REPORTS

China’s “1 Child” Policy Pushes Bride Inflation

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Wang and Wei practice walking down the aisle, just before their wedding ceremony at a Beijing restaurant. Photo: Sim Chi Yin for NPR

Wang and Wei practice walking down the aisle, just before their wedding ceremony at a Beijing restaurant. Photo: Sim Chi Yin for NPR

NPR’s Louisa Lim follows the story of a wedding, beginning with the groom’s traditional early morning visit to the bride’s house. He begs her to open the door and pushes money through the door. He’ll pay her and her family $11,000 for the right to marry, up from about $100 his father paid. The bride is not impressed. The One Child policy combined with preference for male children has brought about a big imbalance in numbers of marriage-age women compared to men. It’s pushing this bride price and, because an apartment is a typical part of the bride price, it’s a factor in the rapid rise of real estate prices. In fact, with young men borrowing and working long hours to build up their bride price, weddings may contribute two percent to China’s GDP.

It’s not necessarily great for the women. The trend puts more men in control of real estate.

Sequestration Could Make Your Next Airline Experience Even Less Fun

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Airport waiting rooms may see more intensive use as FAA furloughs go into effect beginning April 22. Photo: Corey Seeman/flickr

Airport waiting rooms may see more intensive use as FAA furloughs go into effect beginning April 22. Photo: Corey Seeman/flickr

Sunday was the first day of furloughs for air traffic controllers, reports the Marketplace Morning Report’s Peter O’Dowd. The mandatory cuts and tax increases that neither the President nor Congress seemed to want requires a furlough of 1 day every other week for 47,000 FAA employees. The FAA predicts the furloughs could cause delays up to two hours in O’Hare and three hours in Atlanta.

Control towers at less busy airports across the country, including Salinas Municipal Airport, are expected to close in June.

Police, FBI Hunt Suspect – Other Suspect Killed in Firefight

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the subject of the manhunt in Boston, in a photo released by the FBI. He's a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings. Photo: FBI

Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, the subject of the manhunt in Boston, in a photo released by the FBI. He’s a suspect in the Boston Marathon bombings. Photo: FBI

NPR reports two brothers from a Chechnyan family are the suspects in the Boston Marathon bombing. 26-year-old Tamarlan Tsarnaev was killed in a shootout with police, reports the New York Times. 19-year-old Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is the subject of a house-to-house search. Much of Boston is ordered to remain in their homes and not answer the door unless for police.

The brothers are suspected of killing an MIT police officer, holding up a convenience store and carjacking Thursday night.

Robin Young of public radio station WBUR says she knows Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. He was a classmate of her nephew at Cambridge Rindge and Latin secondary school. She described him as the light of a graduation party. She expressed shock that Tsrnaev was involved and said she there was nothing about him that would suggest violence.

Like Tums for a Reef – Can Antacid Reverse an Acidic Ocean’s Effect on Coral?

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Coral will begin dissolving once ocean acidity reaches a certain degree. In Australia, an experiment assessed the process with red-dyed antacid. Photo: Paul from www.Castaways.com.au

Coral will begin dissolving once ocean acidity reaches a certain degree. In Australia, an experiment assessed the process with red-dyed antacid. Photo: Paul from www.Castaways.com.au

NPR’s Richard Harris explores how ocean acidification – driven by increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere – is changing Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.

Stanford’s Ken Caldeira hypothesizes acidification is already at work. He measures the amount of calcium absorbed by a reef in a contained area while the antacid is in the water. He doesn’t hope to cure the destruction of reefs, saying the only way to do that would be to change energy systems.
The last time the ocean’s chemistry changed this fast was when the dinosaurs were wiped out and it took thousands of years for reefs to recover.

In another report Harris visits Heron Island, also on the Great Barrier Reef. There researchers have created an aquarium meant to resemble hypothetical conditions projected by climate models. In a tank with conditions from a worst-case projection of the middle of the 21st century, mats of slimy cyanobacteria thrive but corals die.

“The future is not a great place,” says scientist Sophie Dove.

