Monday, March 24, 2025

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Afghan women risk Taliban wrath over hair trade


By AFP
March 24, 2025


Until Taliban authorities took power in Afghanistan, women were able to freely sell their hair to be made into wigs - Copyright AFP Claire GOUNON


Claire GOUNON

Until Taliban authorities took power in Afghanistan, women like Fatima were able to freely sell their hair to be made into wigs, bringing in crucial cash.

But a ban last year has forced the 28-year-old and others to covertly trade hair — collected from shower drains or the salon floor — braving the risk of punishment one strand at a time.

“I need this money,” said Fatima, 28, one of the few women still in paid private employment in Kabul after the Taliban regained control in 2021.

“I can treat myself to something or buy things for the house.”

The woman, who withholds her last name for security reasons, sells every 100 grams of hair for little more than $3, a small addition to her monthly salary of $100.

Buyers who want to export the locks for wig production abroad “would knock on our doors to collect” the hair, she said.

One of those buyers is a man, who also requested anonymity, sending the manes to Pakistan and China from Afghanistan, one of the world’s poorest countries.

Taliban authorities have cracked down on the rights of women, imposing what the UN calls a “gender apartheid”.

They banned women and girls from universities and schools, effectively strangling their employment hopes.

Women have also been barred from parks and gyms, while beauty salons have been shut down.



– ‘Not allowed’ –




Last year, Taliban authorities imposed vice and virtue laws regulating everyday life for men and women, including banning sales of “any part of the human body” including hair.

They have not said what the punishment for violations would be.

“We must respect the appearance that God has given to humans and preserve their dignity,” Ministry for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice (PVPV) spokesman Saiful Islam Khyber told AFP.

He said the trading of hair had become “normalised” in the country and that now “selling body parts is not allowed.”

Hair sales are so sensitive that the ministry which handles morality issues burned nearly a ton of human strands in Kabul province in January.

The PVPV said in a statement it burned the batch “to protect Islamic values and human dignity”.

The restrictions have not deterred Fatima, however.

During prayer times, when Taliban officials and forces attend the mosque, Fatima sneaks to a Kabul waste site to hand over her cache of tresses.

The few extra dollars are significant, with 85 percent of Afghans living on less than a dollar a day, according to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).



– Secret salon –



At a secret salon in Kabul, two worn-out leather chairs sit in a small, cold room where hairdresser Narges now only receives about four customers a week.

Before the 2021 takeover, the 43-year-old widowed hairdresser used to give crop cuts to five to six clients every day.

Now, only the wealthiest of her customers brave visiting the salon, and even they sometimes ask if they can take valuable spare hair home with them.

“They’re the only ones who can still care about beauty,” she said.

For others, the threat of a Taliban punishment is too much to risk.

Wahida, a 33-year-old widow whose husband was a soldier killed in 2021, has a constant worry about how she will feed her three children.

She still collects hair that has fallen from her eight-year-old daughter’s head and her own, with strands from the root more valuable than those cut with scissors.

The unemployed Afghan woman, who now relies almost entirely on charity, stuffs them in a plastic bag to keep them for a potential sale later.

“I had a glimmer of hope when I used to sell my hair. Now that it’s banned, I’m devastated. I’m hoping buyers will come back to my door,” she said, sitting in her home.

“I know there are places to sell. But I am afraid of getting caught there.”




Colombia’s lonely chimp Yoko finds new home in Brazil

“Yoko… is a highly humanized chimpanzee, the degree of tameness is very high… He basically behaves like a child,” 

By AFP
March 24, 2025


On Sunday, 38-year-old Yoko was flown to Brazil to finally join others of his kind at a sanctuary there - Copyright AFP Claire GOUNON


David SALAZAR

Kidnapped from his family as an infant, then raised by a drug lord before ending up in a Colombian zoo, Yoko the chimpanzee has lived the last two years of his life alone.

He lost his last friend, Chita, in 2023 when she escaped from the zoo with Pancho — Yoko’s rival — and the pair was shot dead by soldiers out of human safety concerns.

On Sunday, 38-year-old Yoko was flown to Brazil to finally join others of his kind at a sanctuary there.

But will he make friends?

Yoko is in many ways more human than chimp, his caregivers say. He uses a knife and fork, plays ball, watches television and makes artwork with crayons on paper and canvas.

He is fond of eating sweets and chicken.

Fed junk food by his captor — a narco trafficker whose name has not been divulged — Yoko has only four of his teeth left. Chimps, like humans, are meant to have 32.

It was common for narco bosses such as Pablo Escobar in the 1990s to keep exotic animals as pets, including tigers and lions, and even hippos and giraffes.

