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Personalized medicine may do more to treat rather than prevent chronic diseases

  • Written by Sharon Horesh Bergquist, Physician, teacher, researcher in preventive medicine and healthy aging, Emory University
imageWhat could genomic medicine do in the future?DNA gel image via www.shutterstock.com.

Personalized medicine, which involves tailoring health care to each person’s unique genetic makeup, has the potential to transform how we diagnose, prevent and treat disease. After all, no two people are alike. Mapping a person’s unique susceptibility...

Read more: Personalized medicine may do more to treat rather than prevent chronic diseases

How robots could help chronically ill kids attend school

  • Written by Veronica Newhart, Ph.D. Candidate in Education, University of California, Irvine
imageToo sick to attend school in person, but perfectly able to participate with a robot's help.AP Photo/David Duprey

Over the past century, American schools have integrated an ever-more-diverse group of students. Racial integration is most prominent, but it’s not just Native Americans, blacks and Latinos who have been brought into public...

Read more: How robots could help chronically ill kids attend school

Netanyahu's meeting with Trump: Good for Israeli-Palestinian peace?

  • Written by Dov Waxman, Professor of Political Science, International Affairs and Israel Studies, Northeastern University

At their meeting at the White House today, U.S. President Donald Trump asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “hold back on settlements for a little bit.”

There are now more than 400,000 Israelis living in over 100 settlements located in the West Bank. Another 300,000 or so are living in East Jerusalem, which Israel has...

Read more: Netanyahu's meeting with Trump: Good for Israeli-Palestinian peace?

How will native tribes fight the Dakota Access Pipeline in court?

  • Written by Monte Mills, Assistant Professor of Law & Co-Director, Margery Hunter Brown Indian Law Clinic, The University of Montana
imageAfter the Army Corps of Engineers approved an easement for the North Dakota Pipeline, two tribes requested – unsuccessfully – to halt construction while their lawsuit over the project is resolved.AP Photo/Susan Walsh

On Feb. 8 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reversed course and issued an easement allowing the installation of the...

Read more: How will native tribes fight the Dakota Access Pipeline in court?

Trump's border plan for Canada? So far, not a wall

  • Written by Jessica Trisko Darden, Assistant Professor of International Affairs, American University School of International Service

President Donald Trump has said little about the world’s longest undefended border – the one between the U.S. and Canada.

Trump barely addressed the issue at his first meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Feb. 13 in Washington. Although Trudeau’s vision of openness and diversity may conflict with Trump’s vis...

Read more: Trump's border plan for Canada? So far, not a wall

How best to prepare for epidemics? Strengthen primary care

  • Written by Ashwin Vasan, Assistant Professor of Clinical Population Health & Medicine, Columbia University
imageA worker at the Wynwood Community Service Center hands a local resident a can of insect repellent Aug. 4, 2016, in Miami. AP Photo/Alan Diaz

In global public health, 2016 was a year defined by the end of two important emergencies: Ebola and Zika.

But that doesn’t mean the risk either of these viruses pose has gone away. Zika transmission...

Read more: How best to prepare for epidemics? Strengthen primary care

America's always had black inventors – even when the patent system explicitly excluded them

  • Written by Shontavia Johnson, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, Drake University
imageThomas L. Jennings became the first black American patent holder in 1821.

America has long been the land of innovation. More than 13,000 years ago, the Clovis people created what many call the “first American invention” – a stone tool used primarily to hunt large game. This spirit of American creativity has persisted through the...

Read more: America's always had black inventors – even when the patent system explicitly excluded them

Will blazing a low-carbon path pay off for California?

  • Written by Matthew Kahn, Professor of Economics, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageCalifornia Gov. Jerry Brown signs SB350 on Oct. 7, 2015. The bill calls for increasing the state's renewable electricity use to 50 percent and doubling energy efficiency in existing buildings by 2030.AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

President Trump has made it clear he intends to dismantle the Obama administration’s policies for reducing U.S....

Read more: Will blazing a low-carbon path pay off for California?

Why America needs Marvel superhero Kamala Khan now more than ever

  • Written by Katie M. Logan, Assistant Professor of Focused Inquiry, Virginia Commonwealth University

During the first few weeks of the Trump administration, we’ve seen increased pressure on Muslim and immigrant communities in the United States.

