Is Health Care A Right?
A search for common ground.
A search for common ground.
Atul Gawande The New Yorker Sep 2017 30min Permalink
She turned to Google for help getting sober. Then she had to escape a nightmare.
Cat Ferguson The Verge Sep 2017 35min Permalink
How two veterans with PTSD turned a Canadian military town into a medical-marijuana hub.
Chelsea Murray The Deep Aug 2017 30min Permalink
A mom looks back on the “brief but wondrous experience” of raising her son Mattie, a little boy poet with a devastating rare disease who earned a following around the world.
Justin Heckert Washingtonian Jul 2017 25min Permalink
How the heaviest man in the NFL survived a life of pain and transformed his body after falling in love.
Joon Lee Bleacher Report Jul 2017 15min Permalink
As a father succumbs to lung cancer, his son tries to recreate his personality in the form of a chatbot.
James Vlahos Wired Jul 2017 30min Permalink
“The last time I ate real food, actually chewed and swallowed, was six years ago.”
David Wong Louie Harper's Jul 2017 Permalink
He hacked a hospital to protest their treatment of a sick child. Now he’s facing 15 years.
David Kushner Rolling Stone Jun 2017 25min Permalink
How Vivitrol, a little-known anti-addiction drug, became the mandatory treatment for opioid abuse in drug courts across the United States.
Alec MacGillis ProPublica Jun 2017 30min Permalink
Finally, the crowd broke for lunch, with those who paid $1,000 availing themselves of private workouts. The highest tier lunched with Paltrow and select panelists. The proles were relegated to wandering around the warehouse and converted parking lot for two hours, getting solicited by dream interpreters or standing in endless lines for free blowouts or manicures — services promptly halted once the panels resumed, no matter that some had spent well over an hour in line.
Maureen Callahan New York Post Jun 2017 Permalink
A tuberculosis crisis in the rural South.
Helen Ouyang Harper's Jun 2017 30min Permalink
West Virginia has the highest overdose death rate in the country. Locals are fighting to save their neighbors—and their towns—from destruction.
Margaret Talbot New Yorker May 2017 45min Permalink
Why do America’s black gay and bisexual men have a higher H.I.V. rate than any country in the world?
Linda Villarosa New York Times Magazine Jun 2017 35min Permalink
Coming to terms with exercise bulimia.
Luke O'Neil Esquire Jun 2017 10min Permalink
“An idea too good not to believe.”
Jesse Singal New York May 2017 25min Permalink
Deciphering the rise of a lifestyle guru who sells self-absorption as the ultimate luxury product.
Molly Young New York Times Magazine May 2017 15min Permalink
The U.S. has the worst rate of maternal deaths in the developed world. The story of a neonatal nurse helps illustrate why.
Nina Martin, Renee Montagne ProPublica May 2017 35min Permalink
A sniper’s bullet and a long recovery.
Brian Mockenhaupt Esquire Apr 2006 35min Permalink
To be mentally ill in Ghana.
Brian Goldstone Harper's Apr 2017 30min Permalink
A journey to the wildest edge of the spa industry.
Taffy Brodesser-Akner Outside Apr 2017 20min Permalink
There is no script for losing a spouse in your 30s.
CHRISTINA FRANGOU The Globe and Mail Dec 2016 30min Permalink
Between 1996 and 2015, the number of working-age adults receiving federal disability payments increased dramatically — but nowhere more so than in rural America. This is one man’s story.
Terrence McCoy Washington Post Mar 2017 Permalink
A tour of a nonprofit that collects, warehouses, and donates perfectly good stuff hospitals throw away, from anesthesia machines to unopened surgical tools.
Marshall Allen ProPublica Mar 2017 10min Permalink
He used to weigh 1,000 pounds. Now he has to figure out what to do with the rest of his life.
Justin Heckert GQ Mar 2017 20min Permalink
Why didn’t gay rights cure gay loneliness?
Michael Hobbes Huffington Post Mar 2017 25min Permalink