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Is it safe for pregnant women to go to the dentist? Yes

  • Written by David Leader, Associate Professor of Dental Medicine, Tufts University
imageIt's safe. Dentist office image via www.shutterstock.com.

According to research from the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, in 2011 about two-thirds of pregnant women had their teeth cleaned in the year prior to delivery, but only about one-half had their teeth cleaned during pregnancy. While plenty of factors may keep pregnant women from...

Read more: Is it safe for pregnant women to go to the dentist? Yes

Depression in pregnancy: Why doing nothing about it may be a bad idea

  • Written by Ardesheer Talati, Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurobiology, Psychiatry, Columbia University Medical Center
imagePregnant woman.Flickr, CC BY

Pregnant women face a number of choices. Most are pretty noncontroversial: Don’t smoke or use drugs; avoid raw fish and eggs; get lots of rest. But one dilemma some pregnant women face is less intuitive: whether and how to treat their minds and bodies if they are depressed.

Much attention has focused on postpartum...

Read more: Depression in pregnancy: Why doing nothing about it may be a bad idea

Protect your privacy during turbulent times: A hacker’s guide to being cyber-safe

  • Written by Timothy Summers, Director of Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Engagement, University of Maryland
imageIf only it were this easy.'Keyboard' via shutterstock.com

Protecting individual privacy from government intrusion is older than American democracy. In 1604, the attorney general of England, Sir Edward Coke, ruled that a man’s house is his castle. This was the official declaration that a homeowner could protect himself and his privacy from the...

Read more: Protect your privacy during turbulent times: A hacker’s guide to being cyber-safe

An activist's playbook: How to influence Trump's cabinet and policies

  • Written by Sarah Snyder, Associate Professor, American University School of International Service

As Donald Trump works to fill his cabinet, his choices have inspired considerable anxiety among his critics. Advocacy organizations such as the American Civil Liberties Union and Human Rights Watch have reacted with concern and outright objections, in particular to the nomination of Sen. Jeff Sessions as attorney general and Rep. Michael Pompeo to...

Read more: An activist's playbook: How to influence Trump's cabinet and policies

For China, climate change is no hoax – it's a business and political opportunity

  • Written by Matthew Kahn, Professor of Economics, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageChinese President Xi Jinping, center, U.S. President Barack Obama and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon shake hands during a joint ratification of the Paris climate change agreement in eastern China's Zhejiang province, Sept. 3, 2016How Hwee Young/Pool Photo via AP

In mid-November, while Americans were preoccupied with election returns, China sent...

Read more: For China, climate change is no hoax – it's a business and political opportunity

Why President-elect Trump doesn't think he has a conflict of interest problem

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Assistant Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon

President-elect Trump will face an array of conflicts of interest when he takes office. These conflicts are not minor or isolated. They are legion. And, to use his own favored language, they will be “huge.”

His real estate holdings abroad make him vulnerable to offers of favorable treatment (or financial threats) by governments...

Read more: Why President-elect Trump doesn't think he has a conflict of interest problem

How Standing Rock became a site of pilgrimage

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Visiting Assistant Professor of Women's Studies, Environmental Studies and Native American Religion, Harvard University

The Army Corps of Engineers, the federal agency responsible for investigating, developing and maintaining water and related environmental resources, recently announced that they would not allow the Dakota Access pipeline to be constructed under the Missouri River and through Lakota territory.

This decision essentially ended the Standing Rock Sioux...

Read more: How Standing Rock became a site of pilgrimage

Forensic evidence largely not supported by sound science – now what?

  • Written by Jessica Gabel Cino, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Associate Professor of Law, Georgia State University
imageIs this worth the tape it's wrapped with?Bill Selak, CC BY-ND

Forensic science has become a mainstay of many a TV drama, and it’s just as important in real-life criminal trials. Drawing on biology, chemistry, genetics, medicine and psychology, forensic evidence helps answer questions in the legal system. Often, forensics provides the...

Read more: Forensic evidence largely not supported by sound science – now what?

