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Sept. 30, 2025, 12:04 PM EDTBy Kaan OzcanNew cases of cancer have been rising among younger people, worrying patients and doctors about causes. A new study suggests increasing numbers of cases of early onset cancer are largely due to improved and more routine screening, while mortality rates among younger people haven’t changed.The study, published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine, compared rates of new diagnoses over the past three decades to mortality rates of the fastest-rising cancers in adults under 50. Of the eight cancers the research team studied, only two, colorectal and endometrial, showed increases in deaths. Other cancers included thyroid, anal, pancreatic, kidney, myeloma and small intestine. While breast and kidney cancers have increased in incidence, the mortality rates across all age groups have decreased in recent years.In fact, invasive breast cancer has been increasing faster in women under 50 than women over 50, at around a 1.4% increase per year from 2012 to 2021, according to the American Cancer Society. Similarly, colorectal cancer rates increased 2.4% per year in adults under 50 years and by 0.4% in adults 50-64 from 2012 to 2021. However, deaths have been halved for both because of earlier detection and improved treatment such as immunotherapies.Advances in screening technology and recommended screening at younger ages have allowed doctors to detect tumors at their earliest stages, including cases that may not ever negatively affect a person’s health.Dr. H. Gilbert Welch, senior investigator at the Center for Surgery and Public Health at Mass General Brigham hospital and a co-author of the study, said the harder doctors look for cancer, the more they are bound to find. “There really isn’t much more cancer out there,” Welch said. “We’re just finding stuff that’s always been there. That’s particularly true in things like the thyroid and the kidney.”The increase in “diagnostic scrutiny” for cancer adds to the uptick in some cancer case numbers. “Largely, what’s going on here is that people are getting tested more, and they’re getting more, if you will, powerful tests that can resolve smaller and smaller abnormalities,” he said. “This is largely simply unearthing things that have always been there.”Last year, the highly influential U.S. Preventive Services Task Force lowered the recommended age for first breast cancer screenings to 40, down from 50. And as deaths from colon cancer among people ages 45 to 49 ticked up, in 2021 the recommended age to start screening dropped from 50 to 45. Dr. Ahmed Jemal, senior vice president for surveillance, prevention and health services research at the American Cancer Society, said rising incidence rates can’t simply be chalked up to more and improved screening. Some of the causes are diet, obesity and physical inactivity.The study also pointed out that unnecessary treatments, such as surgery or radiation or chemotherapy, for cancers that aren’t “clinically meaningful” can cause multiple burdens for younger patients, Jemal said. A clinically meaningful cancer is considered dangerous and could spread if it is untreated. “You create not only cost burden, but you create anxiety,” Jemal said. Dr. Philippe E. Spiess, chief of surgery at Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida, said the psychosocial aspect of cancer is another significant consequence. “Once a patient physically knows they have a mass, there is a significant burden that you have related to knowing that,” he said.Rather than intervene with every cancer doctors find, Spiess said, it’s important for doctors to assess whether patients’ cancers are dangerous and at risk of harming them. If tumors are small enough to be considered nonlethal, doctors should work with patients to monitor and continually assess their risk.“As long as the patient is committed to observation and surveillance, I think the consideration there is that you’re really not losing anything,” Spiess said.Kaan OzcanKaan Ozcan is an intern with NBC News’ Health and Medical Unit. 

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Oct. 1, 2025, 2:39 AM EDTBy Phil HelselFrom a dozen to just one: Scarred “32 Chunk” was crowned the fat bear champion of Alaska’s Brooks River, organizers announced Tuesday.The annual competition drew in tens of thousands of votes and lasted a week.Chunk beat out rival bear “856” in the final polling, 96,350 votes to 63,725, the organization that runs the livestream cameras at the Katmai National Park and Preserve said.”Chunk the Hunk. The Chunkster. 32 Chunk,” the organization, Explore, posted on X. “All hail the new king of Brooks River.”Fat Bear Week, a competition that began in 2014, opened for voting on Sept. 23 with 12 contenders.The bears have been trying to fatten up by gorging on salmon — including at times by only eating the skin, brains and eggs to focus on the most calories — before hibernating for the winter.Voters were instructed to choose “the bear you believe best exemplifies fatness and success in brown bears.”Chunk is a male bear described as “very large” and weighing around 1,200 pounds. He has a distinctive scar and a broken jaw, which is healing but never expected to return to normal, according to Explore’s website.”The timing of the injury during the brown bear mating season and the nature of it strongly suggest that Chunk was injured in a fight with another bear,” the organization said.Katmai National Park and Preserve, on the Alaska Peninsula southwest of Anchorage, is known for its brown bears. The Brooks Camp at the mouth of the Brooks River draws visitors every year to watch the large animals. Salmon return upstream on the Brooks throughout the summer to spawn, and the bears are there to meet them with open jaws. Then, in September, the fish are weakened and dying and bears return to again chow down, the park says on its website.Katmai’s bears usually go to their dens to hibernate in October and November, according to the park.Phil HelselPhil Helsel is a reporter for NBC News.
