Plus, a volcanic discovery; Alan Turing; delaying pregnancy; a queen’s secret messages
| Tuesday, February 28, 2023 | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPHS BY TERRA FONDRIEST
| | His entire life Terry Wright (shown above) has endured severe stomach pain and lung infections—and has been in and out of hospitals. At age 38, a doctor told him if he weren’t Black, he’d probably be diagnosed with cystic fibrosis.
At age 54, he was.
What was the life-changing delay? Why are Black and Latino patients getting inferior care? How often does this happen? More than you think on rare diseases and other issues, writes Bijal P. Trivedi.
Read the full story here.
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| This doctor got it right: Pulmonologist Larry G. Johnson (at right) with Terry Wright during a checkup earlier this month. It shouldn’t be this hard to get proper care, particularly with rare diseases. Read more. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY NATIONAL PHYSICAL LABORATORY CROWN COPYRIGHT, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JOHNER IMAGES, GETTY IMAGES | | These animals can detect human disease: What does cancer smell like? You don’t need a hound dog (pictured above, a beagle) to sniff it out. Animals such as worms and ants can be trained in minutes to detect markers of illness, from COVID to tuberculosis, Nat Geo reports. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPHS BY ELKE BERTOLLI AND JOHN NILSON | | Music and migration: Two Nat Geo Explorers — Jahawi Bertolli (left) and Meklit Hadero (right) — work on the intersection of nature, migration, and music. “We have to be aware of our embeddedness in the natural world and not see ourselves as separate, as dominant, as better than,” Hadero tells Overheard, our weekly podcast. The jazz musician creates art by listening to nature and dissecting the rhythm of a place. Bertolli, a former DJ and wildlife cinematographer, draws his inspiration from adventure and ancient historical instruments. “As long as people see themselves outside of nature, we can’t find the solutions that will help us rebalance the world,” Bertolli said.
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| Smaller than a speck of dust: These hundred million-year-old microfossils of plankton are called radiolarians, and they’re in your backyard. This image, or rather a patched together series of images, was taken by Nat Geo Explorer Aaron Huey with the world’s smallest scanning electron microscope. The skeletons like those pictured help scientists study global warming because their chemical signatures can tell us about ocean health millions of years ago, Nat Geo reports. | | | |
Today’s soundtrack: Love and Happiness, by Al Green
We hope you liked today’s newsletter. This was edited and curated by Jen Tse, Hannah Farrow, and David Beard. Have an idea or a link for us? Write david.beard@natgeo.com. Happy trails! | | | |
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