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Zika Spike Overwhelms Colombia Doctors

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The spread of Zika is taxing Colombia’s already over-burdened health care system.

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LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

Zika is on the rise in Colombia. According to new figures just released, more than 37,000 people have been sickened by the virus since an outbreak began there last fall. For most people, Zika symptoms are mild, but the uptick is worrying because the virus could be linked to complications like birth defects and a rare neurological condition that can cause temporary paralysis. It’s called Guillain-Barre syndrome. NPR’s Nurith Aizenman is in Colombia in a place that’s seen a dramatic number of Zika infections. Good morning, Nurith.

NURITH AIZENMAN, BYLINE: Good morning.

WERTHEIMER: Let’s talk first about Guillain-Barre.

AIZENMAN: Yeah. So as you just said, Linda, Guillain-Barre, it’s a condition that affects your neurological system. Basically, your immune system attacks your nerves, and in a lot of cases, it can be really severe. People can be fully paralyzed for weeks. They have to be on breathing machines. It can take you months to recover, and some people never walk again. Normally, it’s extremely rare, but people here are really worried because there’s been this dramatic surge in cases since the Zika outbreak began. And this is happening in a lot of the countries where the Zika outbreak is happening. It’s in Brazil, in El Salvador, Venezuela. I’m in the city called Cucuta, and I visited a couple of ICUs here, including one at the main hospital. I talked to a neurologist named Jairo Lizarazo. Here he is.

JAIRO LIZARAZO: (Foreign language spoken).

AIZENMAN: He’s saying that around the end of January they suddenly started to get a lot of cases, and now they’re seeing about a case every day – a new case every day. Across Colombia, they’ve seen almost a hundred cases since last fall, which is just way more than usual.

WERTHEIMER: Do we know for sure that Guillain-Barre is linked to Zika virus?

AIZENMAN: It’s an open question. It’s hard to tell if someone has had Zika unless you test them right away while they still an active infection, but the Guillain-Barre symptoms tend to develop a while afterwards. And even if someone has had Zika, you’ve got to prove it wasn’t just a coincidence that they then developed Guillain-Barre. So people here, including Dr. Lizarazo who we just heard from, are launching studies to look into this, but there are no firm answers yet.

WERTHEIMER: OK. What about microcephaly, babies born with abnormally small heads? What is happening with that in Colombia?

AIZENMAN: It’s definitely a concern. The latest numbers are that about 6,300 pregnant women in Colombia are suspected to have fallen sick with Zika. So far, there haven’t been any of those babies born with microcephaly like we saw – we’ve seen in Brazil. But that said, if you think about the time wave of the Zika epidemic, it hit Brazil first. The numbers in Colombia didn’t really start swelling until late last year.

And researchers suspect that Zika may cause these birth defects if the woman is infected in her first trimester. So based on that timing, officials we’ve spoken with say they would expect that if Zika is causing microcephaly it would be several more months before we’d see these cases in Colombia. So, for now, they’re monitoring pregnant women who’ve had Zika. They’re going to run a very large study in cooperation with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, and Colombia is seen as a key to trying to prove a link between birth defects and Zika.

WERTHEIMER: We don’t have too much time left, but let me ask you how the health care system in Colombia is holding up.

AIZENMAN: There are a lot of dedicated and excellent doctors here, but from what I’ve seen, the system is already feeling the strain. I’ve gone to several clinics where they’re asking pregnant women to come in for more tests. And these Guillain-Barre cases are really expensive. One of the main treatments for the disease requires you to clean out the blood – antibodies from the blood. It’s really costly and here is Dr. Lizarazo again, the neurologist from the hospital in Cucuta.

LIZARAZO: (Foreign language spoken).

AIZENMAN: He’s saying there’s already a deficit of ICU beds, and with more Guillain-Barre, it’s going to be really tough.

WERTHEIMER: NPR’s global health correspondent Nurith Aizenman, thank you very much.

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Expensive Journals Drive Academics To Break Copyright Law

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A new pirate website called Sci-Hub allows free access to academic journals behind paywalls. Heather Joseph, an advocate for legal open access, explains the situation to Linda Wertheimer.

Transcript

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

University libraries have been forced to cut back on the number of academic journals that they subscribe to because it has become too expensive. Some faculty are now soliciting illegal copies of articles from peers at other institutions. Others are pulling down articles from the self-described pirate website called Sci-Hub. It’s based in Russia and claims to have made nearly 50 million articles available for free in violation of international copyright law. I’m joined now by Heather Joseph, who’s been following this development. Her organization is called SPARC, the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition. The group advocates for legal open access to academic journals. Ms. Joseph, thank you very much for joining us.

