Tag Archives: putting

Prince William and Prince Harry’s Feud Is Putting Pressure on Palace Ahead of Coronation: It’s ‘Now or Never’ – Yahoo Entertainment

  1. Prince William and Prince Harry’s Feud Is Putting Pressure on Palace Ahead of Coronation: It’s ‘Now or Never’ Yahoo Entertainment
  2. DAN WOOTTON: Prince William is justifiably angrier than he’s ever been with Harry Daily Mail
  3. Prince William, Harry destroying relationship to make their wives happy? Geo News
  4. Prince Harry, William ruining relationship for their wives? The News International
  5. Prince William Is the “Most Upset” with Prince Harry and “Needs Time to Calm Down” Before King Charles’ Coronation Yahoo! Voices
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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NASA succeeds in putting Orion space capsule into lunar orbit, eclipsing Apollo 13’s distance

HOUSTON (CBS SF) — NASA engineers can exhale now. 

Mission controllers with the Artemis program just wrapped up a critical maneuver to put the Orion space capsule into a record-breaking lunar orbit. It will now eclipse Apollo 13 to become the most distant human-capable craft ever launched from Earth.

“The goal here is to test techniques and procedures – and the spacecraft – that NASA wants to use to resume human exploration of the moon,” says CBS News Space Consultant Bill Harwood. “They want to operate it in deep space, so they can really put it through the wringer.”

Except, in this case, there are no humans aboard. That will come later.

“The main key here is to have a successful mission so that we can start looking forward to being able to fly astronauts out to the moon,” says NASA’s Jacob Bleacher.

As for when that might happen? NASA is optimistic it will be sooner than you might think.

“Late 2025 is what we’re aiming for Artemis-3 to land our astronauts on the moon,” says Bleacher, who added that he sees that target date as, “likely.”

ARTEMIS LINKS:

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Twitter lawyer warns that Elon Musk is putting company at risk of billions in FTC fines

Twitter is a remote-first workplace, and has operated as such for years. It is a fundamental change to our employment contracts to require a 40hr a week in-office requirement. I do not, personally, believe that Twitter employees have an obligation to return to office. Certainly not on no notice (it at all).

I also remind all Tweeps (at least in the US) that we have an unlimited PTO policy. All Tweeps are able to take PTO. Perhaps today is a good day to take some rest and recharge.

Everyone here should also know that our CISO, Chief Privacy Officer and Chief Compliance Officer ALL resigned last night. This news will be buried in the return-to-office drama. I believe that is intentional.

Over the last two weeks. Elon has shown that he cares only about recouping the losses he’s incurring as a result of failing to get out of his binding obligation to buy Twitter. He chose to enter into that agreement! All of us are being put through this as a result of the choices he made.

Elon has shown that his only priority with Twitter users is how to monetize them. I do not believe he cares about the human rights activists. the dissidents, our users in un-monetizable regions, and all the other users who have made Twitter the global town square you have all spent so long building, and we all love.

I have heard Alex Spiro (current head of Legal) say that Elon is willing to take on a huge amount of risk in relation to this company and its users, because “Elon puts rockets into space, he’s not afraid of the FTC.” I have heard another leader in the Legal department say that because of the tight SLA’s (of two weeks?!) between product inception > launch, Legal will “have to shift the burden to engineers” to self-certify compliance with FTC requirements and other laws. This will put huge amount of personal, professional and legal risk onto engineers: I anticipate that all of you will de pressured by management into pushing out changes that will likely lead to major incidents.

All of this is extremely dangerous for our users. Also, given that the FTC can (and will!) fine Twitter BILLIONS of dollars pursuant to the FTC Consent Order, extremely detrimental to Twitter’s longevity as a platform. Our users deserve so much better than this.

