Skip to Content

Here's one of the consequences of the new health reform law you might have missed: The number of people seeking treatment for addiction could double, depending upon how many states expand Medicaid programs and how many addicts take advantage of them.

And for many of them, there will be no place to go....

Here's one of the consequences of the new health reform law you might have missed: The number of people seeking treatment for addiction could double, depending upon how many states expand Medicaid programs and how many addicts take advantage of them.

And for many of them, there will be no place to go. "In more than two thirds of the states, treatment clinics are already at or approaching 100 percent capacity," writes Carla K. Johnson (photo) of The Associated Press. That comes from a piece in which Johnson compared federal government data on addiction rates in the 50 states, the capacity of existing treatment programs, and the provisions of the new healthcare law.

The surge of new patients is "expected to push a marginal part of the health care system out of church...

In a commentary in the British newspaper The GuardianKatherine Stewart asks why state legislatures are moving rightward while the...

In a commentary in the British newspaper The GuardianKatherine Stewart asks why state legislatures are moving rightward while the population of the U.S. "continues to trend moderately leftward." 

Her answer: smart, targeted donations from right-wing donors.

She writes:

Alabama, Tennessee, North Dakota, and Mississippi are among the latest to impose unprecedented restrictions on women's access to abortion services. All told, in the first three months of this year, 694 provisions related to reproductive health have come before state legislatures, more than half of them involving abortion restrictions.

We are seeing a similar surge of opposition to science education: in Missouri, Montana, Colorado, and Oklahoma, legislators...

  Raindrops keep falling and the next thing you know the neighborhood is full of water and deputies in boats are yelling "evacuate!" It's always good to get that warning sooner than that. The sequestration as illustration of America's legislative face-plant got attention today (Thur Apr 25)...

  Raindrops keep falling and the next thing you know the neighborhood is full of water and deputies in boats are yelling "evacuate!" It's always good to get that warning sooner than that. The sequestration as illustration of America's legislative face-plant got attention today (Thur Apr 25) from the Associated Press. Its prolific science writer Seth Borenstein highlighted an announcement from the US Geological Survey that budget cuts appear poised to force closure of many stream and river gauges nationwide. About 100 of these these automated sentinels are located where they are vital if communities, farmers, and others are to get warning of flooding and thus reduce loss of life and of property damage. Particularly in the flatter parts of this country where flood plains can reach well into or clean across riverside towns, not to...

According to an article Tuesday in The Philadelphia Inquirer by Don Sapatkin, the story of the AIDS epidemic's "patient zero" was "sordid...

According to an article Tuesday in The Philadelphia Inquirer by Don Sapatkin, the story of the AIDS epidemic's "patient zero" was "sordid tabloid fare" created by a book publicist to hype the 1987 book And the Band Played On by the journalist Randy Shilts

Whether or not this charge is fair, there is a bit more to the story.

Patient zero was identified by researchers as a man who had sex with multiple male partners on his travels across the U.S., inoculating them with HIV and accelerating the epidemic. Shilts, a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle,...

Científicos Uruguayos regalan la ciencia de sus corderos fluorescentes
Pere Estupinya
Share

(English intro to Spanish lang post) Pictures of nine 6-months old transgenic lambs were released yesterday by the Animal Reproduction Institute Uruguay (IRAUy). According to researchers, this is the first time that transgenic lambs have been produced in Latin America. They incorporated the gene coding for the...

(English intro to Spanish lang post) Pictures of nine 6-months old transgenic lambs were released yesterday by the Animal Reproduction Institute Uruguay (IRAUy). According to researchers, this is the first time that transgenic lambs have been produced in Latin America. They incorporated the gene coding for the green fluorescence protein, that makes them aglow under ultraviolet light. A science journalist from Cromo-El Observador was who first and more extensively reported about the announcement. Researchers explain that their goal was to test a new met that can make transgenesis more efficient. In their quotes scientists admit that they are just doing basic research, that they are not planning to work on practical applications, and that other researchers in the world will be able to take advantage of the scientific knowledge they created. That’s a beautiful but quiet naïve view of scientific endeavor, and we think Uruguayan reporters should be more inquisitive about...

