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The most important thing you’re not discussing with your doctor

  • Written by Melissa J. Armstrong, Assistant Professor, Neurology, University of Florida
imageFrom www.shutterstock.com,

Politicians and policymakers are discussing what parts of the Affordable Care Act to change and what to keep. While most of us have little control over those discussions, there is one health care topic that we can control: what we talk about with our doctor.

The Institute of Medicine (IOM) released the landmark publication...

Read more: The most important thing you’re not discussing with your doctor

Will Trump's 'color-blind' pro-business policies help black entrepreneurs too?

  • Written by Steven J. Gold, Professor of Sociology, Michigan State University

A growing body of research has shown the power of entrepreneurship to help solve the economic problems of disadvantaged groups such as women, immigrants and racial and ethnic minorities.

This finding can be traced to a longstanding vision of entrepreneurship established by black Americans as a means of supporting their community and overcoming...

Read more: Will Trump's 'color-blind' pro-business policies help black entrepreneurs too?

Detroit's recovery: The glass is half-full at most

  • Written by Laura A. Reese, Professor of Political Science and Director, Global Urban Studies Program, Michigan State University
imageEmpty field north of downtown Detroit, photographed nine months before the city declared bankruptcy in 2013AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File

After decades of demographic and economic decline, culminating in America’s largest municipal bankruptcy in 2013, many observers were ready to proclaim that the city of Detroit was dead. But over the past...

Read more: Detroit's recovery: The glass is half-full at most

Exploiting black labor after the abolition of slavery

  • Written by Kathy Roberts Forde, Chair, Associate Professor, Journalism Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst
imageConvicts leased to harvest timber in Florida around 1915

The U.S. criminal justice system is riven by racial disparity.

The Obama administration pursued a plan to reform it. An entire news organization, The Marshall Project, was launched in late 2014 to cover it. Organizations like Black Lives Matter and The Sentencing Project are dedicated to...

Read more: Exploiting black labor after the abolition of slavery

Staying politically neutral is more dangerous for companies than you think

  • Written by Daniel Korschun, Associate Professor of Marketing, Drexel University

President Donald Trump’s executive order temporarily banning immigration from seven Muslim countries has put corporate executives in a bind. Almost from the moment he announced the ban, questions poured in about where those executives stood on the issue.

The media have highlighted a cluster of companies that have made public statements...

Read more: Staying politically neutral is more dangerous for companies than you think

What Trump misses about regulations: They produce benefits as well as costs

  • Written by Joseph Aldy, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Harvard University
imageShutterstock.com

President Trump jettisoned more than 30 years of bipartisan regulatory policy on January 30 when he issued an executive order on “Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs.” The order requires that whenever a new regulation is enacted by any federal agency, regulators must eliminate two rules, so that the...

Read more: What Trump misses about regulations: They produce benefits as well as costs

Does an anomaly in the Earth's magnetic field portend a coming pole reversal?

  • Written by John Tarduno, Professor of Geophysics, University of Rochester
imageWhat's north would become south.NASA , CC BY

The Earth is blanketed by a magnetic field. It’s what makes compasses point north, and protects our atmosphere from continual bombardment from space by charged particles such as protons. Without a magnetic field, our atmosphere would slowly be stripped away by harmful radiation, and life would...

Read more: Does an anomaly in the Earth's magnetic field portend a coming pole reversal?

Uncovering the roots of racist ideas in America

  • Written by Ibram X. Kendi, Assistant Professor of History, University of Florida
imageLittle Rock protest, 1959 Wikimedia/John T. Bledsoe

Donald Trump proclaimed during his inaugural address, “When you open your heart to patriotism, there is no room for prejudice.”

Opening our hearts to patriotism will not solve the problem of racist ideas. Some of the nation’s proudest patriots have also been the nation’s...

Read more: Uncovering the roots of racist ideas in America

Why do conservatives want the government to defund the arts?