If you feel uncomfortable about anything you’re being asked to do, you can call Twitter’s Ethics Hotline at (800) 275-4843 or submit a report at ethicshelpline.twitter.com. Please also note the FTC’s number is: 1-877-FTC-HELP. You may also remember that Mudge reached out to httos://whistlebloweraid.org

I wish you all luck. It’s been such an honor to work with all of you. And I’ll be taking a day of PTO today. 🫡💙



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The Worst Ingredients No One Should Be Putting In Their Oatmeal Anymore, According To Health Experts

woman eating bowl of oatmeal with various toppings

When you add the right toppings to the mix, oatmeal makes for a breakfast that’s equally delicious and healthy. One of the best things about a bowl of oats is that it serves as a blank canvas—it’s probably one of the most versatile meals out there, since you can add just about anything your heart desires. However, while this leaves plenty of room for healthy toppings that can aid you on your weight loss journey, it also leaves room for tons of unhealthy ones that could please your taste buds but take a serious toll on your body. For this reason, it’s important to be aware of the risks at hand when it comes to certain ingredients. In fact, health experts agree that there are a few you should leave out of the bowl altogether if you care about your health.

To learn more, we spoke to experts Rachel MacPherson, certified personal trainer and certified nutrition coach at Garage Gym Reviews and dietitian Trista Best of Balance One Supplements. They told us that refined sugar and other sugary ingredients like chocolate and dried fruits are among the worst options out there.

1. Refined sugar

It shouldn’t be surprising to learn that the absolute worst thing you can add to your oatmeal or overnight oats is plain old white sugar. While this ingredient may undeniably make your breakfast taste a little better, the health risks at hand just aren’t worth it, especially if you’re trying to lose weight.  “The worst ingredient to add to overnight oats if your goal is to lose weight is sugar,” Macpherson confirms, explaining that this sweet ingredient “contributes no nutrients.” And if you’re trying to slim down or just maintain a healthy diet, providing your body with ample nutrients is essential. As she puts it, “nutrient density is vital for sustainable weight loss and healthy weight balance.”

But it isn’t just the lack of nutrients that makes sugar a terrible ingredient; eating an excess of it can also lead to issues like inflammation, poor gut health, weight gain, and disease over time. Additionally, on the shorter term side of things, eating sugar (unsurprisingly) spikes your blood glucose levels and makes you crave more sweets later in the day. That means starting your morning with a sugary breakfast will likely lead to overeating down the line. For all of these reasons and more, it’s best to skip the sugar in your oatmeal.

2. High-sugar toppings like chocolate, syrup, and dried fruit

While it may seem obvious that you should avoid adding sugar by the spoonful to your bowl of oats, there are many sneaky high-sugar add-ins that you may not think twice about. As Best points out, “some of the worst ingredients that are mistakenly added to healthy overnight oat recipes include chocolate sauce, sugar, syrup, and dried fruit.”

Wait, dried fruit is bad? Unfortunately, yes. While it’s certainly not the worst thing you can add to the mix, it’s important to be aware that this ingredient has a lot more sugar than you nay realize. Best says it’s “one of those foods that is in the middle of being healthy and unhealthy, depending on the amount that is consumed.” Compared to its fresh counterparts,  “this type of fruit is highly concentrated in calories and sugar and it is easy to eat much more than a serving size.” All in all, it’s probably best to leave dried fruit out of your oats altogether and opt for fresh fruit like high-fiber berries instead.

Other healthy, filling, lower-sugar options you can add to your breakfast without putting your health at risk include seeds, nuts, and nut butters. All of these options will provide a good amount of nutrients and keep you fuller longer without packing on the sugar. All in all, when it comes to oatmeal, the possibilities for healthy ingredients are practically endless—just remember to be wary of how much sugar you’re adding.

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Please Stop Putting Launchers In PC Games Already On Steam

Image: Kerbal Space Program | Kotaku

The was once a golden age of PC gaming where you could open up Steam (or even just launch an executable yourself!), boot up a game and the next thing you would see would be the game itself. For many big (and small) releases those days are now long gone, replaced by an era of launchers that are, at best, a nuisance.

If you want to play a Rockstar game on PC you need to install the company’s own launcher, which boots before you play the game you clicked to play, then makes you click another play button so you can finally play it. And that’s how it works when it’s working; when it’s not you simply can’t play any Rockstar games that you own, sorry!

Want to play a Total War game? You get a launcher. Paradox game? A launcher. Blizzard game? Battle.net. Fortnite? Epic Games Store. An EA game? Origin. Ubisoft? Hey, guess what, you gotta launch Ubisoft Connect, a launcher. Even Kalypso has a launcher.

Note that there are some bright spots here; Bethesda killed its own launcher off earlier this year and just let Steam handle everything, and some launchers have practical benefits like letting you manage your mods (Paradox) or jump straight into a save game (Creative Assembly).

