Community, Diversity, Sustainability and other Overused Words

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  • BREAKING NEWS: How to write an effective corporate travel policy

    Stacker, Feli Oliveros|Updated May 4, 2025

    For assistance forming your corporation or writing corporate bylaws, we recommend that you utilize the services of Signature Filing. File easily online at a minimal cost. Whether it's for sales meetings, trade shows, or conferences, travel is important for any business. But with increasing costs and a remote work model, corporate travel has become more complicated than ever. This is why a corporate travel policy, or a set of guidelines to ensure your team is efficient with...

  • Is a concussion considered a traumatic brain injury?

    Stacker, Jonathan H. Stokes for Stokes Stemle, LLC|Updated May 19, 2025

    A concussion is a brain injury that occurs when a violent blow or jolt hits the head and causes the brain to strike against the inside of the skull. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), concussions can damage brain cells and lead to dangerous chemical changes within the brain. But is there a difference between a concussion and a traumatic brain injury (TBI)? Learn how to distinguish between this terminology below. And remember, if you have been...

  • In the U.S., eating disorder-related emergency room visits among youth more than doubled in just four year; among children and teens in Europe have spiked by up to 40% since 2019.

    Stacker, Kayla Levy for Charlie Health|Updated May 19, 2025

    Eating disorders are serious mental health conditions that affect millions of people across the country. Yet stigma, misinformation, and outdated stereotypes continue to cloud public understanding of who develops eating disorders, when symptoms begin, and what recovery looks like. In reality, conditions like anorexia, bulimia, and binge eating disorder are life-threatening and often co-occur with other mental health issues, such as anxiety or depression. Recent data points to...

  • How to lower your insurance costs without compromising coverage

    Stacker, John Davey for CheapInsurance.com|Updated May 19, 2025

    Insurance is an important part of financial planning. It can help you protect yourself from unexpected financial losses due to accidents, illnesses, or other events. However, insurance can also be expensive. This is where insurance discounts come in. Insurance discounts are offered by insurance companies to lower the cost of your insurance policy. There are many different types of insurance discounts available, depending on your individual circumstances. By taking advantage...

  • Study: Teaching science and reading together yields double benefits for learning

    Stacker, Susan M. Kowalski for The 74|Updated May 19, 2025

    This month marks the five-year anniversary of the World Health Organization's declaration that COVID-19 was a pandemic. That announcement shuttered school buildings and launched millions of students into remote learning. While the immediate health crisis is over, the long-term impact on students is not, The 74 reports. The latest Nation's Report Card underscores that academic recovery remains elusive, with many students needing months of additional instructional time to close...

  • This project-based high school serving 30 districts has endured for nearly two decades with a focus on STEM

    Stacker, Greg Toppo for The 74|Updated May 12, 2025

    Albany If anyone could sell you a $2 million school bus, it's Karina Butler. The 17-year-old spent last fall learning about hydrogen fuel cells—New York school districts must stop buying conventional diesel buses by 2027, and by 2035, Butler explained, all school buses in the state must operate electrically. The new buses are clean, she said, but at $2 million apiece they're also "very pricey," she told The 74. That's a tough sell for cash-strapped districts in the state's c...

  • Doctors told a dad his daughter would never walk on her own. He built a way to get her on the trails.

    Stacker, Clarissa Casper for The Salt Lake Tribune|Updated May 12, 2025

    LJ Wilde always felt he one day would use his background in mechanical engineering to enrich his daughter Luci's life. "I didn't know what for," Wilde said. "I just felt it." What he didn't know was just how many lives he eventually would change. Two years after she was born, doctors told the Hyrum, Utah, resident that Luci would likely never be able to walk on her own due to a rare genetic disorder, The Salt Lake Tribune reports. When he learned this, his mind immediately...

  • 10 ways COVID changed American schools

    Stacker, Erica Meltzer for Chalkbeat|Updated May 12, 2025

    COVID had already killed thousands of people in other countries and was spreading in the United States when a top federal health official said schools should prepare to offer "internet-based teleschooling" in case they had to close for a period of time. "We are asking the American public to work with us to prepare for the expectation that this could be bad," Dr. Nancy Messonnier, then a leader in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's pandemic response, told reporter...