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Oct. 29, 2025, 4:57 AM EDT / Updated Oct. 29, 2025, 8:53 AM EDTBy Andrew GreifIn 2022, after three minutes of spinning, flipping and skiing down a slopestyle course designed to resemble China’s Great Wall, Alex Hall raised his arms triumphantly while accepting the Olympic gold medal. Hall’s golden moment was met with mostly silence. Standing atop the podium of a Beijing Olympics that played out under China’s strict “zero-Covid” policy, he looked at empty grandstands. He spent his next day being drug tested, seeing a handful of Team USA friends and doing interviews with journalists for hours before flying home to Utah. “Not having the fans in 2022, I think, was definitely a bit of a bummer,” Hall said. When the Winter Olympics open in 100 days with an opening ceremony inside Milan’s famed San Siro soccer stadium, a much different scene will await competitors taking part in the first truly open Winter Games since 2018. As befitting a complex competition featuring 16 different sports and innumerable geopolitical influences, the 2026 Olympics are being carefully watched by athletes, organizers and Olympics observers for a number of reasons. They are the first games since the International Olympic Committee elected its first woman as president, Kirsty Coventry. This is also an extraordinarily far-flung Olympics, with venues spread out between urban Milan and three mountain “clusters,” some a five-hour drive away — Cortina d’Ampezzo, Livigno and Val di Fiemme. And Milan and the surrounding Lombardy region returns to the global spotlight after Covid wracked northern Italy nearly six years ago. Yet in the lead-up to the games, which begin Feb. 4, athletes have expressed excitement that not only are the Olympics returning, but fans are, too — and with them, a sense of competitive normalcy. In one sign of demand from the outside world to attend the first Winter Olympics in Europe since 2006, more than 120,000 people have applied to fill 18,000 volunteer positions, according to organizers.Hilary Knight, the four-time Olympic medalist for the U.S. hockey team who is preparing for her fifth Olympics, said competing in Beijing felt akin to playing in a television studio.“It didn’t feel like the Olympics because we were missing those moments or those touch points with those we hold so dearly that have cheered us on our entire careers and have sacrificed so much to get us to that one, key moment,” Knight said. “Everyone’s just really looking forward to that experience, together. … It’s a shared experience, right? Like you win a medal, you want to share it with as many people as possible.”The Olympics have already faced, and passed, one post-Covid test, when athletes competing at the 2024 Summer Games in Paris often remarked at the size and sound of crowds that packed venues across the city. Organizers from the Milan-Cortina bid were taking notes from inside the closing ceremony, readying for a turn they have been waiting for since 2019, when the IOC selected their bid over a joint bid by Stockholm-Åre in Sweden.That Milan wanted the Olympics, despite the challenges of cost, logistics and infrastructure that have driven many other potential host cities away, did not surprise John Foot, a professor of modern Italian history at Bristol University in the U.K., whose research has included Italian sports. Cortina hosted the 1956 Winter Olympics, and elite skiers have long favored competing in the city. American skier Lindsey Vonn said its inclusion as a venue was partly responsible for bringing her out of retirement to try to make a fifth Olympics.”There’s something special about Cortina that always pulls me back,” Vonn said.Foot said it was likely that organizers in the city of more than a million — which sits in a wide, flat plane — had seen how hosting the 2006 Winter Olympics had helped spur Turin from an industrial to a post-industrial period of growth, in part thanks to a boost in tourism. Milan has a reputation as the economic engine of Italy because of its deep ties to fashion, industry and business, and for hosting six games during soccer’s 1990 World Cup, but it’s not known as being a cold-weather city, Foot said. He could not recall whether Milan had an ice rink during his 20 years living there.“It always has been a crossroads city because it’s very well positioned for Europe,” Foot said. The last time northern Italy attracted such global prominence was in 2020, for far different reasons. More than two weeks after the country’s first Covid-related death in late February, in Lombardy, the region that includes Milan, all sporting events in the country were put on hold. In 2022, one research team estimated that the pandemic was responsible for more than 165,000 excess deaths in Italy. That number had risen to more than 188,000 by 2023.Milan was able to rebound more quickly economically than other major cities in Italy, Foot said. But the spotlight in February won’t be on Milan alone. Milan will host only ice hockey, speed skating, figure skating and short track, a fraction of the 116 medal events during the games. The rest will be spread out across a wide area requiring a five-hour drive between Livigno, just across the Swiss border, to Cortina. It takes approximately four hours to drive from Milan to Livigno, and an