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Boeing 737 Max: The FAA wanted a safe plane – but didn't want to hurt America’s biggest exporter either

  • Written by Susan Webb Yackee, Professor of Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Boeing is accused of not being fully forthcoming about changes it made to the 737 Max.AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

Recent incidents aside, air travel is incredibly safe these days.

Global airplane fatalities averaged 840 a year from 2010 to 2018, compared with almost 2,000 in the 1990s. In fact, this decade is on pace to see the fewest casualties since...

Read more: Boeing 737 Max: The FAA wanted a safe plane – but didn't want to hurt America’s biggest exporter...

Electronic health records cannot replace a doctor who knows you

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Electronic medical records can be costly and time-consuming.Africa Studio/Shutterstock.com

The introduction of electronic health records (EHRs) was accompanied by a great deal of fanfare. Such systems, which replace old paper-based charts in doctor’s offices and hospitals, were designed to make patient data more accurate, safer and more...

Read more: Electronic health records cannot replace a doctor who knows you

Journalism needs to practice transparency in a different way to rebuild credibility

  • Written by Michael Palanski, Associate Professor of Management, Rochester Institute of Technology
Does the news business need a better definition of transparency?Shutterstock

Public trust in media continues to hover near all-time lows, driven by perceptions that the news industry is partisan and peddles inaccurate information (“fake news”), as well as ambivalence about news from social media.

According to a new Knight Foundation repo...

Read more: Journalism needs to practice transparency in a different way to rebuild credibility

Skip this chore: Cleaning your air conditioner condenser probably won't make it work better

  • Written by David Yuill, Assistant Professor of Architectural Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Scratch this off your to-do list.Florence Yuill, CC BY-ND

I asked my neighbor who hoses off his air conditioner condenser every spring why he does it. “Because my dad always told me I had to,” he said.

Conventional wisdom like what my neighbor’s dad imparted may always seem right. But through my HVAC scholarship – the study...

Read more: Skip this chore: Cleaning your air conditioner condenser probably won't make it work better

Why flood insurance needs an overhaul: 6 questions answered

  • Written by Robert W. Klein, Professor Emeritus of Risk Management and Insurance, Georgia State University

Editor’s note: The Trump administration plans to significantly revamp the pricing of flood insurance. While some homeowners would see their premiums rise, others would benefit from lower rates. We asked an insurance expert to explain what the government program currently works and why it’s in dire need of fixing.

What is flood insurance?...

Read more: Why flood insurance needs an overhaul: 6 questions answered

Baseball's biggest problem isn't pace of play – it's teams tanking

  • Written by Adam Felder, Director of Data Analytics, Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, University of Virginia
Miami Marlins fans have little to look forward to this season.AP Photo/Brynn Anderson

Major League Baseball is in trouble. But for all of Commissioner Rob Manfred’s concerns about pace of play, he’s looking in the wrong direction.

The game is healthy. The league isn’t.

Tanking – or intentionally losing – is endemic....

Read more: Baseball's biggest problem isn't pace of play – it's teams tanking

A new procedure may preserve fertility in kids with cancer after chemo or radiation

  • Written by Kyle Orwig, Professor of OB/GYN and Reproductive Sciences, University of Pittsburgh
A 12-week-old baby female macaque, named Grady, was born from frozen testicular tissue. Oregon Health and Science University, CC BY-SA

Cancer in children was often a death sentence in decades past, but new therapies are saving lives. Many of these treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation, however, make children infertile. Now, new research is...

Read more: A new procedure may preserve fertility in kids with cancer after chemo or radiation

March Madness: With gambling legal in eight states, who really wins?

  • Written by John Affleck, Knight Chair in Sports Journalism and Society, Pennsylvania State University
The odds of more legal betting are good. AP Photo/John Locher

March means springtime, but also breathless headlines of Cinderellas, busted brackets and buzzer beaters.

This year, it’ll also include talk of “sharps,” “handles” and “point spreads,” as millions more Americans are able to openly wager for the...

Read more: March Madness: With gambling legal in eight states, who really wins?

Will more genetically engineered foods be approved under the FDA's new leadership?

  • Written by Ana Santos Rutschman, Assistant Professor of Law, Saint Louis University
Will food laws change as more GM foods are created?Zerbor/Shutterstock.com

The world of food and drug regulation was rocked earlier this month by the news of a change in leadership at the Food and Drug Administration. Commissioner Scott Gottlieb resigned and will step down in early April. His temporary replacement is Dr. Ned Sharpless, director of...

