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4 things you need to know right now to protect yourself from the flu

  • Written by Arnold Monto, Professor, Epidemiology, University of Michigan
Donnie Cardenas, on bed, waits with his roommate Torrey Jewett at Palomar Medical Center in Escondido, Calif., Jan. 10, 2018. Cardenas had the flu.AP Photo/Greg Bull

This has been a particularly bad influenza season, starting early especially in the South and West Coast in the U.S. This follows a severe season in Australia during our summer.

There...

Read more: 4 things you need to know right now to protect yourself from the flu

How talented kids from low-income families become America's 'Lost Einsteins'

  • Written by Alexander Bell, PhD Candidate, Economics, Harvard University
New research concludes that there are many “Lost Einsteins” in America – children who had the ability to become inventors but didn't because of where they were born.Shutterstock.com

Innovation is widely viewed as the engine of economic growth.

To maximize innovation and growth, all of our brightest youth should have the opportunity...

Read more: How talented kids from low-income families become America's 'Lost Einsteins'

DACA isn't just about social justice – legalizing Dreamers makes economic sense too

  • Written by Amy Hsin, Associate Professor of Sociology, City University of New York
Demonstrators chant slogans during an immigration rally in support of DACA.AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

Earlier this month, hopes were high that a bipartisan deal could be reached to resolve the fate of the “Dreamers,” the millions of undocumented youth who were brought to the U.S. as children.

Those hopes all but vanished on Jan. 11 as...

Read more: DACA isn't just about social justice – legalizing Dreamers makes economic sense too

Successful businesses need proactive leadership – and so does Congress

  • Written by Thomas Bateman, Professor of Management, University of Virginia
Congress could learn a thing or two about acting proactively from Elon Musk, seen here with his Dragon space capsule.AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Imagine you’re speeding along on a highway. Suddenly, the traffic ahead of you slows, forcing you to hit the breaks. Eventually you arrive at the source of the bottleneck: a mattress lying in the right...

Read more: Successful businesses need proactive leadership – and so does Congress

Is it time for a 21st-century version of 'The Day After'?

  • Written by Marsha Gordon, Professor of Film Studies, North Carolina State University

It’s beginning to feel like the 1980s all over again.

Already this year, we’ve seen Donald Trump tweeting provocative nuclear threats about North Korea. A terrifying (but false) incoming missile alert set Hawaiians on edge, while the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention planned (and then postponed) a nuclear attack preparedness...

Read more: Is it time for a 21st-century version of 'The Day After'?

Is a unified Korea possible?

  • Written by Ji-Young Lee, Assistant Professor, American University School of International Service

North and South Korean athletes will march under one flag during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics in South Korea.

The “Korean Unification Flag” is both a highly symbolic marker of reconciliation and a reminder of a divided Korea, a condition that has lasted since 1945.

As a scholar of East Asian international...

Read more: Is a unified Korea possible?

Unrest in Iran will continue until religious rule ends

  • Written by Haidar Khezri, Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Department of Central Eurasian Studies (CEUS), Indiana University

The two-week protest movement that rocked cities across Iran earlier this year has largely subsided, but the fallout from the government’s harsh response has just begun. More than 3,700 people were arrested and 23 were killed in sometimes violent nationwide marches that started on Dec. 28, 2017, in response to an austerity budget proposed by...

Read more: Unrest in Iran will continue until religious rule ends

Spanish use is steady or dropping in US despite high Latino immigration

  • Written by Phillip M Carter, Associate Professor of Linguistics, Florida International University

Hidden just beneath the surface of the ongoing heated debate about immigration in the United States lurks an often unspoken concern: language. Specifically, whether immigration from Spanish-speaking countries threatens the English language’s dominance.

Language and immigration have long been politically linked in the U.S. When Farmers...

Read more: Spanish use is steady or dropping in US despite high Latino immigration

When it comes to your health, where you live matters

  • Written by Jessica Young, Assistant Professor, American University
Shoppers browsing vegetables at a farmers market.Pixabay

According to a recent report, Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and West Virginia have the worst health in the U.S. These states have higher rates of premature deaths, chronic diseases and poor health behaviors year after year.