Yoko was taught to smoke and dress up in human clothes — causing him to develop a skin disease and lose part of his fur.

“Yoko… is a highly humanized chimpanzee, the degree of tameness is very high… He basically behaves like a child,” said veterinarian Javier Guerrero.

The vet accompanied Yoko on the first part of his journey, dubbed “Operation Noah’s Ark,” from Ukumari Biopark, a zoo in the Colombian city of Pereira.



– A smile is not a smile –




Experts fear Yoko may find it hard to adapt to life with other chimpanzees at Sorocaba in the Brazilian state of Sao Paolo — the largest great ape sanctuary in Latin America.

There are more than 40 other chimps there, but vets and animal behaviorists worry Yoko may not fit in.

“Yoko… is not a chimpanzee in the strict sense… he is an animal that identifies much more with human beings,” said Cesar Gomez, Ukumari’s animal training coordinator.

“To give you an example, a smile is something positive” for humans, “but for chimpanzees, it is something negative and Yoko does not understand these types of communication,” he said.

Yoko was seized from his owner’s lair by police in 2017 after spending an unknown amount of time there, then taken to a refuge that flooded before he became a resident of the Pereira zoo.


“He was denied the chance to be a chimpanzee and grow up with his family,” assistant vet Alejandra Marin told AFP.

In the wild in their natural home in Africa, chimpanzees die at about 40 or 45 years of age. They are social, group animals, and with good care in captivity, they can live up to 60.

The chimpanzee is listed as an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

With Yoko’s transfer Sunday, Colombia became the first country in the world to rid itself of entirely captive great apes, said the Great Ape Project, an NGO.

“The great apes are chimpanzees, orangutans, gorillas, and bonobos — none of these species are endemic to our country, and they have no reason to be here,” said Andrea Padilla, a Colombian senator of the Green Alliance who oversaw Yoko’s “deeply symbolic” transfer.

“From a very young age, Yoko was a victim of trafficking and trade, passed from one drug trafficker to another,” she added.

On Monday morning, Padilla posted on X that Yoko had landed in Brazil, and was “safe and sound and about to start a new life with his peers.”
South Korea struggles to contain deadly wildfires


By AFP
March 25, 2025


The level of damage would make the fires collectively the third-largest in South Korea's history - Copyright AFP YASUYOSHI CHIBA

Deadly wildfires in South Korea worsened overnight, officials said Tuesday, as dry, windy weather hampers efforts to contain one of the country’s worst-ever fire outbreaks.

More than a dozen different blazes broke out over the weekend, with the safety minister reporting thousands of hectares burned and four people killed.

“The wildfires have so far affected approximately 14,694 hectares (36,310 acres), with damage continuing to grow,” acting Interior and Safety Minister Ko Ki-dong said.

The extent of damage would make the fires collectively the third-largest in South Korea’s history. The largest was an April 2000 blaze that scorched 23,913 hectares (59,090 acres) across the east coast.

More than 3,000 people have been evacuated to shelters, Ko said. At least 11 people have been seriously injured.

“Strong winds, dry weather, and haze are hampering firefighting efforts,” Ko told a disaster and safety meeting.

The government is “mobilising all available resources”, he said, and today, “110 helicopters and more than 6,700 personnel will be deployed”.

In Uiseong, the sky was full of smoke and haze, AFP reporters saw. Workers at a local temple were attempting to move historical artefacts and cover up Buddhist statues to protect them from possible damage.

The Korea Forest Service said the containment rate for the fire in Uiseong decreased from 60 to 55 percent by Tuesday morning.

More than 6,700 firefighters have been deployed to battle the wildfires, according to the Ministry of Interior and Safety, with nearly two-fifths of the personnel dispatched to Uiseong.

The government declared a state of emergency in four regions, citing “the extensive damage caused by simultaneous wildfires across the country”.

Some types of extreme weather have a well-established link with climate change, such as heatwaves or heavy rainfall.

Other phenomena, such as forest fires, droughts, snowstorms and tropical storms can result from a combination of complex factors.


S. Korea authorities deploy choppers, troops to battle wildfire


By AFP
March 24, 2025


A Korea Forest Service helicopter is used to help extinguish a forest fire near its ignition point in Uiseong - Copyright YONHAP/AFP -

South Korean authorities said Monday they would deploy dozens of helicopters and thousands of firefighters and soldiers as they struggle to control multiple wildfires in the southeast, which have been burning for days.

Four people have been killed so far, with officials warning that high winds and rising temperatures were hindering efforts to put out the blazes.