  • Written by Aaron D. Knochel, Assistant Professor of Art Education, Pennsylvania State University
imageWhat happens when funding isn't just eroded, but is wiped away?'Erosion' via www.shutterstock.com

Recent reports indicate that Trump administration officials have circulated plans to defund the National Endowment of the Arts (NEA), putting this agency on the chopping block – again.

Conservatives have sought to eliminate the NEA since the...

Read more: Why do conservatives want the government to defund the arts?

Stories are better than lectures at teaching us about health

  • Written by Sheila Murphy, Professor of Communication , University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
imageNarratives about health can help change behavior.Girl watching TV via www.shutterstock.com

Humans having been using stories or narratives to transmit crucial information for thousands of years. Despite that, Western medicine largely ignores the use of narrative and instead continues to rely on lists of dos and don’t’s, facts and figures...

Read more: Stories are better than lectures at teaching us about health

More Articles ...

  1. Finding the causes of cancer is the first step to prevention ​
  2. Understanding genetic differences between breast cancer tumors is key to better treatment
  3. Immunotherapy: Training the body to fight cancer
  4. Ringling Bros. Circus shutdown is a distraction from the real issue: Eating animals
  5. Why Brazil is winning its fight against corruption
  6. Defining dual-use research: When scientific advances can both help and hurt humanity
  7. Melanoma: Taming a migratory menace
  8. We have a vaccine for six cancers; why are less than half of kids getting it?
  9. The Super Bowl's evolution from football game to entertainment extravaganza
  10. How man's best friend is helping cancer treatment
  11. Dads are more involved in parenting, yes, but moms still put in more work
  12. Many kids still don't report concussion symptoms. How can we change that?
  13. The Conversation US launches Ethics and Religion desk
  14. Is Trump's Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch a judicial or a political appointment?
  15. Stereotypes can hold boys back in school, too
  16. A nomination battle over Neil Gorsuch could slow down Trump's agenda
  17. How 'voter fraud' crusades undermine voting rights
  18. Trump's trade policy is more predictable and less isolationist than critics think
  19. How Planned Parenthood has helped millions of women, including me
  20. Hunting hackers: An ethical hacker explains how to track down the bad guys
  21. Immigration and crime: What does the research say?
  22. National Prayer Breakfast: What does its history reveal?
  23. Sure, pipelines are good for oil companies, but what about jobs related to preserving nature and culture?
  24. Cheerleading's peculiar path to potential Olympic sport
  25. What does 'America first' mean for American economic interests?
  26. Why Bill Belichick cast down his tablet
  27. How the 19th-century rebuilding of Britain's Houses of Parliament made air pollution visible
  28. Donald Trump's tweets are now presidential records
  29. Mary Tyler Moore's death a reminder of the toll of diabetes
  30. The frog tongue is a high-speed adhesive
  31. The best legal arguments against Trump's immigration ban
  32. Trump's immigration ban: Will it undercut American soft power?
  33. Here's a better way to regulate carbon – and change the tired environment-versus-economy debate
  34. I'm a US doctor just back from Sudan, where hospitality from Muslims greeted me everywhere
  35. Three ways you can just say no to antibiotic drug abuse
  36. For endangered species, the road to recovery can be winding and bumpy
  37. How Florida is helping train the next generation of cybersecurity professionals
  38. What's gone wrong in the seven countries Trump included in his ban? Essential reads
  39. How Tolstoy’s 'War and Peace' can inspire those who fear Trump’s America
  40. For indigenous communities, fish mean much more than food
  41. How distrust of unbelievers runs deep in American history
  42. How anti-LGBT laws foster a culture of exclusion that harms states' economic prosperity
  43. It's pedal to the metal for driverless cars
  44. Do Americans want to buy 'smart' guns?
  45. Trump's immigration order is bad foreign policy
  46. What the Bible says about welcoming refugees
  47. SmallSat revolution: Tiny satellites poised to make big contributions to essential science
  48. Why advances in treating those with brain injuries require advances in respecting their rights
  49. As Trump mulls another 'reset' with Russia, he should consider perils of Big Oil diplomacy
  50. Research challenges the view that environmental regulators are anti-business