Why are people in some places in the U.S. consistently...

Read more: When it comes to your health, where you live matters

Medicaid work requirements could cost the government more in the long run

  • Written by Diane Dewar, Associate Professor of Health Policy, Management and Behavior, University at Albany, State University of New York
Tammie Jackson, looking at the prescription drugs she could not obtain before enrolling in Montana's expanded Medicaid program, in the summer of 2017.AP Photo/Bobby Caina Calvan

After the Trump administration gave states permission to impose new restrictions on Medicaid eligibility, Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin wasted no time.

Within days, Kentucky...

Read more: Medicaid work requirements could cost the government more in the long run

More Articles ...

  1. Another continuing resolution won't solve the real problem within the Republican Party
  2. Healthy to eat, unhealthy to grow: Strawberries embody the contradictions of California agriculture
  3. There are better ways to foster solar innovation and save jobs than Trump's tariffs
  4. What are chronophilias?
  5. Is attraction to an age group another kind of sexual orientation?
  6. What might explain the unhappiness epidemic?
  7. Guarding against the possible Spectre in every machine
  8. Secret memo shows bipartisanship during Watergate succession crisis
  9. Deportees in Mexico tell of disrupted lives, families and communities
  10. Trump goes to Davos: 4 books he should read on first trip to gathering of global elites
  11. When a mom feels depressed, her baby's cells might feel it too
  12. Global toll from landslides is heaviest in developing countries
  13. Why so many Americans think Buddhism is just a philosophy
  14. DeVos speech shows contempt for the agency she heads
  15. What the government shutdown means for the health of Americans
  16. Shutdown under a unified government? Blame Trump
  17. Fungi can help concrete heal its own cracks
  18. Will a federal government shutdown damage the US economy?
  19. 20 years since America's shock over Clinton-Lewinsky affair, public discussions on sexual harassment are changing
  20. Climate change and weather extremes: Both heat and cold can kill
  21. Ahead of government shutdown, Congress sets its sights on not-so-comprehensive immigration reform
  22. 'Dreamers' could give US economy – and even American workers – a boost
  23. Tolerating distraction
  24. Is the FBI's latest probe of the Clinton Foundation a 'witch hunt' – or something more?
  25. If you thought colleges making the SAT optional would level the playing field, think again
  26. Time to stop using 9 million children as a bargaining CHIP
  27. This year's severe flu exposes a serious flaw in our medical system
  28. How social media helped fuel indie wrestling's resurgence
  29. Re-criminalizing cannabis is worse than 1930s 'reefer madness'
  30. New ways scientists can help put science back into popular culture
  31. Has Venezuela become a totalitarian regime?
  32. Why an election won't topple Venezuela's dictator
  33. Willie O'Ree's little-known journey to break the NHL's color barrier
  34. 50 years ago, a US military jet crashed in Greenland – with 4 nuclear bombs on board
  35. What a medieval love saga says about modern-day sexual harassment
  36. What the 2018 farm bill means for urban, suburban and rural America
  37. Post-fire landslide problems aren’t new and likely to get worse
  38. Post-fire mudslide problems aren’t new and likely to get worse
  39. Signaling more independence from the US, the World Bank phases out its support for fossil fuels
  40. How rejuvenation of stem cells could lead to healthier aging
  41. What makes some art so bad that it's good?
  42. Reaching rural America with broadband internet service
  43. Is language key to resolving the Israeli-Arab conflict?
  44. US life expectancy just dropped for the second year in a row. Let's stop the trend now
  45. Shades of green: What gig economy workers can learn from the success of romance writers
  46. How robot math and smartphones led researchers to a drug discovery breakthrough
  47. Deadly California mudslides show the need for maps and zoning that better reflect landslide risk
  48. New study reveals why some people are more creative than others
  49. Closure of DC public charter school offers important lessons for Secretary DeVos and school choice debate
  50. What we can learn from closure of charter school that DeVos praised as 'shining example'