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St. Patrick’s Day: A time to toast ... your liver and how it deals with green beer

  • Written by Marie-Pierre Hasne, PhD, Pharm.D. Lecturer, College of Medicine-Tucson, University of Arizona
St. Patrick and Ireland may be mostly on your mind on March 17, but it's also a time to toast your liver.VGstockstudio/Shutterstock.com

St. Patrick’s Day is here, and even though most big celebrations have been canceled because of coronavirus, we still have something to cheer over – our livers.

If St. Patrick is celebrated for his...

Read more: St. Patrick’s Day: A time to toast... your liver and how it deals with green beer

The Fed will have to do a lot more than cut rates to zero to stop Wall Street's coronavirus panic

  • Written by Alexander Kurov, Professor of Finance and Fred T. Tattersall Research Chair in Finance, West Virginia University
A sea of red.AP Photo/Craig Ruttle

The Federal Reserve is 0 for 2 in its fight against Wall Street’s coronavirus panic, seeming to confirm perceptions of the central bank’s impotence.

The Fed’s first attempt to calm thing down – a half-point surprise rate cut on March 3 – failed because markets knew the Fed was almost...

Read more: The Fed will have to do a lot more than cut rates to zero to stop Wall Street's coronavirus panic

Fear can spread from person to person faster than the coronavirus – but there are ways to slow it down

  • Written by Jacek Debiec, Assistant Professor / Department of Psychiatry; Assistant Research Professor / Molecular & Behavioral Neuroscience Institute, University of Michigan
It's hard not to be scared of an invisible and spreading threat.AP Photo/Markus Schreiber

As cases of COVID-19 proliferate, there’s a pandemic of fear unfolding alongside the pandemic of the coronavirus.

Media announce mass cancellations of public events “over coronavirus fears.” TV stations show images of “coronavirus panic...

Read more: Fear can spread from person to person faster than the coronavirus – but there are ways to slow it...

Pete Buttigieg's coded language shows the limits and promise of LGBTQ progress

  • Written by Nathaniel Frank, Director, What We Know Project, Cornell University
Pete Buttigieg speaks with members of the media on March 1 in Plains, Georgia.AP Photo/Matt Rourke

According to family lore, my father suspected I was gay when I was six because I liked cars with windshield wipers in the rear. (As a shrink, he’s always had a penchant for looking under the hood, so to speak.)

There were other clues too. I used...

Read more: Pete Buttigieg's coded language shows the limits and promise of LGBTQ progress

On the front lines of developing a test for the coronavirus

  • Written by David Pride, Associate Director of Microbiology, University of California San Diego
A University of Washington Medical Center set up a drive-through testing center on March 13, 2020.AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

“That escalated quickly!” is a common trope used in popular culture to describe when a situation gets out of hand before you’ve even had a chance to think about it. We don’t often use this trope in...

Read more: On the front lines of developing a test for the coronavirus

Social distancing comes with social side effects – here's how to stay connected

  • Written by Jonathan Kanter, Director of the Center for the Science of Social Connection, University of Washington
There are ways to strengthen bonds while keeping physical distance.MoMo Productions/DigitalVision via Getty Images

To fight the spread of coronavirus, government officials have asked Americans to swallow a hard pill: Stay away from each other.

In times of societal stress, such a demand runs counter to what evolution has hard-wired people to do: Seek...

Read more: Social distancing comes with social side effects – here's how to stay connected

What Islamic hygienic practices can teach when coronavirus is spreading

  • Written by Rose S. Aslan, Assistant Professor of Religion, California Lutheran University
A Muslim man prepares for prayer by doing a ritual washing.mustafagull/Getty Images

As outbreaks of the coronavirus spread throughout the world, people are reminded over and again to limit physical contact, wash hands and avoid touching their face. The recent Netflix docuseries “Pandemic: How to Prevent an Outbreak” illustrates how the...

Read more: What Islamic hygienic practices can teach when coronavirus is spreading

Closing polling places is the 21st century's version of a poll tax

  • Written by Joshua F.J. Inwood, Associate Professor of Geography Senior Research Associate in the Rock Ethics Institute, Pennsylvania State University
Californians wait in line to vote on Super Tuesday, March 3, 2020.AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu

Delays and long lines at polling places during recent presidential primary elections – such as voters in Texas experienced – represent the latest version of decades-long policies that have sought to reduce the political power of African Americans i...

