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  • Millions of Americans suffer from long COVID, which can have debilitating physical effects, including fatigue and difficulty breathing. Yet many patients feel abandoned, as federal aid winds down.
  • Although many Alaskan students are familiar with salmon fishing, raising them gives them a new perspective on writing, science, math and art.
  • A decades-old county ordinance preventing businesses from having coin-operated amusement devices, including arcade games, in the same area where alcohol is served will be repealed next month, two supervisors announced Wednesday.
  • Sales of super-efficient electric heat pumps are rising in the U.S. But what are heat pumps? And why do some call them a key climate solution?
  • What if you had a magical way to see imbalances in your body years before they developed into a real issue or life-threatening problem? What if you were able to always keep tabs on your health, and when an early imbalance was detected, you could easily reverse it with simple diet and lifestyle techniques, therefore preventing the development of anything serious? You are in luck! That magical device exists, it is called “Medical Thermography.” In this event you will learn about thermal imaging, what it is able to “see”, and the many ways it can help you on your health journey in conjunction with the routine tests prescribed to you by your providers. Christine Horner, MD is a board certified and nationally recognized surgeon, an author of two award-winning books, and an expert in natural medicine. She spearheaded legislation in the 1990s that made it mandatory that insurance companies pay for breast reconstruction following mastectomy. After being introduced to thermography in 2004, Dr. Horner developed a passion for technology. She became an interpreter of thermal imaging in 2017, and has recently brought her own mobile thermal imaging business to Revivorship. Please contact Revivorship at (858) 956-0077 with any questions.
  • Ahead of the Senate Judiciary Committee's hearing on Supreme Court ethics reform, Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono tells NPR that the highest court in the U.S. should have the highest ethical standards.
  • NPR's Steve Inskeep asks the president of a China-led development bank about the impact of the friction between the U.S. and China.
  • Schroeder took on the powerful elite with her rapier wit and antics for 24 years, shaking up stodgy government institutions by forcing them to acknowledge that women had a role in government.
  • California Gov. Gavin Newsom wants the state to purchase massive amounts of renewable energy.
  • An investigation is continuing into the crash of a small airplane that took off from John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana and slammed into a neighborhood near El Cajon, killing two nurses and two pilots aboard. Meanwhile, gyms in San Diego are seeing more business than ever before as the pandemic has spurred a fitness craze. Plus, the pandemic has been hard on kids, and parents as well. KPBS looks at the mental health of parents juggling work and kids and everything else.
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