COVID-19 Misinformation, Female Race Team, Ocean Acidification

COVID-19 Misinformation, Female Race Team, Ocean Acidification

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 1285

  • Mar 9, 2020 6:00 am
  • 1:40:21 mins
Download the BYURadio Apps Listen on Apple podcastsListen on SpotifyListen on YouTube

When It Comes to Coronavirus Info, Who Can You Trust? (0:31) Guest: Scott C. Ratzan MD, MPA, Distinguished Lecturer, Graduate School of Public Health, City University of New York Should you cancel your travel plans because of coronavirus? Keep your kids home from school? Stop going to church and other gatherings? It’s really hard to know with the steady drumbeat of new COVID-19 cases and deaths around the country. A group of leading public health experts have published an “urgent call” for a coordinated effort to tell Americans what they need to know about coronavirus. Why Hundreds of Scientific Studies Get Retracted Every Year (20:16) Guest: Ivan Oransky, Co-Founder of RetractionWatch.com, Distinguished Writer in Residence at New York University’s Carter Journalism Institute Since the start of this year, more than 200 studies published in scientific journals have been retracted because of mistakes – or in some cases, outright fraud by the scientists who did them. A lot of these studies got tons of hoopla when they were first published, including breathless headlines in the press. And then, a year later, five years later – in a few cases more than a decade later – the journal that published the study says, “Oops! We shouldn’t have published that.” But at that point, isn’t the damage already done? A retraction rarely gets the same publicity that the original study had. Treating Gun Violence Like a Public Health Epidemic (37:14) Guest: Megan Ranney, MD, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine at Brown University, Chief Research Officer for the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction For the first time in 20 years, the US government is offering grants to researchers looking into gun violence. Since 1996, there’s been a moratorium on any federal funding for firearm safety research for fear results of that research might be used to restrict gun access in the US. So what’s changed? Emergency room physician Megan Ranney has been researching firearm injuries for years, despite the federal moratorium.