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Released: 14-Mar-2023 4:55 PM EDT
Endocrine Society supports EPA rule regulating “forever chemicals” in drinking water
Endocrine Society

The Endocrine Society supports a new U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rule which includes provisions to regulate several per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)—including PFOA and PFOS—found in our drinking water.

Released: 14-Mar-2023 2:10 PM EDT
URI professor discusses worsening child labor in the United States
University of Rhode Island

With the issue of child labor in the U.S. – particularly among migrant children – coming under new scrutiny, URI Professor of Political Science Brendan Skip Mark lends his expertise to provide context around the issue. Prof. Mark is co-director of the CIRIGHTS data project – the world’s largest quantitative dataset on global human rights.

Newswise: British public back ban on selling junk foods at checkouts study shows
Released: 14-Mar-2023 11:15 AM EDT
British public back ban on selling junk foods at checkouts study shows
University of Southampton

Shoppers join food industry and health experts in backing UK plans to ban high fat, salt and sugar products from checkouts, store entrances and aisle ends

   
Newswise: Collaboration, support structures needed to address ‘polycrisis’ in the Americas
Released: 14-Mar-2023 8:05 AM EDT
Collaboration, support structures needed to address ‘polycrisis’ in the Americas
University of Miami

Public and private-sector leaders from the Americas discussed the confluence of concerns challenging the hemisphere at the 2023 Concordia Americas Summit at the University of Miami.

Newswise: People should have right to shape marine environmental decisions
Released: 13-Mar-2023 6:55 PM EDT
People should have right to shape marine environmental decisions
University of Exeter

Government and political institutions should do more to make citizens feel empowered within marine environment decisions and give them the right to participate, new research shows.

   
Newswise: Social media experts explains why Congress set the stage for a TikTok ban
Released: 13-Mar-2023 5:30 PM EDT
Social media experts explains why Congress set the stage for a TikTok ban
Virginia Tech

TikTok, the world’s fastest-growing social media app, used by two-thirds of America’s teenagers, has federal lawmakers debating its potential threat to national security with legislation introduced by a bipartisan coalition of U.S. Senators  empowering President Joe Biden to ban its use. Mike Horning, an associate professor of multimedia journalism at Virginia Tech’s School of Communication, offers his perspective about the issues with TikTok that have put government officials on edge.

 
Released: 13-Mar-2023 7:05 AM EDT
Op-ed: Silicon Valley Bank's Failure in Risk Management
University of Maryland, Robert H. Smith School of Business

What brought SVB down? From a risk management perspective, it made several blunders. The first was in placing large bets on interest rates. Clifford Rossi, who had a front row seat at WaMu’s largest bank failure in U.S. history, gives expansive analysis.

   
Newswise: Lottery: The Hope for Upward Mobility
Released: 10-Mar-2023 8:55 AM EST
Lottery: The Hope for Upward Mobility
Chulalongkorn University

“The poor play the lottery, the rich play the stock market.” This comical statement seems to hide both hope and the bitter truth. An economics professor at Chulalongkorn University invites us to understand why many Thais put their hopes into lotteries and analyzes how their popularity relates to social inequality, upward mobility and corruption.

Released: 9-Mar-2023 3:30 PM EST
Toxic Twitter abuse could skew UK wildlife law
University of Reading

Wildlife conservation efforts could suffer because toxic online rows about trophy hunting are becoming increasingly abusive, ecologists have warned.

   
Released: 9-Mar-2023 1:30 PM EST
You can't put a price tag on knowledge. Read the latest news on finance and the world economy in the Economics channel
Newswise

The U.S. economy is on people's minds as the government prepares for a showdown on the deficit and government spending. Find the latest research and expert commentary on money issues here. Below are some of the latest headlines in the Economics channel on Newswise.

       
Newswise: FSU law professor available to offer context on United Nations High Seas Treaty
Released: 8-Mar-2023 10:50 AM EST
FSU law professor available to offer context on United Nations High Seas Treaty
Florida State University

By: Bill Wellock | Published: March 8, 2023 | 10:23 am | SHARE: A new United Nations agreement, informally known as the “High Seas Treaty,” creates a legal framework for managing the parts of the world’s oceans that are outside national boundaries.Discussions over the treaty have been ongoing since 2004. Now that an agreement is drafted, it must be adopted and ratified by UN member states before it takes effect.

Released: 8-Mar-2023 9:00 AM EST
Neurosurgeons Release 2023 Legislative and Regulatory Agenda
American Association of Neurological Surgeons/Congress of Neurological Surgeons Washington Office

Priorities include prior authorization reform, health care consolidation, GME funding and Medicare improvements.

