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Friday, August 01, 2025

Quick hits: NASA needs farmers; 988 to use geolocation; opioid prescriptions required to have warnings; why child care needs national support

NASA's sub-agency, NASA Acres, would like to meet more farmers. (Graphic by Adam Dixon, Offrange)

If you're a farmer, NASA could use your help. The space agency has a growing sub-agency, known as NASA Acres, that is "designed to use satellite data to help U.S. farmers make sustainable decisions and be more profitable," reports Donavyn Coffey for Offrange. NASA Acres is recruiting farmers to participate in its Farmer Innovation Ambassador Team. The group will "weigh in on the problems that need solving, and to spread the word: NASA can help. The space agency is leveraging 50 years of satellite and data science to help any farmers willing to join in."

A change in location guidance aims to help 988 Suicide & Crisis Hotline counselors route help based on where callers or texters are calling from, instead of their cell's area code. "The Federal Communications Commission voted to require text messages to the 988 suicide and mental health crisis hotline to be georouted to local crisis centers based on where they are sent from," reports Chris Teale for Route Fifty. "Over the past three years, the crisis line service has received 11.1 million calls, 2.9 million texts and 2.4 million chats via instant message."

New labels come with direct warnings about long-term
use of opioids. (Graphic via MedPage Today)
The Food and Drug Administration will require opioid makers to update their labels to include details that "highlight the safety risks of long-term use," reports Nicole Lou of MedPage Today. "Now, opioid drug labels should clarify that patients should undergo periodic checks for signs of addiction, abuse, or misuse of these painkillers." The labels will include less common but possible health complications that longer-term opioid use can cause, such as esophageal dysfunction and negative interactions with other medications. Opioid makers have 30 days to submit their new labeling for FDA review.
Haspel's book launches Aug. 11.


While the national conversation about child care is decades long, few changes have been made to address the dearth of providers, poor wages for child care teachers and the overall cost to families who are lucky enough to secure care. "Researcher Elliot Haspel suggests child care is a lost American value," writes Jackie Mader for The Hechinger Report, which reports on education. "Haspel's new book “Raising a Nation" presents 10 arguments — some of them well known and others less intuitive — for why child care needs to be a more supported part of American society."

In what could be a national first, energy company Holtec International looks to reopen the once-retired Palisades Nuclear Plant in Michigan by the end of this year. "The 800-MW Palisades plant received key federal approvals to open three years after shutting down," reports Eric Wesoff of Canary Media. "If Holtec succeeds, it would be the first nuclear plant in the U.S. to restart after being closed down. Remarkably, it would be just the second or third reactor to come back online in the global history of civilian nuclear power." 

Consumer enthusiasm helped inspire the  
combination. (Hershey/Mondelēz graphic)
Reese's peanut butter cups and Oreo cookies are slated for a mash-up, hitting grocery store shelves this fall. "Snack giants Hershey and Mondelēz are combining two of their top-selling products in a sugary marriage they say consumers have been begging for," reports Jesse Newman for The Wall Street Journal. The dynamic snack duo was partially inspired by "consumers’ own posts of their DIY combinations, such as a Reese’s peanut butter cup sandwiched between two Oreo wafers." 

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