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Science Friday

Racism And Mental Health, How To Milk Ticks. March 26, 2021, Part 1

Science Friday

Science Friday and WNYC Studios

Science, Life Sciences, Wnyc, Natural Sciences, Friday

4.46.3K Ratings

🗓️ 26 March 2021

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Mental Health Costs Of ‘Everyday’ Racism On March 16, a 21-year-old white man killed six Asian women and two other people in multiple shootings in Atlanta. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Asians and Asian-Americans in the U.S. have experienced a rise in racist attacks, which psychologists say are tied to anti-Chinese rhetoric from the former White House administration, as well as others who have scapegoated Asian Americans. The Stop AAPI Hate reporting center was created in March of 2020 to track these events. The project is a collaboration between the Asian Pacific Planning and Policy Council, Chinese for Affirmative Action, and San Francisco State University’s Asian American Studies Department. The center reports that more than 3,700 acts of hate were brought to their attention between their founding and February 28 of this year, including verbal harassment or shunning, physical assault, and civil rights violations. At the same time, people who identify as Asian-American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) have increasingly reported symptoms of anxiety or depression, or requested screenings for mental health diagnoses. Charissa Cheah, a professor of psychology at the University of Maryland-Baltimore County has found that even witnessing acts of hate or discrimination can affect someone’s mental health—and spill over to their children. And Kevin Nadal, a psychology researcher at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, has documented how microaggressions, considered a more covert form of racism than physical violence, can cause trauma. Cheah and Nadal discuss the connection between chronic exposure to racist behavior and mental health, along with resources for people who may be experiencing the effects of trauma, as well as the long history of anti-Asian racism in the United States.   To Milk A Tick Ticks are masters of breaking down the defenses of their host organism to get a blood meal. They use anesthetics to numb the skin, anticoagulants to keep the blood flowing, and keep the host’s immune system from recognizing them as invaders and kicking them out. And the key to understanding this is in the tick’s saliva. Biochemist and microbiologist Seemay Chou discusses how she milks the saliva from ticks to study what compounds play key parts in these chemical tricks. She also talks about how ticks are able to control the microbes in their saliva.   A Year Of Staying Home Has Led To A Global Chip Crisis The global pandemic has led to a different kind of worldwide crisis: a global chip shortage. Demand for semiconductor chips—the brains behind “smart” devices like TV’s, refrigerators, cars, dishwashers and gaming systems—has spiked after a year of staying and working from home. And the pressure on global supply chains has never been greater. Sarah Zhang, staff writer at The Atlantic, joins Science Friday to explain what happened. Plus, why AstraZeneca came under fire from U.S. regulators this week and how one scientist has finally solved a 20-years-long mystery about the bald eagle.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Science Friday. I'm Iraflato.

0:03.6

Car companies around the world are being forced to freeze production.

0:07.9

They can't get the computer chips they need for their brainy vehicles.

0:12.0

The global pandemic has sparked a global chip shortage.

0:16.2

Computer chips, they're inside lots of things, right?

0:18.7

Phones, tablets, computers, refrigerators,

0:22.0

dishwashers, and that's part of the problem. Here to tell us more is Sarah Zang, staff writer for the

0:28.4

Atlantic. Hi, Sarah. Hi, thanks for having me. So why have we run out of chips? What's happened?

0:34.7

It's kind of a perfect storm created by the pandemic. So remember about a year ago, everything kind of frozen place and factories were closed and a lot of shipstop running. So there was first a dip in production. And I think carmakers that you were talking about, they saw this and were thinking, oh, well, we don't need to make as many cars. So they decided to put in fewer orders for chips.

0:55.6

But what actually happened is that we've all been stuck at home.

0:58.3

And a lot of us maybe have needed to buy laptops or webcams to be on Zoom all the time.

1:03.7

And just bought a lot of appliances, whether it's like fridges or TVs.

1:07.0

And all of these things require semiconductor chips.

1:10.5

So what you now have is also a huge

1:12.4

demand for all these electronics that require chips. So the car companies were kind of locked out.

1:18.0

They've suddenly found themselves. Oops, we don't have any cars. So now they're idling their factories.

1:23.0

While you have all the electronics companies still going, you know, kind of full board, like making all

1:28.1

these things that we were ordering. And you have phones and, you know, game consoles, like,

1:33.1

they're also getting delayed because we're all kind of caught up in this chip crunch.

1:37.6

Yeah. Yeah. Is there any estimated time for things getting back to normal? Yeah, it's a great

1:43.4

question. It kind of depends on a little bit

1:44.9

about what we do, right? So first of all, it depends on do we keep ordering a lot of electronics?

...

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