Skip to main content

UW In The News

  • Trump Hates Having Too Many Voters

    Opinion April 9, 2020

    Quoted: Except for the part where he had actually endorsed said judge in January. “And there were no polls,” added Barry Burden, the director of the University of Wisconsin Elections Research Center.

  • How to Avoid Misinformation About COVID-19

    Smithsonian Magazine April 9, 2020

    If you’ve found yourself unsure whether a soundbite or headline you saw or shared was true, know that you’re not alone, says Dietram Scheufele, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who studies science and political communication.

  • How Wisconsin’s election disenfranchised voters in the coronavirus pandemic

    Vox April 8, 2020

    “As the weeks wore on, the legislature dug into that position, allowing no accommodations, no flexibility for voters, and the governor slowly moved to the opposite side,” University of Wisconsin-Madison political science professor Barry Burden told Vox.

  • Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders and No Decision in Wisconsin, Yet

    US News and World Report April 8, 2020

    Quoted: “There will be lingering concerns no matter how the election is run,” says Barry Burden, a political science professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “It’s just not possible to run an ideal election in a public health pandemic. Who’s complaining about it will vary depending on what is done.”

  • Bharat Biotech: Hope to get nasal vaccine against Covid-19 into market in 12-18 months: Hyderabad-based Bharat Biotech

    Times of India April 8, 2020

    Q When did you start work on a new vaccine and what is the status of the research?

    A. We began work on the new vaccine, CoroFlu, in February this year. CoroFlu builds on cutting-edge technology from an influenza vaccine already being developed by US company FluGen, and based on research at the University of Wisconsin, Madison (UWM). Because CoroFlu is based on a flu vaccine, our team hopes to protect patients from both the flu virus and the novel coronavirus at the same time.

  • 3D printing faces hurdles in coronavirus response

    The Hill April 8, 2020

    Quoted: Tim Osswald, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and an expert on the technology, told The Hill that 3D printing speeds up manufacturing much more than traditional production methods.

  • Wisconsin is scheduled to vote today. How will the pandemic affect turnout?

    The Washington Post April 7, 2020

    On Tuesday, April 7, Wisconsin is scheduled to vote. With the coronavirus still raging, state lawmakers of both parties have for weeks been urging voters to cast ballots early or absentee to help contain the pandemic.

    -Michael Wagner, Katerine Cramer, Dhavan Shah, Lewis Friedland

  • Cafeteria workers are risking their health to feed vulnerable students

    USA Today April 7, 2020

    The pandemic has shown us just how important “lunch ladies” are, and we owe it to them to remember this lesson when school is back in session.

    -Jennifer Gaddis is an assistant professor in the Department of Civil Society & Community Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the author of The Labor of Lunch: Why We Need Real Food and Real Jobs in American Public Schools.

  • When stress hits you like a slap in the face, how do you respond?

    MarketWatch April 7, 2020

    “Build in cues to remind yourself to be intentional about practicing mindfulness,” said Richard Davidson, director of the Center for Healthy Minds at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Examples include glancing at a photo of loved ones on your desk or sticking an inspiring phrase (“I’ve got this!”) on your computer monitor.

  • UW-Madison scientists developing coronavirus vaccine

    Spectrum News 1 April 7, 2020

    Researchers with the University of Wisconsin – Madison are teaming with Madison-based company FluGen and Hyderabad, India-based Bharat Biotech.

  • Cafeteria workers are risking their health to feed vulnerable students

    USA Today April 6, 2020

    The pandemic has shown us just how important “lunch ladies” are, and we owe it to them to remember this lesson when school is back in session.Jennifer Gaddis is an assistant professor in the Department of Civil Society & Community Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the author of The Labor of Lunch: Why We Need Real Food and Real Jobs in American Public Schools.

  • What To Do If Someone In Your Household Tests Positive For COVID-19. Expert Answers Your Questions | Wisconsin Public Radio

    WPR April 3, 2020

    Quoted: WPR’s WHYsconsin has received numerous questions about how to care for someone with COVID-19. WPR’s Melissa Ingells recently spoke with Patrick Remington, a physician and emeritus professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health, to answer your questions.

  • FluGen, UW-Madison researchers developing COVID-19 vaccine

    Wisconsin State Journal April 3, 2020

    UW-Madison researchers and the vaccine companies FluGen and Bharat Biotech are developing and testing a vaccine against COVID-19 called CoroFlu, they announced Thursday.

  • Researcher: We Can Reframe Social Distancing As An Act Of Kindness

    Wisconsin Public Radio April 2, 2020

    Quoted: Richard Davidson, a professor of psychology and psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the founder and director of the Center for Healthy Minds, says that in this time of unusual challenges, we have also been cut off from many of our usual coping techniques.

  • Map Reveals Hidden U.S. Hotspots of Coronavirus Infection

    Scientific American April 2, 2020

    The mapping team initially used data from a crowd-sourced tracker of county-level cases and validated them with estimates from state health departments. The researchers have since incorporated data from several other sources, and they are partnering with their colleagues at the University of Wisconsin–Madison to authenticate that information.

  • The Safety Net Got a Quick Patch. What Happens After the Coronavirus?

    The New York Times April 2, 2020

    Quoted: Despite the declines, child poverty in the United States remains higher than in most similar countries. About 17.2 percent of American children live on less than half the median income, said Timothy Smeeding, an economist at the University of Wisconsin, citing data from Luxembourg Income Study.

