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When medical workers behave badly during disease outbreaks, everyone suffers

  • Written by Lara Salahi, Assistant Professor of Broadcast and Digital Journalism, Endicott College
During high-stress deadly epidemics, even well-trained responders can get caught up in behaviors that are more harmful than helpful.AP Photo/Olivier Matthys

When a deadly infectious disease takes hold in a population, outbreak responders do their best to save lives and stamp out the contagion. No matter the disease or the location – whether...

Read more: When medical workers behave badly during disease outbreaks, everyone suffers

Attacks against elections are inevitable – Estonia shows what can be done

  • Written by Liisa Past, Next Generation Leader, McCain Institute for International Leadership, Arizona State University
The March 3, 2019, elections in Estonia were well-defended against anti-democracy influences.AP Photo/Raul Mee

Kremlin-backed attackers are working to influence the upcomingEuropean Parliament elections, according to cybersecurity firm FireEye. A hacking campaign has targeted governments and political organizations as well as think tanks and...

Read more: Attacks against elections are inevitable – Estonia shows what can be done

The surprising (and Long) story of the first use of ether in surgery

  • Written by Roger K. Thomas, Professor Emeritus, Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Georgia
An illustration of Crawford Long removing a tumor from the neck of James Venable. Crawford W. Long Museum, CC BY-SA

In the small town of Jefferson, Georgia, about 20 miles from the University of Georgia in Athens, a 26-year-old physician named Crawford Williamson Long removed a tumor from the neck of a man named James Venable while Venable was...

Read more: The surprising (and Long) story of the first use of ether in surgery

Fending off new Sackler money is easier for museums and schools than returning old gifts

  • Written by Terri Lynn Helge, Professor of Law, Texas A&M University
Anti-opioid protest at the Harvard Art Museums, which the Sackler family has supported with charitable gifts.Jon Shaffer, CC BY-SA

The state of Oklahoma has reached a settlement with drugmaker Purdue Pharma and its owners, the Sackler family, for US$270 million to fund opioid addiction treatment.

This first of what could become a string of...

Read more: Fending off new Sackler money is easier for museums and schools than returning old gifts

An unexpected pathway to treating neurodegenerative diseases

  • Written by Kenneth S. Kosik, Professor of Neuroscience, University of California, Santa Barbara
An MRI image of the brain.SpeedKingz/Shutterstock.com

Scientific success stories can sometimes occur when therapies being studied for one disease can be used to treat another.

In the case of the drug we have been studying in my lab, this is especially important because it could be used to develop a drug for Alzheimer’s. This cancer drug,...

Read more: An unexpected pathway to treating neurodegenerative diseases

How the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings turned baseball into a national sensation

  • Written by Robert Wyss, Professor of Journalism, University of Connecticut
A drawing from Harper's Weekly depicts a game between the Red Stockings and the Brooklyn Atlantics.New York Public Library

This Major League Baseball season, fans may notice a patch on the players’ uniforms that reads “MLB 150.”

The logo commemorates the Cincinnati Red Stockings, who, in 1869, became the first professional baseball...

Read more: How the 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings turned baseball into a national sensation

Principle behind Google's April Fools' pigeon prank proves more than a joke

  • Written by Edward Wasserman, Professor of Experimental Psychology, University of Iowa
Consider the wisdom of the flock.Zac Ong/Unsplash, CC BY

Google’s 2002 April Fools’ Day joke purportedly disclosed that its popular search engine was not actually powered by artificial intelligence, but instead by biological intelligence. Google had deployed bunches of birds, dubbed pigeon clusters, to calculate the relative value of...

Read more: Principle behind Google's April Fools' pigeon prank proves more than a joke

Extreme weather news may not change climate change skeptics' minds

  • Written by Ryan Weber, Associate Professor of English, University of Alabama in Huntsville
How do people respond to media coverage of weather influenced by climate change?AP Photo/Andy Newman

The year 2018 brought particularly devastating natural disasters, including hurricanes, droughts, floods and fires – just the kinds of extreme weather events scientists predict will be exacerbated by climate change.

Amid this destruction, some...

Read more: Extreme weather news may not change climate change skeptics' minds

You'll hear these 4 arguments in defense of the Electoral College – here's why they're wrong

  • Written by Robert Speel, Associate Professor of Political Science, Erie campus, Pennsylvania State University

For the first time in the country’s modern history, the existence of the Electoral College has become a campaign issue.

Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren recently called for the abolition of the Electoral College, while other Democratic presidential candidates, including former U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke and Sen. Kamala Harris,...

Read more: You'll hear these 4 arguments in defense of the Electoral College – here's why they're wrong

DOJ efforts to kill Obamacare, the cat with 9 lives, could cause health care havoc for millions

  • Written by J.B. Silvers, Professor of Health Finance, Weatherhead School of Management & School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., announces legislation at the Capitol on March 26 to lower health care costs and protect people with pre-existing conditions.J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

If the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, were a cat, it would be just about out of its nine lives.

It is amazing that this law, which represented a sea...

Read more: DOJ efforts to kill Obamacare, the cat with 9 lives, could cause health care havoc for millions

More Articles ...

  1. Supreme Court to rule on use of religious symbols in war memorials
  2. The science and politics of genetically engineered salmon: 5 questions answered
  3. How higher ed can earn the public's trust after the admissions scandal
  4. Statistics ruined baseball by perfecting it
  5. Beyond 'Bandersnatch,' the future of interactive TV is bright
  6. How social media is helping Big Tobacco hook a new generation of smokers
  7. Trump and obstruction of justice: An explainer
  8. Russia responds to Mueller report: Moscow wins, Putin is stronger than Trump and US is a 'global pain in the a--'
  9. Russia responds to Mueller report: Moscow wins, Putin is stronger than Trump and US is a 'pain in the a - -'
  10. Romney's Mormon religion helps explain his criticism of Trump
  11. In the future, everyone might use quantum computers
  12. Colorectal cancer increase in younger adults: What could be the cause?
  13. Why the next terror manifesto could be even harder to track
  14. 7 tips to stay safe while studying abroad
  15. Apollo 11 brought a message of peace to the Moon - but Neil and Buzz almost forgot to leave it behind
  16. Dynasties still run the world
  17. Boeing is doing crisis management all wrong – here's what a company needs to do to restore the public's trust
  18. A chess program helped this 8-year-old raise $240,000 and get his family out of a homeless shelter – here's what to look for in a chess program for your child
  19. The promise and peril of the Dominican baseball pipeline
  20. Why the Vatican needs to open its archives on Pope Pius XII
  21. Saudi women are going to college, running for office and changing the conservative country
  22. Why Trump's recognition of the Golan Heights as Israeli territory matters
  23. Despite consumer worries, the future of aviation will be more automated
  24. How Trump and Barr could stretch claims of executive privilege and grand jury secrecy
  25. Does Monsanto's Roundup cause cancer? The law says yes, the science says maybe
  26. Cars are regulated for safety – why not information technology?
  27. What President Trump's executive order on campus free speech is really meant to do
  28. Boeing 737 Max: The FAA wanted a safe plane – but didn't want to hurt America’s biggest exporter either
  29. Electronic health records cannot replace a doctor who knows you
  30. Journalism needs to practice transparency in a different way to rebuild credibility
  31. Skip this chore: Cleaning your air conditioner condenser probably won't make it work better
  32. Why flood insurance needs an overhaul: 6 questions answered
  33. Baseball's biggest problem isn't pace of play – it's teams tanking
  34. A new procedure may preserve fertility in kids with cancer after chemo or radiation
  35. March Madness: With gambling legal in eight states, who really wins?
  36. Will more genetically engineered foods be approved under the FDA's new leadership?
  37. We need more teachers of color, so why do we use tests that keep them out of the classroom?
  38. Niger has the world's highest birth rate – and that may be a recipe for unrest
  39. Nuns were secluded to avoid scandals in early Christian monastic communities
  40. Livestreamed massacre means it's time to shut down Facebook Live
  41. Why social movements like #MeToo seem to come out of nowhere
  42. Your pet on pot, or even CBD: Not a good thing, a vet toxicologist explains
  43. Teens have less face time with their friends – and are lonelier than ever
  44. Death penalty moratorium in California – what it means for the state and for the nation
  45. Even if Netanyahu goes, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will continue
  46. The bias hiding in your library
  47. 5 ways summer camp makes a difference – and what to look for in a camp
  48. Violence against women is overlooked in its role in opioid epidemic
  49. A case against a moratorium on germline gene editing
  50. White nationalism, born in the USA, is now a global terror threat