An End To Flint's Water Nightmare, Aid-In-Dying In California, And More: Roundup for 10/9/2015

A Flint, Mich. resident holds a jug containing tap water at a public meeting.
Steve Carmody

What we're reading this week.

Flint, Michigan Moves To End Water Crisis

The city's long experiment sourcing water from the Flint River  has been one nightmare after another. Returning to the Detroit water supply should offer relief, but some health effects may be long-term -- and devastating, as Michigan Radio reports
 

To Reach Teens Enduring Domestic Abuse, A Missouri County Tries Texting

Domestic violence rates are high in Taney County, but crisis center staffers know teens rarely make phone calls. So they launched an anonymous text lineSide Effects' Rebecca Smith has more

Last Week Tonight Takes On Mental Health

In his typical style -- hard critique combined with funny pop culture references, -- comedian John Oliver took on the troubled state of mental health in America on Sunday on his HBO show Last Week Tonight. You can watch the full segment here: 

California Governor Signs Aid-In-Dying Law

The Golden State will become the fifth to allow physician-assisted suicide, as KQED and Kaiser Health News report
 

Indiana's Rural HIV Outbreak Offers National Lessons

HIV transmission among IV drug users has been in decline since the early 90s. But the outbreak in Scott County, Ind. this spring brought new attention to the need for clean needles, harm reduction expert Daniel Raymond toldSide Effects.
 

Did we miss anything? Let us know: sideeffects [at] wfyi [dot] org. 

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  1. Flint, Mich. Returning To Detroit Water, But Problems Persist
  2. To Address Domestic Violence, A Rural County Reaches Out To Teens Via Text
  3. Texting Helps Low-Income Diabetes Patients Manage Insulin Dosing
  4. What Have We Learned From The Indiana HIV Outbreak?
  5. California Governor Signs Aid-in-Dying Law