HEATHER JOSEPH: Thank you for having me.

WERTHEIMER: So how do the academic journals that are charging a lot of money for what – for their subscriptions, what is their justification?

JOSEPH: Well, the justification I think is a good one for nonprofit organizations like Scholarly Societies that really do operate on pretty much a cost recovery model. The commercial ventures, though, that have the profit margins in the 30 and 40 percent range, there really is no justification. They’re profit-maximizing businesses, which is fine. The question is, should such businesses be built around information that’s vital to the public’s good and the public’s health?

WERTHEIMER: When these scholars do articles, who gets – do they get any of that money?

JOSEPH: They’re unpaid. The authors of these articles traditionally contribute the work of writing the articles, the work of reviewing and verifying the information, and they’re not paid.

WERTHEIMER: I can see why universities might feel that they were paying too much.

JOSEPH: Yes, indeed.

WERTHEIMER: So now we have the pirate website Sci-Hub, which provides free access to journals. What has been the reaction to this in the academy?

JOSEPH: Well, I think researchers take for granted that they’re – they’ve been forced into a system of workarounds to try to get access to the articles that they need to do their research. Typically, a researcher will have legal access to only between 50 and 70 percent of the articles that they need to do their work. So I think this database, Sci-Hub, was just another step in a process that researchers have sadly become used to doing.

WERTHEIMER: It’s not just academics. We might all decide that we need to pull up a paper on, say – I mean, something that we all do every day is look up any diseases we are afraid we might have.

JOSEPH: That’s exactly right. I think that’s first and foremost the value you can see immediately. Whenever you’re diagnosed or a family member is diagnosed with an illness, we just – we go to the web, and we want the latest verified information. And unfortunately, most of the articles that we’ll run into will have a pay wall that will say, you need to pay $10, $15, $20, even $30 for an individual view of an article.

WERTHEIMER: I understand you have some unhappy personal experience of this.

JOSEPH: Actually, my son has Type 1 juvenile diabetes. So when he was diagnosed, of course, the first thing that I did when we got home from the hospital was try to find information that would keep him safe through the night. And I think it was my personal eye-opening experience as to just how expensive it was to try to get basic scientific information, which, by the way, much of it was funded by the NIH, institutions that my tax dollars have supported the research. So I was sort of doubly exercised over this issue of wanting to provide better, open, equitable access to this information.

WERTHEIMER: Heather Joseph, she is with the Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources Coalition, SPARC. Thank you very much.

JOSEPH: Thank you for having me.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Best of the Week: 'Deadpool' is a Monumental Hit, 'Star Wars' Teases 'Episode VIII' and More

The Important News

Box Office: Deadpool broke the record for highest-grossing R-rated movie. And it broke a bunch of other records.

Marvel Madness: Disney dropped the first look at Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2. Adam McKay will be involved with Ant-Man and the Wasp in some capacity.

DC Delirium: Dan Amboyer might be the new Green Lantern.

Franchise Fever: The sixth Transformers movie will be a Bumblebee spinoff.

Sequelitis: Another Hellraiser movie is on the way. Blade Runner 2‘s release date was announced. John Wick: Chapter Two‘s release date was announced. Dwayne Johnson will return for a San Andreas sequel. Roger Corman is making a Death Race 2000 sequel. Emily Blunt is the new Mary Poppins.

New Directors/New Films: The Witch‘s Robert Eggers will make a medieval epic next. Ron Howard will direct Robert Downey Jr.’s Pinocchio movie.

Casting Net: Ryan Reynolds will star in a sci-fi movie from the Deadpool writers. Keira Knightley will play Catherine the Great for director Barbra Streisand. Christian Bale will reunite with Scott Cooper for Hostiles. Emilia Clarke will star in Set It Up. Jessica Chastain will star in Aaron Sorkin’s Molly’s Game. Abbey Lee will star in The Dark Tower.

Villainous Ventures: Eric Johnson will play Christian Grey’s rival in the Fifty Shades sequels. Julianne Moore will play the villain in Kingsman 2.

Actor Pairings: Paul Rudd and Steve Coogan will play a couple in An Ideal Home.

Remake Report: Todd McFarlane finished the script for a new Spawn movie. A new Astro Boy movie is in the works. The movie of Stephen King’s It will be rated R.

Reel TV: Salt is being turned into a TV show. The Stand will not be done as a TV series again.

TV Movies: The cast of Good Times is trying to Kickstart a Good Times movie.

Award Season: The Revenant was named best film at the BAFTA Awards.

