosophers begin to define a pervasive mental health crisis triggered by climate change, they ask who is really sick: the individual or society?
Ash Sanders The Believer Dec 2019 30min Permalink
The origins of a misplaced panic.
L.V. Anderson Slate Dec 2019 20min Permalink
“What am I going to do? Because this isn’t fair. I deserve to have a life, to be functional. Well, I guess I’m going to stick myself with bees.”
Katy Vine Texas Monthly Nov 2019 25min Permalink
On the rise of telemedicine in rural America, where the number of ER patients has surged by 60 percent in the past decade as the number of doctors and hospitals has declined by up to 15 percent.
Eli Saslow Washington Post Nov 2019 15min Permalink
For years, Mormon Mommy blogger Natalie Lovin curated a picture-perfect life. Then she left the church—and her husband.
Nona Willis Aronowitz Elle Nov 2019 15min Permalink
How did feeling good become a matter of relentless, competitive work; a never-to-be-attained goal which makes us miserable?
Cody Delistraty Aeon Nov 2019 15min Permalink
The patient lasted just minutes after being taken off life support. By then it was too late.
Joe Sexton, Nate Schweber ProPublica Oct 2019 30min Permalink
The latest research suggests it’s not far-fetched at all—especially when you consider all the societal and cultural factors that make today’s games so attractive.
Ferris Jabr New York Times Magazine Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Fentanyl is quickly becoming America’s deadliest drug. But law enforcement couldn’t trace it to its source—until one teenager overdosed in North Dakota.
Alex W. Palmer New York Times Magazine Oct 2019 50min Permalink
How Aja Newman’s trip to the emergency room uncovered the abusive behavior of “rock star” physician David Newman, who ultimately pleaded guilty to four counts of sexual abuse against his patients.
Lisa Miller The Cut Oct 2019 30min Permalink
Welcome to Coffeyville, Kansas, where the judge has no law degree, debt collectors get a cut of the bail, and Americans are watching their lives — and liberty — disappear in the pursuit of medical debt collection.
Lizzie Presser ProPublica Oct 2019 25min Permalink
On sleep deprivation in the NBA.
Baxter Holmes ESPN Oct 2019 20min Permalink