Thank you to Science Politics for publishing our work! Check out the full FLIP the Script report at climatehealth.gwu.edu/flip-script.
Thank you to Science Politics for publishing our work! Check out the full FLIP the Script report at climatehealth.gwu.edu/flip-script.
Check out this new piece in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social by @susananenberg.bsky.social addressing how climate change has been framed as an expensive obligation with delayed benefits. They ask: what if it saved us money and made us healthier right now?
sciencepolitics.org/2026/03/09/i...
We are so thrilled to launch a new column at Science Politics, The Clinical Divide by the great Sanjay Basu, MD, PhD! Take a look at his column intro and read some of his recent essays. Many great essays to come!
sciencepolitics.org/2026/03/04/t...
The effort to remove and erase climate science is clearly in service of very specific interests.
@sciencepolitics.bsky.social just published a letter written by 28 scientists who say political pressure to remove a chapter on climate science in a manual for judges is a troubling turn for other disciplines, too. Take a look.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/03/02/a...
A great new piece in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social by Lesley Jo Weaver and colleagues on SNAP and why advocacy must continue for the people most affected by the turmoil in nutrition support programs.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/23/h...
What a great piece on global mental health in Science Politics by Lauren Yan and Sebastian PeΓ±a-Vargas, addressing a new multimillion dollar initiative that can be a chance for local partners to determine which interventions work and who needs them most.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/20/d...
Check out today's great piece by Marcus King on water security in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social! As climate change accelerates, water scarcity fuels unrest, reshapes rural economies, and pushes people to migrate.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/19/h...
I really love this essay by Hanna Garth in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social exploring how cultural understandings about what counts as real food do not always align with nutritional guidance.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/16/w...
Check on the newest in Dagomar Degroot's column, Horizons of Humanity in Science Politics. "Climate history points to past disasters, but it also suggests strategies for survival."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/11/o...
I'm thrilled to introduce a new cartoon column, "Fine Lines" by Meg Leta Jones in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social, drawing out the complexities of technology and law.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/10/f...
We can't dream big without funding. Take a look at our newest piece in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social by Flip Tanedo! "The future of science relies on support for basic research and a culture and environment that builds up people."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/09/u...
This morning in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social Sanjay Basu discusses the past, present, and future confluences around vaccine dissonance. It's worth looking at history to understand opportunities for the future.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/06/m...
Okay, another thing: If the ocean is not your thing, but outer space is...
We've launched a new column for space policy, too! The great @dagomardegroot.bsky.social is at the helm for that one: HORIZONS OF HUMANITY.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/01/13/h...
One last thing: This role is extra meaningful cause I get to work w/ wonderful colleagues I left 5 years ago when I pivoted from a faculty job @georgetown-sfs.bsky.social to science journalism. Thx to @emendenhall.bsky.social the Editor-in-Chief of @sciencepolitics.bsky.social for inviting me back!
πI have a new gig. π
Introducing: OCEAN EMPIRE, my new column about U.S ocean policy and foreign affairs for @sciencepolitics.bsky.social.
We are a brand new online magazine housed at Georgetown University. I'm thrilled to bring in-depth news analysis about what's happening to 70% of our planet.
@fieseler.bsky.social has a new column in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social! Ocean Empire will bring an essay a month.
"The U.S. β this ocean nation I call home β is an empire of political and cultural influence whose reach, at times, seems unlimited."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/05/o...
Thanks for sharing all of this with me. The historical chapter you read is telling the backstory of the past--I'd encourage you to read the book if you're interested because your arguments here are exactly what I argue: patients must be knowledge partners in care and their rights matter
Check out our new piece in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social by Norberto Grzywacz! He argues, "Polarization threatens democracy itself by undermining norms and institutions, with politicians often prioritizing partisan benefits over the public good."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/04/s...
More on Invisible Illness in the Abiding Hysteria Podcast! This was a really great conversation.
open.spotify.com/episode/2Qvi...
Regina LaBelle in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social: "The U.S. cannot stop rogue actors by itself when transnational criminal organizations operate w/o regard to borders & across numerous criminal enterprises...Countering TCOs relies upon international cooperation."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/02/02/t...
We are experimenting with some art-of-becoming essays in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social. Malena Rice's writes, "Somehow, despite playing almost no conscious role in the first 18 years of my life, astronomy quietly swelled into an all-encompassing passion."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/01/30/t...
We ask in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social: how do we reimagine clinical care for the increasing number of people living with complex chronic conditions? "Itβs not just money but also the culture of medicine thatβs impeding peopleβs care." #longcovid
sciencepolitics.org/2026/01/28/t...
Take a look at @matthewkavanagh.bsky.social's essay that considers how global public investment is critical for future engagement, arguing, "A new vision for global health must move toward mechanisms that treat health as a truly global public good."
sciencepolitics.org/2026/01/26/t...
My tribue to Dr Bill Foege and the lessons we can learn from his inspiring life
Lessons From William H. Foege, A Global Health Legend
@forbes.com
www.forbes.com/sites/madhuk...
It was in part because of this argument that I was also very interested in the useful critiques that some people really disagree with the thresholds theory. I generally find that when we engage in deep and respectful dialogue, we can learn from each other. I have learned that some patients feel the thresholds theory is "pseudoscientific" and others view it as harmful. I find this an important point in part because science politics are at play here. In the critique I've read, the problem is that thinking about these health conditions as anything but having a biological cause and biological treatments may cause people to be dismissed in clinical spaces or prevent scientific discovery. This viewpoint could not be more important. In fact, the ME/LC activist community has been able to drive measurable change through this rallying cry. It's important and in the second part of the book I discuss how remarkable this political movement is and why such collective power matters.
#LongCovid
#ME
@emendenhall.bsky.social
emilymendenhall.substack.com/p/danger-in-...
I don't think that's the project of the book at all. There is no one-size-fits-all solution b/c people's infections and bodies are different. Some people described to me how healing mind-body therapies were. Others have tried everything & have found no relief. Experiences differ widely.
The majority of organizing happening in Minnesota isnβt just peaceful, itβs INVISIBLE. Moms showing up who wonβt be interviewed on TV, people whose ICE patrols donβt turn into viral video. The grocery runs, the donations, the people filming bc they happen to be there. Please remember this.
Thank you for this thoughtful analysis. People are only stronger because of your open and collective dialogue.
Your argument underscores the main point of the book: it is urgent to view patients as knowledge partners in clinical settings and to center patients' expertise in their care.
Jishnu Das argues in @sciencepolitics.bsky.social, "Rushing to action only risks entrenching one poorly functioning system of knowledge acquisition with another." It's okay to recognize that reimagining global action may take time.
sciencepolitics.org/2026/01/25/s...