The Love Bomb
For 50 years, Enthusiastic Sobriety programs have promised to help teenagers kick drug and alcohol addiction. But former followers say ES doesn’t save lives—it destroys them.
For 50 years, Enthusiastic Sobriety programs have promised to help teenagers kick drug and alcohol addiction. But former followers say ES doesn’t save lives—it destroys them.
Daniel Kolitz The Atavist Jul 2021 Permalink
Can face-to-face meetings between a victim and an abuser—a form of restorative justice—help a society overwhelmed with bad behavior?
Amelia Schonbek The Cut Jul 2021 30min Permalink
Those who are incarcerated are suing for their right to gender confirmation surgery—if deemed necessary. Meet the psychiatrist who almost always says it’s not.
Aviva Stahl Wired Jul 2021 25min Permalink
On losing your Beloved in 2020.
Jesmyn Ward Vanity Fair Sep 2020 10min Permalink
Why now is the time to rethink COVID safety protocols for children—and everyone else.
David Wallace-Wells New York Jul 2021 40min Permalink
Caffeine makes us more energetic, efficient and faster. But we have become so dependent that we need it just to get to our baseline.
Michael Pollan Guardian Jul 2021 15min Permalink
For the nurses in the Appalachian highlands who risked their lives during the pandemic, it is as if they fought in a war no one acknowledges.
Peter Jamison Washington Post Jul 2021 15min Permalink
For one writer, “Hot Vax Summer” is a slow climb.
Talia Lavin Vice Jun 2021 10min Permalink
An internet huckster got rich selling a sex enhancement supplement named Stiff Nights. Then the FDA sampled his wares.
Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling The New Republic Jun 2021 30min Permalink
Residents have lived near more than 100 massive petroleum storage tanks for decades, never really knowing if they’re breathing in dangerous chemicals. Now they’re fighting to find out.
Kathryn Miles Boston Globe Magazine Jun 2021 15min Permalink
From medical health privacy laws to a maze of siloed information systems, the true impact of COVID-19 on American Indian and Alaska Natives is impossible to calculate.
A little alcohol can boost creativity and strengthen social ties. But there’s nothing moderate, or convivial, about the way many Americans drink today.
Kate Julian The Atlantic Jun 2021 25min Permalink
Inside the race to eliminate one of nature’s biggest threats.
Chris Sweeney Boston Magazine May 2021 15min Permalink
A group of high school students try desperately to make it through an isolated and dire year.
Susan Dominus New York Times Magazine May 2021 50min Permalink
On the tragic flood of elder death in the wake of COVID-19.
And as time arcs and stops and speeds and slows now, I watch myself ride the agony of the death. It’s not out of resistance, exactly, but a need to inquire into both time’s speed and the callous logic, basically eugenicist, that on bad days, the rest of the world seems to hold: that she was old enough to die this way.
Lucy Schiller Welcome To Hell World May 2021 10min Permalink
A century of research has demonstrated how poverty and discrimination drive disease. Can COVID push science to finally address the issue?
Amy Maxmen Nature Apr 2021 25min Permalink
He covered car accidents for a years as a journalist. Then he was in two himself.
Joshua Sharpe The Atlantic May 2021 10min Permalink
A cohort of journalists is drowning in burnout, trauma, and moral injury.
Olivia Messer Study Hall May 2021 Permalink
Jackie Thomas was $29,134 in debt and in trouble with state regulators. She hadn’t slept in days. If a judge ruled against her, she’d fail the mothers who could only keep their jobs thanks to the 24-hour child care she offered.
Lizzie Presser ProPublica May 2021 25min Permalink
On India’s Covid catastrophe.
Arundhati Roy Guardian Apr 2021 20min Permalink
For decades, thousands of people came to Trinidad, Colorado, to have gender confirmation surgery done by Dr. Stanley Biber. This excerpt from Going To Trinidad tells his—and one of his patient’s—poignant stories.
Martin J. Smith 5280 Apr 2021 20min Permalink
New research is intensifying the debate — with profound implications for the future of the planet.
Ferris Jabr New York Times Magazine Apr 2021 20min Permalink
Sewage epidemiology has been embraced in other countries for decades, but not in America. Will Covid change that?
Miranda Weiss Undark Apr 2021 25min Permalink
Hundreds of workers at a Tampa lead smelter have been exposed to dangerous levels of the neurotoxin. The consequences have been profound.
Corey G. Johnson, Rebecca Woolington, Eli Murray Tampa Bay Times Apr 2021 30min Permalink
What lasting impact will the pandemic have on America’s first responders?
Ava Kofman ProPublica Apr 2021 30min Permalink