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13 December 2020 Coronavirus Charts and News: College Towns Have Higher COVID Deaths Germany Orders National Lockdown Over Christmas

13 December 2020 Coronavirus Charts and News: College Towns Have Higher COVID Deaths Germany Orders National Lockdown Over Christmas
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Oregon leads the way in across-the-board decriminalization

Oregon leads the way in across-the-board decriminalization The state voted to remove criminal penalties for possession of any illicit drugs.  By Steve Chapman Chicago Tribune December 10, 2020 5:04pm Text size Copy shortlink: In the aftermath of the November election, public attention focused on the sudden termination of Donald Trump s presidency. Largely overlooked was a development that could begin to shut down another destructive phenomenon. The people of Oregon voted to remove criminal penalties for possession of any illicit drugs. Heroin? Meth? Cocaine? They will remain illegal in the state, but in the same sense that parking by a fire hydrant is illegal. Police may issue citations, but no

Trump s Muslim ban had adverse effects on women s birth outcomes, a new study shows

Dec. 9, 2020 When President Trump banned travel from seven Muslim-majority countries as one of his first executive orders in 2017, fears of family separation and disrupted refugee resettlement were widespread. But few people were sounding the alarm about its potential impact on birth outcomes. Now, research suggests that the stress associated with the travel ban increased preterm births for women from those seven countries. A study from the Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health found that women from the impacted countries living in the United States saw an almost 7 percent increase in their chances of delivering preterm from September 2017 to August 2018. White women born in the United States saw no change in their odds of having a preterm birth during the same period, which started eight months after the ban.

Study confirms inequalities in drinking water arsenic exposure across U S populations

Study confirms inequalities in drinking water arsenic exposure across U.S. populations A new national study of public water systems found that arsenic levels were not uniform across the U.S., even after implementation of the latest national regulatory standard. In the first study to assess differences in public drinking water arsenic exposures by geographic subgroups, researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health confirmed there are inequalities in drinking water arsenic exposure across certain sociodemographic subgroups and over time. Community water systems reliant on groundwater, serving smaller populations located in the Southwest, and Hispanic communities were more likely to continue exceeding the national maximum containment level, raising environmental justice concerns. The findings are published online in

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