   
Released: 8-Mar-2023 7:05 AM EST
DePaul University experts available to discuss Chicago mayoral run-off, issues that will decide race
DePaul University

CHICAGO — As Chicago voters head to the polls in less than a month to decide whether Brandon Johnson, a Cook County Board Commissioner, or Paul Vallas, a former CEO of Chicago Public Schools, will be the next mayor of the third largest city in the U.S., DePaul University faculty experts are available to provide insight and commentary.

Released: 7-Mar-2023 3:00 AM EST
COVID expansion of SNAP benefits expires, hunger and food insecurity likely to rise, says family nutrition expert
Virginia Tech

SNAP serves as the nation’s and the state’s largest line of defense against hunger and food insecurity. SNAP, formerly called food stamps, provides cash benefits to purchase food to eligible individuals with low incomes. Elena Serrano, director of the Virginia Cooperative Extension Family Nutrition Program, says, “Ending the enhanced benefits will affect households who have the most to lose, those households that qualified for maximum benefits, who will lose an added $95 per month in benefits. On average SNAP participants will lose $82 per month.”

Newswise: WashU Expert: Goldman Sachs’ sale won’t allow return to ‘freewheeling ways’
Released: 6-Mar-2023 2:05 PM EST
WashU Expert: Goldman Sachs’ sale won’t allow return to ‘freewheeling ways’
Washington University in St. Louis

The Goldman Sachs Group is considering a sale of its consumer banking business, but regulations will mean it can’t simply return to being an investment bank, said an expert on financial and securities regulation at Washington University in St. Louis.“While exiting the consumer banking business may allow Goldman to ‘check out,’ it can never fully leave the regulatory world for bank holding companies and return to its investment banking roots,” said Andrew Tuch, a professor of law.

   
Released: 6-Mar-2023 12:40 PM EST
Medical associations call on CMS to resume all disputed No Surprises Act payment determinations
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP), the American College of Radiology® (ACR®) and the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) are urging the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) to quickly resume all independent dispute resolution (IDR) payment determinations paused by its order on Feb. 6.

Released: 3-Mar-2023 6:05 PM EST
Health policy experts call for confronting anti-vaccine activism with life-saving counter narratives
Boston University School of Public Health

Public and private sector health officials and public policymakers should team up immediately with community leaders to more effectively disseminate accurate narratives regarding the life-saving benefits of vaccines to counter widespread, harmful misinformation from anti-vaccine activists in the United States.

Newswise: Archaeological study of 24 ancient Mexican cities reveals that collective forms of governance, infrastructural investments, and collaboration all help societies last longer
Released: 3-Mar-2023 12:50 PM EST
Archaeological study of 24 ancient Mexican cities reveals that collective forms of governance, infrastructural investments, and collaboration all help societies last longer
Field Museum

Some cities only last a century or two, while others last for a thousand years or more. Often, there aren’t clear records left behind to explain why.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Expert: National Cybersecurity Strategy Neglects Public Awareness
Released: 2-Mar-2023 4:20 PM EST
Johns Hopkins Expert: National Cybersecurity Strategy Neglects Public Awareness
 Johns Hopkins University

Johns Hopkins University information security expert Anton Dahbura is available to discuss the Biden administration's newly released national cybersecurity strategy.

 
Newswise: Eng invited to White House Cancer Moonshot forum
Released: 2-Mar-2023 3:35 PM EST
Eng invited to White House Cancer Moonshot forum
Vanderbilt University Medical Center

Cathy Eng, MD, the David H. Johnson Professor of Surgical and Medical Oncology, has been invited to participate in the White House Cancer Moonshot Colorectal Cancer Forum. She will be at the White House Complex on March 10 as administration officials provide updates on progress on several key Moonshot initiatives and seek input from patients, caretakers, oncologists and researchers.

Released: 2-Mar-2023 3:05 PM EST
SLU/YouGov Poll: Bipartisan Support for School Safety and Gun Reforms
Saint Louis University

The February 2023 SLU/YouGov Poll interviewed 900 likely Missouri voters about issues facing the Missouri legislature and their opinions about school safety and guns, following the October school shooting at Central Visual and Performing Arts High School. The survey found that 56% of voters reported they were somewhat or very worried about a shooting happening at Missouri schools, and there is bipartisan support for safety and gun reforms.

Released: 2-Mar-2023 1:15 PM EST
Study finds political campaigns may change the choices of voters – but not their policy views
Oxford University Press

A new paper in The Quarterly Journal of Economics, published by Oxford University Press, measures the overall impact of electoral campaigns and finds that televised debates have little effect on the formation of voter choice.