The Videos and Geek Stuff

New Movie Trailers: Star Wars: Episode VIII, Ghostbusters, The Divergent Series: Allegiant, Kindergarten Cop 2, Alice Through the Looking Glass, Bastille Day, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny, Midnight Special, Sing, Triple 9 and Florence Foster Jenkins.

TV Spots: 10 Cloverfield Lane.

Watch: A fan-made Wonder Woman trailer.

See: What the villain in the new Ghostbusters looks like.

Watch: The first episode of Lego Star Wars: The Resistance Rises.

See: What a Back to the Future prequel would look like.

Watch: Puppets reenact scenes from the Best Picture Oscar nominees.

Play: A video game where Leonardo DiCaprio chases after an Oscar.

See: How Deadpool’s Tim Miller also helped make Iron Man a hit. And the Justice League short that got Miller the Deadpool gig.

Watch: Ryan Reynolds interviews Hugh Jackman about Eddie the Eagle. And James Corden auditions to be Deadpool’s sidekick.

See: What Keira Knightley would look like as Cable in Deadpool 2.

Watch: How the scores for Deadpool and The Hateful Eight were made.

See: How The Good Dinosaur should have ended.

Watch: A scary car commercial directed by Sam Raimi.

Learn: Why Gene Hackman dropped out of The Silence of the Lambs.

Watch: Shia LaBeouf’s latest performance art project.

See: The new motion poster for the Pete’s Dragon remake.

Our Features

Superhero Movie Guides: Upcoming superhero movies that could be rated R. And R-rated comic books that need to be R-rated movies. And how Deadpool could lead a new R-rated comic book movie renaissance.

Sci-Fi Movie Guide: An exploration of recent sci-fi movie sequels.

List: Great romantic movies for people who hate romantic movies.

Horror Movie Guide: All the latest horror news and trailers you need to know.

List: Unexpected appearances by presidents in movies.

Home Viewing: Here’s our guide to everything hitting VOD this week.

and

MORE FROM AROUND THE WEB:

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Trump Calls For Apple Boycott, But Lawmakers Don't See Clear Path In iPhone Case

A man walks outside the Apple store on the Fifth Avenue in New York on Wednesday.

A man walks outside the Apple store on the Fifth Avenue in New York on Wednesday. Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

As Apple and Justice Department lawyers duke it out in court over the government’s attempts to force the tech company to unlock the iPhone of one of the San Bernardino killers, there are calls for a legislative solution in the debate that pits privacy against national security concerns.

But the chances of Congress coming up with a what would almost certainly be a controversial solution to a highly complex issue in an election year seem remote. In part, that’s because no can can figure out how to resolve the issue.

Meanwhile, during a campaign stop in South Carolina, Republican Donald Trump called on consumers to boycott Apple, until the company complies with the court order to to come up a way to bypass the iPhone’s encryption.

Lawmakers Picking Sides

Some lawmakers, most notably Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, have taken sides.

“Apple chose to protect a dead ISIS terrorist’s privacy over the security of the American people,” Cotton said in a statement, adding that “legislation is likely the only way to resolve this issue.”

California Congressman Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, has also shifted into the pro-legislation category. Earlier this month Schiff was quoted as saying a legislative solution to the issue was not “feasible or even desirable.” On Wednesday, Schiff issued a statement that “these complex issues will ultimately need to be resolved by Congress, the Administration and industry, rather than the courts alone, since they involve important matters of public policy.”

But Schiff has not offered a specific course of action, adding, “We are far from any consensus.”

The chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Republican Richard Burr of North Carolina, has written that “Apple needs to comply with the court’s order.”
Burr and the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, California’s Dianne Feinstein, have had ongoing discussions about legislation to force tech companies to decrypt their devices if ordered to do so by a court. A spokeswoman for Burr, however, said there is no draft bill yet, and that the senator was working “on his own schedule” on the proposal.

Independent Sen. Angus King of Maine, another member of the intelligence panel, told NPR’s Morning Edition Friday that “this is a really tough issue” and that he could “argue it either way.” King said that to decide it in this case “is I think the wrong approach. There is an old saying in law school: ‘Hard cases make bad law.’ “

King was critical of the Obama administration for not proposing legislation to address the encryption issue, saying its something the FBI has “been sounding alarms about … for more than a year.”

One possible path forward for lawmakers is that Washington staple, the blue ribbon commission. In fact, House Homeland Security Committee chairman Michael McCaul of Texas and Democratic Senator Mark Warner of Virginia have proposed just such a panel, a “national commission on security and technology challenges in the digital age.”