In Uiseong, nearly 7,000 hectares (17,000 acres) of land has been affected and around 600 people evacuated, Lim Sang-seop, head of the Korea Forest Service, told a press briefing.

“A total of 57 wildfire fighting helicopters are to be deployed to extinguish the fire,” he said, adding that more than 2,600 fire fighting personnel — including soldiers — would be mobilised “to respond with all their might”.

The fire had been partly contained but was still burning as of Monday afternoon.

The forest agency has issued “severe” fire warnings, its highest level, in multiple locations, including North and South Gyeongsang provinces, Busan and Daejeon.

A major wildfire claimed four lives over the weekend in Sancheong county, in South Gyeongsang province, about 250 kilometres (155 miles) southeast of Seoul.

That fire was also partly contained by Monday — but still burning.

The government declared a state of emergency in the affected regions, citing “the extensive damage caused by simultaneous wildfires across the country”.

Prime Minister Han Duck-soo, who was reinstated as acting president earlier Monday, visited the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters, urging authorities to work together “until the wildfires are completely extinguished”.

“It is a truly heartbreaking incident,” he said, adding that he would meet people affected by the fires later Monday.

The leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, Lee Jae-myung, urged authorities to “mobilise all means at their disposal to quickly and safely suppress the fires” and take further measures to prevent any additional wildfires.

Some types of extreme weather have a well-established link with climate change, such as heatwaves or heavy rainfall.

Other phenomena such as forest fires, droughts, snowstorms and tropical storms can result from a combination of complex factors.


‘Reasons to be optimistic’: UK startups boost local news scene


By AFP
March 25, 2025


The Manchester Mill media founder and editor Joshi Herrmann works in the offices of the online newspaper serving Greater Manchester - Copyright AFP Oli SCARFF

On the second floor of a London furniture store, three journalists are busy finalising the latest edition of a newsletter, covering everything from local foodbank funding to a neighbourhood cafe.

The Slice is a local magazine and a family of four hyper-local online news websites which serve the east London borough of Tower Hamlets — one of the UK’s most diverse, but deprived, neighbourhoods.

While local newspapers have been closing across the country, The Slice is “all about developing a model of local journalism that is financially sustainable in areas of deprivation”, explained founder and editor Tabitha Stapley.

The Slice and its websites are owned by a non-profit organisation started by Stapley, a former fashion journalist.

It is funded by some 500 paid subscribers, including readers and local businesses, who get an exclusive newsletter in return for helping keep the publication free for all.

Even the office location is a local affair, with the furniture store owner offering the space for free in exchange for occasional advertising.

“The most exciting thing about this job for me is that we’re trying something new,” said Agatha Scaggiante, deputy editor and only other full-time staff member alongside Stapley.

The newsroom is a sliver of hope in the UK, blighted by so-called “news deserts” leaving around “4.8 million people… in an area with no dedicated local news coverage”, said Jonathan Heawood, executive director of the Public Interest News Foundation (PINF).

– Pop-up ads –

Hit by a loss of revenues as audiences shift to other mostly online sources, almost 300 local UK newspapers closed their doors between 2005 and 2024, according to the Press Gazette.

Among these were family-owned newspapers in existence for generations, as well as newspapers that had been publishing for over 100 years.

Today’s prevailing model of local news, which often comprises a website filled with articles loosely linked to the area and a torrent of pop-up ads, is leaving readers “uninspired and unengaged”, Heawood told AFP.

As a result, even the around 1,200 remaining local news outlets are struggling with cuts and bleak resources.

According to Heawood, local news “has huge benefits socially”, informing people of their local institutions and democratic processes, reducing polarisation and creating “pride in place”.

A news desert “is not just a grey area on a map. It’s people feeling like they’re left without someone who can represent them,” said Heawood. “And people really, really mourn that.”

Launched in 2018, The Slice is the only dedicated newspaper with a locally-based team serving Tower Hamlets’ 300,000-plus residents, according to Stapley. Some 8,000 people have signed up for the newsletters.

During last year’s general election, the team did video interviews with all the MP candidates in Tower Hamlets: “so people could actually see them”.

– ‘People need an example’ –

From Manchester to Glasgow, Joshi Herrmann’s Mill Media is popularising another form of regional news: long-read features and deep-dives into everything from local culture to corruption.

Launching with the Manchester Mill in 2020, Herrmann now runs six local publications with around 20 staff across the UK.

They have investigated the toxic work culture at a Manchester university, and exposed a Labour party MP as the landlord of a children’s home failing safety standards.

“We’re in a race for people’s attention and affection… So you’ve got to really change how you do things,” Herrmann told AFP.

