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Hospice care for those with dementia falls far short of meeting people’s needs at the end of life

  • Written by Maria J Silveira, Associate Professor of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan
imageMedicare's regulations for enrolling in hospice exclude many dementia patients who need it the most. LPettet/E+ via Getty Images

Jimmy Carter, who chose to forgo aggressive medical care for complications of cancer and frailty in February 2023, recently reached his one-year anniversary since enrolling in hospice care. During this time, he celebrated...

Read more: Hospice care for those with dementia falls far short of meeting people’s needs at the end of life

How federal tax dollars meant to fight climate change could end up boosting Louisiana’s fossil fuel production

  • Written by Ned Randolph, Adjunct Professor of Environmental Communications, Tulane University
imageLouisiana accounted for nearly one-sixth of the nation's oil-refining capacity and shipped 63% of its liquefied natural gas exports in 2022.Adbar/Wikimedia, CC BY

Billions of federal tax dollars will soon be pouring into Louisiana to fight climate change, yet the projects they’re supporting may actually boost fossil fuels – the very...

Read more: How federal tax dollars meant to fight climate change could end up boosting Louisiana’s fossil...

Mi experiencia en Malasia muestra cómo la religión puede fusionarse con el nacionalismo populista para silenciar la disidencia

  • Written by Ahmet T. Kuru, Professor of Political Science, Director of Center for Islamic & Arabic Studies, San Diego State University
imageIslamistas malasios se manifiestan a favor de la sharia el 20 de noviembre de 2023.Zahim Mohd/NurPhoto via Getty Images

No esperaba que mi gira literaria por Malasia acabara con una confrontación con hombres que se identificaron como policías en un aeropuerto de Kuala Lumpur.

Llegué a este país de mayoría musulmana...

Read more: Mi experiencia en Malasia muestra cómo la religión puede fusionarse con el nacionalismo populista...

Exploding stars are rare but emit torrents of radiation − if one happened close enough to Earth, it could threaten life on the planet

  • Written by Chris Impey, University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona
imageMassive dying stars emit large amounts of radiation. NASA/ESA/Hubble SM4 ERO Team via AP

Stars like the Sun are remarkably constant. They vary in brightness by only 0.1% over years and decades, thanks to the fusion of hydrogen into helium that powers them. This process will keep the Sun shining steadily for about 5 billion more years, but when...

Read more: Exploding stars are rare but emit torrents of radiation − if one happened close enough to Earth,...

What is Volt Typhoon? A cybersecurity expert explains the Chinese hackers targeting US critical infrastructure

  • Written by Richard Forno, Principal Lecturer in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageU.S.-China antagonism is particularly acute in the realm of hacking and cybersecurity.AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato

Volt Typhoon is a Chinese state-sponsored hacker group. The United States government and its primary global intelligence partners, known as the Five Eyes, issued a warning on March 19, 2024, about the group’s activity targeting...

Read more: What is Volt Typhoon? A cybersecurity expert explains the Chinese hackers targeting US critical...

DNA says you’re related to a Viking, a medieval German Jew or a 1700s enslaved African? What a genetic match really means

  • Written by Shai Carmi, Associate Professor of Population and Statistical Genetics, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
imageA genetic match to an ancient person doesn't mean you're more related genealogically.Mark Edward Atkinson/Tetra Images via Getty Images

In 2022, we reported the DNA sequences of 33 medieval people buried in a Jewish cemetery in Germany. Not long after we made the data publicly available, people started comparing their own DNA with that of the...

Read more: DNA says you’re related to a Viking, a medieval German Jew or a 1700s enslaved African? What a...

Many travel nurses opt for temporary assignments because of the autonomy and opportunities − not just the big boost in pay

  • Written by Ivan Gan, Assistant Professor of Communication Studies, University of Houston-Downtown

Travel nurses take short-term contracts that can require long commutes or temporarily living away from home. Time and again, they have to get used to new co-workers, new protocols and new workplaces.

So why would staff nurses quit their stable jobs to become travel nurses?

Well, for one, they get bigger paychecks. But U.S. nurses have other...

Read more: Many travel nurses opt for temporary assignments because of the autonomy and opportunities − not...

A new US-run pier off Gaza could help deliver 2 million meals a day – but it comes with security risks

  • Written by Tara Sonenshine, Edward R. Murrow Professor of Practice in Public Diplomacy, Tufts University
imageCrew members of the Army ship James A. Loux in Hampton, Va., prepare on March 12, 2024, for the ship to go to the Middle East to build the Gaza pier.Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images

The U.S. has dispatched eight Army and Navy vessels from Virginia to build a temporary pier off the coast of the Gaza Strip. The aim of this work: to supply food...

Read more: A new US-run pier off Gaza could help deliver 2 million meals a day – but it comes with security...

Why Jersey girls − and guys − still don’t pump their own gas

  • Written by Robert H. Scott III, Professor & Greenbaum/Ferguson/NJAR Endowed Chair in Real Estate Policy, Monmouth University
imageSit back and relax -- you're in the Garden State.Kena Betancur/VIEWpress via Getty Images

New Jersey’s quirky reputation is hard earned, but one peculiarity stands out: It’s the only place in America where you can’t pump your own gas.

Laws against self-service gasoline used to be common: In the late 1960s, nearly half the states...