When the bombs exploded near the finish line at the Boston Marathon, doctors in the medical tent didn't know what to do: Should they run from danger? Should they go outside to help the injured? Should they stay with their patients in the tent?

According to...

When the bombs exploded near the finish line at the Boston Marathon, doctors in the medical tent didn't know what to do: Should they run from danger? Should they go outside to help the injured? Should they stay with their patients in the tent?

According to a stirring piece by Sushrut Jangi in The New England Journal of Medicine, a family physician, Pierre Rouzier, 

texted his wife what might be a good-bye message: There's a bomb at the finish line and we have to help. “I didn't want to die,” he said, “but there were people out there.”

One woman "held his arm and said, "I'm going to die right here, and no one is going to know who I am.' Rouzier held her hand and told her, 'You're not going to die.'"

Much of the piece is a mini-profile of...

Jim Handman at Quirks and Quarks has pointed me to an io9 list of 13 smart podcasts that include a few you might know, and...

Jim Handman at Quirks and Quarks has pointed me to an io9 list of 13 smart podcasts that include a few you might know, and some others you likely won't--but you should give them a look. That is, a listen. They are not all science outfits, but they are all science-y. For British humor, try The Infinite Monkey Cage, where the physicist Brian Cox and the comedian Robin Ince team up to inform and entertain. Stuff You Should Know is another worth looking at, as is 99% Invisible. Indeed they all are, including Science FridayRadiolab, and the other more familiar shows here. Also among the top 13 is Quirks and Quarks,...

The Solutions Journalism Network is tired of stories that tell us what's wrong without telling us what might be done about it.

It says its aim is to recognize and support "critical and clear-eyed reporting that investigates and explains...

The Solutions Journalism Network is tired of stories that tell us what's wrong without telling us what might be done about it.

It says its aim is to recognize and support "critical and clear-eyed reporting that investigates and explains credible responses to social problems," according to its website. "The key is to look at the whole picture, the problem and the response (journalism often stops short of the latter)."

And as one of its first projects, it has set up a fund to support stories on climate change with grants of up to $5,000 to cover expenses. The awards will also include "mentorship from leading journalists" and "access to story-sourcing tools," whatever those might be. (If you're interested,...

Tests done at the now bankrupt Cetero Research lab in Houston to assure the safety of drugs seeking FDA approval were, in many cases, fraudulent, according to an investigation by Rob Garver...

Tests done at the now bankrupt Cetero Research lab in Houston to assure the safety of drugs seeking FDA approval were, in many cases, fraudulent, according to an investigation by Rob Garver and Charles Seife at ProPublica

In a long story that appeared last week, they reported that "about 100 drugs, including sophisticated chemotherapy compounds and addictive prescription painkillers, had been approved for sale in the United States at least in part on the strength of Cetero Houston's tainted tests." 

Astonishingly, Garver and Seife reported that the FDA has apparently not taken any action on the drugs that were approved on the basis of fraudulent testing, and it has not even revealed what those drugs are. "To this day, the agency refuses to disclose the names of the...

Tom Shales was a widely admired columnist for The Washington Post where, he says, he "spent roughly 39 varyingly rewarding years, most of those as TV critic."

"Varyingly" is the key word. Shales, in a post on the About Editing...

Tom Shales was a widely admired columnist for The Washington Post where, he says, he "spent roughly 39 varyingly rewarding years, most of those as TV critic."

"Varyingly" is the key word. Shales, in a post on the About Editing and Writing blog by Jack Limpert, former editor of The Washingtonian, explains that much of the "variation" in his rewards came from editors he had, a few of whom were great, and most of whom were awful. There is no room for mediocrity in Shales's universe.

If you're an editor, you might be inclined to stop reading when you get to this, in the third graf:

I regularly denounced editors as a species, insulting them with such disparagements as, “Those who can, do; those who can’t, teach; those who can’t even teach, edit.”  Editors, I liked to say...