Primarily funded by subscribers set to reach 10,000 in coming months, Mill Media received significant backing during a seed round for investment in 2023. It boasts 500,000 readers and as of June it was breaking even, Herrmann said.

“It does feel like in the same way that people are pushing against fast fashion, people are pushing against fast news,” said Victoria Munro, who writes for the Mill’s sister publication, the Sheffield Tribune.

When The Mill launched in Manchester, Mancunian Sophie Atkinson thought it “seemed too good to be true”.

“Long-form journalism in Manchester — that just hadn’t existed for years,” said Atkinson, now a senior editor.

And before the Tribune launched in 2021, Sheffield’s over 500,000 residents were left with just one local daily.

“No one had done this kind of email-based, subscription-based local media thing,” said Hermann. “People need an example that it can work.”

Similar newsletter and subscription-based local initiatives have since popped up across the UK, said Herrmann.

“There are reasons to be optimistic”, said Heawood. But, “I’m not confident that we’re going to get through the next few years easily”, he warned.

He called for greater government support and changes by big tech companies to make the internet a more profitable space for community and independent media.

On Wednesday, King Charles III will host a reception to showcase royal support for local journalism.





China says to pursue ‘correct’ path of globalisation as trade woes mount


By AFP
March 23, 2025


China imported $29 billion of US farm produce in 2023 - Copyright AFP/File STR


Peter CATTERALL

China’s number two leader told a gathering of business executives in Beijing on Sunday that the country would pursue economic globalisation despite “fragmentation”, a thinly veiled reference to trade turmoil sparked by US President Donald Trump.

The China Development Forum convenes after weeks that have seen Trump slap multiple rounds of tariffs on goods from the country, threatening a vital lifeline as economic challenges persist.

Chinese leaders have been seeking to steer a shaky economy onto a more stable path since the end of the pandemic, particularly by boosting consumption.

They are also now seeking to assert the country’s role as a staunch defender of the multilateral economic system, as Trump wages tariff wars with major US trading partners including China, Canada and Mexico.

“China will firmly stand on the correct side of history, that of fairness and justice, and act in a righteous manner amid the rough waters of the times,” Premier Li Qiang said.


Chinese leaders are seeking to steer a shaky economy onto a more stable path – Copyright POOL/AFP Adek BERRY, ADEK BERRY

Li’s speech came at the opening of the annual forum, attended this year by prominent business leaders including Apple CEO Tim Cook.

The country will “adhere to the correct direction of economic globalisation, practice true multilateralism and strive to be a force for stability and certainty”, Li vowed.

And in apparent reference to renewed trade wars sparked by Trump, he added: “today, global economic fragmentation is intensifying”, while “instability and uncertainty are on the rise”.

Beijing has in recent weeks expressed an open attitude toward engaging with Trump for trade talks.

US Senator Steve Daines on Saturday met with He Lifeng, China’s Vice Premier responsible for economic matters, during a visit to Beijing viewed as a bid to ease strained relations.

Daines is also meeting with Li on Sunday for talks that are expected to involve the cross-border flow of fentanyl and the deadly drug’s precursor chemicals from China into the United States.

– ‘Candid dialogue’ –

Trump says his new tariffs on China are due to Beijing’s failure to stem shipments of the chemicals, which underpin a devastating drug crisis.

Beijing has insisted that it cracks down harshly on the illicit production and trade of drugs, describing the issue as one for Washington itself to solve.

During his meeting with Daines, He said China “firmly opposes the politicisation, weaponisation and instrumentalisation of economic and trade issues”.

The Vice Premier added that China is willing to “engage in candid dialogue” with the United States to resolve issues.

The two countries have “many common interests and broad space for cooperation”, he added.

The tariffs imposed by Trump since taking office in January amount to a 20 percent blanket hike on Chinese overseas shipments to the United States.

The country’s exports reached record heights last year, but observers warn that turbulence in the global trading system could force Beijing to find other ways to boost activity.

Data released Monday indicated an uneven recovery during the first two months of the year.

Retail sales charted a moderate increase from the previous January-February period, though unemployment rose to its highest level recorded in two years.

Beijing says it is targeting growth this year of around five percent — the same as last year and a goal considered ambitious by many economists.
Is workplace technology failing employees?


By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
March 23, 2025


Photo: © Digital Journal

Key findings, drawn from a recent survey, reveal how workplace technology is failing employees and why leadership is rethinking the office experience. This reveals how employees are ditching company technology, with 89 percent of those polled using personal devices or apps for work because company-provided tools are not effective.

Moreover, the survey suggests that poor technology is hurting work-life balance. Here, 76 percent of workers feel pressured to be “always on,” and 60 percent say tech issues slow them down.