  • Report: Inflation and labor shortages are stressing small business owners right now

    Stacker, Erika Malzberg for NEXT|Updated May 12, 2025

    Inflation, reduced consumer spending and labor shortages top small business owners' list of worries, according to a nationwide NEXT survey of 500 business owners that also asked what they're doing to address those concerns. The goal of the survey was to understand how business owners think about the economy and the threats to their business, and what's changed since NEXT's last pulse check in 2023. The results show how small business owners think about and respond to risk. 62%...

  • Data shows medication-assisted treatment works for opioid use disorder-so why aren't more people getting it?

    Stacker, Kayla Levy for Charlie Health|Updated May 12, 2025

    Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a treatable but potentially life-threatening condition. Yet millions of people still lack access to the most effective treatment options. According to recently released data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), medications for OUD, especially buprenorphine and methadone, can significantly reduce the risk of overdose and improve long-term health outcomes. Despite this, medication-assisted treatment (MAT) remains widely...

  • What are the cheapest days of the week to fly?

    Stacker, Karen Axelton for Experian|Updated May 12, 2025

    With airfares expected to remain elevated throughout 2025, according to online travel marketplace Hopper, finding the cheapest days to fly could save you a lot of money. The cheapest days of the week to fly are typically Tuesdays and Wednesdays. However, this isn't always the case, so Experian says comparing your options and being flexible are the keys to finding the lowest fares. The Cheapest and Most Expensive Days of the Week to Fly While Tuesdays and Wednesdays are...

  • 5 key mental health trends from the 2025 State of Mental Health Report

    Stacker, Kelsey Chacon for Rula Health|Updated May 12, 2025

    Understanding how people perceive their mental well-being—especially in such a rapidly changing world—is vital to Rula's mission to connect people with the mental healthcare they need. In honor of National Mental Health Awareness Month, Rula released the State of Mental Health Report: Mental Well-being in a Changing World. Surveying over 2,000 U.S. consumers, the report was designed to illuminate: - People's relationship with their mental health - How people feel about men...

  • How biohazard training for first responders and property managers can help combat the fentanyl crisis

    Stacker, Jon Acosta for Trauma Services|Updated May 4, 2025

    The fentanyl epidemic is most closely associated with drug users—often people who became addicted after being prescribed opioids for pain or injury. However, as abuse rates have increased, fentanyl has turned into a crisis for first responders, property managers, and maintenance workers who have to deal with the aftermath, Trauma Services reports. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, opioids such as fentanyl were involved in 55,529 unintentional o...

  • The number of 18-year-olds is about to drop sharply, packing a wallop for colleges-and the economy

    Stacker, Jon Marcus for The Hechinger Report|Updated May 4, 2025

    Pickup trucks with trailers and cars with yawning trunks pulled up onto untended lawns in front of buildings from which people lugged books, furniture, mattresses, trophy cases and artwork. Anything else of value had already been sold by a company that specializes in auctioning off the leftover assets of failed businesses. At least one of the buildings was soon to be demolished altogether, its red-brick walls dumped into its 1921 foundation. This was the unceremonious end of...

  • The most and least hospitable states for electric vehicle ownership

    Stacker, Andrew Jose, Data Work By Elena Cox|Updated May 4, 2025

    The number of people purchasing and using electric vehicles in the United States reached record levels in 2024, thanks to a combination of federal, state, and local incentives and growing awareness about the impact of greenhouse gases on climate change. However, recent moves by the Trump administration to curb incentives to buy EVs, such as tax credits, pause federal fleets' adoption of EVs, and implement tariffs on EV parts is threatening continued growth. EVs occupied...

  • 'Stop the Bleed' kits could help shooting victims. Why don't more people know about them?

    Stacker, Rita Oceguera for The Trace|Updated May 4, 2025

    In 2021, Chicago launched a counterterrorism initiative to teach city employees to respond to life-threatening injuries caused by dangerous events, like mass shootings. To do that, the city installed more than 1,000 blood control kits in over 500 municipal buildings. Since then, the Office of Emergency Management and Communications has grown the program by partnering with other agencies and departments. The expanded effort, community leaders say, serves a critical purpose:...

  • Cities have a public bathroom crisis. Are smart, portable bathrooms the way forward?

    Stacker, Maylin Tu for Next City|Updated May 4, 2025

    Gerardo Valerio had been looking for a bathroom in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo neighborhood for 20 minutes when he stumbled across a blue and white trailer with "FREE BATHROOM" at the top. At first, he was hesitant to enter the bathroom, which had been installed by the Washington, D.C.-based portable toilet startup Throne. To get in, he had to scan a QR code which pre-loaded a text onto his phone. After sending the text, the door would automatically slide open. "What do I text,...

