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The cheerful lexicon of the Spanish language may help solve a health mystery called the Hispanic Paradox

  • Written by Maria Magdalena Llabre, Professor of Psychology, University of Miami
imageClues to solve the paradox have emerged from an unlikely place. Jose Luis Pelaez/Stone via Getty Images

In early December 2021, I was seeing a physical therapist for a shoulder injury. During one of my visits, the therapist was alternating between me and another patient on an adjacent bed, who had a knee replacement. While the therapist worked on...

Read more: The cheerful lexicon of the Spanish language may help solve a health mystery called the Hispanic...

What is palliative care? How is it different from hospice?

  • Written by Yael Schenker, Professor of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Health Sciences
imagePalliative care tries to support a patient's quality of life.Pekic/E+ via Getty Images

When most people hear the term palliative care, they look worried or confused. Introducing myself to patients and families as a palliative medicine physician, I commonly hear things like, “Does this mean I am dying?” or “I am not ready for...

Read more: What is palliative care? How is it different from hospice?

Ukrainian refugees might not return home, even long after the war eventually ends

  • Written by Sandra Joireman, Weinstein Chair of International Studies, Professor of Political Science, University of Richmond

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has caused more than 4.2 million people to flee to the neighboring countries of Poland, Romania, Moldova and elsewhere.

Russia’s violence against civilians and attacks on cities caused an additional 6.5 million or more people to become internally displaced. They left their homes but moved within Ukraine...

Read more: Ukrainian refugees might not return home, even long after the war eventually ends

5 ways Americans' lives will change if Congress makes daylight saving time permanent

  • Written by Steve Calandrillo, Professor of Law, University of Washington
imageSome people dread the time change that occurs twice a year -- and for good reason.AP Photo/Elise Amendola

The U.S. Senate approved the Sunshine Protection Act in March 2022, with the goal of making daylight saving time permanent starting in November 2023. If that happens, the U.S. will never again “spring forward” or “fall...

Read more: 5 ways Americans' lives will change if Congress makes daylight saving time permanent

How Ukraine has defended itself against cyberattacks – lessons for the US

  • Written by Robert Peacock, Assistant Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida International University
imageAs missiles rain down on Ukraine's telecommunications infrastructure, including Kyiv's TV tower, hackers have been attacking in cyberspace.Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images

In 2014, as Russia launched a proxy war in Eastern Ukraine and annexed Crimea, and in the years that followed, Russian hackers hammered Ukraine. The cyberattacks went so far...

Read more: How Ukraine has defended itself against cyberattacks – lessons for the US

Ketanji Brown Jackson and the color blind society of Martin Luther King Jr.

  • Written by Bev-Freda Jackson, Adjunct Professorial Lecturer, American University School of Public Affairs
imageU.S. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson in a US Senate office on March 29, 2022.Alex Wong/Getty Images

U.S. Sen. Chuck E. Grassley had a question for Ketanji Brown Jackson during her confirmation hearings to be the first African American woman on the U.S. Supreme Court.

Grassley, the ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, wanted...

Read more: Ketanji Brown Jackson and the color blind society of Martin Luther King Jr.

Har Gobind Khorana: The chemist who cracked DNA's code and made the first artificial gene was born into poverty 100 years ago in an Indian village

  • Written by Sahotra Sarkar, Professor of Philosophy and Integrative Biology, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts
imageHar Gobind Khorana pieced together how DNA encoded for the proteins that life relies on.AP Photo/Paul Shane

2022 marks the 100th birthday of Nobel Prize winning chemist Har Gobind Khorana – or so we think. The exact date of his birth is not known, because Khorana was born in poverty in a British Indian class that rarely recorded such dates....

Read more: Har Gobind Khorana: The chemist who cracked DNA's code and made the first artificial gene was born...

Putin is staking his political future on victory in Ukraine – and has little incentive to make peace

  • Written by Monica Duffy Toft, Professor of International Politics and Director of the Center for Strategic Studies at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
imagePeace talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin won't be easy.Mikhail Klimentyev/SputnikAFP via Getty Images

Despite stop-and-start peace talks, a resolution to the brutal war in Ukraine appears distant.

Major cities in Ukraine are faltering. Civilians, including children, are dying of shrapnel and glass wounds, exposure and thirst.

At the same...

Read more: Putin is staking his political future on victory in Ukraine – and has little incentive to make peace

Using lies and disinformation, Putin and his team have been building the case for a Ukraine invasion for 14 years

  • Written by Juris Pupcenoks, Associate Professor of Political Science, Marist College
imageThe destroyed fuel station in Stoyanka, Ukraine. Putin has been laying the rhetorical groundwork for the invasion of Ukraine for years. Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images

As the invasion of Ukraine began in late February 2022, President Vladimir Putin offered several justifications for why Russia had no other option.

First: Russia needed to fight the...

Read more: Using lies and disinformation, Putin and his team have been building the case for a Ukraine...