While publishers have clear reasons to dump these things on us (from DRM to $$$), these launchers are wildly unpopular among players, in part because of the connectivity hassles (see Rockstar’s example above), but mostly because they’re just a pain in the ass, a speed bump on your way to the place you actually want to go.

Things have hit a new level of absurdity this week, though, with news that Kerbal Space Program—yes, the one with the little aliens building rockets—now has its own launcher for the Steam version of the game, announced as “a resource for news and updates about KSP & KSP 2 Early Access”.

Given the profile of the game, the fact it’s already launching through Steam and its reputation as a weird little indie sandbox, fan reaction has been understandably negative; folks are venting on Steam, while on the game’s Reddit workarounds have already been found to disable the launcher entirely.

Publishers, please, we’re begging you. This sucks. As the best comment in that Steam discussion says, “GAMES ON STEAM DO NOT NEED A LAUNCHER. STEAM IS THE LAUNCHER”.

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Omicron subvariants show resistance, putting some people at risk

Emerging omicron subvariants are resistant to key antibody treatments for HIV patients, kidney transplant recipients and other immunocompromised people, making them particularly vulnerable to Covid this winter, the White House warned this week.

“With some of the new subvariants that are emerging, some of the main tools we’ve had to protect the immunocompromised like Evusheld may not work moving forward. And that’s a huge challenge,” Dr. Ashish Jha, head of the White House Covid task force, told reporters on Tuesday.

President Joe Biden on Tuesday cautioned the estimated 7 million adults in the U.S. who have compromised immune systems that they are particularly at risk, but he could offer little in the way of reassurance other than telling them to consult their physician about what precautions to take.

“New variants may make some existing protections ineffective for the immunocompromised,” the president said before getting his booster Tuesday. “Sadly, this means you may be at a special risk this winter. I urge you to consult your doctors on the right steps to protect yourself, take extra precautions.”

The message clashes with repeated White House assurances that the U.S. has all the vaccines and treatments it needs to fight Covid this winter as public health officials are expecting another surge.

While this may be true for the general population, it is not the case for people with weak immune systems. They include those with cancer, those who have had organ transplants, people living with HIV and individuals who are taking medicine for autoimmune diseases.

Evusheld is an antibody cocktail authorized by the Food and Drug Administration to prevent Covid in people ages 12 and older who have moderately or severely compromised immune systems. The drug is administered as two injections, prior to infection, every six months.

Evusheld, made by AstraZeneca, has helped fill a gap in protection for those with weak immune systems who cannot mount a strong response to the vaccines. The drug, plus several rounds of vaccination, has led to significant declines in hospitalization among this cohort over the past several months, according Camille Kotton, an infectious disease expert who specializes in treating people with weak immune systems.

“We’ve been in a sweet spot for maybe several months now as far as immunocompromised patients having good protection and then good treatment options,” said Kotton, a physician at Massachusetts General Hospital and a member of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s independent vaccine advisory committee.

But more immune evasive omicron subvariants such as BA.4.6, BA.2.75.2, BF.7, BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 are resistant to Evusheld, according to the National Institutes of Health. Scientists at Columbia University, for example, found Evusheld had completely lost its effectiveness against BA.4.6.

And BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 are likely resistant to bebtelovimab, the monoclonal antibody developed by Eli Lily to prevent people with compromised immune systems who catch Covid from developing severe disease, according to NIH.

That leaves people with compromised immune systems increasingly vulnerable as these subvariants increase in circulation in the U.S. As omicron BA.5 declines, this swarm of newer subvariants collectively make up about 38% of infections in the U.S., according to CDC data.

Although Pfizer’s antiviral Paxlovid remains effective against the omicron subvariants, people who have had organ transplants often can’t take the pill because of the way it interacts with other drugs they need, Kotton said.

“I’m concerned that the near future will be a challenging time for immunocompromised patients,” said Kotton. “The monoclonal antibodies in Evusheld are going to provide less protection and bebtelovimab is going to provide ineffective treatment for several of the emerging variants.”

And help is not on the way at the moment. Kotton said she’s not aware of any monoclonal antibodies that are ready to replace the ones the subvariants are chipping away at. Jha acknowledged at the White House on Tuesday that the U.S. has dwindling treatment and prevention options for people with weak immune systems as Covid evolves. He blamed Congress for failing to pass $22.5 billion in funding for the nation’s Covid response due to Republican opposition.

