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The Conversation

Students are returning to school with anxiety, grief and gaps in social skills – will there be enough school mental health resources?

  • Written by Sandra M. Chafouleas, Professor of Educational Psychology, University of Connecticut
imageSchool districts are using federal COVID-19 relief funds to hire more mental health professionals.mmpile/E+ Collection via Getty Images

Even before COVID-19, as many as 1 in 6 young children had a diagnosed mental, behavioral or developmental disorder. New findings suggest a doubling of rates of disorders such as anxiety and depression among...

Read more: Students are returning to school with anxiety, grief and gaps in social skills – will there be...

Opioid lawsuit payout plans overlook a vital need: Pain management care and research focused on smarter use of addictive drugs

  • Written by Mark C. Bicket, Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan
imageThe improper prescription of opioids for pain treatment is one of the central drivers of the opioid epidemic.ah_designs/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The opioid crisis has resulted in more than 500,000 overdose deaths over the past two decades. The federal government, states and other entities have filed litigation against drug manufacturers,...

Read more: Opioid lawsuit payout plans overlook a vital need: Pain management care and research focused on...

After India's brutal coronavirus wave, two-thirds of population has been exposed to SARS-CoV2

  • Written by Rajib Dasgupta, Chairperson, Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health, Jawaharlal Nehru University
imageLining up for a vaccine at a municipal stadium in Hyderabad, India. AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A

Cases of COVID-19 are surging around the world, but the course of the pandemic varies widely country to country. To provide you with a global view as we approach a year and a half since the official declaration of the pandemic, The Conversation’s...

Read more: After India's brutal coronavirus wave, two-thirds of population has been exposed to SARS-CoV2

Hospitals often outsource important services to companies that prioritize profit over patients

  • Written by Leonard L. Berry, University Distinguished Professor of Marketing, Mays Business School; Senior Fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Texas A&M University
imageMany hospitals outsource services to specialized companies. JazzIRT/E+ via Getty Images

Hospitals have long embraced the practice of outsourcing some services to specialized companies. Much of this outsourcing is for nonclinical tasks such as laundry, information technology and cybersecurity, and outsourcing those types of services can boost...

Read more: Hospitals often outsource important services to companies that prioritize profit over patients

How photography can build peace and justice in war-torn communities

  • Written by Pamina Firchow, Associate Professor of Coexistence and Conflict, Brandeis University
imageProject citizen-photographers from Las Cruces, Colombia.Edwin Cubillos Rodriguez, CC BY-ND

It’s not easy for most people to think about what peace and justice mean to them, or how to express it. But that’s what we ask people in war-torn communities to do, all around the world.

One place we did this is in Colombia, a country now testing...

Read more: How photography can build peace and justice in war-torn communities

Afghan troops sought safety in numbers – igniting a cascade of surrender

  • Written by Todd Lehmann, Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science, University of Michigan
imageIn May, Afghan troops raised their national flag as the U.S. pulled out. Now, their flag is down too.Afghan Ministry of Defense Press Office via AP

The swift collapse of the Afghan military in recent days caught many in the U.S. by surprise, including the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

In the months after President Joe Biden’s April...

Read more: Afghan troops sought safety in numbers – igniting a cascade of surrender

What a baker from ancient Pompeii can teach us about happiness

  • Written by Nadejda Williams, Professor of Ancient History, University of West Georgia
imageAs they do today, threats of destruction loomed in ancient Pompeii.Art Media/Print Collector via Getty Images

In a testament to its resiliency, happiness, according to this year’s World Happiness Report, remained remarkably stable around the world, despite a pandemic that upended the lives of billions of people.

As a classicist, I find such...

Read more: What a baker from ancient Pompeii can teach us about happiness

Immunocompromised people make up nearly half of COVID-19 breakthrough hospitalizations – an extra vaccine dose may help

  • Written by Jonathan Golob, Assistant Professor of Infectious Disease, University of Michigan
imageCancer and organ transplant patients, people with untreated HIV and people with other immunodeficiencies are at high risk of severe COVID-19 infection.burakkarademir/E+ via Getty ImagesimageCC BY-ND

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officially recommended on Aug. 12 and Aug. 13, 2021, respectively, that...

Read more: Immunocompromised people make up nearly half of COVID-19 breakthrough hospitalizations – an extra...

Answers to The Conversation's news quiz

  • Written by Martin La Monica, Director of Editorial Projects and Newsletters, The Conversation (US edition)

How closely do you read The Conversation U.S.? You can see answers to questions included in our newsletter below.

