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When treating sports injuries, does the West do it best?

  • Written by Nate Newman, Associate Professor of Athletic Training, Director of the Masters in Athletic Training Program, College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Drake University

Every two years, billions of people watch athletes at the Olympics compete to be crowned world champion.

What the viewer doesn’t see are the athletes’ behind-the-scenes preparation, which includes trying to figure out new ways to give them an edge in the biggest event of their career.

Different treatment methods that may provide an...

Read more: When treating sports injuries, does the West do it best?

What is 'right to try,' and could it help?

  • Written by Morten Wendelbo, Lecturer, Bush School of Government and Public Service; Research Fellow, Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs; and, Policy Sciences Lecturer, Texas A&M University Libraries, Texas A&M University
In this March 18, 2011 photo, Cassidy Hempel waved at hospital staff as she was being treated for a rare disorder. Her mother Chris, left, fought to gain permission for an experimental drug.AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

After a year in which President Donald Trump devoted much of his health policy attention to the repeal and replace of the...

Read more: What is 'right to try,' and could it help?

DC graduation scandal shows how chronic absenteeism threatens America's schools

  • Written by Shaun M. Dougherty, Assistant Professor of Education & Public Policy, University of Connecticut
Millions of American students miss large chunks of the school year. Shutterstock.com

Each year in the United States, approximately 5 to 7.5 million students in the nation’s K-12 schools miss a month or more of school. That means 150 to 225 million instructional days are lost every school year.

The problem is more pronounced in low-income urban...

Read more: DC graduation scandal shows how chronic absenteeism threatens America's schools

Is full transparency good for democracy?

  • Written by Austin Sarat, Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science, Amherst College
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Devin Nunes.AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

With the approval of President Donald Trump, the House of Representatives released the so-called “Nunes memo” on Feb. 2.

In it, House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes describes alleged abuses of surveillance practices by the FBI in the...

Read more: Is full transparency good for democracy?

What the joyous solitude of early hermits can teach us about being alone

  • Written by Kim Haines-Eitzen, Professor of Early Christianity, Cornell University
Loneliness (feeling alone) and solitude (being alone) are not the same thing.jessicahtam, CC BY

In today’s world, loneliness seems to have reached epidemic proportions. Countless studies have highlighted the serious and negative impact that loneliness has on our health, our sense of well-being, and our ability to thrive in an increasingly...

Read more: What the joyous solitude of early hermits can teach us about being alone

More bad news for dinosaurs: Chicxulub meteorite impact triggered global volcanic eruptions on the ocean floor

  • Written by Leif Karlstrom, Assistant Professor of Earth Sciences, University of Oregon
Seismic shockwaves after a meteorite’s collision could affect systems all over the planet.solarseven/Shutterstock.com

The end of the Cretaceous period 66 million years ago was a rough time to be living on Earth.

Three global catastrophes occurred nearly simultaneously: The Chicxulub meteorite slammed into what is now Mexico’s Yucatan...

Read more: More bad news for dinosaurs: Chicxulub meteorite impact triggered global volcanic eruptions on the...

Why privatizing Puerto Rico's power grid won't solve its energy problems

  • Written by Arturo Massol-Deyá, Professor of MIcrobial Ecology, University of Puerto Rico - Humacao
Puerto Rico's power utility, PREPA, has been decimated by years of scarcity and bad management. But will privatizing it really turn the lights back on for Puerto Ricans?AP Photo/Carlos Giusti

Leer en español.

Perhaps nothing is clearer to Puerto Ricans right now than the importance of having a good power grid. Hurricane Maria battered the...

Read more: Why privatizing Puerto Rico's power grid won't solve its energy problems

La privatización de PREPA compromete el desarrollo energético de Puerto Rico

  • Written by Arturo Massol-Deyá, Professor of MIcrobial Ecology, University of Puerto Rico - Humacao
¿Privatizar la generación energética de Puerto Rico ayudará a que esto no vuelva a pasar?AP Photo/Carlos Giusti

Read in English.

Si algo se ve claro ahora en Puerto Rico es la importancia de un sistema energético fuerte y resiliente. Tras el Huracán María, que azotó la isla en septiembre 2017,...