“We had hoped that over time as the pandemic went along, as our fight against this virus went along, we would be expanding our medicine cabinet,” Jha told reporters. “Because of lack of congressional funding that medicine cabinet has actually shrunk and that does put vulnerable people at risk.”

Andrew Pekosz, a virologist at Johns Hopkins University, said finding ways to protect people with compromised immune systems is the most critical issue of the pandemic right now and it needs to be addressed quickly.

“What we need to really work on is getting new antibody treatments out of the lab and into clinics,” Pekosz said. “In the lab, scientists know what next-generation monoclonal antibodies look like.”

Kotton said people with compromised immune systems should stay up to date on their vaccines, which means getting the new booster that targets omicron BA.5. Those who have stayed up to date throughout the pandemic have received six shots by now.

Those starting from scratch would receive a three-dose primary series of Moderna or Pfizer with the older generation shots and then a new booster that targets omicron, according to CDC guidelines.

People with compromised immune systems should continue to exercise caution this winter, because the immune-resistant omicron subvariants could pick up in circulation as people gather for the holidays, Kotton said. But she noted that the group has been more diligent in wearing masks and practicing mitigation measures to avoid the virus than the rest of the population.

The bigger problem is that the general population has largely moved on and is no longer taking basic precautions that could reduce transmissions and protect the vulnerable — such as wearing masks, Kotton said.

“If we all were to mask more in public venues that would enhance the safety for them and allow them to have a higher likelihood of a safer return to many activities,” she said.

Jha was asked by NBC News on Tuesday whether Biden telling people with weak immune systems to consult their physicians about precautions is an indication that the burden of responsibility has shifted to the individuals instead of the broader community.

“As a society — as a caring society, we care about all Americans, particularly the most vulnerable Americans,” Jha said.  “So it remains, I think, a collective responsibility for all of us to care about our fellow Americans who are immunocompromised.”

The CDC recommends that people in communities where the Covid risk level is moderate to self test and wear a high-quality mask before meeting indoors with someone who is at high risk of getting sick. Those who are at high risk should wear a high-quality mask when indoors in public.

When the Covid level is high, people in general should consider wearing high-quality masks and the vulnerable should consider avoiding indoor activities in public that aren’t essential, according to CDC. You can check your county’s Covid level at the CDC’s website.

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Andrade El Idolo Putting AEW Career On The Line In Upcoming Match

A career vs. mask match has been added to the October 7 edition of “AEW Rampage.”

In a backstage segment on this past Friday’s episode, “Hangman” Adam Page, Evil Uno, and Preston “10” Vance stood with Lexy Nair to discuss Page’s upcoming AEW World Championship match with current title holder Jon Moxley. Andrade El Idolo and Jose The Assistant sauntered in, then proceeded to show Vance a clip from the Golden Ticket Battle Royal of Page eliminating him from the bout.

Vance and El Idolo then faced off with one another, with El Idolo challenging Vance to a match in which if he lost, then he would be forced to unmask. Vance upped the ante, stating that when he won, he would drive El Idolo out of AEW. Tony Khan later made the match official. The rest of the card has yet to be announced.

El Idolo made his debut in AEW on the June 4, 2021 edition of “Dynamite” and made his in-ring debut at that year’s Road Rager. He feuded with the likes of Cody Rhodes and Pac before joining forces with Matt Hardy to form the Andrade-Hardy Family Office with Jose The Assistant, Private Party, The Butcher, The Blade, The Bunny, and Jora Johl. The group later kicked out Hardy and rebranded itself as La Faccion Ingobernable, adding Rush into the mix.

Vance began his tenure with the company on the March 31, 2020 edition of “Dark” in a losing effort against Darby Allin. He joined Dark Order shortly after and was dubbed “10.” He’s been a staple of the group since.

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Presidents Cup 2022: Internationals battle back to win Day 3, putting Team USA on upset alert

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At one point in the President Cup’s Saturday morning session, Team USA led all four matches – but the Internationals fought back to earn a split in the morning after getting routed the first two days.

In the afternoon session, the Internationals made it a ballgame.