Dove contributed to a recent article that found the acidification effect on coral was made worse by other human-source pollutants accumulating in the ocean.

“Like a Living Oil Spill” Spectacular Alien Power-Eats Reef Fish

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Lionfish populations spread along Atlantic coast. Courtesy of NOAA

Click on this animation to view the historic spread of Lionfish along the Atlantic coast. Courtesy of NOAA

NPR’s Elizabeth Shogren reports lionfish, a South Pacific and Indian Ocean species imported for aquarium hobbyists, may be devastating reef fish populations. Affected species include grouper and snapper.

Why are Lionfish such a perfect invasion?

  • Nothing eats them because they are covered with venomous spines.
  • They reproduce dozens of time per year.
  • They eat anything.

Shogren speaks with Lad Akins of the conservation group, Reef Environmental Education Foundation, who spends a lot of time leading volunteer expeditions to capture and kill lionfish.

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With 3 Dead, Bomb Investigation ‘Trends’ Toward Domestic Terrorism

A marathon runner, wrapped in a blanket to stay warm after the race, watched Monday as authorities investigated the bombings that shook the finish line area at the Boston Marathon. At least three people were killed and dozens were wounded. Photo: Nicolaus Czarnecki /Barcroft Media /Landov

A marathon runner, wrapped in a blanket to stay warm after the race, watched Monday as authorities investigated the bombings that shook the finish line area at the Boston Marathon. At least three people were killed and dozens were wounded. Photo: Nicolaus Czarnecki /Barcroft Media /Landov

In NPR’s ongoing reporting, Dina Temple-Raston reports more than 150 injuries from the bombing. Details like the timing, near the anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing and tax day, suggest a domestic source as do the type of bombs.

The death toll has risen to three. One of the deceased was an 8-year-old boy who had been watching the finish line with his family.

Investigators report there were only the two bombs that exploded. A third detonation Monday may have been a controlled detonation of a suspicious package.

The FBI is leading the investigation with the Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms. Authorities are particularly interested in photographs taken by members of the public near the site and time of the explosions.

Supreme Court Asks: Can Human Genes Be Patented?

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Artist's representation of DNA. Photo: iStockphoto.com

Artist’s representation of DNA. Photo: iStockphoto.com

By: Nina Totenberg | NPR News

Correction – April 15, 2013
The audio of this story, as did a previous Web version, incorrectly identifies Mark Capone as CEO of Myriad. Capone is the president of Myriad Genetics Laboratories, which is a subsidiary of Myriad Genetics Inc.

Same-sex marriage got huge headlines at the Supreme Court last month, but in the world of science and medicine, the case being argued on Monday is far more important. The lawsuit deals with a truly 21st century issue — whether human genes may be patented.

Myriad Genetics, a Utah biotechnology company, discovered and isolated two genes — BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 — that are highly associated with hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. Myriad patented its discovery, giving it a 20-year monopoly over use of the genes for research, diagnostics and treatment. A group of researchers, medical groups and patients sued, challenging the patent as invalid.

There is no way to overstate the importance of this case to the future of science and medicine. In the view of Myriad and its supporters in the biotech and pharmaceutical industries, patents are the keys to making these medical discoveries possible. Their opponents, including leading medical groups and Nobel Prize-winning scientists, contend that Myriad’s patent improperly puts a lock on research and medical diagnostic testing.

The U.S. patent system, authorized in the Constitution, gives temporary economic incentives to inventors to advance science. The general rules of the patent system have been established in statutes and Supreme Court case law for over 150 years. You can’t patent a product of nature or a law of nature. It doesn’t matter that the task was difficult or costly. Nature is immune to patents. So, even though it may have taken Einstein a long time to figure out that E=mc2, he couldn’t have patented that law of nature.

‘Could You Patent The Sun?’

Until relatively recently, much of the medical profession disdained patents, except as a means to ensure quality. When Dr. Jonas Salk, the inventor of the revolutionary polio vaccine, was asked in 1955 whether he had a patent on the vaccine, he replied, “There is no patent … could you patent the sun?”