Found a fascinating factoid in one of our articles? Send a suggested question to us.quiz@theconversation.com and we may include it in a future quiz. Please include the article link and paste the passage where you found your new nugget...

Read more: Answers to The Conversation's news quiz

Answers to The Conversation's news quiz

  • Written by Martin La Monica, Director of Editorial Projects and Newsletters, The Conversation (US edition)

How closely do you read The Conversation U.S.? You can see answers to questions included in our newsletter below.

Found a fascinating factoid in one of our articles? Send a suggested question to us.quiz@theconversation.com and we may include it in a future quiz. Please include the article link and paste the passage where you found your new nugget...

Read more: Answers to The Conversation's news quiz

More Articles ...

  1. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  2. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  3. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  4. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  5. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  6. Bat pups babble and bat moms use baby talk, hinting at the evolution of human language
  7. Who has the power to say kids do or don't have to wear masks in school – the governor or the school district? It's not clear
  8. What the 'Lyme wars' can teach us about COVID-19 and how to find common ground in the school reopening debate
  9. Lesson from a robot swarm: Change group behavior by talking one-on-one rather than getting on a soapbox
  10. When hotter and drier means more – but eventually less – wildfire
  11. The US is taking a bite out of its food insecurity – here's one way to scrap the problem altogether
  12. Thinking objectively about romantic conflicts could lead to fewer future disagreements
  13. Individual dietary choices can add – or take away – minutes, hours and years of life
  14. 5 claves para entender el conflicto en Afganistán
  15. An Afghan American scholar describes his fear-filled journey from the chaos at Kabul airport to a plane bound for home in the US
  16. Warrior, servant, mother, unifier – the Virgin Mary has played many roles through the centuries
  17. How patients talk about cancer with family, friends and doctors
  18. Correctional officers are driving the pandemic in prisons
  19. Why did a military superpower fail in Afghanistan?
  20. An elite Virginia high school overhauled admissions for gifted students – here's how to tell if the changes are working
  21. Can health insurance companies charge the unvaccinated higher premiums? What about life insurers? 5 questions answered
  22. Mexico, facing its third COVID-19 wave, shows the dangers of weak federal coordination
  23. Fish fins are teaching us the secret to flexible robots and new shape-changing materials
  24. Tick bites: Every year is a bad tick year
  25. Afghanistan only the latest US war to be driven by deceit and delusion
  26. Will recent political instability affect Haiti's earthquake response? We ask an expert
  27. America's moral responsibility for the tragedy unfolding in Afghanistan
  28. Climate change is relentless: Seemingly small shifts have big consequences
  29. Nursing home residents and staff are traumatized from the pandemic - collaborative care can help with recovery
  30. Organic food has become mainstream but still has room to grow
  31. The story of Nearest Green, America's first known Black master distiller
  32. An AI expert explains why it's hard to give computers something you take for granted: Common sense
  33. When the NCAA permitted colleges to pay stipends to student-athletes, the colleges also raised their estimated expenses
  34. As Colorado River Basin states confront water shortages, it's time to focus on reducing demand
  35. Afghans' lives and livelihoods upended even more as US occupation ends
  36. Schools can reopen safely – an epidemiologist describes what works and what's not worth the effort
  37. Rat poison is just one of the potentially dangerous substances likely to be mixed into illicit drugs
  38. Vladimir Putin plans to win Russia's parliamentary election no matter how unpopular his party is
  39. Why we missed hugs
  40. How a volcano and flaming red sunsets led an amateur scientist in Hawaii to discover jet streams
  41. 'Freezer burn' is a serious problem – preventing ice recrystallization may alleviate it
  42. Is it possible to recreate dinosaurs from their DNA?
  43. Deciphering the symptoms of long COVID-19 is slow and painstaking – for both sufferers and their physicians
  44. 250 preschool kids get suspended or expelled each day - 5 questions answered
  45. Afghan government collapses and Taliban on verge of controlling country: 5 essential reads
  46. Afghan government collapses, Taliban seize control: 5 essential reads
  47. Cómo los barrios gay en Estados Unidos utilizaron la experiencia del VIH para ayudar contra el COVID
  48. The disturbing history of how conservatorships were used to exploit, swindle Native Americans
  49. How religious fervor and anti-regulation zealotry laid the groundwork for America's $36 billion supplement industry
  50. Women make fewer political donations and risk being ignored by elected officials