In the News
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April 9, 2025
Michelle Riba, clinical professor of psychiatry, says there are ways to combat the exhaustion that could be of use to creators on TikTok who are feeling overwhelmed and fatigued as a result of the tumultuous political and media landscape: “(They) should remember that they’re not alone — there are many people out there who are feeling this. Finding a group of people who they can talk to, bounce ideas back and forth from, learn from each other is a good idea.”
National Public Radio -
April 9, 2025
“I think we’ve got another moment reflecting a Roman defeat and a burial of troops after the fact. … You get a sense for the nature of battle from the injuries that these poor people have sustained,” said David Potter, professor of classical studies, about the remains of at least 129 people found under a Vienna soccer field — many of them bearing the injuries of warfare, dating to when Rome fought Germanic people nearly 2,000 years ago.
The New York Times -
April 8, 2025
People with heart failure are likely to experience a significant decrease in cognitive abilities, according to new U-M research. “Seeing this cognitive decline among patients, and how it worsens over time after a diagnosis of heart failure, should be a warning for providers to assess a patient’s cognitive ability early and factor it into the care plan,” said cardiologist Supriya Shore. Neurologist Deborah Levine said “regular cognitive monitoring of older adults with heart failure would help identify individuals with the earliest signs of cognitive decline who require supportive care.”
Indo-Asian News Service -
April 8, 2025
Despite his disgrace, ousted South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol “did succeed in mobilizing a coherent political base, particularly among far-right groups,” said Ji Yeon Hong, associate professor of political science and Korean studies. “This movement … is more structural and ideological,” she said, warning that this aspect of Yoon’s legacy might outlast him.
Barron's -
April 8, 2025
“If we want world-class biomedical research, we need a means to update its infrastructure as science and the nation’s needs change. The NIH seems to expect that direct-cost investments alone will suffice to keep America ahead of the knowledge curve. They won’t. … Absent drastic change, that’s a recipe for long-term decline,” wrote sociologist Jason Owen-Smith, executive director of the Institute for Research on Innovation & Science and associate VP for research-institutional capabilities and research intelligence.
The Chronicle of Higher Education -
April 7, 2025
New research from Daniel Whibley, assistant professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation, indicates that women with chronic conditions who experience poor sleep are more likely to encounter mobility challenges: “Poor sleep can affect the nervous system, which may impact balance, coordination and gait — the way someone walks.”
WDIV Detroit -
April 7, 2025
Unnecessary imaging scans for Medicare recipients alone create up to 129 metric kilotons of carbon dioxide emissions a year — equivalent to powering a town of more than 70,000 people, according to Julia Schoen, clinical assistant professor of radiology: “Emissions are likely to continue to increase given sustained increases in overall imaging volumes over the past decade and the potential for further increases related to climate-change related exposures and events.”
U.S. News & World Report -
April 7, 2025
“Monstrously destructive, incoherent, ill-informed tariffs based on fabrications, imagined wrongs, discredited theories and ignorance of decades of evidence. And the real tragedy is that they will hurt working Americans more than anyone else,” said Justin Wolfers, professor of economics and public policy, about Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Business Insider -
April 4, 2025
Ben van der Pluijm, professor emeritus of earth and environmental sciences, says Myanmar is known for its big earthquakes because it sits on the boundary of the Indian Plate, which is still moving northward after 100 million years, and the Eurasian Plate. That motion “is what accumulated the energy that gets released in earthquakes like (last week’s) earthquakes in Southeastern Asia,” he said.
Live Science -
April 4, 2025
Amy Rothberg, clinical professor of internal medicine and director of the U-M Weight Management Program, says if you don’t want to count calories or track food intake, intermittent fasting “may be beneficial for some people. There’s no superior dietary approach. So you need to find an approach that is tailored to that individual.”
ABC News