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The other opioid crisis -- people in poor countries can't get the pain medication they need

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHard to get. Morphine pills image via www.shutterstock.com.

There are two opioid crises in the world today. One is the epidemic of abuse and misuse, present in many countries but rising at an alarming rate in the United States. The other crisis is older and affects many more people around the world each year: too few opioids.

Hospitals in the U.S....

Read more: The other opioid crisis -- people in poor countries can't get the pain medication they need

How the death penalty may keep innocent people in prison

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Utah’s conservative state Senate recently voted to abolish the death penalty. The action reflects a growing bipartisan recognition of the documented flaws of the death penalty, including its high cost, decades-long appeals and faulty lethal injection protocols.

To get the measure through the Republican-led House, Utah legislators might point...

Read more: How the death penalty may keep innocent people in prison

The Common Core explained

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat's the fuss about?Steve Rhodes, CC BY-NC-ND

Beginning in 2010, mathematics and English language arts standards, called the Common Core State Standards, were adopted in 45 of 50 U.S. states.

The Common Core Standards represent a substantial change from what was in place before. They are not just national (nearly) in scope, but also their content...

Read more: The Common Core explained

Why do people risk their lives – or the lives of others – for the perfect selfie?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSome selfies are more dangerous than others...'Selfie' via www.shutterstock.com

2016 hasn’t been a great year for the selfie.

In February, Argentinian tourists passed around a baby La Plata dolphin in order to take selfies with it. The endangered animal subsequently died from stress and heat exhaustion.

Then, in early March, a swan died after a...

Read more: Why do people risk their lives – or the lives of others – for the perfect selfie?

Cheap gas could delay America's efficiency targets for cars and trucks

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Cars and trucks in the United States are supposed to achieve great fuel efficiency gains over the next decade. But now that gasoline prices have plunged, those plans may be delayed.

In 2012, the National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), in collaboration with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), issued regulations that...

Read more: Cheap gas could delay America's efficiency targets for cars and trucks

How to transform workers' campaign rage into better jobs and wages

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The presidential campaigns deserve some credit for finally voicing some of the deep frustrations and anger felt by American workers who have lived for decades in an economy that works for those at the top but not for them and their families.

Thirty years of wage stagnation, the loss of one-third of the nation’s manufacturing jobs since 1970,...

Read more: How to transform workers' campaign rage into better jobs and wages

Big data security problems threaten consumers' privacy

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWho has your personal data, and how secure is it? Do you even know?Card and lock image from shutterstock.com

As more personal information is collected up by ever-more-powerful computers, giant sets of data – big data – have become available for not only legitimate uses but also abuses.

Big data has an enormous potential to revolutionize...

Read more: Big data security problems threaten consumers' privacy

Will requiring food stamp retailers to sell more healthy food make it easier for SNAP recipients to eat better?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageGetting healthy foods on shelves is only part of the solution.Lynn Friedman/Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

The federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) serves an important role in our nation’s fight against hunger. Formerly known as food stamps, SNAP helps 45 million low-income Americans – nearly half of whom are children –...

Read more: Will requiring food stamp retailers to sell more healthy food make it easier for SNAP recipients...

More Articles ...

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  2. Brussels attacks: how radicalization happens and who is at risk
  3. President Trump's foreign policy dystopia
  4. American elections ranked worst among Western democracies. Here’s why.
  5. Are blondes actually dumb?
  6. Do protectionist policies like Trump's lead to trade wars?
  7. To empower women, give them better access to water
  8. Will the end of breeding orcas at SeaWorld change much for animals in captivity?
  9. Global warming is pushing wine harvests earlier – but not necessarily for the better
  10. What we've learned from the deadly Oso, Washington landslide two years on
  11. How the Grand Canyon changed our ideas of natural beauty
  12. A nation at risk -- how gifted, low-income kids are left behind
  13. In TV's shifting landscape, advertisers scramble to adapt
  14. Radiation combined with immune-stimulating drugs could pack a powerful punch against cancer cells
  15. What two legal scholars learned from studying 70 years of Supreme Court confirmation hearings
  16. Fighting superbugs with nanotechnology and light
  17. As Obama makes historic visit, is Cuba ready for change?
  18. Polar bears, Princess Diana, gun rights: The opinions of Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland
  19. Does the First Amendment protect people who film the police?
  20. Acne treatment: antibiotics don't need to kill bacteria to clear up your skin
  21. Picture of Pluto further refined by months of New Horizons data
  22. How do children decide what's fair?
  23. A look inside the Czech Republic's booming fertility holiday industry
  24. Beyond today's crowdsourced science to tomorrow's citizen science cyborgs
  25. Net neutrality may be at risk when companies like Netflix subsidize your data
  26. Roots of opioid epidemic can be traced back to two key changes in pain management
  27. Will cheap gas at the pump stall progress on car emissions?
  28. What kind of judge is Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland?
  29. How Bernie Sanders made the Democratic Party safe for liberals
  30. How much math do you need to win your March Madness pool?
  31. Zika and abortion: will the virus prompt Latin America to rethink abortion and birth control?
  32. In a state wrought with racial tension, Jackie Robinson suited up for his first spring training game
  33. The view from Ohio: Kasich's win and what's next
  34. Recalculating! By not driving the optimal route, you're causing traffic jams
  35. 'Acceptable risk' is a better way to think about radiation exposure in Fukushima
  36. The last time an outsider like Trump crashed the GOP? 1940
  37. A new way to detect tsunamis: cargo ships
  38. One hundred years of 'birther' arguments
  39. From emerging to submerging: the debt burden killing off the age of the BRICS
  40. March Madness means money – it's time to talk about who's getting paid
  41. We've been measuring inequality wrong – here's the real story
  42. Here's another reason why many community college students do not get their degree
  43. Pi pops up where you don't expect it
  44. Letting kids stand more in the classroom could help them learn
  45. Is your March Madness bracket really better than mine?
  46. Why we have the most polarized Supreme Court in history
  47. Inspired by Kim Kardashian, a feverish legion of followers struggle to achieve online fame
  48. Public universities must do more: the public needs our help and expertise
  49. The search for the value of pi
  50. What do special educators need to succeed?