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Tom Kim of South Korea and the International Team celebrates his hole-winning putt to win the match 1 Up with teammate Si Woo Kim of South Korea on Sept. 24, 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
(Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

The Internationals battled back and gained three points to the US’ one in the afternoon, giving themselves at least a shot to win their first Presidents Cup since 1998. Team USA now leads 11-7.

Tom Kim is just 20 years old, but he certainly shines in, and loves, the spotlight. The Presidents Cup rookie knocked down big putts all day long, but none bigger than his 10-foot birdie putt on 18 to give him and Si Woo Kim a 1 up win over Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, who went 2-0 in their first two days in dominating fashion. 

Kim told the media he wanted that putt to go in “more than anything in the world.”

It was the first match to begin in the afternoon, but the final one to end. Sam Burns and Billy Horschel didn’t trail through 15 holes against Adam Scott and Cam Davis. But with a 1 up lead entering 16, they lost back-to-back holes. 

All four golfers drilled iron shots on 18 within 10 feet of the hole – Burns was inside 3 feet, but Davis’ birdie won them the match, putting the Internationals within four points of the US to end the day.

Scott went 2-0-0 on the day after losing his first two matches of the tournament – a much-needed comeback from one of the veterans on the squad.

Justin Thomas and Jordan Spieth continued their dominance, winning both of their Saturday matches, 4 & 3. Thomas is 10-0-2 in team match play at the Presidents Cup and 14-2-3 in team match play including Ryder Cup matches. Spieth is 20-6-3 in team match play and 12-2-1 in the Presidents Cup. He and Spieth improved to 8-2 as partners, and 4-0-0 this tournament.

The International Team cheers as Tom Kim of South Korea and the International Team celebrates his hole-winning putt to win the match 1 Up with teammate Si Woo Kim of South Korea against Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele on Sept. 24, 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
(Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

PRESIDENTS CUP 2022: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE TOURNAMENT

Team USA needs 4.5 points to retain the cup it has won eight straight times – the two teams tied in 2003. The Internationals need 8.5 to win it. 

Tom Kim of South Korea and Si Woo Kim of South Korea and the International Team celebrate Tom Kim’s hole-winning putt on Sept. 24, 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
(Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

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But with 12 Sunday singles, anything is possible, and the momentum, despite a healthy mountain to climb, is on the road team’s side – so much so to the point that International captain Trevor Immelman said he was almost in tears.

Shades of 2012 at Medinah, anyone?

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The Debate Over How Antidepressants Work Is Putting Millions of People in Danger

Nearly 10 percent of all Americans will experience symptoms of depression every year. One of the common forms of treatment includes a combination of therapy and antidepressants. According to the CDC, around 13 percent of Americans over the age of 18 were taking antidepressants between 2015 and 2018. The most commonly prescribed form of these are called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), developed to alter serotonin flux in the brain.

I’m one of the millions that takes an SSRI—one called sertraline, to manage symptoms of anxiety, depression and obsessive compulsive disorder. Before I talked with a psychiatrist about getting on this medication, I dealt with feelings of impending doom and dread that appeared on a whim, as well as dozens of intrusive thoughts and emotions every minute. Basically, it’s like having your very own heckler yell at you all day long. Taking the medication has been immensely helpful for me, as it has for many others.

And that makes it all the more strange to recognize that, as with many other complex diseases, researchers still aren’t sure exactly what causes depression, and whether serotonin is one of the main culprits. In the 1960s, scientists serendipitously discovered that certain drugs being used as sedatives helped alleviate depression. Since these drugs acted on the serotonin system, it led to “a very simplistic idea that low levels of serotonin lead to depression,” Gerard Sanacora, a psychiatrist at Yale University and the director of the Yale Depression Research Program, told The Daily Beast.

Most scientists now adhere to the idea that there are many genetic, social and biological contributors to depression; and yet the idea of a chemical or serotonin imbalance is stuck in the popular zeitgeist. It has lingered on in large part thanks to its prominent placement in advertisements for drugs like Prozac in the late-1980s—even when psychiatric research was already shifting its perspective.

That brings us to the current debate around SSRIs. Most neuroscientists, psychiatrists, and clinicians who study and treat depression agree: Antidepressant drugs like SSRIs work as well as cognitive therapy. With the right treatment, remission rates for depression can range between 5 and 50 percent. There is no question people like myself are finding real relief thanks to these drugs.