It would be comprised of “a body of experts representing all of the interests at stake so we can evaluate and improved America’s security posture as technology-and our adversaries-evolve.” The two wrote the panel would be charged with “developing a range of actionable recommendations that can protect privacy and public safety.”

Presidential Candidates Grappling With Issue

On the presidential campaign trail there is a similarly wide range of views and lack of consensus about how to address the encryption-national security argument.

On one side is Trump’s call for an Apple boycott, something he told his supporters at a rally “just occurred to me.”

Republican Sen. Marco Rubio called it “a tough issue,” but that he hoped Apple would comply with the order, adding, “Ultimately I think being a good corporate citizen is important.”

At a town hall meeting on MSNBC Thursday night, the two Democratic candidates also weighed in. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, asked who’s side he was on, Apple or the FBI’s, responded “both.”

Sanders said, “All of us would be very dismayed if we learned that we could’ve picked up information about a potential terrorist act and we didn’t do that. People would not feel good about this.”

But Sanders added, “There has got to be a balance.” Calling himself “a very strong civil libertarian,” Sanders says he believes “we can fight terrorism without undermining our constitutional rights and our privacy rights.”

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton position was also nuanced. She called it “a very hard dilemma,” that’s “going to have lots of ramifications. But I see both sides. And I think most citizens see both sides.”

Clinton said “there’s got to be some way on a very specific basis we could try to help get information around crimes and terrorism.”

But so far, no one on either side of the issue has figured what that way is.

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NASCAR Season Kicks Off At Renovated Daytona Speedway

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It’s time to go racing! The NASCAR season kicks off this weekend at the Daytona International Speedway. And the place is all new after undergoing a major renovation in a bid to stay relevant in a competitive sports landscape.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

The NASCAR season kicks off this weekend at one of the most famous racetracks in the country. And this year, there’s something very different about the Daytona International Speedway. It has undergone a complete renovation. Catherine Welch of member station WMFE begins her report with a look back.

CATHERINE WELCH, BYLINE: It’s the 1971 Daytona 500. As the Motor Racing Network delivered the action to radio listeners across the country…

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Richard Petty, the rebel from North Carolina rockets, showing the way down the back straightaway. Richard’s within a car-length of A. J. Foyt.

WELCH: Fans at the speedway watched legend Richard Petty take the checkered flag. They cheered from pretty much the same grandstands that stood until a few years ago, when the speedway started getting dismantled down to the beams. The $400 million renovation includes a multi-level concourse, concession stands, more than a thousand TV screens, luxury suites and Wi-Fi. The speedway’s been open since 1959. This is its first major renovation, which also opens it up for rock concerts and sporting events like soccer and football. Lesa France Kennedy sits at the helm of the family business that runs Daytona and 12 other speedways. Her grandfather started NASCAR, but her dad built it into a sporting empire. So what part of this massive redesign would impress a dad like that? Well, the escalators.

LESA FRANCE KENNEDY: He would love the escalators. I can tell you that much. He would love the escalators.

JOIE CHITWOOD: These weren’t thought of to be at a racetrack ever. I mean, nobody even thought they’d put them in. Just – racetracks were different.

WELCH: The stands have never been easy to navigate, much less while lugging around a cooler full of beer or soda. Last-minute construction grinds away as speedway president Joie Chitwood rides one of the 40 new escalators. He thinks fans will love them, too.

CHITWOOD: You bet. Instead of hauling that cooler up the stairs, you can jump on that escalator and we’ll get you there a lot quicker, a lot easier. And you’ll be sitting in your seat, feeling pretty good.

WELCH: All 101,000 seats are new. The original ones from 1959 have been replaced with brightly colored plastic seats that were widened from 15 inches to 20. Fans have been asking for wider seats for years. Chitwood tries one out.

CHITWOOD: Probably the thing that I’m most impressed with is the sightline now. You can literally see every inch of the track.

WELCH: This is a great seat.

CHITWOOD: It is a good seat, and we’re only halfway up the stadium.

WELCH: Father up is where the Daytona Speedway gets swanky. Luxury suites are nothing new at sports arenas, but a first for the speedway. These have panoramic views. The suites, the escalators, the free Wi-Fi – they will all be new to race fans for now. Some of the changes at Daytona are expected to migrate to other racetracks, all part of an effort to make attending NASCAR races more enjoyable. For NPR News, I’m Catherine Welch in Daytona Beach, Fla.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by a contractor for NPR, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio.

