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How pharmacists can help solve medication errors

  • Written by B. Joseph Guglielmo, Dean of the School of Pharmacy, University of California, San Francisco
Patients are often overwhelmed by medications, especially when they leave the hospital. EM Karuna/shutterstock.com

In today’s health care system, no one person – maybe not even you – knows exactly what drugs you’re taking. What’s more, no one health care provider knows how you, the patient, take your medications and at...

Read more: How pharmacists can help solve medication errors

How new fathers use social media to make sense of their roles

  • Written by Tawfiq Ammari, Ph.D. Candidate in Information, University of Michigan
What dads do online helps them navigate gender roles as society changes.Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock.com

A lawyer in Bermuda became internet-famous for dancing ballet alongside his two-year-old daughter, comforting her stage fright by being there and doing the dance moves right with her. He knew the part because he had practiced ballet with...

Read more: How new fathers use social media to make sense of their roles

Who are the Sikhs and what are their beliefs?

  • Written by Simran Jeet Singh, Henry R. Luce Post-Doctoral Fellow in Religion in International Affairs Post-Doctoral Fellow, New York University
New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal.AP Photo/Julio Cortez

New Jersey’s first Sikh attorney general, Gurbir Singh Grewal, was a target of disparaging remarks recently. Two radio hosts commented on Grewal’s Sikh identity and repeatedly referred to him as “turban man.” When called out on the offensiveness of their...

Read more: Who are the Sikhs and what are their beliefs?

Can Trump's White House legally ban reporters?

  • Written by Frank LoMonte, Director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information, University of Florida
CNN White House correspondent Kaitlan Collins in front of the White House.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

As long as reporters have covered government officials, they’ve sought greater access than the government was willing to allow.

The White House excluded a CNN reporter from an international trade announcement with the president of the European...

Read more: Can Trump's White House legally ban reporters?

What is insider trading, the crime Rep. Chris Collins was charged with?

  • Written by Jena Martin, Professor of Law, West Virginia University

The arrest of Congressman Chris Collins shines light on one of the sexier crimes that the securities laws has to offer: insider trading.

It’s the subject of many iconic movies like “Wall Street,” television shows like “Billions” and real-life scandals involving celebrities, politicians and others.

But despite all the...

Read more: What is insider trading, the crime Rep. Chris Collins was charged with?

Republicans may be panicking over Ohio's special election results

  • Written by Nathaniel Swigger, Associate Professor of Political Science, The Ohio State University
Ohio Democratic candidate Danny O'Connor, left, and Republican candidate Troy Balderson.AP Photo/John Minchillo (left)/Jay LaPrete (right)

Ohio’s special election to fill the seat of retiring Republican Congressman Pat Tiberi was too close to call by the morning after the election. Republican Troy Balderson’s lead was less than 1...

Read more: Republicans may be panicking over Ohio's special election results

La raza del asesino influye en la cobertura mediática de los tiroteos masivos en EEUU

  • Written by Laura Frizzell, PhD Student in Sociology, The Ohio State University
Si el periódico habla de la infancia difícil de un criminal, es probable que este sea blanco.ASAG Studio

El 24 de enero de 2014, la policía encontró a Josh Boren, un hombre de 34 años y ex agente de policía, muerto en su casa junto a los cadáveres de su esposa y sus tres hijos. Los disparos fueron...

Read more: La raza del asesino influye en la cobertura mediática de los tiroteos masivos en EEUU

Audiences love the anger: Alex Jones, or someone like him, will be back

  • Written by Michael J. Socolow, Associate Professor, Communication and Journalism, University of Maine

Confrontational characters spouting conspiracy theories and promoting fringe ideas have been with us since the invention of American broadcasting. First on radio, then on television, the American audience has consistently proven eager to consume the rants of angry and bitter men.

Before Alex Jones and InfoWars, there was Glenn Beck.

A decade ago,...

Read more: Audiences love the anger: Alex Jones, or someone like him, will be back

What elephants' unique brain structures suggest about their mental abilities

  • Written by Bob Jacobs, Professor of Neuroscience, Colorado College
African elephant bull.Michelle Gadd/USFWS, CC BY

Conservationists have designated August 12 as World Elephant Day to raise awareness about conserving these majestic animals. Elephants have many engaging features, from their incredibly dexterous trunks to their memory abilities and complex social lives.