Myriad Genetics, however, contends that the genes it isolated are not like the sun. Mark Capone, president of Myriad Genetics Laboratories, notes that the 20,000 genes in the human body are part of a 6-foot-long molecule that’s “coiled and compacted and stuffed into each cell.” And, he says, “What Myriad was able to do is sort through all those 20,000 genes and find the two that were highly linked to hereditary breast and ovarian cancer.”

The gene is like “a single grain of sand” hidden in a building the size of the Empire State Building, says Gregory Castanias, Myriad’s lawyer. He will tell the justices that isolating the two genes justifies a patent because “it is the final step in an extraordinarily complicated set of inventive actions that led to the creation of this molecule, which had never been available to the world before.”

Not so, say those challenging the patent. Human genes are products of nature. They are an essential part of the human body. “All Myriad does is take a part of the body out of the body,” says the challengers’ lawyer, Christopher Hansen of the American Civil Liberties Union. “It is no different than taking a kidney out of the body. Just because you are the [first] person who takes the kidney out of the body doesn’t entitle you to a patent on kidneys.”

Invention Or Discovery?

Castanias, however, contends that by locating the gene and isolating it — snipping it out from the rest of the genetic material — Myriad has created a new and patentable thing. He says it’s “no different than allowing a baseball bat or cast iron fence to be patented as a new invention,” even though those items “originated in a tree” or a “rock.” The baseball bat and cast iron fence are still “human inventions” and thus are patent eligible.

“We do know Myriad did a lot of work,” says New York University law professor Rochelle Dreyfuss, a nationally known patent expert who is not associated with either side in this case. But that’s not enough, she says, because the court still has to answer this question: “Is the thing that’s isolated significantly different from the way that it was when it was in nature?”

Hansen, representing the patent challengers, contends that Myriad is merely following nature’s instructions about where to snip out the gene.

“The structure of the gene, the constituent elements of the gene, the significance of the gene … where the gene starts, where the gene ends, all of those are decisions that nature made,” he says. “Myriad just uncovered the fact that nature had made those decisions.”

What’s more, he argues that by patenting the BRCA 1 and 2 genes, Myriad has hampered research by scientists outside the company.

The company disagrees, noting that 18,000 scientists have published more than 10,000 papers on these two genes. “Myriad will not and has not hindered research,” says Capone, because “research is incredibly important in understanding the function of these genes and in translating that into patient care.”

Cancer Patients

Some researchers concede that Myriad has not invoked its right to block their research, but they are galled by the fact that Myriad at any point could block their work and that the information they turn up in clinical trials cannot be shared with patients.

Patients are also outraged that they can’t get a second opinion on Myriad’s test results. They cite, for example, the case of Kathleen Maxian, whose sister was tested by Myriad for mutations in her BRCA 1 and 2 genes after she had breast cancer at an early age. Based on the negative test results, all of the women in the family thought they were not at a heightened risk of breast or ovarian cancer. Two years later, however, Maxian was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, and a different and supplemental test from Myriad revealed that family members did have a mutation in their BRCA genes.

Genetics counselor Ellen Matloff says that scientists learned in the late 1990s and early 2000s that Myriad’s test was missing mutations in some families.

“I contacted Myriad Genetics and asked them if we could offer a test for our patients who tested negative but in whom we really suspected we were missing something. And we were told absolutely not, it’s a patent violation,” she says.

Another bone of contention over the patent is the cost for the test. Myriad charges $3,000 for a test that experts say costs less than $200 to complete.

Myriad’s Capone says the company is simply trying to recoup the tens of millions of dollars it invested in researching these two genes alone.

The ACLU’s Hansen has a tart reply to that. “A patent isn’t a reward for effort. A patent is a reward for invention. And Myriad didn’t invent anything,” he says. “The gene exists in the body. All Myriad did is find it.”

21st Century Science

Each side of this case sees the future of science threatened. Those challenging the patent see gene patenting as an attempt to monopolize and block future exploration in the new universe of genetics and personalized medicine.