Read more: La privatización de PREPA compromete el desarrollo energético de Puerto Rico

Estate planning for your digital assets

  • Written by Natalie Banta, Associate Professor of Law, Drake University
Digital documents are not nearly as easy to retrieve.Africa Studio/Shutterstock.com

What will happen to your Facebook account when you die? What about all your photos shared on social media, your texts with loved ones, or documents on cloud-storage systems? In just the two-year period from 2012 to 2014, humans produced more data than in all of...

Read more: Estate planning for your digital assets

Suicide isn't just a 'white people thing'

  • Written by Kimya N. Dennis, Associate Professor of Sociology and Criminal Studies; Creator and Coordinator of Criminal Studies program, Salem College
Research suggests that suicides by racial and ethnic minorities are undercounted. Joseph Sohm/shutterstock.com

As a sociologist and criminologist, I often do community outreach on mental health prevention. I urge organizations and programs to avoid “one size fits all” approaches. There are many ways that mental health issues can impact...

Read more: Suicide isn't just a 'white people thing'

More Articles ...

  1. What's the difference between sexual abuse, sexual assault, sexual harassment and rape?
  2. Are traffic-clogged US cities ready for congestion pricing?
  3. The Cleveland Indians' Chief Wahoo isn't going away anytime soon
  4. How childhood experiences contribute to the education-health link
  5. Black Americans mostly left behind by progress since Dr. King's death
  6. If football is so deadly, why did 103 million people watch the Super Bowl?
  7. Why the global stock market crash doesn't really matter
  8. Your mobile phone can give away your location, even if you tell it not to
  9. How one state bridged the cultural divide on climate change to prepare for a stormier future
  10. Teens aren't just risk machines – there's a method to their madness
  11. White men may be biggest winners when a city snags Amazon’s HQ2
  12. 5 things to know about North and South Korea
  13. Why treating addiction with medication should be carefully considered
  14. Trump's push for new offshore drilling is likely to run aground in California
  15. Sessions' war on pot could speed up marijuana legalization nationwide
  16. Improve your internet safety: 4 essential reads
  17. Your next hearing aid could be a video game
  18. How rich are the rich? If only you knew
  19. 5 charts show why the South is the least healthy region in the US
  20. 3 questions about the FISA court answered
  21. Trump and Nunes torch tradition of trust between Congress and FBI
  22. The complex history of 'In God We Trust'
  23. How Americans came to embrace meditation, and with it, Hinduism
  24. The transformation of the Super Bowl ad experience
  25. Fed up with Big Beer's incursion, independent craft breweries push back
  26. Debunking 3 myths behind 'chain migration' and 'low-skilled' immigrants
  27. Are autonomous cars really safer than human drivers?
  28. Black America's 'bleaching syndrome'
  29. Does energy storage make the electric grid cleaner?
  30. Does college turn people into liberals?
  31. As Arctic sea ice shrinks, new research shows how much energy polar bears use to find food
  32. How kindness can make a difference in cancer care
  33. #MeToo is riding a new wave of feminism in India
  34. How lotto scammers defraud elderly Americans and fuel gang wars in Jamaica
  35. What's behind America's promotion of religious liberty abroad
  36. Why I teach a course called 'White Racism'
  37. Charity and taxes: 4 questions answered
  38. The deepest-dwelling fish in the sea is small, pink and delicate
  39. A century ago, progressives were the ones shouting 'fake news'
  40. How Facebook could really fix itself
  41. The education of Ursula Le Guin
  42. Why colleges must change how they teach calculus
  43. What employers can do to stop the next Larry Nassar
  44. Americans are saving energy by staying at home
  45. How mass incarceration harms U.S. health, in 5 charts
  46. Online social networks can help fight social anxiety
  47. Want to be president of Mexico? There's an app for that
  48. 3 key quotes from Trump's first State of the Union, explained
  49. Why Amazon and friends' plan could be a major disrupter of health care system
  50. Trump's path to citizenship for 1.8 million will leave out nearly half of all Dreamers