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How Scientists Misread The Threat Of Zika Virus

A health worker in Lima, Peru, fumigates against the mosquito that spreads Zika virus, dengue and chikungunya.
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A health worker in Lima, Peru, fumigates against the mosquito that spreads Zika virus, dengue and chikungunya. Martin Mejia/AP hide caption

toggle caption Martin Mejia/AP

The world wasn’t prepared for Zika to fly across continents in the span of a few months. In 2015, when the virus began rapidly spreading across the Americas, health workers were surprised, and researchers were caught flat-footed when it came time to provide information to protecting the public’s health.

Scientists misjudged Zika virus as a minor and trivial ailment when it was discovered in 1947, says Dr. Ken Stuart, the founder and director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research in Seattle. That oversight is one reason for the dearth of medical knowledge around the virus.

But it didn’t have to be that way, he says. Stuart spoke with NPR’s Ari Shapiro on why the Zika outbreak has unfolded the way it did and how things could have gone better. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.


Interview Highlights

On why scientists didn’t pay much attention to Zika for decades after it was identified

It was discovered in Uganda and was thought to be isolated and to occur infrequently. So there was essentially no research done. I think only one person in the U.S. was working on Zika virus.

We were unaware of the severity of the disease … [and] were unaware this virus had the capability for getting distributed so rapidly.

On trying to get a handle on emerging infectious diseases

[We can] try to deploy resources consciously to develop fundamental understanding of groups of infectious agents and diseases they cause. Zika virus is a fairly small virus that has a single strand of RNA as its genome, fairly simple. And there are other related viruses [like Spondweni virus], so working on related viruses and how that virus affects the cells and individuals it infects when it causes disease will help with the next outbreak of a related organism.

On why that doesn’t always happen

This really goes back to funding priorities. Much of the funding devoted to infectious disease today is in reaction to outbreaks. Therefore, we’re not generally prepared to respond quickly.

In other cases there are diseases that are very rare but they have an advocacy group that generates research activities. In the case of diseases like Zika, which were isolated in remote areas of the world where that population had no resources or advocacy group, there was no push to do research.

On how we’ll respond to outbreaks in the future

We’re not stuck with what we’ve got. There are conversations between federal funding agencies and private organizations to try to prioritize the utilization of their resources, and I would say the NIH has been a leader in supporting the fundamental research that actually, probably positions us best to be prepared to respond to these disease outbreaks.

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Today in Movie Culture: Sam Raimi's Scary Car Commercial, Puppets Reenact Oscar Nominees and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Oscar Spoofs of the Day:

Watch all eight Best Picture nominees, including Mad Max: Fury Road and The Revenant, redone with puppets (via Reddit):

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Oscar Montage of the Day:

See an evolution of special effects over 88 years in this supercut of every Oscar winner in that category, from Wings to Interstellar:

[embedded content]

Vintage Image of the Day:

Speaking of the Oscars, here’s a throwback from the 1992 ceremony with Jack Palance, who was born on this day in 1919.

Commercial of the Day:

Sam Raimi directed this new car commercial inspired by horror movies (via Geek Tyrant):

[embedded content]

Supercut of the Day:

If you like weird movies, you’ll appreciate this montage of surreal scenes from such films as Trainspotting and Delicatessen (via Reddit):

[embedded content]

Toy of the Day:

Pacific Rim probably isn’t popular enough to warrant an official Lego set, but here’s a custom build of the Striker Eureka Jaeger. See more images at /Film.

Movie Science of the Day:

Kyle Hill of Nerdist’s Because Science explains why Iceman of the X-Men movies would be a bomb with his powers:

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Movie Trivia of the Day:

Get ready for this summer’s Jason Bourne with some trivia about the whole Bourne franchise:

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Cosplay of the Day:

This custom-built Superman leather armor made by Prince Armory was inspired by Jor-El in Man of Steel (via Geekologie):

Classic Trailer of the Day:

This weekend is the 30th anniversary of the release of 9 1/2 Weeks. Watch the original trailer for the sexy drama starring Kim Basinger and Mickey Rourke below.

[embedded content]

and

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Consumer Complaints About Airlines Soar

Ask anyone “How was your flight?” and you’ll likely hear some kind of complaint: it was late, my luggage was lost, there was no legroom.

And it appears that more airline passengers are not just sounding off to friends and family, but are filing official complaints with the government.

New figures from the U.S. Department of Transportation show a big huge increase in the number of consumer complaints against airlines last year, even as the airlines are showing slight improvements in on-time performance and how well they provide other services.

The DOT’s Aviation Consumer Protection Division reports that it received more than 20,000 complaints from travelers against airlines last year, compared to a little more than 15,500 in 2014.

