Shumita Basu
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That's in part because for a long time, the FDA actively discouraged researchers from including women who could become pregnant in clinical trials, which means we have less reliable data when it comes to how a lot of medications might impact women or for women-specific conditions. Luthra told us the story of one researcher at Columbia University.
That's in part because for a long time, the FDA actively discouraged researchers from including women who could become pregnant in clinical trials, which means we have less reliable data when it comes to how a lot of medications might impact women or for women-specific conditions. Luthra told us the story of one researcher at Columbia University.
This researcher says she recently got a call from her advisor that her federal funding had suddenly been cut.
This researcher says she recently got a call from her advisor that her federal funding had suddenly been cut.
This researcher says she recently got a call from her advisor that her federal funding had suddenly been cut.
Luther told us that the opposition to funding research on women is rooted in the culture wars we're seeing play out, but also in a misunderstanding of the research.
Luther told us that the opposition to funding research on women is rooted in the culture wars we're seeing play out, but also in a misunderstanding of the research.
Luther told us that the opposition to funding research on women is rooted in the culture wars we're seeing play out, but also in a misunderstanding of the research.
The NIH did not respond to the 19th's request for comment. In 1975, a mother in South Korea named Choi Young-ja reported her son had gone missing. She told PBS's Frontline her son had been outside playing with neighborhood kids when he disappeared. She went to the police. She checked orphanages and adoption agencies.
The NIH did not respond to the 19th's request for comment. In 1975, a mother in South Korea named Choi Young-ja reported her son had gone missing. She told PBS's Frontline her son had been outside playing with neighborhood kids when he disappeared. She went to the police. She checked orphanages and adoption agencies.
The NIH did not respond to the 19th's request for comment. In 1975, a mother in South Korea named Choi Young-ja reported her son had gone missing. She told PBS's Frontline her son had been outside playing with neighborhood kids when he disappeared. She went to the police. She checked orphanages and adoption agencies.
Years later, she got a phone call that would change everything she thought she knew about her son's disappearance. I got a call.
Years later, she got a phone call that would change everything she thought she knew about her son's disappearance. I got a call.
Years later, she got a phone call that would change everything she thought she knew about her son's disappearance. I got a call.
She had submitted her son's DNA to an agency that works to reunite adoptees and birth parents. And she says there to Frontline that she got a call from someone saying they found her son. Her son, named at birth Sangyeol, was now named Frank. She was overwhelmed. She hung up and burst into tears. A few weeks later, she videoconferenced with her now-adult son for the first time.
She had submitted her son's DNA to an agency that works to reunite adoptees and birth parents. And she says there to Frontline that she got a call from someone saying they found her son. Her son, named at birth Sangyeol, was now named Frank. She was overwhelmed. She hung up and burst into tears. A few weeks later, she videoconferenced with her now-adult son for the first time.
She had submitted her son's DNA to an agency that works to reunite adoptees and birth parents. And she says there to Frontline that she got a call from someone saying they found her son. Her son, named at birth Sangyeol, was now named Frank. She was overwhelmed. She hung up and burst into tears. A few weeks later, she videoconferenced with her now-adult son for the first time.
She says there she was shocked. The boy she last remembered at the age of four had become an adult with gray hair. Her story is just one of many that's come to light in recent years about fraudulent Korean adoptions. Kids and infants who were stolen without the consent of their biological parents.
She says there she was shocked. The boy she last remembered at the age of four had become an adult with gray hair. Her story is just one of many that's come to light in recent years about fraudulent Korean adoptions. Kids and infants who were stolen without the consent of their biological parents.
She says there she was shocked. The boy she last remembered at the age of four had become an adult with gray hair. Her story is just one of many that's come to light in recent years about fraudulent Korean adoptions. Kids and infants who were stolen without the consent of their biological parents.