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US is split between the vaccinated and unvaccinated – and deaths and hospitalizations reflect this divide

  • Written by Rodney E. Rohde, Professor of Clinical Laboratory Science, Texas State University
imageAs coronavirus cases surge, unvaccinated people are accounting for nearly all hospitalizations and deaths. Fat Camera/E+ via Getty Images

In recent weeks, one piece of data has gotten a lot of attention: 99.5% of all the people dying from COVID-19 in the U.S. are unvaccinated.

We are two researchers who work in public health and study immunity,...

Read more: US is split between the vaccinated and unvaccinated – and deaths and hospitalizations reflect this...

Are middle lanes fastest in track and field? Data from 8,000 racers shows not so much

  • Written by David R. Munro, Assistant Professor of Economics, Middlebury
imageThe fastest runners are usually rewarded with the middle lanes. Michael H/Stone vie Getty Images

As a short-distance track and field runner in high school and college, I often found myself wondering which of the eight or sometimes nine lanes on the track was the fastest. It was conventional wisdom that the middle lanes – lanes three through...

Read more: Are middle lanes fastest in track and field? Data from 8,000 racers shows not so much

Why Gil Scott-Heron's 'Whitey on the Moon' still feels relevant today

  • Written by A.D. Carson, Assistant Professor of Hip-Hop, University of Virginia
imageRecent space flights by multi-billionaires highlight the extreme economic inequality in America.Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Not long after the July 20, 1969, Moon landing, Gil Scott-Heron – a poet hailed as the “Godfather of Rap” – released a scathingly critical song called “Whitey on the Moon.”

While others lauded...

Read more: Why Gil Scott-Heron's 'Whitey on the Moon' still feels relevant today

Why women need male allies in the workplace – and why fighting everyday sexism enriches men too

  • Written by Meg Warren, Associate Professor of Management, Western Washington University
imageWomen who perceive their male colleagues as allies are more likely to feel included in a workplace. 10'000 Hours/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Women and groups advocating for gender equality are increasingly urging men to become allies in the fight.

Research has shown that in the absence of male support, women have to shoulder the burden of...

Read more: Why women need male allies in the workplace – and why fighting everyday sexism enriches men too

Insulin was discovered 100 years ago – but it took a lot more than one scientific breakthrough to get a diabetes treatment to patients

  • Written by James P. Brody, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, University of California, Irvine
imageA single brilliant insight is only part of the story of how diabetes became a manageable disease.Douglas Grundy/Three Lions via Getty Images

Diabetes was a fatal disease before insulin was discovered on July 27, 1921. A century ago, people diagnosed with this metabolic disorder usually survived only a few years. Physicians had no way to treat their...

Read more: Insulin was discovered 100 years ago – but it took a lot more than one scientific breakthrough to...

Lawsuits over bans on teaching critical race theory are coming – here's what won't work, and what might

  • Written by Frank LoMonte, Director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information, University of Florida
imageRepublican politicians have championed legislation to limit the teaching of material exploring how race and racism influence American politics, culture and law. AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File

As states and school districts started threatening teachers with disciplinary action for teaching about systemic racism, the question naturally arose: Does...

Read more: Lawsuits over bans on teaching critical race theory are coming – here's what won't work, and what...

COVID-19 recession: One of America's deepest downturns was also its shortest after bailout-driven bounceback

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Senior Lecturer, Questrom School of Business, Boston University
imageThe U.S. economy bounced back in record time. AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

Thanks to a roaring economy, plunging joblessness and a consumer spending spree, it probably won’t come as a surprise that the COVID-19 recession is officially over.

We didn’t know this, formally, however, until July 19, 2021, when a group of America’s top...

Read more: COVID-19 recession: One of America's deepest downturns was also its shortest after bailout-driven...

Effects of childhood adversity linger during college years

  • Written by Toni Watt, Professor of Sociology, Texas State University
imageA study found that 22.8% of college students had experienced at least four adverse childhood experiences. Carol Yepes/Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

College students who experienced a high level of adversity in childhood have lower levels of social support, such as having someone to...

Read more: Effects of childhood adversity linger during college years

Why a 19th-century Russian anarchist is relevant to the mask and vaccine debate

  • Written by Michael Locke McLendon, Professor of Political Science, California State University, Los Angeles
imageBeards? Yes. Masks? Perhaps not.Wikimedia Commons

Americans who refused to don masks or get vaccinated during the pandemic don’t have an easy task constructing a valid philosophical defense of their behavior.

The go-to philosophicalauthorities typically cited to defend individual liberty in the U.S. – John Locke and John Stuart Mill...

