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There's a way for modern medicine to cure diseases even when the treatments aren't profitable

  • Written by James Leahy, Professor of Chemistry; Interim Chair of the Chemistry Department, University of South Florida
Millions of young children get malaria. These two got it in 2010.AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam

Strides in medicine have contributed to a dramatic increase in life expectancy over the last century. Diseases like HIV and cervical cancer that were essentially death sentences as recently as 30 years ago can now be managed with access to prescription...

Read more: There's a way for modern medicine to cure diseases even when the treatments aren't profitable

Flavored e-cigarettes sweetly lure kids into vaping and also mislead them to dismiss danger, studies suggest

  • Written by Leah Ranney, Director of Tobacco Prevention and Evaluation, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Vaping flavors in a store in Biddeford, Maine, Sept. 3, 2019. Robert F. Bukaty/AP Photo

New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announced Sept. 15, 2019 that he plans to pursue emergency regulations to quickly ban the sale of flavored e-cigarettes, making New York the second state to consider such a ban. Cuomo’s action came only days after the Trump...

Read more: Flavored e-cigarettes sweetly lure kids into vaping and also mislead them to dismiss danger,...

British troops massacred Indians in Amritsar -- and a century later, there's been no official apology

  • Written by Sumit Ganguly, Distinguished Professor of Political Science and the Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations, Indiana University
Jallianwala Bagh, in Amritsar, India, where hundreds were killed on April 13, 1919, under British colonial rule.AP Photo/Prabhjot Gill

The Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby recently visited the site of a brutal massacre that happened in 1919 under the British colonial rule in India and offered his personal apologies. He expressed his...

Read more: British troops massacred Indians in Amritsar -- and a century later, there's been no official...

At these colleges, students begin serious research their first year

  • Written by Nancy Stamp, Professor, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Akibo Watson, Corinne Fischer, Ashley Berlot and Jarrett Sannerud, second-year neuroscience students at Binghamton University, preparing reagents for team’s Parkinson disease projectJonathan Cohen/Binghamton University

Rat brains to understand Parkinson’s disease. Drones to detect plastic landmines. Social media to predict acts of...

Read more: At these colleges, students begin serious research their first year

The Senate filibuster explained – and why it should be allowed to die

  • Written by Daniel Wirls, Professor of Politics, University of California, Santa Cruz
The filibuster is like a stoplight that's always red. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Sen. Elizabeth Warren is the latest Democrat to argue an arcane Senate rule governing debate stands in the way of passing a progressive agenda, such as meaningful gun control.

The procedure, known as the filibuster, allows a 41-vote minority in the Senate to block...

Read more: The Senate filibuster explained – and why it should be allowed to die

The bizarre social history of beds

  • Written by Brian Fagan, Distinguished Professor Emeritus in Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara
For centuries, people thought nothing of crowding family members or friends into the same bed.miniwide/Shutterstock.com

Groucho Marx once joked, “Anything that can’t be done in bed isn’t worth doing at all.” You might think he was referring to sleeping and sex. But humans, at one time or another, have done just about...

Read more: The bizarre social history of beds

Why Sikhs wear a turban and what it means to practice the faith in the United States

  • Written by Simran Jeet Singh, Henry R. Luce Post-Doctoral Fellow in Religion in International Affairs Post-Doctoral Fellow, New York University
People participate in a candlelight vigil near the White House to protest violence against Sikhs in 2012.AP Photo/Susan Walsh

An elderly Sikh gentleman in Northern California, 64-year-old Parmjit Singh, was recently stabbed to death while taking a walk in the evening. Authorities are still investigating the killer’s motive, but community...

Read more: Why Sikhs wear a turban and what it means to practice the faith in the United States

Climate explained: why carbon dioxide has such outsized influence on Earth's climate

  • Written by Jason West, Professor of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory satellite makes precise measurements of Earth's carbon dioxide levels from space.NASA/JPLCC BY-ND

Climate Explained is a collaboration between The Conversation, Stuff and the New Zealand Science Media Centre to answer your questions about climate change.

If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer,...