Read more: Will more genetically engineered foods be approved under the FDA's new leadership?

We need more teachers of color, so why do we use tests that keep them out of the classroom?

  • Written by Emery Petchauer, Associate Professor, Michigan State University
Teacher license exams often fail to predict which teachers will be the best, research shows.michaeljung from shutterstock.com

Students of color seldom see teachers who look like them. This is because many aspiring teachers of color are pushed out of the profession before they have a chance to start. It’s not poor performance in college...

Read more: We need more teachers of color, so why do we use tests that keep them out of the classroom?

More Articles ...

  1. Niger has the world's highest birth rate – and that may be a recipe for unrest
  2. Nuns were secluded to avoid scandals in early Christian monastic communities
  3. Livestreamed massacre means it's time to shut down Facebook Live
  4. Why social movements like #MeToo seem to come out of nowhere
  5. Your pet on pot, or even CBD: Not a good thing, a vet toxicologist explains
  6. Teens have less face time with their friends – and are lonelier than ever
  7. Death penalty moratorium in California – what it means for the state and for the nation
  8. Even if Netanyahu goes, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will continue
  9. The bias hiding in your library
  10. 5 ways summer camp makes a difference – and what to look for in a camp
  11. Violence against women is overlooked in its role in opioid epidemic
  12. A case against a moratorium on germline gene editing
  13. White nationalism, born in the USA, is now a global terror threat
  14. Does most of your paycheck go to rent? That may be hurting your health
  15. The politics of fear: How it manipulates us to tribalism
  16. What is the significance of Friday prayers in Islam?
  17. A half-century before the hashtag, artists were on the front lines of #MeToo
  18. Wastewater is an asset – it contains nutrients, energy and precious metals, and scientists are learning how to recover them
  19. Student loans and 'risk-sharing' – the problem with penalizing colleges when graduates can't pay
  20. For Native Americans, US-Mexico border is an 'imaginary line'
  21. Danger ahead in the constitutional standoff over Trump's emergency declaration
  22. Jupiter's Great Red Spot: A 300-year-old cyclone persists but is shrinking
  23. Why some counties are powerhouses for innovation
  24. Here's how airplane crash investigations work, according to an aviation safety expert
  25. New evidence for a human magnetic sense that lets your brain detect the Earth's magnetic field
  26. From 'Wild Horses' to 'Wild Things,' a window into Maurice Sendak's creative process
  27. Thich Nhat Hanh, the Buddhist monk who introduced mindfulness to the West, prepares to die
  28. Global study of pancreatic cancer offers possible insights into treatment and early detection
  29. Teaching in America's prisons has taught me to believe in second chances
  30. Racists in Congress fought statehood for Hawaii, but lost that battle 60 years ago
  31. Restoring tropical forests isn't meaningful if those forests only stand for 10 or 20 years
  32. Adding a citizenship question to the 2020 census would cost some states their congressional seats
  33. Automated control system caused Ethiopia crash, flight data suggests
  34. Editing genes shouldn't be too scary -- unless they are the ones that get passed to future generations
  35. Marijuana is a lot more than just THC - a pharmacologist looks at the untapped healing compounds
  36. Why a college admissions racket would funnel bribes through a fake charity
  37. Why rich parents are more likely to be unethical
  38. 5 ways the Syrian revolution continues
  39. Why meritocracy is a myth in college admissions
  40. Jamaica leads in Richard Branson-backed plan for a Caribbean climate revolution
  41. Consumer rights are worthless without enforcement
  42. Sandy Hook lawsuit court victory opens crack in gun maker immunity shield
  43. 3 days, 3 key votes – and no end in sight for Brexit
  44. Softer, processed foods changed the way ancient humans spoke
  45. The mental health crisis among America's youth is real – and staggering
  46. How AIPAC could lose its bipartisan status
  47. Rise and fall of the landline: 143 years of telephones becoming more accessible – and smart
  48. What will happen to Michael Jackson's legacy? A famed writer's fall could offer clues
  49. Doctors need to talk through treatment options better for black men with prostate cancer
  50. Plastic bag bans can backfire if consumers just use other plastics instead