Read more: Why a 19th-century Russian anarchist is relevant to the mask and vaccine debate

How to avoid food-borne illness – a nutritionist explains

  • Written by Ruth S. MacDonald, Associate Dean, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Iowa State University
imageAfter the meal, putting food away quickly is key to keeping it free from pathogens.Getty Images / Thomas Barwick

Summer means cookouts, picnics and backyard barbecues. But a generous spread of food eaten outside raises some serious health questions. Nobody wants food poisoning – or to make their guests sick. But how do you know when...

Read more: How to avoid food-borne illness – a nutritionist explains

More Articles ...

  1. Free school meals for all children can improve kids' health
  2. The US Army tried portable nuclear power at remote bases 60 years ago – it didn't go well
  3. Why the US won't be able to shirk moral responsibility in leaving Afghanistan
  4. Energy pipelines are controversial now, but one of the first big ones helped win World War II
  5. Low- and middle-income countries lack access to big data analysis – here's how to fill the gap
  6. We are all propagandists now
  7. Election polls in 2020 produced 'error of unusual magnitude,' expert panel finds, without pinpointing cause
  8. For some craft beer drinkers, less can mean more
  9. World's coral scientists warn action is needed now to save even a few reefs from climate change
  10. Coral reef scientists raise alarm as climate change decimates ocean ecosystems vital to fish and humans
  11. Why livestreamers should sell their products with a poker face – not a smile
  12. Calls to cancel Chaucer ignore his defense of women and the innocent – and assume all his characters’ opinions are his
  13. Why conservatorships like the one controlling Britney Spears can lead to abuse
  14. Who owns the beach? It depends on state law and tide lines
  15. Evangelical support for Israel is neither permanent nor inevitable
  16. New COVID-19 vaccine warnings don't mean it's unsafe – they mean the system to report side effects is working
  17. Bioweapons research is banned by an international treaty – but nobody is checking for violations
  18. The next big financial crisis could be triggered by climate change – but central banks can prevent it
  19. Are there any planets outside of our solar system?
  20. Kids aren't just littler adults – here's why they need their own clinical trials for a COVID-19 vaccine
  21. Designing less addictive opioids, through chemistry
  22. As coastal flooding worsens, some cities are retreating from the water
  23. School posts on Facebook could threaten student privacy
  24. How 'In God We Trust' bills are helping advance a Christian nationalist agenda
  25. What's in wildfire smoke? A toxicologist explains the health risks
  26. What's in wildfire smoke? A toxicologist explains the health risks and which masks can help
  27. Emmy Noether faced sexism and Nazism – 100 years later her contributions to ring theory still influence modern math
  28. Why some younger evangelicals are leaving the faith
  29. The US withdraws from Afghanistan after 20 years of war: 4 questions about this historic moment
  30. How Sarah Baartman's hips went from a symbol of exploitation to a source of empowerment for Black women
  31. Teens with secure family relationships 'pay it forward' with empathy for friends
  32. US families with kids are getting monthly payments from the government: 4 essential reads
  33. High-tide flood risk is accelerating, putting coastal economies at risk
  34. We work with dangerous pathogens in a downtown Boston biocontainment lab – here's why you can feel safe about our research
  35. Don't hike so close to me: How the presence of humans can disturb wildlife up to half a mile away
  36. From the labor struggles of the 1930s to the racial reckoning of the 2020s, the Highlander school has sought to make America more equitable
  37. Mixed-ancestry genetic research shows a bit of Native American DNA could reduce risk of Alzheimer's disease
  38. California is planning floating wind farms offshore to boost its power supply – here's how they work
  39. What is child care insecurity? 2 social scientists explain
  40. World hunger surged in 2020, with 1 in 10 people on Earth undernourished
  41. Happy 50th birthday to Chez Panisse, the Berkeley restaurant that launched farm-to-fork eating
  42. Cuba protests: 4 essential reads on dissent in the post-Castro era
  43. Biden targets noncompete agreements, which restrict the job opportunities of millions of low-wage workers
  44. US immigration judges considering asylum for unaccompanied minors are 'significantly influenced' by politics
  45. Bans on critical race theory could have a chilling effect on how educators teach about racism
  46. What is biblical inerrancy? A New Testament scholar explains
  47. Christian attitudes surrounding abortion have a more nuanced history than current events suggest
  48. 25-year-long study of Black women links frequent use of lye-based hair relaxers to a higher risk of breast cancer
  49. Delta variant makes it even more important to get a COVID-19 vaccine, even if you've already had the coronavirus
  50. John Glenn’s fan mail shows many girls dreamed of the stars – but sexism in the early space program thwarted their ambitions