The report indicates fit-for-purpose workplace structures and technology – emphasizing flexibility vs. control – are what employers and employees need. The report comes from Diversified, a technology solutions provider.

The focus is with how companies are underinvesting in workforce technologies such as videoconferencing tools, collaboration platforms, and advanced production and broadcast solutions.

The Diversified Technology Maturity Survey of more than 1,600 U.S. employees also found, in relation to the large proportion of workers who use their own devices or apps for work how this is creating cyber and compliance risks.

With globally dispersed teams relying on collaboration tools, technologies and broadcast events, 77 percent of survey respondents said they work for companies offering hybrid work options. The vast majority (92 percent) split their work weeks between the office and remote locations.

A strong majority said workplace flexibility is critical, with 86 percent considering it when job hunting, and 49 percent willing to sacrifice pay for hybrid work. Even more (69 percent) business leaders would do the same.

The survey also uncovered a desire to reinvent workspaces to boost creativity, security, productivity and retention. Notably, 73 percent of CEOs seek ways to repurpose office space, while 83 percent of leaders are interested in adding public-use areas.

The human impact

Since the arrival of generative AI, most workplace technology conversations have focused on productivity. But workplace technology is also deeply connected to the human experience.

Sixty percent of survey respondents said technology integration issues adversely affect their work-life balance, 76 percent feel that they must be online at all times and 24 percent of those working late said it’s because their technology causes delays.

“The culture of work is changing, and workplace technology is a big driver of this change,” Jason Kornweiss, senior vice president of advisory services for Diversified. Tells Digital Journal in a statement. “Now, workplace structures must be fit-for-purpose and workplace technology needs to power experience, satisfaction and productivity – regardless of where people work.”


1933


Genetic testing firm 23andMe files for bankruptcy


By AFP
March 24, 2025


The DNA testing craze saw millions of consumers rushing to discover their ancestry and health information with tests from 23andMe. — © AFP/File 

Eric BARADAT

Pioneering US genetic testing company 23andMe has filed for bankruptcy and is looking for a buyer two years after hackers gained access to millions of profiles.

23andMe, which sells a mail-back saliva test to determine ancestry or certain health-related genetic traits for less than $200, said late Sunday that it had “filed a voluntary petition for reorganization” with a state bankruptcy court in Missouri.

At its height a few years ago, the DNA testing craze saw millions of consumers rushing to discover their ancestry and health information with tests from 23andMe becoming popular holiday gifts.

The Silicon Valley-based company, which went public in 2021, claims 15 million customers and has seen its sales decline in recent months as the testing craze faded and the company suffered a data breach.

23andMe said that it rejected a takeover offer from its co-founder and CEO Anne Wojcicki who has resigned from her position but will remain on the company’s board of directors, according to the statement.

On X, Wojcicki posted that “While I am disappointed that we have come to this conclusion and my bid was rejected, I am supportive of the company and I intend to be a bidder.”

She explained that her resignation as CEO was strategic so as to “be in the best position to pursue the company as an independent bidder.”

Wojcicki, who co-founded 23andMe 19 years ago, acknowledged the company’s challenges but emphasized her “unwavering” belief in its future.

Faced with the difficulties, 23andMe announced the dismissal of 40 percent of its staff in November, about 200 people. It also suspended its research programs.

In a regulatory filing, 23andMe also said that it has agreed to pay approximately $37.5 million to settle claims related to the 2023 data breach.

The 2023 hacking incident saw 6.9 million accounts affected, of which 5.5 million contained information on genetic matches.

Using customers’ old passwords, the hackers compromised data that included names, sex, birth year, location, photos, health information, and genetic ancestry results.

With the bankruptcy announcement, Geoffrey Fowler, a tech columnist for the Washington Post warned: “If you’re one of the 15 million people who shared your DNA with 23andMe, it’s time to delete your data.”

He cited the risk “that your data could get sold or transferred to a new company, which might want to use it for new purposes.”

The company’s share price was down by nearly 50 percent to 92 cents in Monday trading on Wall Street.

 

Why does one person develop schizophrenia while another does not? A leading psychiatric geneticist investigates the answer



Dr. Consuelo Walss-Bass explores the genetic and environmental factors shaping mental health in a landmark genomic press interview




Genomic Press

Consuelo Walss-Bass, MS, PhD, 

image: 

Consuelo Walss-Bass, MS, PhD, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, USA

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Credit: Consuelo Walss-Bass, MS, PhD,




HOUSTON, Texas, USA, 25 March 2025 – Schizophrenia affects millions worldwide, yet its causes remain one of the greatest medical mysteries. In an exclusive Genomic Press Interview, Dr. Consuelo Walss-Bass, a pioneering researcher in psychiatric genetics, shares how both genetic predisposition and environmental factors contribute to severe mental health disorders. As the John S. Dunn Foundation Distinguished Chair in Psychiatry at UTHealth Houston, Dr. Walss-Bass has dedicated her career to understanding these mechanisms, transforming scientific discoveries into real-world applications for patient care.

