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Trump wants sports back – but fans aren't so sure

  • Written by Murray Edelman, Survey Methodology Consultant for the Seton Hall Sports Poll, Seton Hall University
The parking lot of Citifield, the home of the New York Mets, sits empty.AP Photo/John MinchilloCC BY-ND

Some politicians, media figures and business leaders are clamoring for sectors of the economy to re-open in the near future, and President Trump, on April 14, specifically mentioned America’s professional sports leagues.

“We have to...

Read more: Trump wants sports back – but fans aren't so sure

Video: An unhealthy population is at higher risk to die of COVID-19, that’s bad news for Americans

  • Written by Anurag Papolu, Multimedia Editor
Representational image of an older person receiving treatment.Videoblocks

As reports from cases around the world are analyzed, high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes and other chronic health issues have emerged as particularly high risk factors.

A study by Dr. David L. Katz, medical doctor and preventative and public health expert found that...

Read more: Video: An unhealthy population is at higher risk to die of COVID-19, that’s bad news for Americans

How to avoid infection after a COVID-19 death – an Ebola response veteran explains  

  • Written by Lucy Wilson, Professor of Emergency Health Services, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Workers wearing protective gear remove bodies of people who have died from COVID-19 from a New Jersey nursing home morgue.Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty Images

As the grim reality of COVID-19 unfolds, families and health care workers in the United States are faced with dealing with the horrifying magnitude of deaths from this novel disease. This...

Read more: How to avoid infection after a COVID-19 death – an Ebola response veteran explains  

China turns on the charm and angers Trump as it eyes a global opportunity in coronavirus crisis

  • Written by Klaus W. Larres, Richard M. Krasno Distinguished Professor; Adjunct Professor of the Curriculum in Peace, War and Defense, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
China has its eyes on a post-coronavirus world.Ng Han Guan/AP Photo

A new “red scare” is developing in the U.S.

While Beijing is busy with a global propaganda crusade following the spread of the coronavirus from China to around the world, foreign policy hawks in Washington are seething.

Donald Trump lashes out at Beijing’s response...

Read more: China turns on the charm and angers Trump as it eyes a global opportunity in coronavirus crisis

Doctors facing grim choice over ventilators told to put patients with disabilities at the back of the line

  • Written by Deborah Hellman, Professor of Law, University of Virginia
With a large number of patients with COVID-19, doctors face difficult choices.John Moore/Getty Images

As cases related to the novel coronavirus continue to strain hospitals, doctors face difficult choices about rationing scarce medical resources like ventilators – choices that will likely determine who lives and who dies.

Several...

Read more: Doctors facing grim choice over ventilators told to put patients with disabilities at the back of...

Trump versus the states: What federalism means for the coronavirus response

  • Written by Jennifer Selin, Kinder Institute Assistant Professor of Constitutional Democracy, University of Missouri-Columbia
On April 13, the president said he had the authority to order the states to reopen the economy.Getty/Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post

President Donald Trump recently attempted to explain the complex relationship between the federal government and the states, as outlined by the framers in 1787.

“[Y]ou can call it ‘federalist,’ you...

Read more: Trump versus the states: What federalism means for the coronavirus response

Can your pets get coronavirus, and can you catch it from them?

  • Written by Annette O'Connor, Professor of Veterinary Epidemiology, Michigan State University
Our pets are always close at hand. Are they at risk during the pandemic?Mayte Torres/Moment via Getty Images

Humans and animals share many diseases. And as dramatically shown by the tigers that tested positive in the Bronx Zoo, the coronavirus is one of them. As threeveterinaryepidemiologists who study infectious disease, we have been asked a lot...

Read more: Can your pets get coronavirus, and can you catch it from them?

Some states more ready for mail-in voting than others

  • Written by Steven Mulroy, Law Professor in Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Election Law, University of Memphis
Wisconsin voters had to wait in line in April, wearing masks, because they could not vote by mail. Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP via Getty Images

When Wisconsin voters and officials sought to adapt the state’s spring elections to better observe social distancing guidelines, the U.S. Supreme Court refused. One of the changes state officials had asked...

Read more: Some states more ready for mail-in voting than others

The coronavirus pandemic is making the US housing crisis even worse

  • Written by Isabel Solange Muñoz, Assistant Professor of Geography, University of Tennessee
A pedestrian walks past graffiti in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood.AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

Ninety-five percent of Americans have been ordered to stay at home to reduce the spread of the coronavirus.

As a human geographer who studies experiences of home and housing, I find a certain irony to these orders, particularly when wrapped in messages...