hour longer to go from Milan to Cortina. Even the venues that will open the games (San Siro) and close them (Verona) are a nearly two-hour drive apart. U.S. officials repeatedly have asked fans to be patient, and realistic, if thinking of traveling between venues.The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee is “doing their best to make it feel like just a normal Olympic experience, even if athletes are separated by a few hours or multiple hours, and we’re not necessarily able to have that same close-knit village experience with all different sports,” Knight said. “That was definitely a high-priority item when we were talking with them and different athlete reps, is to feel that Team USA is really important, and to feel that energy from other athletes competing, to feel connected.”Winter Games are often spread out because of the need for both mountain venues and cities big enough to host a large amount of visitors, but the sheer distance in Italy could pose security risks, said Jules Boykoff, a political scientist at Pacific University and former member of the U.S. under-23 national soccer team who has written extensively about the Olympics. Nicole Deal, the chief of security for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, said the “decentralized” geography has led the committee to work with the State Department to ensure there is enough security around U.S. athletes. Armin Zöggeler, who earned medals in luge while representing Italy in six consecutive Olympics from 1994 through 2014, and assisted in the Milan-Cortina bid, acknowledged that the distance was “definitely a logistical challenge.” But he called it “a small price to pay when you think about what it means for the future of these locations.” “The athletes are really excited to finally experience ‘normal’ Olympic Games again after what happened in 2022,” Zöggeler said. “Back then, it was sad to see so many restrictions and empty venues. Northern Italy has such a rich winter sports tradition, and I know all the athletes will feel that energy during the Games. For the Italian team, having the Olympics at home is one of the greatest opportunities you can get in your career. I still remember Torino 2006 very well and I hope the athletes in 2026 can feel something similar. The support from the Italian fans, the ‘Tifosi,’ is something truly special. “I’m excited for the world, but especially the athletes, to see that passion again.”If the upcoming Olympics feel like the first “normal” Winter Games since 2018, then some of the issues facing them also feel typical to Boykoff, who called concerns over overspending, gentrification and environmental impacts typical for Olympic host cities.In the spring, Milan organizers announced a budget of about $1.9 billion, more than $100 million more than previously estimated, though that total did not take into account the cost of building a new hockey arena in Milan or rebuilding a sliding center in Cortina that had been used in the 1956 games. Rebuilding the sliding track required felling around 800 trees, which drew protests from environmental groups, and also concern from competitors that it would not open in time. When tests of the sliding track began this fall, however, it drew strong reviews.What remains concerningly unresolved, however, is whether a new hockey arena in Milan will be ready to host a competition that will see NHL players take part for the first time since 2014. The chief executive of Milan’s local organizing committee, Andrea Varnier, said the “timeline is very tight,” according to The Associated Press.In July, prosecutors in Milan alleged that corruption was behind the city’s soaring real estate values, including the construction of an Olympic village. The mayor denied wrongdoing to the city’s council. A court dismissed the accusations in September. But others have apparently viewed the Olympics as a chance to exploit; two men were arrested this month on charges of trying to illegally obtain public works contract and control nightlife and drug dealing in Cortina, according to prosecutors in Venice.The Olympics could very well be a “17-day party” in Italy, Boykoff said. If it does, it will be a strong opening act for the tenure of Coventry, a former Olympic swimmer from Zimbabwe who is only months into running the IOC.“There are real prickly issues and controversial issues around the exclusion of trans athletes, the handing of the Olympics to dictatorships with principles that absolutely don’t chime with the principles enshrined in the Olympic Charter, so I don’t envy her at all,” Boykoff said. “I think she’s walking into a very difficult situation, and Italy and the Milano-Cortina Olympics is her first chance to really put her own original stamp on the Olympic Games.”Hall, the freestyle skier, donned a sweatshirt bearing the Italian and U.S. flags Tuesday as he described his excitement in defending his gold medal in locale he knows well. Before he moved to Utah when he was 16, Hall, whose mother is Italian, grew up skiing the Alps. In 100 days, he expects to see a large number of aunts, uncles and cousins who live in Italy cheering him on in Livigno, up close. “She’s got a huge Italian fam,” Hall, now 27, said of his mother. “So they’re all pulling up.”Andrew GreifAndrew Greif is a sports reporter for NBC News Digital. 