A Personal and Scientific Journey into Mental Illness

Dr. Walss-Bass’s passion for psychiatric research is deeply personal. Born and educated in Torreón, Mexico, she was drawn to genetics after witnessing her mother’s and sister’s struggles with schizophrenia. “Why does my sister have schizophrenia, and I do not?” she asks. This fundamental question shaped her career trajectory, leading her from chemical engineering to psychiatric genetics at a time when the field was still in its infancy.

Despite skepticism from colleagues who doubted the feasibility of basic research in psychiatry, she pursued postdoctoral training in psychiatric genetics just as the Human Genome Project was nearing completion. This decision placed her at the forefront of a revolution in mental health research, allowing her to integrate genetic discoveries with clinical applications.

Breaking New Ground in Psychiatric Research

Through her pioneering work, Dr. Walss-Bass has developed innovative methods for exploring how genetic variations influence mental health conditions. She has been instrumental in establishing the UTHealth Houston Brain Collection for Research in Psychiatric Disorders, a state-of-the-art resource that preserves postmortem brain tissue, blood samples, and skin biopsies for research. This collection provides scientists with crucial biological data to better understand schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and substance use disorders.

Her work with induced pluripotent stem cells from patients with schizophrenia has also opened new frontiers in personalized psychiatry. By reprogramming adult blood cells into a stem-cell-like state and then differentiating into brain cells, Dr. Walss-Bass is studying how individual patients’ unique genetic makeup can influence how neurons work and respond to different treatments, paving the way for precision medicine in mental health care.

Dr. Walss-Bass emphasizes that understanding psychiatric disorders requires a holistic approach—one that considers both genetic predisposition and external influences such as stress, trauma, and environmental toxins. “Genes do not act in isolation,” she explains. “They interact with the environment in complex ways that we are only beginning to unravel.”

Key Insights from the Interview

  • Genetics and Environment – Mental health disorders arise from a dynamic interplay between inherited genetic factors and external influences, shaping brain function and behavior.
  • Advancing Schizophrenia Research – The UTHealth Houston Brain Collection for Research in Psychiatric Disorders serves as a critical tool for studying the biological underpinnings of severe mental illnesses, offering unprecedented insights into their molecular and cellular mechanisms.
  • Bridging Basic and Clinical Research – By collaborating with clinicians, forensic experts, and psychologists, Dr. Walss-Bass ensures that genetic discoveries translate into improved diagnosis and treatment.
  • Championing Inclusion and Representation in Science – As a Latina scientist in a historically underrepresented field, she is committed to mentoring women and minority students, fostering the next generation of psychiatric researchers.

The Future of Mental Health Research

In addition to managing her research laboratory, Dr. Walss-Bass was recently appointed Director of the Biobehavioral Health Research Core at the Cizik Nursing Research Institute, where she is pioneering collaborations between laboratory scientists and frontline healthcare providers. By integrating molecular biology with patient care, she aims to bridge the gap between the bench and the bedside, ultimately improving treatment outcomes for individuals with psychiatric disorders.

Beyond her scientific contributions, Dr. Walss-Bass is passionate about reducing the stigma surrounding mental health. She believes that psychiatric disorders should be understood in the same way as cancer or diabetes—as medical conditions rooted in biology rather than personal failings. “People living with mental illness deserve the same compassion and medical advancements as those with any other disease,” she says.

Professor Consuelo Walss-Bass’s Genomic Press interview is part of a larger series called Innovators & Ideas that highlights the people behind today’s most influential scientific breakthroughs. Each interview in the series offers a blend of cutting-edge research and personal reflections, providing readers with a comprehensive view of the scientists shaping the future. By combining a focus on professional achievements with personal insights, this interview style invites a richer narrative that both engages and educates readers. This format provides an ideal starting point for profiles that delve into the scientist’s impact on the field, while also touching on broader human themes. More information on the research leaders and rising stars featured in our Innovators & Ideas – Genomic Press Interview series can be found in our publication website: https://genomicpress.kglmeridian.com/.

