NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Why sequencing the human genome failed to produce big breakthroughs in disease

  • Written by Ari Berkowitz, Presidential Professor of Biology; Director, Cellular & Behavioral Neurobiology Graduate Program, University of Oklahoma
Early proponents of genome sequencing made misleading predictions about its potential in medicine.Natali_ Mis/Shutterstock.com

An emergency room physician, initially unable to diagnose a disoriented patient, finds on the patient a wallet-sized card providing access to his genome, or all his DNA. The physician quickly searches the genome, diagnoses...

Read more: Why sequencing the human genome failed to produce big breakthroughs in disease

The opioid crisis is a big issue in New Hampshire – 5 questions answered on what voters want the candidates to do

  • Written by Amanda Latimore, Assistant Scientist, Johns Hopkins University
At the New Hampshire primary debate, America's opioid crisis came up as an issue.Elise Amendola/AP Photo

America’s opioid crisis has hit New Hampshire hard, creating an epidemic of overdoses and addiction-related health issues in the early primary state.

We asked Amanda Latimore, an opioid and behavioral health expert at Johns Hopkins...

Read more: The opioid crisis is a big issue in New Hampshire – 5 questions answered on what voters want the...

The history of 'coming out,' from secret gay code to popular political protest

  • Written by Abigail C. Saguy, Professor of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles
Protesters in Manchester, U.K., 1988.Mirrorpix via Getty

You probably know what it means to “come out” as gay. You may even have heard the expression used in relation to other kinds of identity, such as being undocumented.

But do you know where the term comes from? Or that its meaning has changed over time?

In my new book, “Come...

Read more: The history of 'coming out,' from secret gay code to popular political protest

A college president's advice to college students of the future: Don't borrow

  • Written by Walter V. Wendler, President, West Texas A&M University
West Texas A&M University Walter V. Wendler stands alongside the SUV he drove on a speaking tour to urge Texas high school students not to borrow too much for college.Author provided

Back in 2017, I started regularly leaving my office at West Texas A&M University in Canyon, Texas, to speak to high school students in the Texas Panhandle....

Read more: A college president's advice to college students of the future: Don't borrow

Lynching preachers: How black pastors resisted Jim Crow and white pastors incited racial violence

  • Written by Malcolm Brian Foley, PhD Candidate in Religion - Historical Studies, Baylor University
A funeral held in July 1945 for two victims of the Ku Klux Klan, George Dorsey and his sister, Dorothy Dorsey Malcolm, of Walton County, Georgia, held at the Mt. Perry Baptist Church Sunday. Bettman via Getty

White lynch mobs in America murdered at least 4,467 people between 1883 and 1941, hanging, burning, dismembering, garroting and blowtorching...

Read more: Lynching preachers: How black pastors resisted Jim Crow and white pastors incited racial violence

How a Native American coming-of-age ritual is making a comeback

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana
Ojibwe women conduct a year-long ritual for their girls when they start menstruation.Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Ojibwe, one of the largest indigenous groups in North America, with communities from Quebec to Montana, are revitalizing the “berry fast,” a coming-of-age ritual for girls.

Ojibwe women...

Read more: How a Native American coming-of-age ritual is making a comeback

A Nazi drug's US resurgence: How meth is making a disturbing reappearance

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
A drug addict smoking crystal meth on Skid Row in downtown Los Angeles.AP photo/Jae C. Hong

Although I am teaching a course at Indiana University this semester on the opioid epidemic, I can’t get meth out of my mind.

A colleague of mine was recently carjacked. He was forced to drive at extreme speed throughout the city and escaped with his...

Read more: A Nazi drug's US resurgence: How meth is making a disturbing reappearance

Potential gene therapy to combat cocaine addiction

  • Written by Rachel Patton McCord, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry & Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Tennessee
More than 1 million people in the U.S. are addicted to cocaine.Orawan Pattarawimonchai/Shutterstock.com

Have you ever slipped when trying to avoid sugar, quit smoking, or break another habit or addiction? Usually that one piece of cake or one cigarette won’t ruin your whole plan, but for people struggling with cocaine addiction, one slip can...

Read more: Potential gene therapy to combat cocaine addiction

How Iran's millennials are grappling with crippling U.S. sanctions

  • Written by Manata Hashemi, Farzaneh Family Assistant Professor of Iranian Studies, University of Oklahoma
Within Iran's lower and middle classes, youth culture is highly conformist.Farzin Mahmoudzadeh, Author provided

In early January, after tensions between Iran and the United States escalated to the brink of war, President Donald Trump announced a detente of sorts, stating, “The United States is ready to embrace peace with all who seek...