Released: 2-Mar-2023 9:55 AM EST
FSU political science professor available for context on Northern Ireland trade deal
Florida State University

By: Bill Wellock | Published: February 28, 2023 | 12:36 pm | SHARE: The United Kingdom and the European Union (EU) announced Monday that they have reached an agreement on Northern Ireland trade issues, which became a major sticking point in post-Brexit negotiations.Florida State University Associate Professor Sean Ehrlich is available to provide context on the Northern Ireland trade deal.

Newswise: Economics expert explains how consumer price reports show ‘inflation is not done yet’
Released: 2-Mar-2023 3:00 AM EST
Economics expert explains how consumer price reports show ‘inflation is not done yet’
Virginia Tech

Expectations that inflation has eased fueled recent stock market gains, but results from two major price-tracking indexes came in higher than expected, dousing that optimism with cold water. The statistics from these reports have economists predicting that the Federal Reserve will continue to raise interest rates to get inflation under control.

   
Released: 1-Mar-2023 11:05 AM EST
‘China’s menacing behavior,’ military buildup cause for concern
University of Miami

China’s aggression and increasingly provocative actions in the Indo-Pacific reflect its willingness to openly challenge the U.S.-led economic order in the growth-oriented region, according to a University of Miami China and defense expert.

Released: 28-Feb-2023 1:05 PM EST
Better communication leads to more international solidarity
University of Konstanz

What promoted citizens to favour a fair distribution of vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic? This is the focus topic in the current study of Konstanz researchers, political scientists Dirk Leuffen, Pascal Mounchid and Max Heermann as well as sociologist Sebastian Koos, published in npj Vaccines.

Newswise: Targeting wealth managers would cripple Russia's oligarchs
Released: 28-Feb-2023 12:05 PM EST
Targeting wealth managers would cripple Russia's oligarchs
Dartmouth College

From astronomical sums of money to opulent superyachts and lavish villas, the assets of the oligarchs providing the political and financial backing for Russian president Vladimir Putin's military ambitions have been publicly and fervently seized by Western nations since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

   
Newswise: US falls far behind most of the world in support for fathers and caregivers of aging adults
Released: 28-Feb-2023 10:25 AM EST
US falls far behind most of the world in support for fathers and caregivers of aging adults
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

Today, the WORLD Policy Analysis Center (WORLD) at UCLA, launched “Equality within Our Lifetimes,” the most comprehensive analysis to date of laws and policies related to gender equality in all 193 U.N. member states. While the U.S. performs well in some areas, it has become even more of an outlier when it comes to care.

Released: 27-Feb-2023 6:00 PM EST
Syria peacebuilding efforts must address causes of the country’s “failed” state
University of Exeter

Any attempts to build peace in Syria must address the factors which led to the country being a failed state before civil war began, research says.

Released: 27-Feb-2023 5:10 PM EST
Hoops 4 Hope Returns
University of New Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center

23-year-old fundraiser for the UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center makes a comeback this spring.

21-Feb-2023 11:35 AM EST
Internal Medicine Physicians Call for Policies that Would Protect Patient Access to Reproductive Health Care Services
American College of Physicians (ACP)

Patients need to be able to access comprehensive reproductive health services without undue government interference, including abortion, says the American College of Physicians (ACP) in a new policy paper published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

Released: 27-Feb-2023 9:55 AM EST
FSU experts available to comment on East Palestine Environmental disaster
Florida State University

By: Mark Blackwell Thomas | Published: February 27, 2023 | 9:33 am | SHARE: It’s been three weeks since a train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio sparked an environmental disaster that is still unfolding.  A federal investigators’ Feb. 22 announcement that the accident was 100% preventable, came on the same day the Ohio Department of Natural Resources announced that the deaths of 43,700 aquatic animals were tied to the disaster.

Released: 27-Feb-2023 8:05 AM EST
Child Sex Trafficking and Enhancing Georgia Responses
University of Georgia

Wilbanks CEASE Clinic Director Emma M. Hetherington is a child welfare law specialist certified by the National Association of Counsel for Children. Hetherington provides legal consulting services to attorneys and advocates nationwide on matters involving child welfare law, child sexual abuse and CSEC.

Newswise: Economics expert available to speak about outlier repercussions of Russian invasion of Ukraine
Released: 26-Feb-2023 3:00 AM EST
Economics expert available to speak about outlier repercussions of Russian invasion of Ukraine
Virginia Tech

The one-year anniversary of Russia’s invasion – or in the words of Kremlin leaders, “special military operation” – has left thousands dead or wounded, scores of buildings and infrastructure destroyed or damaged, and millions of people displaced. The economic damage from the war reaches far beyond the borders of Ukraine and Russia.



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