The most frequent complaints are about flights being delayed or cancelled and luggage that is lost or damaged, even though government data show airlines slightly improved their on-time performance last year and lost fewer bags.

And complaints spiked in December of 2015, with DOT recording 1,565 complaints from angry airline customers, an increase of almost 47 percent from December 2014, and up nearly 20 percent from November 2015.

Last year, airlines improved on-time performance from 2014, with 79.9 percent of flights arriving on time in 2015, compared to 76.2 percent of flights being on time the year before. But that’s still one in five flights arriving late, a chronic problem in the industry.

One reason the number of complaints rose last year could be that more travelers are aware that they can complain to the government and are finding out how to do it.

It’s not something that the airlines are all that eager to tell their customers about. Customer service representatives rarely volunteer the information over the phone or at airport counters, and the information is very difficult to find on airline websites.

But that could soon change.

Rep. Janice Hahn, D-Calif., is trying to require airlines to post the consumer complaint hotline and a link to the DOT’s complaint web page in a prominent place on their web sites. She was able to add the provision to the Federal Aviation Administration funding bill that passed the House Transportation committee last week.

Complaints can be filed at https://www.transportation.gov/airconsumer/file-consumer-complaint, or by calling 202-366-2220.

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'World's Fastest Stoner' Finishes Last In Olympic Marathon Trials

Chris Barnicle (right) races at the Olympic Marathon Trials in Los Angeles on Feb. 13.

Chris Barnicle (right) races at the Olympic Marathon Trials in Los Angeles on Feb. 13. Courtesy of Diana Hernandez hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of Diana Hernandez

The self-proclaimed “world’s fastest stoner” finished in last place at the trials for the 2016 Rio Olympics in Los Angeles on Saturday, with a time of 3:45:34.

For casual runners, any time under four hours is considered respectable, but for the Olympic Trials — where the winning time was 2:11:12 — clocking a time over 3 hours is a massive failure.

But Chris Barnicle, a former collegiate and professional runner who is now outspoken about how eating marijuana edibles has benefited his distance running, was mellow about his last place finish. He told the running website FloTrack that it was a tough race, but a “really, really special day.”

Finishing 105th out of 105 runners wasn’t a disappointment for Barnicle, mostly because he wasn’t even expecting to participate until a few weeks before the race. That’s when he realized the trials would be held in Los Angeles, where he lives and works as a distributor for medical marijuana dispensaries.

“It was around Christmas time this year, and I thought: I got the trials qualifier, I live in L.A., so I just got to sign up and renew my USATF membership and do it—it’ll be so much fun,” he told Runner’s World.

Though he qualified for the trials in 2013 with a half marathon time of 1:04:29, Barnicle’s running and training dropped off steeply in the following years.

Barnicle told FloTrack that he “of course” wished he had been able to prepare more fully for the race, but a lingering injury and short training window prevented him from doing so:

“I had one little tempo run where I ran ten miles in sixty-five minutes and felt pretty comfortable, that was a few weeks out. I did a three hour long run, no distance on that, just three hours, and I did a twenty miler that was pretty easy.

“So my thought going into the race was that I was going to run comfortably off the back and I’ll slowly pick people off.”

But, he says, just three or four miles into the race, he realized that wasn’t going to happen.

“I kept thinking there’d be people that were dying. But it was me that was dying. I was just trying to finish,” he said.

Finish he did — though his time was the slowest men’s or women’s time since at least 2000, according to FloTrack.

So just how slow was his time?

Barnicle finished more than 30 minutes after the last-place finisher for the women, Joanna Zeiger, who has had multiple rib surgeries and was still suffering from rib pain, abdominal spasms, and nausea. She clocked 3:23:28.

But Barnicle, who collapsed due to cramps around the 22-mile mark, was determined to finish.

“There were medics coming by and asking me if I needed to drop off—I feel like they were almost suggesting that I do it—but for me, I had to do it. I’ve dropped out of some races before, and I know there’s no worse feeling in the world,” he said.

Did he eat any edible marijuana the morning of the trials?

“No comment,” he answered. “I worked really hard to make it to the finish line and to get my name in the results. I would hate for USATF to be able to change that to a DQ.”

The world’s fastest stoner says he’s considering getting back into professional running, but that right now he’s focused on his medical marijuana business. Along with two of his running teammates from the University of Arkansas, he started an edible marijuana company called Organic Zip. But that folded he said, due to a supply problem.

