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Fresh Air opens the window on contemporary arts and issues with guests from worlds as diverse as literature and economics. Fresh Air Weekend collects the best segments from the week's programs and crafts them together for great weekend listening.
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Fresh Air Weekend

Fresh Air opens the window on contemporary arts and issues with guests from worlds as diverse as literature and economics. Fresh Air Weekend collects the best segments from the week's programs and crafts them together for great weekend listening.

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Health & Science

Dieter Egli, a developmental biologist at Columbia University, and Katherine Palmerola examine a newly fertilized egg injected with a CRISPR editing tool. (Rob Stein/NPR)
NPR
Science

New U.S. experiments aim to create gene-edited human embryos

A scientist in New York is conducting experiments designed to modify DNA in human embryos as a step toward someday preventing inherited diseases.

7 years ago

Sandbags are used to slow the erosion of the bank along the Delaware River. (Bill Barlow for WHYY)
Science

Why engineers use different barriers to protect N.J. coastal towns

If you live along the Jersey Shore, you may notice a variety of barriers in place to prevent flooding. Here's a look at a few of the most common techniques.

7 years ago

(Illustration by Ella Trujillo)
The Pulse
Health

Separate: Black Health in America

Segregation in housing and education has had reverberations on health care and health outcomes for African-Americans. In this episode, we ...

Air Date: February 1, 2019

Listen 48:46
Cooper University Hospital in Camden
Health

Camden’s 7 Day Pledge reduces hospital readmissions, but replicating the program in Philly could be tricky

The 7 Day Pledge links hospitalized Medicaid patients with primary-care doctors, reducing the number of patients who end up back in the hospital unnecessarily.

7 years ago

The correctional complex on State Road in Philadelphia. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
Health

Three years after ACLU settlement, prisoners with mental illnesses still face long waits for state hospitals

There are 140 people on those wait lists to get into state facilities, Department of Human Services said in an email.

7 years ago

An outreach worker gets information from a woman living in a tent under the Emerald Street railroad overpass. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
Health

Amid bitter cold, Philly closes last Kensington encampment

Philadelphia officials say they will provide housing to all homeless drug users cleared from a camp in Kensington Thursday. But most shelters are already full.

7 years ago

Traces of cadmium, lead and arsenic have been discovered in many brands of apple and other fruit juices. (Westend61/Getty Images)
NPR
Health

There’s arsenic and lead in many brands of fruit juice. Should you be concerned?

Consumer Reports tested 45 fruit juices and found that 21 of them had "concerning levels" of cadmium, arsenic and/or lead.

7 years ago

A water tower stands above a residential neighborhood
Health
StateImpact Pennsylvania

Report says EPA refuses to regulate two PFAS chemicals

If feds are withdrawing from PFAS rules, states will have to redouble efforts to protect public health, advocates say.

7 years ago

People now use the Delaware for recreation, like these visitors to Spruce Street Harbor Park. Prior to the Clean Water Act, the Delaware River was so polluted no one would have considered basking so close to it. But the regulation has not been updated for decades, and scientists say hidden dangers to fish and wildlife still exist. (Brandon Eastwood for WHYY)
The Why
Science

Keeping the river rolling: How the Clean Water Act helped revive the Delaware

The Clean Water Act helped turn the Delaware River and its waterfront into a place many people enjoy today. But can the river be protected from future pollution?

Air Date: January 30, 2019

Listen 13:34
People bundled up against the cold in downtown Chicago on Sunday. Forecasters warned of dangerous weather conditions across a swath of the U.S. over the next several days. (Nam Y. Huh/AP Photo)
NPR
Science

‘Life-threatening arctic blast’ surges into Midwest, barreling toward Eastern U.S.

Record-shattering cold, heavy snow and howling winds are descending on a broad swath of the U.S., the National Weather Service says.

7 years ago

The Milky Way's Galactic Center in the night sky above the Paranal Observatory (the laser creates a guide-star for the telescope). ESO/Y. Beletsky
Skytalk
Science

Strolling Our Galactic Neighborhood

Our Milky Way is one of some forty galaxies that comprise what is known as our “local group.” Two of our nearest galact ...

Air Date: January 29, 2019

Listen 06:12
To tame your anger, it may help to take time to observe and name it. (Ariel Davis for NPR)
NPR
Health

Got anger? Try naming it to tame it

It's almost like a reflex — hard-wired in the brain. When something unjust or unfair happens to you, "your blood pressure often goes up.

7 years ago

 The front of the former Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Willow Grove and present day Horsham Air Guard Station. (Matt Rourke/AP Photo)
Science
NJ Spotlight

N.J. landfill agrees to accept PFAS-contaminated soil from Pa. military base

Some New Jersey environmental groups oppose the planned dumping of material from the former Willow Grove Naval Air Station.

7 years ago

A new study shows that for a quarter of Americans, eating at work adds as much as 1,300 calories per week — most of them empty. (Duplass/BigStock)
Health

Free food at work is significant source of unhealthy calories, CDC says

A new study shows that for a quarter of Americans, eating at work adds as much as 1,300 calories per week — most of them empty.

7 years ago

Children of Mexican immigrants wait to receive a free health checkup inside a mobile clinic at the Mexican Consulate in Denver, Colo., in 2009. The Trump administration wants to ratchet up scrutiny of the use of social services by immigrants. That's already led some worried parents to avoid family health care.
(John Moore/Getty Images)
NPR
Health

Fear of deportation or green card denial deters some parents from getting kids care

In Texas, researchers studying the issue say it's a major reason why more children are going without health insurance.

7 years ago

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