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Man eats dubious street foodβ€”ends up blowing apart his GI tract

27 June 2025 at 17:23

Food poisoning is never funβ€”and a lot of the time, it can seem quite forceful. Take the common gut-buster norovirus for example. It can ignite forces that might make jet propulsion researchers jealous. Victims may fear liftoff from a porcelain launch pad, or a vomitous blast with a reverse thrust that seems powerful enough to drop a military jet from the sky.

But then there are the rare illnesses that produce truly violent forces. Such was the case for one unfortunate man in China who made the near-fatal decision to eat some dubious street food.

It's unclear what the 59-year-old ate exactlyβ€”but it's a safe bet he'll never eat it again. Soon after, his innards vigorously ignited. According to a case report in this week's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, the man, in fact, vomited with so much explosive force that he blew apart his esophagusβ€”the muscular tube through which food passes from the throat to the stomach.

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Wealthy Americans have death rates on par with poor Europeans

3 April 2025 at 22:18

It's well-established that, on the whole, Americans die younger than people in most other high-income countries. For instance, an analysis from 2022 found that the average life expectancy of someone born in Switzerland or Spain in 2019 was 84 years. Meanwhile, the average US life expectancy was 78.8, lower than nearly all other high-income countries, including Canada's, which was 82.3 years. And this was before the pandemic, which only made things worse for the US.

Perhaps some Americans may think that this lower overall life-expectancy doesn't really apply to them if they're middle- or upper-class. After all, wealth inequality and health disparities are huge problems in the US. Those with more money simply have better access to health care and better health outcomes. Well-off Americans live longer, with lifespans on par with their peers in high-income countries, some may think.

It is true that money buys you a longer life in the US. In fact, the link between wealth and mortality may be stronger in the US than in any other high-income country. But, if you think American wealth will put life expectancy in league with Switzerland, you're dead wrong, according to a study in the latest issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

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Β© Getty | Pascal Mora

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