YouTube's Plan to Showcase Credible Health Information Is Flawed, Experts Warn

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August 27, 2021

Public Health

YouTube's Plan to Showcase Credible Health Information Is Flawed, Experts Warn

Search results may include a special section with videos from sources that are deemed reliable

By Grant Currin

Public Health

COVID, Quickly, Episode 13: Vaccine Approval, Breakthrough Infections, Boosters

Today we bring you a new episode in our podcast series COVID, Quickly. Every two weeks, Scientific American's senior health editors Tanya Lewis and Josh Fischman catch you up on the essential developments in the pandemic: from vaccines to new variants and everything in between.

You can listen to all past episodes here.

By Josh Fischman,Tanya Lewis,Jeffery DelViscio | 06:26

Epidemiology

Humanitarians Push to Vaccinate in Conflict Zones

Pandemic ceasefires offer an opportunity to expand vaccination efforts, experts say. But negotiation is tricky

By Madeline Drexler,Undark

Public Health

How COVID, Inequality and Politics Make a Vicious Syndemic

Overlapping diseases and social conditions in the U.S. continue to dictate who is hurt most badly by the novel coronavirus

By Emily Mendenhall,Clarence C. Gravlee

Sociology

Why We Rally around Some Social Issues and Not Others

The answer involves an experiment with strange results and a dive into irrationality

By Clara Vandeweerdt

Evolution

How Did Neanderthals and Other Ancient Humans Learn to Count?

Archaeological finds suggest that people developed numbers tens of thousands of years ago. Scholars are now exploring the first detailed hypotheses about this life-changing invention

By Colin Barras,Nature magazine

Behavior

How to Reduce Racial Disparities in Smoking Deaths

African Americans die at a higher rate than other groups yet have a harder time quitting—but new evidence-based approaches can change that

By Bryan W. Heckman,Anne Davis,James E.K. Hildreth

Conservation

Summer of Science Reading, Episode 3: Abandoned, Underground, But Not Lost

In Science Book Talk, a new four-part podcast miniseries, host Deboki Chakravarti acts as literary guide to two science books that share a beautiful and sometimes deeply resonant entanglement.

In this week's show: Underland, by Robert MacFarlane, and Islands of Abandonment, by Cal Flyn. 

By Deboki Chakravarti | 25:57

Space Exploration

Why Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin Is So Reviled

Economic inequality, an indulgent trip to space and an ongoing legal battle with NASA are putting the space company in the hot seat

By Chelsea Gohd,SPACE.com

Public Health

Unraveling the Mystery of Why Children Are Better Protected from COVID Than Adults

Their immune system is more primed to fight off the novel coronavirus

By Lars Fischer

Inequality

Too Many Scientists Still Say Caucasian

Racist ideas of categories for human identity continue to warp research and medicine

By Alice B. Popejoy,Nature magazine
FROM THE STORE

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FROM THE ARCHIVE

YouTube's Recommendation Algorithm Has a Dark Side

It leads users down rabbit holes

QUOTE OF THE DAY

"I'm just not sure that people are tuning in to YouTube to see more scientists or people who have been determined to be credible or authoritative."

Corey Basch, public health researcher at William Paterson University

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