In the News

  1. December 20, 2021
    • Headshot of Srijan Sen

    Early in the pandemic, Srijan Sen, professor of psychiatry, saw an unexpected drop in depression among health care workers, which he attributed to them having a sense of community and purpose. But as the pandemic has dragged on, he says, they have become more anguished and fatigued, as they wrestle with “a level of vigilance and concern that maybe was sustainable for two weeks or two months, but not for two years.”

    The New York Times
  2. December 17, 2021
    • Photo of Richard Curtin

    “Governments always think it is in their ability to quickly stop inflation and they never can,” said economist Richard Curtin, director of the Surveys of Consumers, noting that three presidents in the 1960s and ’70s thought they had recipes to bring inflation down: Lyndon B. Johnson imposed a surtax on income, Richard Nixon resorted to wage and price controls, and Jimmy Carter went on TV to ask Americans to consume less. 

    The New York Times
  3. December 17, 2021
    • Headshot of Neil Carter

    “The study underscores the importance of the conservation community working early and collaboratively with land planners, energy developers and engineers to eliminate or reduce the impacts of dams on terrestrial species before it is too late,” said Neil Carter, assistant professor of environment and sustainability, on research that shows the destructive impact global expansion of hydroelectric dams has had on the habitats of tigers and jaguars.

    BBC
  4. December 17, 2021
    • Photo of Aubree Gordon

    Aubree Gordon, associate professor of epidemiology, says vaccinated people have begun to let their guard down after nearly two years of pandemic restrictions: “I think there’s been a bit of an assumption that people are bulletproof, that the vaccine is going to protect them from infection or if they do get infected that they won’t get very sick. We know that’s not 100 percent true.”

    National Geographic
  5. December 16, 2021
    • James Baker

    “We’ve given this vaccine to more human beings than any other vaccine in history. If there was some smoking gun about toxicity or another issue, we would know it by now,” said James Baker, professor emeritus of internal medicine and biomedical engineering. “These vaccines are remarkably safe and almost unbelievably effective given what we’ve seen. And the real issue is getting everybody vaccinated so they’re protected and they aren’t spreading it to each other.”

    WDIV/Detroit
  6. December 16, 2021
    • Photo of Mary Gallagher

    “A diplomatic (Olympic) boycott is maybe politically necessary for the Biden administration, given the bad state of the relationship, and also the very anti-China atmosphere in Washington,” said Mary Gallagher, professor of political science and director of the International Institute. “It’s striking, of course, with 1980 in comparison, because both the Trump and the Biden administration use the ‘g-word’ … to label what the Chinese government is doing in Xinjiang. But at the same time, even genocide doesn’t earn a full boycott.”

    Vox
  7. December 16, 2021
    • Joshua Hausman

    “Maybe the pace of inflation will diminish without the need for anything more than a small interest-rate increase, one consistent with continuing employment gains and high asset prices. But I doubt it,” wrote Joshua Hausman, associate professor of public policy. “The omicron variant — and the international response to its discovery — leads me to believe that COVID-related disruptions to the economy may well last for years, not months.”

    The Atlantic
  8. December 15, 2021
    • Sandra Graham-Bermann
    • Joanna Quigley

    “Schools really need to have a lot more mental health counseling available. I know school psychologists are slammed and are absolutely overwhelmed, particularly when it gets to the high school level,” said Sandra Graham-Bermann, professor of psychology. Joanna Quigley, clinical associate professor of psychiatry, says there are warning signs that a child is in distress that parents should be monitoring: changes in mood, behavior and physical health.

    Michigan Advance
  9. December 15, 2021
    • Headshot of Jon Zelner

    “It’s unvaccinated people who are going to be at the worst risk for the worst outcomes. And it’s also going to be the folks who don’t have the ability or the luxury to quarantine or just kind of hide out when it looks like the numbers are getting too high,” said Jon Zelner, professor of epidemiology, on the potential fallout of the omicron variant, especially in low-vaccine areas and in rural, poor and minority communities.

    The Atlantic
  10. December 15, 2021
    • Photo of Shelie Miller

    “It’s a false sense of security in thinking we can waste food because we’re composting it,” said Shelie Miller, professor of environment and sustainability and director of the Program in Environment. “Reducing your overall edible food waste is much more important, because composting doesn’t eliminate the much bigger upstream environmental impacts associated with growing food.”

    Consumer Reports