How the 'test to treat' initiative aims to get ahead of the next wave of COVID-19

  • Written by C. Michael White, Professor of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
imagePharmacies could play an increasingly important role in testing and treatment of COVID-19.dusanpetkovic/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Going into the third year of the pandemic, public health experts are developing strategies to work within communities to have a more nimble and rapid response to COVID-19 infection rates.

C. Michael White, a professor...

Read more: How the 'test to treat' initiative aims to get ahead of the next wave of COVID-19

More Articles ...

  1. The 1 in 10 U.S. doctors with reservations about vaccines could be undermining the fight against COVID-19
  2. Planting mixes of flowers around farm fields helps keep bees healthy
  3. People are more likely to react to a Black person's story of injustice – even if it happened to someone who is white
  4. What are war crimes? 3 essential reads on atrocities in Ukraine and the likelihood of prosecuting Putin
  5. Revolutionary changes in transportation, from electric vehicles to ride sharing, could slow global warming – if they’re done right, IPCC says
  6. Lessons in realpolitik from Nixon and Kissinger: Ideals go only so far in ending conflict in places like Ukraine
  7. Cyberattacks have yet to play a significant role in Russia’s battlefield operations in Ukraine – cyberwarfare experts explain the likely reasons
  8. Reliable death tolls from the Ukraine war are hard to come by – the result of undercounts and manipulation
  9. Ketanji Brown Jackson set for historic Supreme Court confirmation vote: 3 essential reads
  10. Humanitarian aid workers need security, rights and better pay
  11. Amazon, Starbucks and the sparking of a new American union movement
  12. What is a dwarf planet?
  13. Nuclear fusion hit a milestone thanks to better reactor walls – this engineering advance is building toward reactors of the future
  14. These energy innovations could transform how we mitigate climate change, and save money in the process – 5 essential reads
  15. Pope Francis' visit to Malta highlights the role of St. George Preca, an advocate for teaching the gospel
  16. What countries have nuclear weapons, and where are they?
  17. The war in Ukraine ruins Russia's academic ties with the West
  18. SCOTUS is about to decide whether a public school football coach can pray on the field
  19. Medieval illustrated manuscripts reveal how upper-class women managed healthy households – overseeing everything from purging, leeching and cupping to picking the right wet nurse
  20. Tomorrow's COVID safety guidelines will be different from today's – but that doesn't mean yesterday's were wrong
  21. Is Russia committing genocide in Ukraine? A human rights expert looks at the warning signs
  22. Biden bets a million barrels a day will drive down soaring gas prices – what you need to know about the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
  23. The Human Genome Project pieced together only 92% of the DNA – now scientists have finally filled in the remaining 8%
  24. William Tecumseh Sherman knew the enduring cruelty of war
  25. Transgender people of color face unique challenges as gender discrimination and racism intersect
  26. Sri Lanka teeters on economic edge, from pandemic-fueled financial crisis and Ukraine war spillovers
  27. Behind the crypto hype is an ideology of social change
  28. Brains are bad at big numbers, making it impossible to grasp what a million COVID-19 deaths really means
  29. Criminal justice algorithms: Being race-neutral doesn’t mean race-blind
  30. Transgender women are finding some respect in India, but a traditional gender-nonconforming group – hijras – remains stigmatized
  31. 'Laugh right in its face' – a poet reflects on her craft's defiant role in the middle of a war
  32. Afghan evacuees lack a clear path for resettlement in the U.S., 7 months after Taliban takeover
  33. A new way to pick the best school for your child
  34. Much of the cost of dementia care in aging Native American adults is due to hospitalization
  35. What is aphasia? An expert explains the condition forcing Bruce Willis to retire from acting
  36. Black college presidents had a tough balancing act during the civil rights era
  37. Yes, Putin and Russia are fascist – a political scientist shows how they meet the textbook definition
  38. Black Lives Matter protests are shaping how people understand racial inequality
  39. Restoring touch through electrodes implanted in the human brain will require engineering around a sensory lag
  40. COVID-19 vaccines for the youngest children may be inching closer to authorization – a pediatrician explains how they're being tested
  41. What the new science of authenticity says about discovering your true self
  42. How does the COVID-19 prevention drug Evusheld work and who should receive it? An infectious disease specialist explains
  43. I no longer grade my students' work – and I wish I had stopped sooner
  44. Arctic greening won’t save the climate – here’s why
  45. How fast can we stop Earth from warming?
  46. Calling Putin a 'war criminal' could spark even more atrocities in Ukraine
  47. Can my electric car power my house? Not yet for most drivers, but vehicle-to-home charging is coming
  48. What is alopecia? It's no laughing matter for millions of Black American women
  49. Kids afraid of getting shots? Here are 3 easy ways for parents to help them
  50. Kiev ya se ha enfrentado a otras invasiones y la identidad ucraniana se ha fortalecido como respuesta