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Insulin Marketplace, Hair, Whale Size. December 13, 2019, Part 2

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.4 • 6.3K Ratings

🗓️ 13 December 2019

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Why Diabetes Patients Are Getting Insulin From Facebook Almost one in ten Americans are diagnosed with diabetes, according to the most recent statistics from the CDC. With those odds, you likely know someone with the disease. And you may also know that most diabetes patients need to be treated with insulin therapy—frequent injections of a hormone that helps regulate their blood sugar—or face serious complications, like blindness, nerve damage, or kidney failure.  Unfortunately, a good number of these patients can’t afford to purchase insulin through official channels, like pharmacies and hospitals, even with the help of health insurance. In such cases, diabetes patients are turning to what one recent study called “underground exchanges”—platforms like Craigslist, Ebay and Facebook—to get access to the drug they need.  Ira is joined by one of the authors of that study, Michelle Litchman, a nurse practitioner and researcher at the University of Utah College of Nursing in Salt Lake City, to talk about what patients are doing to combat the high cost of insulin in the U.S. Combing Over What Makes Hair So Strong Hair is one of the strongest materials—when stretched, hair is stronger than steel. A team of researchers collected and tested hair from eight different mammals including humans, javelinas, and capybaras to measure what gives hair its strength. The basic structure of hair is similar across species with an outer cuticle layer surrounding fibers, but each species’ hair structure accommodates different needs. Javelinas have stiffer fibers to allow them to raise their hair when it’s in danger. Their results, published in the journal Matter, found that thinner hair was stronger than thicker strands. Engineer Robert Ritchie, who was one of the authors of that study, talks about the structure that gives hair its strength and how bio-inspired design can create better materials. How Whales Got Whale-Sized We live in a time of giants. Whales are both the largest living animals, and, in the case of 110-foot-long blue whales, the largest animals that have ever been alive on the planet.  But whales haven’t always been gigantic. Until about 3 million years ago, the fossil record shows that the average whale length was only about 20 feet long. They were big, but not big. The rise—and growth—of the lineages that gave rise to humpbacks, fin whales, and other behemoths happened, in evolutionary time, overnight. So, why are whales big—and why are whales so big now? Now, researchers who parsed data from feeding events of a dozen different whale species think they have the mathematical confirmation. Writing in Science this week, they say baleen whales, who become more energy-efficient as they grow, benefit from bigness because it lets them migrate to food sources that appear and disappear at different points around the globe.  Study co-author Jeremy Goldbogen, a marine biologist for Stanford University’s Hopkins Marine Station, explains the delicate balance of energy and size for giant mammals, and why bigness is such a compelling biological question.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. A bit later in the hour how diabetes patients are

0:05.9

dealing with the high cost of insulin by looking for help online. We'll talk about it. And we want

0:12.0

to know that if you have diabetes and have had to borrow insulin from a friend or family member

0:17.6

or have turned to social media for cheaper access to the drug, we want to hear

0:23.2

from you.

0:24.0

Give us a call.

0:24.9

Our number, 844-724-8255-8-44-Sight-4-Sight-4-Sight-Talk or tweet us at SciFri.

0:32.4

Once again, if you've had to get your insulin from social media or friends or family,

0:38.8

we want to hear from you.

0:42.2

844-724-8255.

0:47.4

But first, what have I told you that one of the most advanced bioengineering factories is located on your head?

0:50.2

Yeah, your hair is one of the strongest materials out there. When it's stretched, hair is,

0:56.8

believe it or not, stronger than steel. A team of researchers wanted to know what makes this

1:01.6

furry fiber so strong. They collected hair samples from humans, bears, havelinas, and other

1:07.1

mammals to examine the structure of hair. And what they found might surprise you, as it certainly surprised me.

1:14.8

Their results were published in the journal Matter,

1:17.1

and my next guest is here to comb over the results.

1:21.2

See what I did with that, Robert?

1:22.9

It was terrible, brother.

1:26.0

Robert Richie is one of the authors of that study.

1:28.7

He's professor of a material sciences and engineering at the University of California,

1:32.8

UC Berkeley, and a faculty senior scientist, material science division.

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