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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Jul 15 2026 UPDATED 9:11 AM

Full Issue

Blood Test Can Alert Older Adults To Possibility Of Developing Alzheimer's In 5-10 Years

A study of the so-called p-tau217 test showed that symptom-free older adults with very high levels of p-tau217 had a 38% risk of developing cognitive impairment over five years and 78% over 10 years, AP reported. Also in the news: new ways to tackle obesity; injuries in sports; and more.

A blood test may predict if apparently healthy older adults are likely to develop Alzheimer鈥檚 symptoms in the next five or 10 years, researchers reported Wednesday. That information could be reassuring or terrifying, but for now it鈥檚 a potential tool to speed drug development by helping to identify and enroll high-risk people into studies of possible Alzheimer鈥檚 treatments or preventive strategies. Already large clinical trials are testing if certain drugs could prevent or at least delay the disease 鈥 and if any of those pan out, doctors will need an easy way to tell who should try them. (Neergaard, 7/15)

Chesley B. Sullenberger III, the pilot known as Sully who guided a passenger jet to a water landing in 2009 in what became known as the 鈥淢iracle on the Hudson鈥 after he saved 155 lives, has been diagnosed with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, he said in a statement on Tuesday. The diagnosis is 鈥渆arly stage,鈥 he said, adding: 鈥淚 am in the beginning of this long journey.鈥 (Cerro, 7/14)

More health and wellness news 鈥

A new startup is making a bold move in the world of obesity drug development: It鈥檚 not working with the GLP-1 target that has taken the world by storm. (DeAngelis, 7/15)

Alcohol kills more than 178,000 Americans each year. It doesn鈥檛 have to.聽Drinking鈥檚 deadly toll in the U.S. is the result of decades of policy decisions, industry influence, and cultural inertia, as STAT shows in its investigative series, The Deadliest Drug. The U.S. has not made a concerted effort to reduce heavy drinking since Prohibition ended nearly a century ago.聽(Cueto and Facher, 7/14)

Pitching injuries have soared over the last decade in parallel with a rise in average velocity, which seems intuitive: The harder you throw, the more likely you are to get hurt. The same seems true for swinging: According to The Athletic, the league鈥檚 hardest swingers have missed more than twice as many days because of injury since 2023 as players who swing 10 miles per hour slower. Within baseball, the rise in injuries is often described in bleak terms like 鈥渆pidemic鈥 and 鈥渃risis,鈥 but the same conversation is happening across sports. (Gordon, 7/13)

Also 鈥

The space between stars just got a little sweeter. Astronomers have detected a type of sugar in space that鈥檚 also found in raspberries and self-tanners. The sugar, called erythrulose, lurks in what鈥檚 called the interstellar medium: thin clouds of gas and dust littered between stars. Sugar does more than sweeten tea and powder doughnuts. Different varieties fuel our cells and even make up DNA. Scientists are itching to know how sugars form because they鈥檙e a key ingredient for life as we know it. (Ramakrishnan, 7/13)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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