In the face of these threats, which Marvel superhero might be best equipped to defend the people, ideals and institutions under attack? Some comic fans and critics are pointing to Kamala Khan, the...

Read more: Why America needs Marvel superhero Kamala Khan now more than ever

Recovering from disasters: Social networks matter more than bottled water and batteries

  • Written by Daniel P. Aldrich, Professor of Political Science, Public Policy and Urban Affairs and Director, Security and Resilience Program, Northeastern University
imageSurvivors leave Tohoku a day after the March 11, 2011 earthquake and tsunami.Warren Antiola/Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

Standard advice about preparing for disasters focuses on building shelters and stockpiling things like food, water and batteries. But resilience - the ability to recover from shocks, including natural disasters - comes from our...

Read more: Recovering from disasters: Social networks matter more than bottled water and batteries

More Articles ...

  1. Why you should donate your data (as well as your organs) when you die
  2. Refugees: Is there room for a middle ground?
  3. Should cybersecurity be a human right?
  4. Think you're not having enough sex? Try being a senior in assisted living
  5. Four ways to stay mentally fit if you're struggling with the political climate
  6. When Trump's tweets are angry, the mood of his followers darkens
  7. What Plato can teach you about finding a soulmate
  8. Trump wants to change Medicaid funding; could his ideas work?
  9. Why politicians think they know better than scientists – and why that's so dangerous
  10. Trump's vow to 'destroy' Johnson Amendment could wreak havoc on charitable world
  11. Scientist at work: Tracking muskoxen in a warming Arctic
  12. Why you should date your best friend
  13. Does it matter if Trump doesn't like economists?
  14. Why Tinder is so 'evilly satisfying'
  15. Trump loses appeal, but travel ban fight isn't over yet
  16. What do gorilla suits and blowfish fallacies have to do with climate change?
  17. Why Trump needs the civil servants he wants to fire: Lessons from abroad
  18. Songs of worship: Why we sing to the Lord
  19. Are the Grammys really about good music?
  20. How a travel ban could worsen doctor shortages in US hospitals and threaten primary care
  21. African-American GIs of WWII: Fighting for democracy abroad and at home
  22. How Democrats can help Trump make the ACA's replacement 'terrific'
  23. Allison Davis: Forgotten black scholar studied – and faced – structural racism in 1940s America
  24. When birds go roaming: The mystery of avian irruptions
  25. US relationship with Mexico more bitter than sweet under Trump
  26. Berkeley, Milo Yiannopoulos and the lessons of free speech
  27. Can Facebook be sued for live-streaming suicides?
  28. The stress of sitting in traffic can lead to more crime
  29. What is the true meaning of mercy?
  30. Syrian refugees 'detrimental' to Americans? The numbers tell a different story
  31. Can a dying patient be a healthy person?
  32. Who will pay for Trump’s 'big, beautiful' wall?
  33. How Obama's presidential campaign changed how Americans view black candidates
  34. Why US should treat Mexico as a vital partner, not a punching bag
  35. What Facebook Live means for journalism
  36. Joe Camel in a bottle: Alcohol companies fail to follow their own ad rules during the 2017 Super Bowl
  37. Are you really anonymous online? Your friends on Twitter may give you away
  38. You are the new gatekeeper of the news
  39. The story of Elizabeth Taylor Greenfield, America's first black pop star
  40. History shows Trump will face legal challenges to​ detaining immigrants
  41. Even before sanctuary cities, here's how black Americans protected fugitive slaves
  42. Should scientists engage in activism?
  43. The most important thing you’re not discussing with your doctor
  44. Will Trump's 'color-blind' pro-business policies help black entrepreneurs too?
  45. Detroit's recovery: The glass is half-full at most
  46. Exploiting black labor after the abolition of slavery
  47. Staying politically neutral is more dangerous for companies than you think
  48. What Trump misses about regulations: They produce benefits as well as costs
  49. Does an anomaly in the Earth's magnetic field portend a coming pole reversal?
  50. Uncovering the roots of racist ideas in America