  • Shortest-living dog breeds

    Stacker, Annalise Mantz, Cu Fleshman|Updated May 4, 2025

    Everyone from grade school students to proud pet owners quotes the statistic that one dog year equals seven human years. It's considered axiomatic, but, as it turns out, that's not accurate. Really, experts say it's more accurate to compare the first year of a dog's life to 15 years of a human's, the second year to nine human years, and every year after that to five human years. The math gets even more complicated when factoring in the dog's size: Bigger dogs start to age...

  • How one state sent residents' personal health data to LinkedIn

    Stacker, Tomas Apodaca for The Markup, Colin Lecher for The Markup|Updated May 4, 2025

    The website that lets Californians shop for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act, coveredca.com, has been sending sensitive data to LinkedIn, forensic testing by The Markup has revealed. As visitors filled out forms on the website, trackers on the same pages told LinkedIn their answers to questions about whether they were blind, pregnant, or used a high number of prescription medications. The trackers also monitored whether the visitors said they were transgender or...

  • Aspiration during surgery: When it's a sign of medical malpractice

    Stacker, Tommy Fibich for Fibich Leebron Copeland & Briggs|Updated May 4, 2025

    Aspiration during surgery doesn't happen often, but when it does, it can cause serious health problems. In some cases, it's the result of a medical error, which could point to malpractice. Patients dealing with a potential malpractice claim often feel confused and unsure about what to do next. If you or someone you care about has experienced aspiration during a procedure, it's important to understand your rights, Fibich Leebron Copeland & Briggs notes. Speaking with a...

  • Rewilding death in the Appalachian mountains

    Stacker, Michaela Haas for Reasons to be Cheerful|Updated May 4, 2025

    In the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, a quiet revolution in end-of-life practices is underway. At Ramsey Creek Preserve near Westminster, South Carolina, the deceased do not rest under rows of cold marble, but beneath meadows and oaks, their presence woven into the natural world, Reasons to be Cheerful says. The first body Billy Campbell buried on his land was the stillborn child of friends. Then a colleague who died suddenly in a car accident "solidified the...

  • QR codes in 2025: How the latest trends are reshaping customer engagement

    Stacker, Ektha Surana for Uniqode|Updated May 4, 2025

    Remember when we transitioned from calling it "surfing the internet" to "Googling"? It was one of those moments when technology became so ingrained in our lives that it became a verb. "QR-ing" may be on a similar trajectory. Once an underdog of the tech world, QR codes are now a core tool for businesses across industries—not just in marketing but in operations, logistics, security, healthcare, and internal workflows. According to Uniqode's State of QR Codes 2025 report, 59% o...

  • Americans are overconfident about understanding their blood pressure-and may avoid getting needed treatment

    Stacker|Updated May 4, 2025

    Stunning as it may sound, nearly half of Americans ages 20 years and up—or more than 122 million people—have high blood pressure, according to a 2023 report from the American Heart Association. And even if your numbers are normal right now, they are likely to increase as you age; more than three-quarters of Americans age 65 and older have high blood pressure. Also known as hypertension, high blood pressure is a major risk factor for heart disease and stroke. Most Americans don...

  • Graduate of one of America's largest all-girls public high schools works to revive it

    Stacker, Dale Mezzacappa for Chalkbeat|Updated May 4, 2025

    KaTiedra Argro has been on a mission: restore her school's reputation as a premier Philadelphia educational institution where young women hone their skills, excel as leaders, and find their voices. The principal of the Philadelphia High School for Girls spent last fall visiting 48 elementary and middle schools to recruit students. She went all over the city, from Northeast to Southwest, to sell kids on an historic all-girls school that was founded 13 years before the Civil War...

  • The movies leaving Netflix this month

    Stacker, Jake Kring-Schreifels|Updated May 4, 2025

    Throughout May, high school and college students across the country are finishing their final exams, donning their commencement robes, and shaking and taking their degrees to start the next chapter of their lives. But they aren't the only ones closing a door—in May 2025, 46 movies are tossing their streaming caps and graduating from Netflix, just without the same pomp and circumstance. There are quite a few reasons a movie can get dropped from a streamer like Netflix; p...

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