Myriad and its supporters, however, see patents as the key to exploration. “We believe we’re on the cusp of a revolution of how we treat our patients in this country, by translating personalized medicine into the clinic,” says Capone. But without “the incentives offered by a strong and stable intellectual property system,” Myriad and others like it may not garner the investment and support needed to develop those new treatments and bring them to patients.

Castanias is a little more down to earth.

“At some level it is about money,” he says, because “medicine doesn’t happen for free. … If you look at the enormous amount of investment — and not everything works that you invest in — the patent system is critical to medical care” by incentivizing companies to invest in needed scientific research and development.

How do other countries handle this dilemma? Most do grant patents on genes, but they also have exceptions to the patents, allowing researchers to use the genes freely and allowing anyone who can to develop diagnostic tests. That type of an escape valve, however, would require action from Congress.

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A Farmer’s Paradox: Water Rules Could Run Afoul of Food Safety Measures

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Grassy drainage ditches like this one have been shown to clean pesticides and fertilizers from agricultural runoff. Vegetable shippers, though, often demand that farms have no plants other than crops. Photo: Danielle Venton

Ponds and grassy ditches clean farm runoff, but after the 2006 e. coli outbreak in leafy greens, wholesalers might ask that they be removed.

KUSP’s Danielle Venton continues her insightful examination of the new regulations aiming to reduce pollution in the watershed.

In prior reports she spoke with a family near Salinas that drives eight miles to get drinking water for their home, and reported on farmers’ worries that they will gain unfair notoriety by complying with the new rules.

Farmer Dirk Giannini points out irrigation installed on a seeded lettuce bed. New regulations put greater pressure on farmers to limit pollution running off their fields. Photo: Danielle Venton


Maria Nuño's taps pours nitrate-contaminated water into her sink. She drives 8 miles to get bottled drinking water. Photo: Danielle Venton

Maria Nuño’s taps pours nitrate-contaminated water into her sink. She drives 8 miles to get bottled drinking water. Photo: Danielle Venton

 

Which State Parks are Doing OK? Off-Road Vehicle Areas

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California has heard proposals to sell off some state parks to make the department more affordable. But 8 parks are in great fiscal health. They are popular and have a dedicated flow of revenue and one is hoping to expand: Carnegie State Vehicular Recreation Area. From the California Report’s Rachel Myrow

Carnegie SVRA hopes to grow. Environmentalists hope to establish their own state park there instead. Photo: California State Parks

Carnegie SVRA hopes to grow. Environmentalists hope to establish their own state park there instead. Photo: California State Parks

California Report’s News Fix blog writes: “We’ve heard a lot over the last couple of years about all the money troubles the California state parks have been having—but not all state parks are starved for cash. Eight ‘off-highway vehicle parks’ get a steady stream of gas-tax funds guaranteed by state law. These parks are a different breed from the rest. They’re even run by a separate division within the Department of Parks and Recreation. And in many ways, off-roaders struggle with Californians who have a very different idea of what a park should be.”

Carnegie owns a property it hopes to expand on, but hasn’t completed environmental reporting on the expansion. Now Celeste Garamendi, the sister of U.S. Representative John Garamendi proposes instead “Tesla Park” on the expansion site. Not for the electric car, but for the mining town that once was sited there.

Change in Priorities: LA Schools Hire Security Not Teachers

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By Kirk Siegler | NPR

Students at Tenth Street Elementary out on the playground. Photo: Kirk Siegler

Students at Tenth Street Elementary out on the playground. Photo: Kirk Siegler

Tenth Street Elementary is in the Pico-Union district of Los Angeles, a few blocks west of the Staples Center and downtown skyscrapers. It’s a tough neighborhood; school security is always an issue.

On a recent day, about 150 third-graders were spread across a worn cement playground, running around, playing chase and tag.

Most lunch hours, you’ll find Juan Alfayate, the school’s energetic principal, out on the blacktop, dodging soccer balls and having fun with the kids while on playground patrol.

“There is only so much we can do, in terms of making a complete, airtight, safe school,” Alfayate says, “but obviously we want to make sure that we supervise all of the adults coming in and out of the school; at the very least we have to do that.”

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