But if depression is not quite as tied to serotonin levels as we once thought, then it raises the issue that we don’t really know how SSRIs work and why they may help some depressed people. There are several promising theories suggesting they play a role in mediating gut bacteria, to helping the brain grow new cells and require itself, to creating larger and more complex physiological changes beyond simply raising serotonin levels. But none of these theories have been proven out yet.

The ensuing discussion has boiled over into a full-on debate, pitting mainstream psychiatry against a minority of researchers who don’t think antidepressants actually work.

Every few years, a new spate of studies pops out from the shadows, supposedly “debunking” the notion of the serotonin hypothesis. These studies suggest that depression is either a result of social factors or caused by traumatic experiences, and that antidepressants either don’t work, numb emotions, or actively cause harm. Instead of medication, they believe that depression is better treated solely through therapy.

The ensuing discussion has boiled over into a full-on debate, pitting mainstream psychiatry against a minority of researchers who don’t think antidepressants actually work.

The spats between competing academics and researchers are just as intense and vicious as any other fight that takes place on the internet—featuring Twitter feuds, op-eds for think-tanks, and news outlets themselves. The shady history of the pharmaceutical industry further feeds skepticism around the efficacy of antidepressants. When antidepressant clinical trials didn’t bear out the results that were hoped for, drug companies essentially buried the evidence and biased the record in favor of antidepressants—which has only exacerbated mistrust over these drugs and their makers.

Adding fuel to the fire, one recent review study published in the journal Molecular Psychiatry reevaluated decades of past data on serotonin levels in depression, finding no evidence of the link between the two and offering this up as evidence that SSRIs don’t work or only work by blunting emotions. This conclusion drew criticism from many psychiatrists and clinicians—the study didn’t even analyze whether antidepressants work—but with support from the study’s authors, right-wing media pushed this message out anyway.

“If there are benefits, I would say that they are due to this emotion numbing effect, and otherwise, what the evidence shows is these very small differences between the drugs and placebo,” Joanna Moncrieff, a psychiatrist at University College London who led the study, told The Daily Beast. “Antidepressants are drugs that change the normal state of your brain, generally, it’s not a good idea to do [that] on a long term basis.”

Moncrieff herself is an influential figure in what’s being called “critical psychiatry,” The Critical Psychiatry Network, which Moncrieff co-chairs, describes the movement on its website: “It mounts a scientific challenge to claims about the nature and causes of mental disorder and the effects of psychiatric interventions.” The researchers associated with this movement advocate against using drugs for mental health conditions, and have even promoted COVID-19 conspiracies.

If depression is caused by the interaction of stressful events and biology, as some within the Critical Psychiatry Network argue, Sanacora doesn’t follow why this means that antidepressants don’t work. “I just don’t follow the logic,” he said.

Four other experts who spoke to The Daily Beast specifically pushed back on Moncrieff’s findings, most notably emphasizing that hers and her team’s paper crudely conflates two hypotheses under the serotonin theory. There’s the chemical imbalance hypothesis that’s pretty well known, which suggests a deficit in the serotonin neurotransmitter in the body leads to depression. But according to Roger McIntyre, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at the University of Toronto, “the notion of chemical imbalance in your brain has never been put forward as a coherent, comprehensive, evidence based proposal.”

Instead, the more prevailing serotonin hypothesis that psychiatry takes seriously and which McIntrye and others argue is supported by evidence, is that a dysregulation of the body’s whole serotonin system is what contributes to clinical depression. This includes problems in the amount of receptors available to bind serotonin, issues with how the cells fire, and numerous other disruptions on the biomolecular level. They argue that Moncrieff gets it wrong when it comes to making the grand claim that there isn’t any evidence of serotonin’s involvement in depression.

The notion of chemical imbalance in your brain has never been put forward as a coherent, comprehensive, evidence based proposal.

Roger McIntyre, University of Toronto

Moreover, not knowing a drug’s mechanism isn’t a good enough reason to prevent its usage if it’s demonstrably helping people. “We’re very confident that SSRIs work for depression,” Tyler Randall Black, a child and adolescent psychiatrist at the University of British Columbia, told The Daily Beast. “There’s reams and reams of evidence showing us that they work, but not why they work.” McIntrye pointed to the fact that we don’t even completely know how Tylenol works either—despite the fact that it’s one of the most widely used pain-relievers around the world. Tylenol also impacts the brain in unexpected ways—although it numbs social or psychological pain, it isn’t grounds for removing it from the market.

