Should privacy rights trump scientific integrity? Canada protects its research fraudsters' identities. (Toronto Star)
If you've had Zika, the CDC wants your semen. (CNN)
Mainlining vitamins is a thing. And it's not good. (The Atlantic)
A Bastille Day present for France's gay men: permission to donate blood, albeit only if they have abstained from sex for a year, as in the U.S. (Newsweek)
Unintended Consequences Dept.: Making prescription opioids harder to get has driven the rise in overdoses, according to one interpretation of new DEA data. (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)
Meanwhile, can treating opioid addiction as a health problem instead of crime help solve the problem? (NPR)
A biosimilar for etanercept (Enbrel), the rheumatology drug, won the backing of an FDA advisory committee. (Reuters)
Is it time for a "fat tax"? Here's how an Indian state did it. (BBC)
Guns, pollution, Mormonism: Suspects in Utah's youth suicide spike. (Pacific Standard)
Behold the power of placebo -- weight loss, better eyesight, lower blood sugar. (Discover)
What percentage of physician assistants work in primary care? (Becker's Hospital Review)
How physicians used Google Cardboard to save a baby's life. (CNN)
Endangered species: Geriatrician. (Kaiser Health News)
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