Today’s Solutions: March 19, 2026

Around 180 million children around the world suffer from malnutrition. The condition is mainly the result of extreme poverty and causes children to lead stunted lives where their height, intelligence, and overall well-being is far below well-nourished children of similar age. Simply providing more nutrition to these children isn’t necessarily a solution, with recent studies showing that chronic malnutrition changes the population of beneficial bacteria in the gut, which makes it harder for these children to absorb key nutrients even when they are fed good food. Large-scale bacterial transplants isn’t necessarily an option, but scientists have found an innovative way around that with fecal pills (simply put, poop pills). The idea is to collect good bacteria living in the feces of healthy individuals and store them in freeze-dried fecal pills that can be consumed by patients like any other capsule. Malnourished people could take these pills to make their gut bacteria healthier to absorb those key nutrients. Perhaps this idea sounds disgusting (it certainly doesn’t sound appealing), but it could possibly save millions of lives and help millions more live up to their full potential.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Overthinking is a learned habit, and therapists say you can unlearn it

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM "Just stop overthinking" is advice that tells you nothing useful about how to actually follow it. The mind ...

Read More

A single dose of psilocybin gave smokers six times better odds of quitting th...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM A new clinical trial from Johns Hopkins University produced results that surprised even the researchers behind it. Participants who ...

Read More

Rusty social skills? 5 ways to reconnect with socialization

Now that there are more opportunities to go out and socialize, you may be experiencing some mixed emotions regarding social events. You may have ...

Read More

AI-powered blood test shows promise in early breast cancer detection

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Early detection of breast cancer dramatically increases survival rates, but identifying the disease in its earliest stages remains ...

Read More