October 25, 2025
Oct. 24, 2025, 6:06 PM EDT / Updated Oct. 25, 2025, 12:21 AM EDTBy Tim StellohA wealthy Florida family. A pair of hit men. A law professor gunned down in his home.The plot to murder Daniel Markel more than a decade ago hinged on a bitter custody dispute and took years to unravel. Earlier this month, a grandmother who’d once worked as a bookkeeper for her family’s dental practice became the fifth defendant sent to prison for their role in the sprawling conspiracy.Here’s a look at the web of defendants, the man they were convicted of killing and the woman at the center of the plot, who has never been charged with a crime.DATELINE FRIDAY SNEAK PEEK: Deadly Mischief01:54Florida legal scholar gunned down at homeDaniel MarkelA Harvard graduate and prominent legal scholar at Florida State University, Daniel Markel focused on the philosophy of punishment and spent years examining the subject to better inform sentencing decisions in the criminal justice system, recalled a university colleague, Mark Spottswood. Markel, 41, was also a devoted father of two young boys and, at the time of his death, locked in a bitter dispute with his ex-wife over custody of their children.On July 18, 2014, Markel had just arrived at his Tallahassee home when a gunman shot him twice in the head and fled. The scholar was pronounced dead the next day.A neighbor provided what turned out to be a critical piece of evidence in the killing: After hearing gunfire in Markel’s garage, the man dialed 911 and reported what he saw — a light-colored Toyota Prius driving away.A romance gone sourWendi AdelsonThen a law student, Wendi Adelson met Markel in 2004 on a dating site and they married two years later. Initially, the couple was in love — “They were, like, visibly lovey-dovey,” recalled a friend of Markel’s, Josh Berman — but by 2012 the relationship had soured and Adelson filed for divorce.Wendi Adelson exits the courtroom for a lunch break on Aug. 25.Alicia Devine / Tallahassee Democrat / USA Today Network via Imagn Adelson wanted to move their boys from Tallahassee to South Florida, where her family lived, but a family court judge denied the request, saying that she hadn’t met her “burden of proof that a relocation was in the best interest of the minor children.” What was left of the relationship between Markel and the Adelsons deteriorated.“It was toxic,” Steven Epstein, an attorney and author of a book about the case, “Extreme Punishment,” told “Dateline.” “Definitely toxic.”After Markel’s death, Adelson described her ex to authorities as “litigious” and said that he’d treated her badly, a video of the interview shows. She wondered if someone could have gunned him down not because they hated him, she said in the interview, “but because they thought this was good somehow.”During their divorce, Adelson told authorities, one of her older brothers joked about hiring a hit man to kill Markel. Her parents, she added, had “more reason to dislike Danny than almost anyone else. He hurt their daughter.”In interviews with police and in court testimony, Wendi Adelson has repeatedly denied being involved in Markel’s murder and has never been charged with a crime.A $35,000 job and a confession Luis RiveraLuis Rivera was the driver of the Prius seen pulling away from Markel’s home. A member of the Latin Kings who lived in Miami, Rivera was arrested in connection with the murder in the summer of 2016, two years after Markel was gunned down. In exchange for a reduced sentence, he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and confessed, telling authorities that he was paid $35,000 for his role in the killing and identifying the custody dispute as a possible motive, a video of the interview shows.Luis Rivera takes the stand to testify in 2019.Tori Schneider / Tallahassee Democrat / USA Today Network via Imagn“The lady wants her two kids back,” Rivera recalled the man he identified as the gunman saying. “She wants full custody.” Rivera was sentenced to 19 years in prison.The connectionSigfredo GarciaThe man Rivera identified as the gunman, Sigfredo Garcia, was also arrested in the summer of 2016. He pleaded not guilty and was convicted of first-degree murder after a trial three years later. He was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole.Sigfredo Garcia during his sentencing in 2019.Tori Schneider / Tallahassee Democrat / USA Today Network via ImagnGarcia provided a link between Markel’s killing and the Adelsons: The mother of his children, Katherine Magbanua, had not only dated the protective older brother who’d made the hit man joke, she was on the payroll of the Adelson Institute, a dental practice owned by Wendi Adelson’s parents, according to Georgia Cappleman, chief assistant state attorney in Florida’s 2nd