Your Thoughts Matter
Public Health
Health effects of the Gulf oil spill
Source: JournalistsResource.org- Read more about Health effects of the Gulf oil spill
- Log in to post comments
On April 20, 2010, BP’s Deepwater Horizon drilling rig in the Gulf of Mexico exploded, leading to the largest oil spill in world history — more than five million barrels. While much of the surface oil dispersed faster than expected after the well was capped in July, undersea plumes linger, as do the spill’s impacts on the environment and human health.
Drug-resistant infections and their surging economic costs
Source: JournalistsResource.orgThe issue: Since penicillin was introduced in the 1940s, antibiotics have saved countless lives. But we have used these drugs so much for so long that the diseases they once killed have adapted and developed immunity. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 23,000 Americans now die each year from infections by bacteria that are impervious to antibiotics.
How soda taxes affect the price of soft drinks, sugar-sweetened beverages: A look at Berkeley, California
Source: JournalistsResource.orgTrends and statistics relating to U.S. seniors, elderly: Census Bureau 2014 report
Source: JournalistsResource.orgChildhood stress and the risk for adult chronic disease
Source: JournalistsResource.orgMarijuana use, legalization and cognitive effects: Research perspectives
Source: JournalistsResource.orgTobacco cessation: Gaps in efforts to get Medicaid recipients to quit smoking
Source: JournalistsResource.orgHow state policy affects how guns move between states
Source: JournalistsResource.orgHeat waves in the United States: Research on trends, definitions and dangers to the public
Source: JournalistsResource.org- Read more about Heat waves in the United States: Research on trends, definitions and dangers to the public
- Log in to post comments
July 2016 was the hottest month on Earth since people began keeping records, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). It beat a record set in July 2015. Land temperatures were 1.8°F above average. July 2016 was also the 379th consecutive month with temperatures above the 20th century average.