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ICYMI Health features what we're reading this week.
This week, we examined pieces that explored unconventional ways of thinking. A new book by Brené Brown explores why dwelling on failure can actually yield positive results, and a father-daughter team makes a case for seeking solutions to problems rather than analyzing our feelings about them. We also took note of a highly practical survey about bicycle signage that could hold a key to improving relationships between rides and drivers. Read on and tell us in the comments: What did you read and love this week? 1. America's Most Admired Lawbreaker -- HuffPost Highline Part one of a 58,000-word expose on Johnson & Johnson, a blockbuster drug and the people it harmed.
2. Ignore Your Feelings -- The Atlantic Michael and Sarah Bennett's new self-help book, F*ck Feelings, argues that that we should all stop dwelling on our emotions.
3. This Doctor Is Trying To Save Black Lives, One Haircut At A Time -- The Huffington Post Dr. Joseph Ravenell, who works at NYU School of Medicine, is leveraging the trust black men have in their local barber in an effort to improve public health.
4. Your Opinion Of You -- Pacific Standard While the Myers-Briggs test flatters all 16 of its personality types, the controversial personality assessment that Scientologists use as a recruitment tool focuses on demoralizing the test-taker.
5. Is Obamacare Punishing Hospitals The Wrong Way -- The Huffington Post Medicare's effort to reduce hospital readmissions may be disproportionally punishing hospitals that serve at-risk patients.
6. A Simple Change to Road Signs Could Help Cyclists and Drivers Finally Get Along -- Science Of Us Signs that say "Bicyclists May Use Full Lane" send a different message than ones that read "Share the Road."
7. Female Pain: Living with an Illness That No One Believes In -- Broadly For women who suffer from fibromyalgia, one of the most frustrating aspects of the disease is that doctors question its legitimacy.
8. A Field Guide to Dwelling on Your Failures -- Science Of Us A new book by social scientist Brené Brown posits that we can learn from taking time to think about our failures before we move on.
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