Judicial Circuit.On the drive from Tallahassee to Miami, Rivera told authorities, Garcia called Magbanua and said: “Everything is done. Make sure you have my money. I’m on my way.”Working for the AdelsonsKatherine MagbanuaAlthough the dental practice was paying Katherine Magbanua, it didn’t appear she was doing any work for the practice, Cappleman told “Dateline.” And she’d gotten other perks from the family, including help paying for her breast augmentation surgery, according to Jason Newlin, chief investigator with the Leon County State Attorney’s Office.Katherine Magbanua testifies in the trial of Donna Adelson on Aug. 26.Alicia Devine / Tallahassee Democrat / USA Today Network via ImagnMagbanua was arrested in October 2016 and charged with murder, conspiracy and solicitation in Markel’s killing. She denied the allegations and testified at a trial three years later that she’d done legitimate work for the Adelsons and paid for her surgery with cash tips from a job promoting liquor brands.A mistrial was declared after the jury deadlocked, but during a retrial three years later, Magbanua was convicted of all charges and sentenced to life in prison.The protective older brotherCharles AdelsonWendi Adelson’s protective older brother was a periodontist who ran a lucrative implant practice north of Miami and drove a Ferrari with a distinctive license plate — “Maestro.” He’d been recorded at a Miami restaurant appearing to implicate himself in the crime, according to prosecutors, and was arrested in 2022 on charges of first-degree murder, conspiracy and solicitation of murder.During his 2023 trial, Charles Adelson denied that he played a role in Markel’s killing and testified that he was the victim of a deadly extortion scheme: After Markel’s killing, he said, Magbanua told him if he didn’t pay one-third of a million dollars in 48 hours, he’d be dead.Charlie Adelson in court on Nov. 1, 2023.Alicia Devine / Tallahassee Democrat / USA Today Network via ImagnCharles Adelson testified that he paid her what he could — $138,000 in cash — and agreed to pay $3,000 a month more through checks from his family’s dental practice.Magbanua took the stand and provided testimony that was far different from her earlier statements. She said she’d lied in her trials to save herself and pointed to Charles Adelson as the one responsible for coming up with the murder plot. Magbanua also acknowledged recruiting Garcia to carry out the killing.On Nov. 6, 2023, after three hours of deliberations, a jury convicted Charles Adelson of all charges. He was sentenced to life in prison.Florida mom arrested in connection with son’s murder-for-hire killing of brother-in-law01:39Matriarch on a missionDonna AdelsonDays after her son’s conviction, the matriarch of the Adelson family was arrested in dramatic fashion: She and her husband were taken into custody at Miami International Airport with one-way tickets to Vietnam that they’d booked on Nov. 7 — one day after Charles Adelson’s conviction — and after she’d been recorded on a jailhouse phone call saying they were “looking for places where there’s no extradition.” (Vietnam has no official extradition treaty with the United States.)Donna Adelson listens to her defense team’s opening statements in the courtroom in Tallahassee, Fla., on Aug. 22.Alicia Devine / Pool via AP fileDonna Adelson was charged with murder, solicitation and conspiracy. She pleaded not guilty.During a nearly two-week trial that began in August, prosecutors portrayed Donna Adelson as a vengeful mother-in-law who was furious over Markel’s efforts to limit her contact with her grandchildren and helped orchestrate the murder plot.Among the key pieces of evidence presented at the proceedings was a phone call Donna Adelson made to Charles Adelson after an undercover FBI agent approached her and pretended to be affiliated with the murder plot. Cappleman, the prosecutor, described what Donna Adelson said in the recorded call — she told her son that the agent’s comments involved “both of us” — as a “confession.”Donna Adelson’s lawyer, Jackie Fulford, acknowledged that her client was an overinvolved grandparent, but Fulford said she was a “meddler, not a murderer.” Prosecutors, Fulford added, didn’t have a single piece of evidence connecting Donna Adelson to the killing.On Sept. 4, after just a few hours of deliberation, a jury convicted Donna Adelson of all charges. In a victim impact statement delivered immediately afterward, Markel’s father posed a brief question to Donna Adelson.“Was it worth it?” Phil Markel said.A month later, the 75-year-old was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.Tim StellohTim Stelloh is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.
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