DELVE
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DELVE SERIES 5 - POWDER KEG: Some stories grow from a green shoot; some explode like a powder keg. The global supplement market is worth $200 billion a year, and Chris Ashenden is a rock star of the industry. Yet in his home country of New Zealand, nobody had heard of him. Investigative journalist Jonathan Milne wanted to tell his story – but when Chris proved elusive, alarm bells began to ring. In the latest electrifying podcast from DELVE, we investigate the superstar endorsements, the science and the safety of the world’s favourite green powder, AG1. Listen to a story that will entangle the biggest names in audio, from Joe Rogan to Andrew Huberman to Gwyneth Paltrow. We follow the money, dig into the crimes and commission our own lab analysis. From the chill of the Southern Ocean to a record Mexican heatwave, from Colombia to the Caribbean, we chase down AG1’s founder to tell the story he didn’t want told. Only on DELVE, the home of gripping, in-depth investigative podcasts, including award-winning The Boy in the Water, and Fractured. Sign up to our premium service DELVE+ on Apple, Spotify or your favourite podcast platform. DELVE+ subscribers get Early Release, Ad Free listening. Led by investigations editor, Melanie Reid. Listen to journalism that matters. Discover more on the Melanie Reid Investigates Facebook and Instagram pages, and on Newsroom.co.nz. (Android and Spotify listeners can Sign up to DELVE+ here.) DELVE SERIES 4 - FRACTURED SEASON 1: A baby taken, a mother jailed, a couple forced apart and facing deportation without their daughter. Crushed by the weight of multiple government departments working in lockstep, what happens when the dream of a new country becomes an unimaginable nightmare? In this new investigation, Melanie Reid and her team take the x-rays that were used to convict a young mother and put them before international experts, who tell us this case is just the tip of the iceberg of a factitious medical phenomenon leading to injustice around the globe. DELVE SERIES 1-3 - THE BOY IN THE WATER SEASONS 1-3: Melanie Reid's chart topping podcast takes you inside a small town harbouring a big mystery. After the lifeless body of three-year-old Lachie Jones is found floating in an oxidation pond in the Southland town of Gore, police rule his death a tragic accident. But nothing is what it seems. Melanie has spent three years covering this case, revealing multiple flaws in the police investigation and uncovering new evidence that casts serious doubt about the circumstances surrounding Lachie’s death. In The Boy in the Water, Melanie unravels the case – and the secrets – in an attempt to find out what really happened to little Lachie Jones. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
預告片
Great
2 天前
Great, respectful storytelling and well produced and edited.
Excelent
11月9日
93101
Is there going to be another episode
11月14日
Are they going to continue with fractured? I feel like we have been waiting awhile for a new episode to come out? Bring back new episodes!!! I was enjoying listening to exposing injustices!
Fractured Logic
10月11日
1) Evidence of damage does not prove the cause of damage. 2) On the fractures not being a problem in the future—because they corrected the discovered deficiencies in all future treatments. 3) Premies are different in physiology from full term infants even disregarding any unknown congenital issues and they struggle from birth, and my god, suction and forceps births can be brutal on term babies. Who knows if any of her bones broke during this and were also healing, at what rate per day would be difficult to tell especially with her deficiencies (which could both be causing future injuries and slowing the healing process and without any supplemental support the deficiencies get worse as the body works over time to recover and also grow at the exponential rate of all babies after birth) 4) The texts are out of both emotional and cultural context not to mention tone. It’s easy to read text in any emotional voice to suit your inclination (how many times has a miscommunication occurred bc your recipient read your text differently from your meaning?). Saying something like “I’ll drink the ‘poison’” during a communication of exasperation is not meant as a literal statement usually, context not withstanding. It’s the same thing as saying “If you don’t come home right now I’m going to jump off a bridge!” and we all know what that statement means. It’s not literal. Basically it seems like the cultural equivalent of saying “Omg, if you don’t come back right now I’m going to lose my mind” and again, not literally. 5) On the bursting blood vessels in her brain; was she or was she not admitted that evening for a possible case of meningitis which is essentially brain swelling? And wasn’t she then given antibiotics and such prior to admission by the doctor who saw the baby at her home? Was it addressed how much time elapsed between the antibiotics and her first imaging showing bleeds associated with swelling and inflammation? How long does it take for these to cause any inflammation or sign of infection to be unobservable because the infection was being treated prior to any imaging? Did she continue with the antibiotics as prophylactic? One would then never be able to tell if she was physically injured or if the injuries were due to the previous condition now masked forever? 6) Jurors are average people; and we all can agree that the “average” person is horribly prepared to think about evidence and the science behind things let alone anything medical. The average person is just going to be emotionally manipulated by the simple facts of the case and think it’s a hurt baby, the doctors said so, therefore the parents are monsters. 7) Racism and all sorts of other biases that make average people judging people of other cultures incredibly unfair. Basically the jurors are horrible judges. They probably decided long before any defense was made. This story is more common than we believe. The “system” probably gets it wrong 60% of the time. I’m thinking about how much of a power imbalance exists in the world of child welfare all over the world. Instead of trying to be holistic in approach to understand complex cases and the medical facts of injury are diagnosed, the default opinion is always it was intentional and or criminal in nature. The supposition is always to assume wrong doing to protect the child and then never waver from this accusation when instead it should only be a part of any consideration and not drive all further decisions. It is a huge miscarriage of basic human rights when no other possibility is allowed to be considered. Once the accusation is leveled it is too late. The system takes over and all but guarantees the creation of a criminal case. When full contextual analysis is denied, any allowance for differential diagnosis is then ignored by medical professionals. Professionals who then must hold this position to defend themselves and their institution’s reputation against any perceived liability for misdiagnosis. There is no graceful way for them to bow out if they realize it’s possible a mistake was made. A diagnostic finding should not be used to prove cause because that is not how logic works. If someone has an injury that is non specific then the cause of said injury cannot be determined simply by discovering that injury. It should never then lead to legal consequences or the threat of criminal prosecution but the way this process is set up that is not possible. This is a tale of insult to injury in the worst possible way. Caring for your child by bringing them to get medical attention should not be a legal risk, but it certainly always is. Most parents simply do not understand and never realize how close they may sometimes come to having their children essentially stolen from them by the state. Especially when your child has unique or unusual needs and conditions. The public has been led to believe that medical professionals are infallible and completely incapable of making human mistakes. But they certainly do every single day and medical science is not as advanced as popular culture portrays, much like the CSI effect. The system is rigged and broken (or working as designed depending on your perspective) and runs on autopilot following outdated racist, classist, and sexist scripts without nuance and with no regard for the lifelong damage and irreparable trauma it causes. This is what this story is telling us.
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資訊
- 創作者newsroom.co.nz
- 集數74
- 季數5
- 年齡分級兒少不宜
- 版權© newsroom.co.nz
- 節目網站
- 提供者Newsroom NZ Limited