‘Hail Trump’ salute recalls a powerful message of hate

  • Written by Stephanie Schorow, Adjunct Professor of Professional Writing, Regis College, Regis College

During a Nov. 22 celebration of Donald Trump’s election triumph, members of a far-right organization, the National Policy Institute, were filmed extending a stiff arm in the iconic “Heil Hitler” salute of Nazi Germany. Ensuring there would be no mistaking the gesture, National Policy Institute President Richard Spencer shouted,...

Read more: ‘Hail Trump’ salute recalls a powerful message of hate

Why it's wrong to blame Obamacare for health care ills

  • Written by Aravind Chandrasekaran, Associate Professor (Operations & Healthcare), The Ohio State University
imageScreen shot of ACA enrollment website.Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

The Affordable Care Act (ACA), often called Obamacare, has come under sharp criticism. Now, with the nomination of Rep. Tom Price (R-Ga.) for secretary of health and human services, there are concerns about whether it will be repealed or changed. Price, a physician, has been a...

Read more: Why it's wrong to blame Obamacare for health care ills

More Articles ...

  1. Trump Tower, the skyscraper and the future of urban development
  2. America's role in the world 75 years after Pearl Harbor
  3. Unbelievable news? Read it again and you might think it's true
  4. Victory at Standing Rock reflects a failure of US energy and climate policy
  5. How can we learn to reject fake news in the digital world?
  6. Neoliberalism's failure means we need a new narrative to guide global economy
  7. What women with breast cancer should know about estrogens
  8. The Italian referendum: No Trump nor Brexit
  9. Microbes: Our tiny, crucial allies
  10. What changes when Pope Francis grants all priests the authority to forgive abortions
  11. Balancing cybersecurity and academic freedom is a challenge on campus
  12. 'Parental alienation': What it means and why it matters
  13. Why did a new Colombian peace agreement come so quickly after the referendum 'no' vote?
  14. Three ways Facebook could reduce fake news without resorting to censorship
  15. 10 ways the tech industry and the media helped create President Trump
  16. How making fun weekend plans can actually ruin your weekend
  17. How Trump's deportation plan threatens America's food and wine supply
  18. Can we rely on DIY air pollution sensors?
  19. How majority voting betrayed voters again in 2016
  20. Religion shapes Cuba despite Castro's influence
  21. After decades of research, why is AIDS still rampant?
  22. Circadian rhythms and the microbiome: Disrupting daily routine of gut microbes can be bad news for whole body
  23. Trump’s Carrier coup reveals credibility gap between Twitter rhetoric and economic reality
  24. Eyes in the sky: Cutting NASA Earth observations would be a costly mistake
  25. Neuroscience hasn't been weaponized – it's been a tool of war from the start
  26. What cyber charter schools are and why their growth should worry us
  27. Donald Trump is no Mussolini, but liberal democracy could still be in danger
  28. Why male couples should think about HIV in their relationships
  29. How Trump's immigration enforcement could affect families and communities
  30. Experts' roundtable: The future of journalism in Trump's America
  31. Fusion energy: A time of transition and potential
  32. Why America's labor unions are about to die
  33. America says goodbye to Michelle Obama, its mom-in-chief
  34. The disturbing connection between bullying and sexual harassment
  35. Understanding the conditions that foster coral reefs' caretaker fishes
  36. Where Latino teens learn about sex does matter
  37. How Trump could shock a divided nation back to life as collaborator-in-chief
  38. Globalization and its discontents: Why there's a backlash and how it needs to change
  39. Questions I never got to ask Fidel Castro
  40. The future of electronics is light
  41. Flakka is a dangerous drug, but it doesn't turn you into a zombie
  42. She phubbs me, she phubbs me not: Smartphones could be ruining your love life
  43. Why literature matters in debate about race and immigrants
  44. What China's 'export machine' can teach Trump about globalization
  45. Mexicans are migrating, just not across the US border
  46. Misinformation on social media: Can technology save us?
  47. Dear Mr. Trump: Climate policy puts lives in your hands
  48. Why so many people regain weight after dieting
  49. 100 years of the 'gender gap' in American politics
  50. Here's how undocumented students are able to enroll at American universities