  • U.S. Panel Outlines How Doctors Should Ration Care in a Pandemic

    Reuters March 31, 2020

    Quoted: Dr. Alta Charo, a bioethicist at the University of Wisconsin, said shifting to crisis standards allowed states or healthcare providers to relax or change certain rules, such as using medical devices in ways they were not originally approved for, if they offer a “better-than-nothing option.”

  • With Maintaining Care In Mind, Veterinarians Adjust Practices During Coronavirus Pandemic

    Wisconsin Public Radio March 31, 2020

    Quoted: Vaccinations are a crucial form of preventive medicine in an animal’s development, said Dr. Ruthanne Chun, associate dean for clinical affairs at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine and director of UW Veterinary Care.

  • Death Projections Can Make Us Feel Helpless. One Expert Explains a Better Way to Get People to Act.

    Mother Jones March 31, 2020

    Quoted: What kinds of communication can actually push people to take action—to, among other things, socially distance, wash their hands, and not freak out? I recently posed this question to risk communications expert Dominique Brossard, a professor and chair in the Department of Life Sciences Communication at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

  • Coronavirus Pandemic Deals Another Blow To Wisconsin’s Newspapers

    Wisconsin Public Radio March 31, 2020

    Quoted: The COVID-19 shutdowns have taken away cornerstones of newspapers’ already-struggling revenue: business ads and events, said Mike Wagner, a journalism professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

  • How Climate Science Is Expanding the Scale of Ecological Research

    Eos March 31, 2020

    Quoted: “Climate scientists have a whole suite of tools by which they’re able to look at things like variability and changes over space and time, and now we can take those same approaches and think about how we can capture those dynamics for ecological responses,” said Benjamin Zuckerberg, an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin—Madison and lead author on the new study. “It’s basically treating the biological observations of, say, birds and plants in the same way that climatologists treat observations of temperature and rainfall.”

  • UW-Madison will be a clinical trial site for a coronavirus treatment that uses plasma from recovered patients

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel March 31, 2020

    What began two weeks ago with a pair of scientists urging the use of plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients to rescue the sick has blown up into a national movement.

  • A ‘negative’ coronavirus test result doesn’t always mean you aren’t infected

    The Washington Post March 30, 2020

    Quoted: But the experience in the United States appears to be different, so far. Jeffrey P. Kanne, chief of thoracic imaging at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said that U.S. experts are not currently recommending CT scans to diagnose patients without the genetic test.

  • ‘I have no money’: debt collection continues despite pandemic

    The Guardian March 30, 2020

    Quoted: “Garnishment is a really important issue, especially for low-income, economically vulnerable families, the exact workers being laid off in the US right now,” said J Michael Collins, faculty director of the Center for Financial Security at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

  • Pandemics and the Shape of Human History

    The New Yorker March 30, 2020

    Quoted: “The discovery of America was followed by possibly the greatest demographic disaster in the history of the world,” William M. Denevan, a professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, has written. This disaster changed the course of history not just in Europe and the Americas but also in Africa: faced with a labor shortage, the Spanish increasingly turned to the slave trade.

  • Why Are Barns In Wisconsin Painted Red?

    Wisconsin Public Radio March 30, 2020

    Quoted: Apps, professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is the author of dozens of books chronicling rural life in Wisconsin and helped answer Tucker’s question.

  • Bernie Sanders’ Campaign Turns To A New Foe: The Coronavirus

    NPR March 30, 2020

    “It’s Sanders’ last stand in electoral politics,” said Barry Burden, director of the Elections Quoted: Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “He’s old enough that I don’t think anyone expects him to make another run for the presidency. He may be in his last term in the Senate or near it. Right now, he still has something of a national stage. Once he leaves the campaign, that will be gone.”

  • Working At Home With A Toddler Will Be Chaotic. Here Are Some Tips To Help.

    Wisconsin Public Radio March 27, 2020

    Quoted: In the new-world realities brought on by COVID-19, the disease spread from the new coronavirus known as SARS-CoV-2, early childhood specialist Lorena Mancilla urges parents and guardians to be kind to themselves while figuring out what works.

    “Children need regulated, healthy parents more than anything else during this period of social distancing and shelter-in-place orders,” she said. “Life happens. Schedules may not work. It’s okay. Do what you can to keep your children safe.”

  • It’s Easy to Feel Overwhelmed, but It’s Critical to Remember the Good, Experts Say

    The New York Times March 27, 2020

    Quoted: “What we’re facing is unprecedented, and I don’t want to downplay its seriousness, but it’s not the worst-case scenario,” said Malia Jones, a researcher who studies infectious diseases at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

  • Coronavirus Highlights the Love-Hate Relationship With New York

    US News March 26, 2020

    Quoted: Trump’s insistence on referring to the illness as the “Chinese virus” plays into a central theme of his presidency, experts say, with the president demonizing foreigners. “I think that approach to this whole catastrophe just feeds the culture wars,” says Katherine Cramer, an American Politics professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Featured Experts

Alexandra Huneeus: Implications of Maduro Capture

Alexandra Huneeus, a professor at UW Law, is an expert in international law and human rights whose work has deep… More

Featured Experts

Jonathan Temte: Changes to federal childhood vaccination recommendations

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced Jan. 5 that they were reducing the number of vaccines recommended for… More

Experts Database