Read more: Climate explained: why carbon dioxide has such outsized influence on Earth's climate

A newly designed vaccine may help stamp out remaining polio cases worldwide

  • Written by Patricia L. Foster, Professor Emerita of Biology, Indiana University
The oral polio vaccine is most commonly used in the developing world, despite one big problem.CDC/Alan Janssen, MSPH, CC BY

Public health organizations around the world have been fighting for global eradication of polio since 1988. Through massive vaccination efforts, the incidence of polio has gone down 99% since then, with the virus eradicated...

Read more: A newly designed vaccine may help stamp out remaining polio cases worldwide

Why carbon dioxide has such outsized influence on Earth's climate

  • Written by Jason West, Professor of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory satellite makes precise measurements of Earth's carbon dioxide levels from space.NASA/JPL

I am often asked how carbon dioxide can have an important effect on global climate when its concentration is so small – just 0.041% of Earth’s atmosphere. And human activities are responsible for just 32% of that...

Read more: Why carbon dioxide has such outsized influence on Earth's climate

More Articles ...

  1. The womb isn't sterile – healthy babies are born with bacteria and fungi in their guts
  2. Anti-vaccination mothers have outsized voice on social media – pro-vaccination parents could make a difference
  3. How a person vapes, not just what a person vapes, could also play a big role in vaping harm
  4. Why won't Democrats say they want government to solve problems?
  5. Top Democrats discussed 'Medicare for All' at Houston debate, but what about healthy food for all?
  6. Weinstein may be a monster, but the lawyers who enabled him are the real villains in #MeToo takedown 'She Said'
  7. How bankruptcy works for companies and creditors
  8. How corporate bankruptcy works
  9. Concussions and children returning to school – what parents need to know
  10. Free preschool, longer school days and affordable day care help keep moms in the paid workforce
  11. An artist's journey into the science of sweat
  12. A plan to monitor the mentally ill? History of mental illness and stigma provides insights
  13. Hotels play vital role in relief efforts when disaster strikes
  14. The problem with the push for more college degrees
  15. China is positioned to lead on climate change as the US rolls back its policies
  16. How TV cameras influence candidates' debate success
  17. Vaping likely has dangers that could take years for scientists to even know about
  18. Why community-owned grocery stores like co-ops are the best recipe for revitalizing food deserts
  19. Want to reform America's police? Look to firefighters
  20. Historically black colleges give graduates a wage boost
  21. In dandelions and fireflies, artists try to make sense of climate change
  22. How do brains tune in to one neural signal out of billions?
  23. The problem of living inside echo chambers
  24. Could a toilet seat help prevent hospital readmissions?
  25. Don't ignore serious nonmilitary threats to US national security
  26. 5 charts show how your household drives up global greenhouse gas emissions
  27. Why a plan to lower prescription drug prices should not be piecemeal
  28. The strange connection between Bobby Kennedy's death and Scooby-Doo
  29. Africa's Catholic churches face competition and a troubled legacy as they grow
  30. Indian Moon probe's failure won't stop an Asian space race that threatens regional security
  31. How giving legal rights to nature could help reduce toxic algae blooms in Lake Erie
  32. Curious Kids: Who was the first black child to go to an integrated school?
  33. 4 tips for selecting charities after disasters like Hurricane Dorian
  34. Market-based policies work to fight climate change, from India to Jamaica
  35. Math skills aren't enough to get through hard decisions – you need confidence, too
  36. How disinformation could sway the 2020 election
  37. Why your employer-sponsored insurance may ultimately not be good for you
  38. Far fewer Mexican immigrants are coming to the US -- and those who do are more educated
  39. In Brazil's rainforests, the worst fires are likely still to come
  40. I create manipulated images and videos – but quality may not matter much
  41. The hidden story of two African American women looking out from the pages of a 19th-century book
  42. How to increase access to gifted programs for low-income and black and Latino children
  43. Curious Kids: Why do burps make noise?
  44. How to increase access to gifted programs for low-income students and children of color
  45. What is Ashura? How this Shiite Muslim holiday inspires millions
  46. 'I'll have what she's having' – how and why we copy the choices of others
  47. Are you mentally well enough for college?
  48. Dr. Spock's timeless lessons in parenting
  49. New abortion laws contribute to sexist environments that harm everyone's health
  50. How climate change is driving emigration from Central America