Scientific American has taken over YouTube's Space Lab channel, relaunching it today as Scientific American Space Lab.

Scientific American and its editor, Mariette DiChristina...

Scientific American has taken over YouTube's Space Lab channel, relaunching it today as Scientific American Space Lab.

Scientific American and its editor, Mariette DiChristina, partnered with Space Lab in 2012, when Space Lab asked SciAm to contribute to the channel. (DiChristina had been a judge for Space Lab video competition and had appeared on the channel.)

SciAm launched a bi-weekly show called The Countdown--a round-up of the top five space stories in the news, with host Sophie Bushwick. Rachel Scheer, a SciAm spokesperson, said that "as the show flourished, the YouTube Space Lab team handed over the reins of the channel to Scientific American."

The new SciAm-branded channel features two other shows--Ask the Experts, and It happened in Space,...

Katie Drummond
Paul Raeburn
Share

The tech and culture site The Verge has launched its new Verge Science vertical (what we used to call a science section), with Katie Drummond of Wired as the editor. FishbowlNY ...

The tech and culture site The Verge has launched its new Verge Science vertical (what we used to call a science section), with Katie Drummond of Wired as the editor. FishbowlNY reports that Drummond most recently covered military research at Wired and has also worked at The Daily and AOL News.

Drummond introduces the section (sorry: the vertical) with a video here, which you might want to check out before heading over to The Verge Science. There you will find stories on...

The early reports on the Boston Marathon bombing and the Texas fertilizer plant explosion are not first drafts of history, but "tentative notes for the first drafts of the first drafts of history," as Tabitha M. Powledge writes...

The early reports on the Boston Marathon bombing and the Texas fertilizer plant explosion are not first drafts of history, but "tentative notes for the first drafts of the first drafts of history," as Tabitha M. Powledge writes in On Science Blogs. Meaning that we can expect plenty of revisions before that first draft is correct. 

Powledge notes, interestingly, that the Boston Marathon bombing got far more coverage than did the apparent accident in Texas, although it caused far more casualties. Terrorism is a better story than industrial accidents, but which kills and injures more people?

She points out a couple of pieces she didn't like in the bombing commentary. I hadn't seen Paige Williams's post ...

Few creatures stir the imagination like the coelacanth. Scientists thought it had been extinct for millions of years, and then in the 1930s, a specimen seemed to have swum from the Devonian right into a fisherman’s net.

Now scientists have finally sequenced the genome of this elusive, primitive looking...

Few creatures stir the imagination like the coelacanth. Scientists thought it had been extinct for millions of years, and then in the 1930s, a specimen seemed to have swum from the Devonian right into a fisherman’s net.

Now scientists have finally sequenced the genome of this elusive, primitive looking creature to find out how slowly it’s really evolved, and to discern its relationship to those fish that dragged themselves onto land and became our ancestors. The news was announced in a paper in Nature.

At the LA Times, Eryn Brown covered the advance in this story, which told us that it was difficult to get DNA from this highly endangered fish but not how they finally did it. How does one go about getting a DNA sample from a five-...

  Right on time - as many years into the mission as is needed to allow three, statistically persuasive blips apiece by other-Earths in orbits like ours - the Kepler Telescope mission has paid off its prime promissory note: habitable planets that are of Earth's approximate size. In fact, astronomers with...

  Right on time - as many years into the mission as is needed to allow three, statistically persuasive blips apiece by other-Earths in orbits like ours - the Kepler Telescope mission has paid off its prime promissory note: habitable planets that are of Earth's approximate size. In fact, astronomers with the NASA Ames Research Center program reported they have bagged, with the requisite three orbits each, a numeralogically apt three large and rocky but probably not crazy massive planets. The two-planet report is in Science magazine, that on the third star and its planet is in the Astrophysical Journal .

  Big news, gratifying news. Not huge news - that'll come if Kepler, or eventually some even better planet shadow-spotting instrument, reports a world just about spot-on to Earth's specs. The best two of these three, which means they get the most attention in press and that's probably because they are in Science plus are sister worlds which fires...