The full Genomic Press Interview, titled “Consuelo Walss-Bass: Why does my sister have schizophrenia and I do not? Understanding how a person’s unique genetic makeup interacts with their environment to shape behavior is one of the final frontiers in medicine,” is freely available through Open Access starting on 25 March 2025 in Genomic Psychiatry at the following hyperlink:  https://doi.org/10.61373/gp025k.0014.

About Genomic Psychiatry – Genomic Psychiatry: Advancing Science from Genes to Society (ISSN: 2997-2388) represents a paradigm shift in genetics journals by interweaving advances in genomics and genetics with progress in all other areas of contemporary psychiatry. Genomic Psychiatry publishes peer-reviewed medical research articles of the highest quality from any area within the continuum that goes from genes and molecules to neuroscience, clinical psychiatry, and public health.

For media inquiries or interview requests with Dr. Consuelo Walss-Bass, please contact: UTHealth Houston Media Relations. Email: media.relations@uth.tmc.edu

RACIST AMERIKA

Black infants and children consistently have double the risk for death compared to Whites



American College of Physicians



Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.   
----------------------------      

1. Black infants and children consistently have double the risk for death compared to Whites

Racial inequities in childhood mortality between Black and White Americans have not decreased since 1950

Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-24-02794

URL goes live when the embargo lifts            

A population-based surveillance study evaluated the extent and persistence of excess infant and childhood mortality among Black Americans between 1950 and 2019. The study found that while gaps in life expectancy and mortality decreased between Black and White Americans over the study period, relative mortality in infants and children increased. According to the researchers, this is the first study to systematically examine data across the entire postwar era (from the 1950s to the present day) to assess long-term trends in race-based mortality disparities in the United States across the age spectrum. The findings suggest the need for innovative social, economic and health care policies to address the structural causes of inequity affecting mortality in Black Americans. The study is published in Annals of Internal Medicine

 

An international team of researchers from Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Yale School of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, and Harvard University analyzed mortality data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Census Bureau between 1950 and 2019 to estimate sex and age specific excess mortality burden on Black Americans compared to White Americans. The researchers gathered data from death certificates between 1960 – 2019 obtained from the CDC and death counts between 1950 – 1959 obtained from the Vital Statistics reports published by the Census Bureau. They calculated annual crude and age-standardized mortality rates, life expectancy, and years of life lost for Black and White Americans for every year in the study period. The data showed that life expectancy at birth increased by 20.4% and 13% between 1950 to 2019 among Black Americans and White Americans, respectively. In the 1950s, age-standardized mortality rate was 23% higher for Black Americans than White Americans; by the 2010s, this mortality ratio narrowed by 4% but remained 18% higher than in the White population. In Black children, a total of 522,617 excess deaths in infancy and 689,724 during childhood occurred over the 70-year period. In the 1950s, the mortality rate was 92% percent higher in Black infants compared to White infants, with an excess mortality ratio of 1.92. While the mortality rates for both Black and White infants decreased in the 2010s, the mortality ratio increased, with Black infants dying 115% more frequently than white infants for a mortality ratio of 2.15.  In the 2010s, medical conditions during the perinatal period were the largest cause of excess death in Black children younger than five years and external causes (including homicides, suicides, trauma, and accidental causes of death) were the most frequent cause of excess mortality in Black children between five to 19 years. 

 

While excess mortality among Black children has decreased over the past seven decades, Black children still have double the risk of death than White children, a disparity that has not decreased since the 1950s. This analysis underscores racial inequities in childhood mortality seen since the 1950s in the U.S. and suggests the urgent need for increased public health and policy actions to reduce this gap. 
 

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with corresponding author Angel Paternina-Caicedo, MD, MSc, please email ajpaterninac@unal.edu.co and apaterninac@unisinucartagena.edu.co.

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2. Most women undergo annual mammography screening, regardless of clinical guideline advice

Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-24-03325

Editorial: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-25-00477

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A national cross-sectional study examined how often women in the United States undergo a mammography screening in the past year versus the past one to two years. The researchers found that over 75% of women received a mammogram in the past year, suggesting a large proportion of women undergo screening annually whether annual screening is recommended by guidelines or not. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

 

Researchers from Harvard Medical School analyzed data from 20,034 women aged 40 to 84 years without breast cancer history who participated in the 2019 and 2021 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS). Clinical guidelines on the age to initiate screening, age to cease screening, and how often to screen vary widely, so the researchers aimed to determine how often women report a mammography screening by age and other sociodemographic factors. Among women aged 65 to 84 years, the researchers also examined receipt of screening in the past year vs. one to two years by 10-year life expectancy, since most guidelines recommend discontinuation of mammography screening when life expectancy is less than 10 years. The researchers found that 68.1% of participants reported mammography screening in the past 2 years, of which 75.2% reported screening in the past year. Women aged 40 to 44 years and aged 55 to 74 years were more likely to report screening in the past year than women aged 45 to 54 years or 75 to 84 years. Women with sociodemographic factors including identifying as non-Hispanic Black, having a college degree, and those from the Northeast or Midwest were more likely to report a mammography in the past year. Among those aged 65 to 84 with less than 10-year life expectancy, 71.1% of those screened in the past two years reported screening in the past year.