Read more: The coronavirus pandemic is making the US housing crisis even worse

1918 flu pandemic killed 12 million Indians, and British overlords' indifference strengthened the anti-colonial movement

  • Written by Maura Chhun, Community Faculty, Metropolitan State University
Cremation on the banks of the Ganges river, India.Keystone-France via Getty Images

In India, during the 1918 influenza pandemic, a staggering 12 to 13 million people died, the vast majority between the months of September and December. According to an eyewitness, “There was none to remove the dead bodies and the jackals made a feast.”

A...

Read more: 1918 flu pandemic killed 12 million Indians, and British overlords' indifference strengthened the...

More Articles ...

  1. Catholic Church urges Venezuela to unite against coronavirus
  2. Massive spending in a crisis brought bloody consequences in ancient Athens
  3. Why prisoners are at higher risk for the coronavirus: 5 questions answered
  4. Lead with empathy during the COVID-19 crisis
  5. 3 innovations helping the homeless in Eugene, Oregon
  6. What's lost when we're too afraid to touch the world around us?
  7. Buildings have their own microbiomes – we're striving to make them healthy places
  8. The first Earth Day was a shot heard around the world
  9. How to build community while worshipping online
  10. Making masks at home – what you need to know about how to reduce the transmission of coronavirus
  11. Checking blood for coronavirus antibodies – 3 questions answered about serological tests and immunity
  12. Coastal fish populations didn't crash after the Deepwater Horizon spill – why not?
  13. How the rich reacted to the bubonic plague has eerie similarities to today's pandemic
  14. 8 ways veterans are particularly at risk from the coronavirus pandemic
  15. Why Boris Johnson won't have to pay any hospital bills
  16. Leading in wartime: 5 ways CEOs should communicate with their workers during coronavirus
  17. Coronavirus may wane this summer, but don't count on any seasonal variation to end the pandemic
  18. Prisons and jails are coronavirus epicenters – but they were once designed to prevent disease outbreaks
  19. Sanders exit opened door for Obama to endorse Biden – and offer up his rhetorical skills
  20. Researchers seek to repurpose an existing manufacturing platform to produce a COVID-19 vaccine
  21. How to reach young voters when they're stuck at home
  22. What policing during the pandemic can tell us about crime rates and arrests
  23. A philosopher answers everyday moral dilemmas in a time of coronavirus
  24. Screens are keeping us connected now – but they're still disruptive to in-person communication
  25. Lack of data makes predicting COVID-19's spread difficult but models are still vital
  26. No, CBD is not a miracle molecule that can cure coronavirus, just as it won't cure many other maladies its proponents claim
  27. Wildfire smoke worsens coronavirus risk, putting firefighters in extra danger
  28. Students fight pandemic – and get real-world experience – by using 3D printers to make face shields
  29. What we do and do not know about COVID-19's infectivity and viral load
  30. What we do and do not know about COVID-19's infectious dose and viral load
  31. Coronavirus lockdowns are pushing mass transit systems to the brink – and low-income riders will pay the price
  32. Income inequality is getting worse in US urban areas
  33. Why the Supreme Court made Wisconsin vote during the coronavirus crisis
  34. Birthed by HBCU students, this organization offers important lessons for today's student activists
  35. Shuttered by the coronavirus, many gay bars – already struggling – are now on life support
  36. Do people become more selfless as they age?
  37. Ignaz Semmelweis, the doctor who discovered the disease-fighting power of hand-washing in 1847
  38. Bees seeking bacteria: How bees find their microbiome
  39. Cold War-style preparedness could help fight future pandemics
  40. Journalists are recognizing they're writing a rough draft of history – and can't say definitively 'that's the way it is'
  41. Journalists are recognizing they're writing a rough draft of history -- and can't say definitively that's the way it is
  42. COVID-19 may hit rural residents hard, and that spells trouble because of lack of rural health care
  43. Isolating together is challenging – and relationship stresses can affect biological functioning
  44. Want to know how many people have the coronavirus? Test randomly
  45. Will COVID-19 be the death of summer vacation?
  46. 5 ways parents can motivate children at home during the pandemic – without nagging or tantrums
  47. US pharmacists can now test for coronavirus – they could do more if government allowed it
  48. US pharmacists can now test for coronavirus. They could do more if government allowed it
  49. Ancient texts encouraged hope and endurance when they spoke of end times
  50. Scientists have found oil from the Deepwater Horizon blowout in fishes' livers and on the deep ocean floor