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This hour, we discuss food insecurity in Connecticut, and some of the solutions, with local advocates and experts. Plus, an in-school pantry just opened at Hartford High School. Principal Flora Padro describes the "new normal" she envisions.
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This hour, we hear about efforts where we live to address loneliness and isolation after the "epidemic" was highlighted by U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy in a recent advisory.
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This hour: COVID is … still a thing. There are new vaccines, new variants, and new data on Paxlovid rebound. Plus: A new study on … picking your nose.
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This hour: bedtime stories. What can we learn from people who write and tell them? How can we all be more intentional and magical about the last things we think about before sleeping?
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Prospect Medical Holdings bought three Connecticut hospitals in 2016. Since then, critics of the move say the group, funded by private equity, cut patient services and drew down hospital finances.
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The Israel-Hamas war has left many traumatized from witnessing the atrocities of this war up close. This hour on Where We Live, we talk about the long-term mental health impacts for those directly and indirectly affected by this war.
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Torrential rains caused widespread problems across the region this summer, ruining crops, washing out roads and flooding homes. But there’s another, often unnoticed, consequence of all that rainwater pouring onto the ground — private wells are getting contaminated.
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This hour, all about walking. Why does urban design often make it so hard to do? And what can we learn about ourselves when we look at the way we walk?
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New findings from the Wesleyan Media Project highlight concerns over how brokers and third parties advertise federal Medicare products.
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As many as three million people get concussions every year, but about half go undiagnosed. Today, on Where We Live, we talk about these so-called mild brain injuries: the misconceptions, the reality, and what’s new in Traumatic Brain Injury research.