 

The findings suggest most women screen annually, with women aged 55 to 74 more likely to screen annually than women aged 45 to 54 despite recommendations for biennial screening, especially for those aged 55 and older. Additionally, non-Hispanic Black women reported some of the highest screening proportions across demographics, despite experiencing greater breast cancer death than other populations. This suggests future interventions to improve breast cancer outcomes for Black women should focus more on follow-up and treatment rather than screening. The researchers conclude that interventions to inform women over 40 of the option to screen biennially may be appropriate for health systems choosing to follow biennial screening guidelines.

 

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with corresponding author Mara A. Schonberg, MD, MPH, please email Sophie Afdhal at safdhal@bidmc.harvard.edu or Katie Brace at Katie.Brace@bilh.org.

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3. 'Broken heart syndrome’ associated with double the risk of rehospitalization for wide range of conditions

Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/ANNALS-24-01770

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Patients diagnosed with Takotsubo syndrome, or ‘broken heart syndrome’ face double the risk of rehospitalization for a wide range of conditions. A brief research report is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

 

Recently, Takotsubo syndrome became a news story when experts hypothesized that Hollywood star Gene Hackman or his wife Betsy Arakawa may have died of "broken heart syndrome" after discovering the other dead. Takotsubo syndrome is a real and potentially serious condition characterized by transient left ventricular dysfunction, often precipitated by intense emotional or physical stress. Although its clinical presentation is like that of acute myocardial infarction, there is no coronary artery disease present. While the condition may resolve, several registries have reported reduced long-term survival after an episode of acute takotsubo syndrome.

 

Researchers from the Aberdeen Cardiovascular and Diabetes Centre, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, United Kingdom studied data from the Scottish Takotsubo Registry to explore the incidence and causes of all subsequent hospital readmissions affecting patients with the syndrome. They found that of 12,873 hospitalizations in this population, the incidence rate of hospital readmission was 743 per 1,000 person-years compared with 365 per 1,000 person-years for the general Scottish population, and 750 per 1,000 for patients with myocardial infarction. Compared with the general population, patients with takotsubo syndrome were twice as likely to be hospitalized for any cause, especially cardiovascular causes, such as myocardial infarction, heart failure, or arrythmia. The researchers also found excess admissions for mental health, stroke, gastrointestinal, and several other causes.

 

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with an author, please email Wendy Davidson at w.davidson@abdn.ac.uk.

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Over half of patients prefer their own doctor and will wait longer for an appointment



Convenience or continuity: when are patients willing to wait to see their own doctor?



American Academy of Family Physicians

Convenience or Continuity: When Are Patients Willing to Wait to See Their Own Doctor? 

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Convenience or Continuity: When Are Patients Willing to Wait to See Their Own Doctor?

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Credit: Annals of Family Medicine




Original Research

Background and Goal: This study focuses on how primary care patients balance the trade-off between continuity of care and access to timely appointments. It examines whether patients prefer to wait longer to see their own primary care physician (PCP) or prefer to see another clinician for faster care.

Study Approach: Researchers analyzed data from a cross-sectional online survey of adult primary care patients in Michigan. Patients were presented with scenarios in the survey for different visit types—annual checkups, chronic and mental health follow-ups, new symptoms, and urgent concerns—and asked to choose among three options: see only their PCP, prefer their PCP but willing to see another clinician, or see the first available clinician. 

Results: 2,319 questionnaires were included in the analysis. 

  • Over one-half of patients preferred their PCP for annual checkups, chronic condition follow-up, and mental health follow-ups. Patients were willing to wait 3-4 weeks to see their PCP for sensitive exams (68.2%), new mental health concerns (58.9%), and new concerns about chronic conditions (61.1%).

  • Only 7.2% of patients were willing to wait for their PCP for urgent concerns while most preferred the soonest available clinician​.

Why It Matters: As urgent care rises and health systems prioritize rapid access over continuity, this study suggests these shifts may not align with patient preferences, which emphasize trust and continuity over convenience.  

Convenience or Continuity: When Are Patients Willing to Wait to See Their Own Doctor? 

Gregory Shumer, MD, MHSA, et al

University of Michigan, Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, Michigan 

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