“When I finished running, I moved straight to Humboldt County and had a really good plug. Then we had one guy up there, but he was kind of a flake; then we had a guy down in Oakland for a little bit, but he flaked on us. So then I moved down here to LA where I started supplying for these Koreans, who kind of have an endless supply of flower, and I worked for them for a little bit. Now I’m working for an official distribution company that follows all the 2018 regulations.

“It’s all medical. Everything that I do out here is within compliance with the law.”

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In this 2014 interview, Chris Barnicle talks about his now-shuttered edible marijuana business Organic Zip.

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h/t Deadspin

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When Getting A Blood Pressure Cuff Takes All Day

Sharlene Adams rode three buses to get to an East Baltimore medical supply store.

Sharlene Adams rode three buses to get to an East Baltimore medical supply store. Rachel Bluth/Capital News Service hide caption

toggle caption Rachel Bluth/Capital News Service

The doctor told Sharlene Adams to get a blood pressure cuff, so she set out to buy one.

For Adams, who lives in West Baltimore, that meant four bus rides, a stop for a doctor’s signature, two visits to a downtown pharmacy for other medical supplies, a detour to borrow money for a copay, a delay when a bus broke down and, at last, a purchase at a pharmacy on the east side of town.

The 7-mile trip there took 5 1/2 hours. Then she had to get back home.

She seemed unfazed. For Adams, this is what it takes to follow a doctor’s recommendations.

Adams’ neighborhood is not far from where Freddie Gray grew up and died after being injured in police custody last April, an event that triggered unrest.

Incomes here average less than $28,000 a year, according to the U.S. Census. Drugs and violence plague the area.

Adams’ story isn’t about huge barriers to medical care but about a series of smaller hurdles that hinder access for her and many other low-income people.

Adams, 55, has no car, no computer and no credit card. Her insurance will pay for a blood pressure cuff, but only with a prescription. She doesn’t have the ready cash that would allow her to pop into a drugstore and pick up a $40 blood pressure cuff off the shelf.

She has been treated for mental health problems including bipolar disorder, and she has been homeless — a time when she never saw a doctor.

Adams acknowledges she used to use illegal drugs, but that, she said, ended years ago. Yet when doctors hear she used crack, she said, they sometimes dismiss her complaints.

“You have some of them that, they treat you like dirt, really, because they think you’re the scum of the earth anyway,” Adams said.

She tries to stay healthy, but she is working with few resources and has to overcome most of a lifetime spent ignoring her health. She fails as often as she succeeds.

Adams has diabetes but isn’t clear on exactly when to test her blood sugar. She doesn’t like needles and doesn’t want to take insulin. She wants to eat better but says the food her doctor recommends costs too much. She wants to lower her blood pressure but she still smokes.

For Adams, seeing a doctor, filling a prescription or scheduling a medical test comes with frustration that middle-class patients don’t have to deal with. She knows the difference, and she resents it.

When Adams needed a colonoscopy, for example, a doctor referred her to a center in Pikesville, about 8 miles from her home on North Bentalou Street. Adams says she can’t get there.

“We don’t have the opportunity to get things like some other people get,” she said. “You lost. You run around, you don’t know if you have cancer.”

The Journey Begins

Adams has lived on North Bentalou Street since December 2014 and uses a housing voucher to help with her rent payments. One Monday morning last fall, she pulled on a pair of brightly patterned leggings and topped them with a pink zip-up jacket.

Her long, fake nails were painted with ornate patterns, and she wore earrings. She was ready for the long trip she hoped would end with the purchase of a blood pressure cuff.

Adams went out the door of her rent-subsidized, porch-front brick rowhouse and headed to the bus stop.

Along the way, Adams seemed to know everyone. She said hi to the women with children clad in school uniforms, to the men sitting on their porches sipping cans wrapped in black plastic bags.

Sharlene Adams bought a cigarette from a neighbor as she waited for a bus.

Sharlene Adams bought a cigarette from a neighbor as she waited for a bus. by Rachel Bluth/Capital News Service hide caption

toggle caption by Rachel Bluth/Capital News Service

She asked every one of them for a cigarette or for spare change to buy a loose cigarette from a former Army medic who lives next to the bus stop.

“I can’t start my day without a cigarette,” Adams said. She knows smoking is bad for her, but quitting is low on her list of priorities.

The quest for a blood pressure cuff had been initiated the week before, when Adams visited her primary care doctor at University Family Medicine on Redwood Street.

During the 20-minute visit with Dr. Kerry Reller, she managed to discuss Adams’ two dozen prescriptions, check her blood sugar and pressure, make sure she was scheduled for a mammogram and colonoscopy and attend to Adams’ seemingly endless list of ailments, from her eyes to her ankles. She also asked about Adams’ diet and if she’s getting the right kind of exercise.