Read more: Why Jersey girls − and guys − still don’t pump their own gas

Competitive workplaces don’t work for gender equality

  • Written by Amalia Rebecca Miller, Georgia S. Bankard Professor of Economics, University of Virginia
imageNot famously laid-back. Mary Altaffer/AP Photo

Ultra-competitive workplaces – places where employees battle against each other for rank, bonuses and promotions – are common in many high-status fields, including law and finance. But while having a highly competitive culture is, on its face, gender-neutral, it actually worsens gender...

Read more: Competitive workplaces don’t work for gender equality

More Articles ...

  1. Moscow terror attack showed growing reach of ISIS-K – could the US be next?
  2. Tweaking US trade policy could hold the key to reducing migration from Central America
  3. Failure of Francis Scott Key Bridge provides future engineers a chance to learn how to better protect the public
  4. For over a century, baseball’s scouts have been the backbone of America’s pastime – do they have a future?
  5. One year ago, Pope Francis disavowed the ‘Doctrine of Discovery’ – but Indigenous Catholics’ work for respect and recognition goes back decades
  6. 69% of US Muslims always give to charities during Ramadan, fulfilling a religious obligation
  7. The amazing story of the man who created the latest narco-state in the Americas, and how the United States helped him every step of the way − until now
  8. NASA’s mission to an ice-covered moon will contain a message between water worlds
  9. As climate change and pollution imperil coral reefs, scientists are deep-freezing corals to repopulate future oceans
  10. Invisible lines: how unseen boundaries shape the world around us
  11. Bridges can be protected from ship collisions – an expert on structures in disasters explains how
  12. Port of Baltimore bridge collapse rattles supply chains already rocked by troubles in Panama and the Red Sea
  13. The roots of the Easter story: Where did Christian beliefs about Jesus’ resurrection come from?
  14. How to have the hard conversations about who really won the 2020 presidential election − before Election Day 2024
  15. Why civil rights icon Fannie Lou Hamer was ‘sick and tired of being sick and tired’
  16. ‘The Amazon of Sports’ has already cornered baseball’s apparel market – and is now on the verge of subsuming baseball cards, too
  17. Horses lived in the Americas for millions of years – new research helps paleontologists understand the fossils we’ve found and those that are missing from the record
  18. Cancer often requires more than one treatment − an oncologist explains why some patients like Kate Middleton receive both chemotherapy and surgery
  19. Easter 2024 in the Holy Land: a holiday marked by Palestinian Christian sorrow
  20. I’ve captained ships into tight ports like Baltimore, and this is how captains like me work with harbor pilots to avoid deadly collisions
  21. Abortion drug access could be limited by Supreme Court − if the court decides anti-abortion doctors can, in fact, challenge the FDA
  22. 3 ways to use the solar eclipse to brighten your child’s knowledge of science
  23. Not having job flexibility or security can leave workers feeling depressed, anxious and hopeless
  24. An annual pilgrimage during Holy Week brings thousands of believers to Santuario de Chimayó in New Mexico, where they pray for healing and protection
  25. Politicians may rail against the ‘deep state,’ but research shows federal workers are effective and committed, not subversive
  26. Trump-era tax cuts contributed to a decline in higher ed giving, with fewer Americans donating to colleges and universities
  27. Helping children eat healthier foods may begin with getting parents to do the same, research suggests
  28. How AI and a popular card game can help engineers predict catastrophic failure – by finding the absence of a pattern
  29. Abstinencia de la hierba: Más de la mitad de las personas que consumen cannabis medicinal para el dolor experimentan síntomas de abstinencia
  30. Amazon, SpaceX and other companies are arguing the government agency that has protected labor rights since 1935 is actually unconstitutional
  31. Schools can close summer learning gaps with these 4 strategies
  32. I’ve been studying congressional emails to constituents for 15 years − and found these 4 trends after scanning 185,222 of them
  33. What is dirt? There’s a whole wriggling world alive in the ground beneath our feet, as a soil scientist explains
  34. Gary, Indiana’s lawsuit against gunmakers is shot down by a new law, after surviving 25 years of appeals
  35. Excessively high rents are a major burden for immigrants in US cities
  36. Israel’s ‘Iron Wall’: A brief history of the ideology guiding Benjamin Netanyahu
  37. Fighting every wildfire ensures the big fires are more extreme, and may harm forests’ ability to adapt to climate change
  38. How Moscow terror attack fits ISIS-K strategy to widen agenda, take fight to its perceived enemies
  39. Climate change is shifting the zones where plants grow – here’s what that could mean for your garden
  40. Jon Stewart, still a ‘tiny, neurotic man,’ back to remind Americans what’s at stake
  41. EPA’s new auto emissions standard will speed the transition to cleaner cars, while also addressing consumer and industry concerns
  42. Generative AI could leave users holding the bag for copyright violations
  43. TikTok’s duet, green screen and stitch turn political point-scoring into an art form
  44. Breakaway parties threaten to disrupt South Korea’s two-party system – can they also end parliamentary gridlock?
  45. Even presidents need a touch of madness − in March
  46. Purim’s original queen: How studying the Book of Esther as fan fiction can teach us about the roots of an unruly Jewish festival
  47. For centuries, owls were considered to bring bad luck in many cultures as well as in the US, but the outpouring of grief in New York over Flaco shows how times have changed
  48. Why are Americans fighting over no-fault divorce? Maybe they can’t agree what marriage is for
  49. James Clavell’s ‘Shōgun’ is reimagined for a new generation of TV viewers
  50. Legislative inaction and dissatisfaction with one-party control lead to more issues going directly to voters in ballot initiatives, with 60% of them in six states