But there is much less discussion of their...

Read more: What elephants' unique brain structures suggest about their mental abilities

Capital gains and why they matter – a tax expert explains

  • Written by Stephanie Leiser, Lecturer in Public Policy, University of Michigan
It's a game for the rich.AP Photo/Steven Senne

The Trump administration wants to change the way capital gains are taxed to factor in inflation.

To many, this may sound like a technical change of little consequence. To others, such as the Tax Policy Center’s Len Burman, it’s a “windfall” for the very rich who are still adding...

Read more: Capital gains and why they matter – a tax expert explains

More Articles ...

  1. All the battles being waged against fossil fuel infrastructure are following a single strategy
  2. Who are Pakistan's Ahmadis and why haven't they voted in 30 years
  3. Programmers need ethics when designing the technologies that influence people's lives
  4. Your voting habits may depend on when you registered to vote
  5. A night enforcing immigration laws on the US-Mexico border
  6. 5 razones por las cuales la pesadilla de Venezuela podría empeorar, con o sin los drones asesinos
  7. Ida B. Wells: How grassroots support and social media made a monumental difference in honoring her legacy
  8. The US needs to get over its obsession with GDP
  9. Smith College incident is latest case of racial 'profiling by proxy'
  10. Farmers are drawing groundwater from the giant Ogallala Aquifer faster than nature replaces it
  11. As Russians hack the US grid, a look at what's needed to protect it
  12. Americans, stop obsessing over GDP
  13. Think Confederate monuments are racist? Consider pioneer monuments
  14. Save money when traveling abroad by thinking like an economist
  15. Funding basic research plays the long game for future payoffs
  16. Humans gave leprosy to armadillos – now they are giving it back to us
  17. What philosophers have to say about eating meat
  18. Frente a movilización masiva para el aborto legal en Argentina, la Iglesia católica modera su tono
  19. Facing a groundswell of support for legal abortion, Argentina's Catholic Church moderates its tone
  20. Violencia crónica de México afecta la salud mental, con consecuencias fatales: más suicidios
  21. Police kill about 3 men per day in the US, according to new study
  22. Vladimir Putin's lying game
  23. Brains keep temporary molecular records before making a lasting memory
  24. What makes a good friend?
  25. Why stretching is (still) important for weight loss and exercise
  26. Why adjusting capital gains for inflation makes economic sense
  27. Brazilian evangelicals, swinging hard to the right, could put a Trump-like populist in the presidency
  28. How Trump's trade war affects working-class Americans
  29. #MeToo movement finds an unlikely champion in Wall Street with the new ‘Weinstein clause’
  30. Mapping Brazil's political polarization online
  31. Can you be Christian and support the death penalty?
  32. What colleges must do to promote mental health for graduate students
  33. Ancient arts are inspiring modern electronics
  34. Why 'Nigerian Prince' scams continue to dupe us
  35. It's harder than you might expect for charities to give back tainted money
  36. Here's what we know about CRISPR safety – and reports of 'genome vandalism'
  37. Does Monsanto's Roundup cause cancer? Trial highlights the difficulty of proving a link
  38. Trump administration and California are on collision course over vehicle emissions rules
  39. ¿Por qué duelen tanto las cortadas con papel?
  40. Lawyers defending immigrant children in detention are relying on a court case from the 80s
  41. Will the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade? And if it does, what happens to abortion rights?
  42. Rising suicides in Mexico expose the mental health toll of living with extreme, chronic violence
  43. Genetic testing: Should I get tested for Alzheimer's risk?
  44. What is a blockchain token?
  45. A high-adrenaline job: 5 questions answered about fighting wildfires
  46. No sufra desvelos: existen muchas soluciones para dormir mejor
  47. Print-your-own gun debate ignores how the US government long provided and regulated firearms
  48. From gun kits to 3D printable guns, a short history of rogue gun makers
  49. Bird DNA helps explain Amazonian rivers' role in evolution
  50. Alan Alda living with Parkinson's – a neurologist explains treatment advances