Reller told Adams to start monitoring her blood pressure daily along with her blood sugar.

Medicaid, the health insurance plan for low-income people that covers Adams, would pay for a blood pressure cuff to help her.

But there was a problem with the paperwork. Later in the week, when Adams called to check on her order, the pharmacy where she was going to buy the cuff told her she would need the doctor to sign a new prescription and fax it over again.

That missing signature was the reason Adams was once again heading downtown. She had left her house a little after 11 a.m. She watched three No. 13 buses, part of Baltimore’s notoriously unreliable public transportation system, go by. It would be 45 minutes before a No. 91 bus would come to take her downtown.

Bus riders with smartphones can use an app to track the buses and see what time they will really arrive, but the app is of no use to Adams. She doesn’t have a smartphone.

Before getting to the doctor’s office, she stopped at the University of Maryland pharmacy to pick up lancets for her diabetes test monitor. Adams is supposed to check her sugars, in West Baltimore parlance, every morning, fasting until she draws her blood and writes down the results.

On this morning, she was out of lancets, the tiny needles she uses to prick her skin to get the blood sample, so she hadn’t done the test. Because she hadn’t yet checked her blood sugar, she also hadn’t eaten — dangerous for someone with diabetes. But Adams was trying to follow the doctor’s instructions literally.

This was another miscommunication between Adams and her doctor, something that happens regularly. Adams acknowledges that she has a short attention span and says she doesn’t read well, problems that make it difficult for her to fully understand doctors’ instructions.

She said she is like many other people she knows. “A lot of people don’t understand the words they use,” she said. “Half of them don’t know the meaning. Half of them can’t even read. Half of them can’t even spell. Half of them are partially illiterate,” Adams said. “Basically they are going to be lost.”

Adams said she tries to take care of herself. She weighs herself at exercise classes she attends at a community center on Mondays and Wednesdays. She stays away from fried foods and salt, but sweets are her weakness — one cookie can turn into 24.

She said she often can’t afford the foods and sugar substitutes that her doctor recommends. “It is kind really of confusing and hard because prices are so high,” Adams said. “You don’t get that many [food] stamps, the check’s not that big, you are barely making it to pay your bills. And you go to pantries and they don’t have food that you basically can eat as a diabetic.”

At The Doctor’s Office

By 12:30 p.m., Adams had left the pharmacy and walked a block to her doctor’s office on Redwood Street to begin the process of getting a signed prescription faxed over to the medical supply store. It would take an hour and a half.

While Adams waited, Reller faxed a refill for a diabetes prescription to a downtown pharmacy — the same one Adams had just been to for lancets. At 2 p.m., Adams was out of the clinic, walking back to the university pharmacy to pick up her pills. But they weren’t ready. She would have to return another day.

At 2:15, Adams boarded another bus for the trip to East Baltimore to the medical supply store where she now had a prescription to buy a blood pressure cuff.

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But she first had to make another stop, this time at a friend’s house to borrow money in case the pharmacy demanded a copay. The friend lives next door to Adams’ daughter, Shardaye.

The friend gave Adams a cigarette and $11, seven of which were in rolls of coins.

They chatted a bit, so that Adams could be updated on the comings and goings at her daughter’s house. Then Adams went back up the street to catch a bus to Northern Pharmacy & Medical Equipment on Harford Road.

There would be another complication.

The bus broke down on the way. It got rolling again, but it would be 3:30 before the bus finally dropped Adams off outside the pharmacy.

Searching For Instructions

Inside the store, Adams browsed the aisles of medical equipment like a budget-conscious shopper in a high-end department store. She muttered to herself about getting her Medicaid plan to pay for diabetic socks and canes.

There was a bowl of old Halloween candy on the counter. Adams picked up a mini chocolate bar. It was the first thing she had eaten all day.

At 4 p.m., a woman in a short lab coat and high heels handed her a box holding the cuff and moved on to the next customer. Adams stepped back and opened the box, unwilling to leave until she understood the equipment. She hunted down another worker and, trying the cuff on, asked if it fit correctly. The clerk assured her that it was big enough.

Three bus rides, three trips to two pharmacies, a stop at the doctor’s office and five hours later, Adams had her blood pressure cuff.

Now she’d have one more bus ride to carry her home. She left the pharmacy and crossed the street. But before the bus arrived, Adams strode over to a gas station, pulled out the rolls of coins her friend had given her, and bought a pack of cigarettes.

This story is part of a reporting partnership between Kaiser Health News and University of Maryland College Park’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism, which operates Capital News Service.

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