Read more: Closing polling places is the 21st century's version of a poll tax

Coronavirus: Three lessons from the AIDS crisis

  • Written by Laurie Marhoefer, Associate Professor of History, University of Washington
The AIDS Memorial Quilt, honoring people who died of AIDS, on display in Washington, D.C. in 2011. NIH/Wikipedia

As my governor closes all the public schools and public libraries here in Seattle, I’m thinking about 1981 – the year when newspapers in New York and Los Angeles reported that a strange new virus was killing healthy young...

Read more: Coronavirus: Three lessons from the AIDS crisis

Barr isn't the first powerful official to defy the courts and risk legitimizing contempt for the law

  • Written by Austin Sarat, Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science, Amherst College
What message is Attorney General William Barr sending citizens in defying court order?Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images

What happens to the rule of law when even the top law enforcement official in the land refuses to obey it?

That’s the question raised in a stinging rebuke of Attorney General William Barr and his Justice Department that...

Read more: Barr isn't the first powerful official to defy the courts and risk legitimizing contempt for the law

More Articles ...

  1. Vodka won't protect you from coronavirus, and 4 other things to know about hand sanitizer
  2. Online learning will be hard for kids whose schools close – and the digital divide will make it even harder for some of them
  3. Social distancing: What it is and why it's the best tool we have to fight the coronavirus
  4. America's poorest children won't get nutritious meals with school cafeterias closed due to the coronavirus
  5. Why don't viruses make their original hosts sick? 5 questions answered
  6. Biden and Trump agree on strong US-Israel relations – Bernie, not so much
  7. Coronavirus could hit homeless hard, and that could hit everyone hard
  8. Biden and Trump agree on strong US-Israel relations – Sanders, not so much
  9. Coronavirus, kids and school closings: A public health expert answers 4 questions
  10. The oil shock of 2020 appears to be here – and the pain could be wide and deep
  11. The coronavirus will delay agricultural export surges promised in trade deal with China
  12. Coronavirus and tourism: Places like Alaska without a severe COVID-19 outbreak could still be devastated
  13. This isn't the first time sports teams have played in eerily empty arenas
  14. Lessons on wrangling candidates from the masterful moderator of presidential debates, Jim Lehrer
  15. Julius Caesar refused to be crowned king
  16. Plagues follow bad leadership in ancient Greek tales
  17. How coronavirus is upsetting the blood supply chain
  18. How does the coronavirus test work? 5 questions answered
  19. Why a Roman philosopher's views on the fear of death matter as coronavirus spreads
  20. Coronavirus control measures aren't pointless – just slowing down the pandemic could save millions of lives
  21. The first fireside chat calmed an anxious nation and provides a model for today
  22. How the fireside chat provided a model for calming the nation that President Trump failed to follow
  23. What to expect as colleges and universities move classes online amid coronavirus fears: 4 questions answered
  24. Biden's win shows the power of Democratic moderates
  25. The new coronavirus is hitting colleges and universities hard, but donors can help
  26. Ancient bird skull found in amber was tiny predator in the time of giant dinosaurs
  27. Biden's big night with moderates, African Americans and Baby Boomers
  28. Why public universities are chasing rich kids from out of state
  29. There's plenty of toilet paper in the US – so why are people hoarding it?
  30. Can gambling juice fandom for women's sports?
  31. Newborn babies weigh less today – possibly due to the increased popularity of cesarean sections and induced labor
  32. Why so few young Americans vote
  33. Indian Country leaders urge Native people to be counted in 2020 Census
  34. When safety measures lead to riskier behavior by more people
  35. If I get sick with coronavirus, can Donald Trump make me stay home?
  36. A coronavirus recession may be coming: Here's what to do with your money
  37. Protecting mangroves can prevent billions of dollars in global flooding damage every year
  38. 7 science-based strategies to cope with coronavirus anxiety
  39. Graphic novels help teens learn about racism, climate change and social justice – here's a reading list
  40. Black turnout in primaries might make Democrats think twice about swing voter strategy
  41. Mennonites helped turn Paraguay into a mega beef producer – indigenous people may pay the price
  42. A geriatrician offers 4 tips for seniors to stay connected during coronavirus outbreak
  43. How a tech-based program on health brought African American kids and parents together
  44. Does screening travelers for disease and infection really work?
  45. Malnourished bugs: Higher CO2 levels make plants less nutritious, hurting insect populations
  46. Will sick leave protect me if I get ill from coronavirus? 5 questions answered
  47. Can I take time off if my child's school is closed for coronavirus? 5 questions on sick leave laws answered
  48. Why the US still hasn't had a woman president
  49. The candidate you like is the one you think is most electable
  50. From border security to climate change, national emergency declarations raise hard questions about presidential power