Read more: How Iran's millennials are grappling with crippling U.S. sanctions

3 ways coronavirus will affect the US economy – and 1 silver lining

  • Written by Robert Aboolian, Professor of Operations and Supply Chain Management, California State University San Marcos
Apple closed all its stores in China as a health precaution, now through at least Feb. 14. Roman Balandin\TASS via Getty Images

As the new coronavirus spreads around the world, and confirmed cases and deaths mount, economists are increasingly concerned about the impact on the U.S. economy.

In a recent report to Congress, the Federal Reserve warned...

Read more: 3 ways coronavirus will affect the US economy – and 1 silver lining

More Articles ...

  1. How Iran's millennials are grappling with crippling US sanctions
  2. 3 standout quotes from the New Hampshire Democratic debate, explained
  3. Why people post 'couple photos' as their social media profile pictures
  4. Real pay data show Trump's 'blue collar boom' is more of a bust for US workers, in 3 charts
  5. Research in China is complicated by the Communist Party's influence, says researcher who worked there
  6. As China suffers from coronavirus, some wonder: Is it really that serious? 3 questions answered
  7. National Prayer Breakfast was a moment for leaders to show humility – Trump changed it
  8. Employment gaps cause career trouble, especially for former stay-at-home parents
  9. AI could constantly scan the internet for data privacy violations, a quicker, easier way to enforce compliance
  10. 'Sea-level rise won't affect my house' – even flood maps don't sway Florida coastal residents
  11. The Philippines has rated 'Golden Rice' safe, but farmers might not plant it
  12. The dystopian experience of skiing in New Jersey's new American Dream mall
  13. How Trump's proposed benefits changes will create hardship for rural people with disabilities
  14. Democratic plans for raising taxes on the rich: A guide for the middle class
  15. What Trump’s picks for the Presidential Medal of Freedom – like Rush Limbaugh and Antonin Scalia – say about him
  16. Deported to death: US sent 138 Salvadorans home to be killed
  17. The 6 countries in Trump's new travel ban pose little threat to US national security
  18. The secret to the success of two Oscar-nominated scores
  19. Sanders called JPMorgan's CEO America's 'biggest corporate socialist' – here's why he has a point
  20. Violence and other forms of abuse against teachers: 5 questions answered
  21. Soil carbon is a valuable resource, but all soil carbon is not created equal
  22. What's a church? That can depend on the eye of the beholder or paperwork filed with the IRS
  23. Re-creating live-animal markets in the lab lets researchers see how pathogens like coronavirus jump species
  24. Fighting coronavirus fear with empathy: Lessons learned from how Africans got blamed for Ebola
  25. This is how ancient Rome's republic died – a classicist sees troubling parallels at Trump's impeachment trial
  26. Civility in politics is harder than you think
  27. Trump's excess and extravagance turned the State of the Union into an action movie
  28. A plasma reactor zaps airborne viruses – and could help slow the spread of infectious diseases
  29. Is the coronavirus a pandemic, and does that matter? 4 questions answered
  30. 'American Dirt' fiasco exposes publishing industry that's too consolidated, too white and too selective
  31. Is online education right for you? 5 questions answered
  32. How the US repeatedly failed to support reform movements in Iran
  33. R0: How scientists quantify the intensity of an outbreak like coronavirus and its pandemic potential
  34. Iowa caucuses did one thing right: Require paper ballots
  35. US could learn how to improve election protection from other nations
  36. Learn to trust immigrants by role-playing in their shoes
  37. Is hiring more black officers the key to reducing police violence?
  38. The Iraq War has cost the US nearly $2 trillion
  39. A clue to stopping coronavirus: Knowing how viruses adapt from animals to humans
  40. Cancer deaths decline in US, with advances in prevention, detection and treatment
  41. At-risk colleges should do what's best for students, alumni, donors, employees – and local communities
  42. 100 years ago, Congress threw out results of the census
  43. US workplaces are nowhere near ready to contain a coronavirus outbreak
  44. What do kids think of the president?
  45. Do authors really put deeper meaning into poems and stories – or do readers make it up?
  46. Quarantines have tried to keep out disease for thousands of years
  47. Catholic investigations are still shrouded in secrecy
  48. Inside Mexico's war on drugs: Conversations with 'el narco'
  49. The Trump administration has made the US less ready for infectious disease outbreaks like coronavirus
  50. The Trump administration has made the U.S. less ready for infectious disease outbreaks like coronavirus