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Student athletes are at risk for heat stroke, but these recommendations can save lives

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A late-summer heat wave is creating dangerous conditions for student athletes across the country preparing for the fall season.

Among the most dangerous heat illnesses is exertional heat stroke, which is caused by vigorous exercise and hot, humid conditions. Unless treated right away, it can become fatal.

“(Exertional heat stroke) is one of the three leading causes of death in high school sport in America,” Doug Casa, the CEO of the Korey Stringer Institute, told CBS News.

Named after the Minnesota Vikings player who died of heat related illness in 2001, the institute’s mission is to prevent heat-related deaths and help rehabilitate athletes.

To help keep kids safe, the institute has several recommendations for schools, including: 

  • Have athletes get acclimated to the heat before practicing in full uniform
  • Take mandatory water breaks
  • Have a cooling tub to treat overheated players
  • Make sure the school has an athletic trainer

“They don’t want to depend on a coach if their child is going to die or live when they have a medical emergency,” Casa said.

Christina Emrich, certified athletic trainer at Red Bank Regional High School in New Jersey, roams the sidelines, at the ready to help.

“If you recognize it and treat it, exertional heat stroke is 100% survivable,” she said.

Among the tools she uses to protect students is a device that measures the “wet bulb globe temperature,” which shows Emrich how much heat stress athletes may be experiencing. Experts say this is a more accurate measure of what athletes experience, because it takes into account the ambient temperature, relative humidity, wind speed and radiation from the sun. Devices cost around $400 to $500, but the data they provide can help save lives.

Without prevention and treatment tools, the impact of heat can be devastating on the body — something Ryan Swoboda knows all too well. 

In July 2017, on his third day of practice as a freshman on the University of Virginia’s football team, Swoboda collapsed. His core temperature had shot up to a life-threatening 109 degrees, landing him in the hospital for three weeks. 

“I remember I got there and I wanted to prove myself,” he said. “I had damage to a lot of my organs.”

After more than a year in rehabilitation, he recovered and went on to play professionally in the NFL.



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“Pink cocaine” is the latest street drug. This team of researchers has been warning the public about it for a year.

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The death of music star Liam Payne. Sex trafficking allegations against Sean “Diddy” Combs. A deadly car crash involving an Instagram model. Many Americans have only recently learned of the drug known as “pink cocaine” from a deluge of celebrity horror stories. Joseph Palamar, an associate professor of population health at NYU Langone, would say they are late to the party.  

“A lot of people just think it’s this new powder that’s going around,” Palamar said. “It’s a pretty pink powder, and everyone’s starting to use it, when it really started increasing was around mid-2023.”  

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The death of music star Liam Payne has thrust “pink cocaine,” sometimes also called Tusi, into the national spotlight. The National Drug Early Warning System predicted its rise back in 2023.  

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“The chatter increases before a lot of poisonings occur” 

When Palamar first heard of pink cocaine, his team immediately scoured posts on Reddit as part of his research for the National Drug Early Warning System. The organization specializes in narcotics surveillance and collects data on drugs that could rise in popularity and lethality.  

“We’ve looked at other drugs, and what we found … is that a lot of times the chatter increases before a lot of poisonings occur,” said Palamar.  

Palamar explained there’s a whole community called “Psychonauts,” in which people use novel drugs or induce “altered states of consciousness” and post about their experiences. For drug use, Palamar equated it to a diary to alert people to the effects of drugs.

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National Drug Early Warning System research shows how each Reddit post about “pink cocaine” represents a data point it uses to better predict drug trends and warn the public. 

National Drug Early Warning System


Standing in front of a chart that resembles a stock rally on Wall Street, Palamar explained how each Reddit post about pink cocaine represents a data point he uses to better predict drug trends and warn the public. 

“When we detect a trend, we alert everybody we could possibly think of,” he said. “We alert departments of health, academics, people who use. We want to spread our information pretty widely in order to prevent use. It’s concerning because it’s already high, and it’s increasing. We already have dozens of people talking about it per day.” 

The warning system first issued an alert on pink cocaine in February 2023, when researchers noticed a spike in chatter from Redditors. That chatter nearly doubled to more than 30 posts per day by the summer. 

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The National Drug Early Warning System sent out its first warning about “pink cocaine” in February 2023.

National Drug Early Warning System


“It appears that the chatter on average is now higher,” Palamar said. “It’s more consistent. We don’t have dips as low as previous years.” 

CBS News reached out to Reddit for a comment on the research. A spokesperson said its policies ban the buying or selling drugs, and most conversations on its message boards are warning other Reddit users about pink cocaine. 

Similar trends emerged with carfentanyl, a synthetic opioid 100 times more potent than its lethal sister-drug fentanyl. Nearly 80,000 Americans have died from poisonings linked to carfentanyl in the past two years, according to the National Institute of Drug Abuse.  

“Don’t play with this stuff… It’s a powerful substance.” 

One pink cocaine user, who takes the drug at least once a month, agreed to speak with CBS News without revealing her identity. She said she tests each batch for fentanyl but admits she doesn’t otherwise know the contents of the drug mixtures she’s buying. 

“You don’t know what is in it every time.” she said. “You don’t know what is inside … there are the ingredients that make you dance. There are ingredients that can make you feel more chill. There are ingredients can make you feel more trippy.” 

Those unknowns — about the substance and the high — pushed Frank Tarantino, special agent in charge of the Drug Enforcement Agency in New York, to issue an urgent warning to CBS News New York. 

“When people are seeking pink cocaine and they think they’re buying pink cocaine, they’re actually buying a drug that’s laced with fentanyl and they have no idea and they’re overdosing and dying,” Tarantino said.  

The anonymous user who spoke to CBS News said she has found fentanyl in her own supply.  

“I gave it back,” she said. “It’s dangerous.” 

Pink cocaine is not cocaine 

Pink cocaine is often confused for real cocaine. Tusi, the other street name for the substance, is often confused for the synthetic psychedelic 2C-B. It’s neither.  

Pink cocaine is a combination of other drugs. It is pink in color due to the addition of food coloring, and sometimes strawberry or other flavoring, according to the National Capital Poison Center.  

Officials said it is most commonly used by young people in the club scene. Pink cocaine is usually either ingested in pill form or snorted as a powder. Rarely, it is injected. 

An analysis by CBS News found 99.5% of pink powder seized by the Drug Enforcement Agency is a mixture of ketamine and other drugs, which can include fentanyl, according to DEA data from nearly 1,000 seizures. 



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Customers flock to beloved Texas pie shop for Thanksgiving

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Customers flock to beloved Texas pie shop for Thanksgiving – CBS News


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Houston’s Flying Saucer Pie Company has a devoted following, with people camping out overnight and lines up to half a mile long to get dessert for Thanksgiving. Janet Shamlian takes a look at what makes this shop so special.

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Recall affects roughly 240,000 electric vehicles

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Recall affects roughly 240,000 electric vehicles – CBS News


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Some 240,000 electric vehicles are being recalled because of the risk they could lose power while being driven. Some of the affected models include Kia vehicles and the Hyundai Genesis.

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