Vilifying these drugs can have unintended consequences because therapy is often unavailable, making SSRIs the only accessible option. “The demand for mental health care far outstrips the available access,” Sanacora said, adding that many Americans need to wait months to see a good cognitive behavioral therapist. Additionally, abruptly deciding to stop taking SSRIs can be dangerous: One in five patients who do this will experience flu-like symptoms, insomnia, imbalance, and other symptoms that can last for a year.

While the psychiatrists who spoke with The Daily Beast emphasized that the serotonin hypothesis was a way of simply explaining a complex disorder like depression, they did highlight it has fostered downsides over time. The story of a “‘chemical imbalance’ narrative has negatively influenced patient decision-making and patient self-understanding,” Awais Aftab, a psychiatrist at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, told the Daily Beast.

The demand for mental health care far outstrips the available access.

Gerard Sanacora, Yale University

Phil Cowen, a psychopharmacologist at the University of Oxford in the U.K, told The Daily Beast that socioeconomic status is a contributing factor to depression, leading those in the critical psychiatry space to believe it “gives power to doctors and industry” over patients. Ironically, it ignores the millions of “people with experience” who were helped through antidepressants.

Still, the million dollar question remains: How do SSRIs work? Aftab explained that a new leading hypothesis is that they encourage the creation of new neurons and new connections between neurons inside the brain. The hippocampus, a seahorse-shaped region of the brain important for memory and learning, shrinks and loses neurons when depression hits. SSRIs seem to stimulate the production of neuronal stem cells, which integrate into the hippocampus to restore its function and structure. Other studies suggest SSRIs help the brain rewire the connections that cause the clinical symptoms associated with depression.

He also added that SSRIs might work through different mechanisms in different individuals, so treatments may have to be more tailored to a case-by-case basis.

And more specific, individual treatments might require psychiatrists to be more honest with their patients about what we know and don’t know about these medications, versus trotting out an oversimplified (and downright inaccurate) explanation.

Black already tries to do so with his patients: “I say we know for sure it affects serotonin, but we don’t know how that changes your brain and we don’t know that you’re lacking serotonin to begin with.” He’s found that these open discussions over what we know so far about therapy and medications pay off in the long run, and many of his patients will still opt to take the antidepressant as part of their search to find what works best for them.



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Royal Caribbean is putting SpaceX’s Starlink on its cruise ships

Royal Caribbean, the cruise company that also operates Celebrity Cruises and Silversea Cruises, has announced that it’ll be outfitting its fleet of ships with SpaceX’s Starlink internet service (via TechCrunch). The company says the service will make the internet experience while at sea faster and more reliable.

Royal Caribbean seems to be moving full steam ahead with deploying Starlink — it trialed the service on one of its ships over the summer, and will be officially launching it on September 5th, starting with a ship called the Celebrity Beyond. The company expects to have the service fully deployed across its fleet by the first quarter of 2023.

Royal Caribbean’s announcement doesn’t include technical details, like how many Starlink dishes its ships would use, or how much bandwidth would be split between a few thousand passengers. However, the company does promise that people will be able to use streaming services and make video calls.

SpaceX’s boat-focused internet service, Starlink Maritime, is relatively new, having debuted earlier this summer. Currently, it only covers coastal waters in parts of North and South America (including the Caribbean), Europe, and around Australia and New Zealand, but SpaceX says it plans on covering most of the world’s oceans by Q1 2023.

The light blue costal areas are the only place the service currently covers.
Image: SpaceX

SpaceX has a lot going on with Starlink at the moment. Perhaps the most obvious is its partnership with T-Mobile to beam texts and calls to cell phones, using second-generation satellites that it plans on launching next year. The company is also working with Hawaiian Airlines and charter carrier JSX to provide in-flight Wi-Fi, something that Delta (and likely others) are also looking into. For those of us on land, the company recently launched a version of Starlink for RVs.

Meanwhile, the cruise industry has had a hard time recovering from the pandemic, according to a report from Reuters. Like many other businesses, cruise companies have had staffing issues, with some even having to cancel trips. There’s also the question of whether people will continue to spring for luxuries like cruises, as financial leaders like Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warn that efforts to fight inflation will “bring some pain to households and businesses.”

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