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Health

    Alcohol is a major factor in gun violence. Why is it ignored?
    One in three shooting deaths involve heavy drinking, but alcohol use is not widely addressed in public policy or violence prevention programs, Johns Hopkins researchers found.
    Photo collage showing numerous beer bottles against a shooting target in the background, with bullet holes scattered across the image.
    As more Marylanders grow older, a debilitating eye disease is gaining ground
    Age-related macular degeneration is incurable, but Marylanders are getting better treatment for it now, physicians say.
    Debra Grigsby, 70, retired nurse from Carroll County, receives a shot in her eye from Dr. Lisa Schocket of the University of Maryland for age-related macular degeneration. The injection will slow the progression of the eye condition. It’s especially prevalent in older adults and has no cure — it can only be slowed. More people are getting diagnosed with the disease as a consequence of living longer.
    Advocates, health experts urge Maryland to cut emissions by swiftly moving to electric vehicles
    Some 5.1 million Marylanders live in areas that are failing to meet EPA‘s ground-level ozone standards and suffering adverse health effects, including higher levels of asthma.
    Truck traffic along Highway 83 in Baltimore City.
    Mfume, Cardin push to require college emergency action plans for heat illnesses
    The measure was introduced five years after Jordan McNair, a University of Maryland football player, collapsed due to heatstroke during practice and later died.
    Jordan McNair was a freshman offensive lineman for the University of Maryland.
    Maryland has a massive backlog for Medicaid in-home care. Some patients die waiting.
    Family members with their own work and family obligations are having to step in, and often cannot provide the level or frequency of care that their loved ones need.
    Jayne Felton rests her arms on her box of paperwork related to her sister’s care in her home office in Havre De Grace on June 8, 2023.
    Where teens pour the drinks: New Cherry Hill juice bar to open with community in mind
    Juice bar organizers want to promote entrepreneurship and healthiness one sip at a time.
    Michael Battle Jr. and Dani Battle, founders of the RICH Program, stand in the RICH Juice Bar on Wednesday, June 14, 2023.
    Johns Hopkins APL scientists test better ways to remove ‘forever chemicals’ from homes and water
    Johns Hopkins APL scientists are figuring out how to get so-called “forever chemicals” used in products and packaging out of the environment so they can’t harm people or animals.
    The filter designed by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab uses whiskers to leech onto short-chain PFAS molecules, removing up to 90% of the PFAS from the water system.
    Abstinence not required: How a Baltimore drug treatment program prioritizes saving lives
    The harm reduction model, which has received endorsement and funding from the Biden administration, offers potentially life-saving services to opioid users, without requiring abstinence in return.
    A syringe is seen on the ground as Lisa McFadden waits to be treated near a Baltimore City Health Department RV, Monday, March 20, 2023, in Baltimore. The Baltimore City Health Department's harm reduction program uses the RV to address the opioid crisis, which includes expanding access to medication-assisted treatment by deploying a team of medical staff to neighborhoods with high rates of substance abuse and offering buprenorphine prescriptions.
    Commentary: Maryland’s response to the opioid crisis isn’t working
    Reducing Maryland’s high rate of opioid overdose deaths will require improved approaches by the state’s health care providers, says Dr. Enrique Oviedo, a psychiatrist who serves as medical director of MATClinics.
    Dr. Enrique Oviedo is a psychiatrist and is medical director of MATClinics.
    Johns Hopkins University and Health System target of cybersecurity attack
    The attackers targeted a “previously unknown vulnerability in the widely used software MOVEit,” the letter said.
    The Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland.
    Johns Hopkins pulls LGBTQ glossary offline after ‘lesbian’ definition draws criticism
    Johns Hopkins’ definition of lesbians as “non-men” triggered online outrage from both the right and left, labels of misogyny and even criticism from Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling.
    Scenes of Johns Hopkins Homewood Campus
    Why Marylanders slept in their cars for a chance at a free dentist or doctor visit
    Remote Area Medical’s free pop-up clinic in Northeast Baltimore drew hundreds of people who've fallen through the cracks of Maryland’s fragmented health insurance system.
    PPE station at the Remote Area Medical dental clinic held June 10 and 11 in Northeast Baltimore.
    University of Maryland Medical System closing rehab center, moving services downtown
    The University of Maryland Medical System’s rehab center near Woodlawn, formerly known as Kernan Hospital, will shutter in three years and trauma rehab will move to downtown Baltimore.
    This is the Roslyn and Leonard Stoler Center for Advanced Medicine slated to open at the University of Maryland Medical Center in 2026.
    25,000 Marylanders with Medicaid just lost their coverage
    Twenty one percent of the first Marylanders who've had to renew their Medicaid coverage post-pandemic have lost it because they either did not receive notices or could not overcome administrative hurdles.
    During Maryland’s COVID-19 public health emergency, Medicaid coverage was extended to all Marylanders already enrolled. With the emergency coverage now ending, Maryland is beginning the process of re-enrolling all 1.8 million Medicaid beneficiaries. Organizations like Health Care for the Homeless help patients through the process of re-enrolling in Medicaid, which can include creating email addresses, locating necessary paperwork to enroll, and selecting insurance.
    Baltimore, breathe easy: Air quality returns to ‘acceptable’ levels
    The Air Quality Index in Baltimore and the surrounding region improved markedly Friday morning to “acceptable” levels, meaning only those who are especially sensitive to air pollution need to remain cautious.
    The air quality in Baltimore and the surrounding region is worse Thursday morning than it was Wednesday. Parts of the region have very unhealthy air and some have hazardous,.some people chose to wear a mask and many chose ro go without.
    Wildfire smoke isn’t a health threat for most Baltimore residents — this time
    There’s been no rush on Baltimore emergency rooms, but the real concern is what happens next.
    A man walks in the Inner Harbor as Baltimore is blanketed in dangerous levels of smoke from Canadian wildfires on Thursday, June 8, 2023.
    Johns Hopkins names outpatient center for trailblazing Black surgeon
    The outpatient center at Johns Hopkins will be given a name in honor of Dr. Levi Watkins Jr., as part of the institution's latest efforts to honor exceptional Black leaders.
    Johns Hopkins Hospital is naming its outpatient center after Dr. Levi Watkins Jr., a cardiac surgeon who paved the way for other Black medical professionals.
    What it’s like living and working in haze-filled Baltimore
    Canceled events, emergency messages and mask-clad pedestrians harked back on Thursday to the frenzy of uncertainty in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic.
    Will Simmons walks his dog, Lulu, through Federal Hill Park, in Baltimore. Air quality in Baltimore remains at dangerous levels due to smoke from Canadian wildfires blanketing the city on Thursday, June 8, 2023.
    Baltimore’s air is improving but still ‘unhealthy’
    The air quality in Baltimore is worse Thursday morning than it was Wednesday. It is “very dangerous” or “hazardous” depending on where you are in the region.
    Air quality in Baltimore remains at dangerous levels due to smoke from Canadian wildfires blanketing the city on Thursday, June 8, 2023.
    Air quality alert in Baltimore: What you need to know
    The Baltimore area is under a code red air quality warning. Here’s how to stay safe.
    A person runs through Federal Hill Park on Thursday morning, June 8, 2023. Baltimore's air quality remains at dangerous levels due to smoke from Canadian wildfires.
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