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June 24, 2026

featured

Podcasts are Changing the Doctor-Patient Dynamic. Is That a Good Thing?

The New York Times

Dr. James H. Stein, a cardiologist at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said a patient who listened to a podcast episode about cardiology now might arrive at his clinic and announce, “I have advanced heart disease and I need a coronary CT angiogram and I need you to measure my homocysteine level.”

Research

Wisconsin inventions that changed the nation

Wisconsin State Journal

UW-Madison is responsible for another massive medical advancement — but this one was pharmaceutical, not biological.

Warfarin, one of the most widely used blood thinners on the market, began as a treatment for cows. A Deer Park farmer walked into the laboratory of Karl Paul Link, a biochemist working in the university’s College of Agriculture, because his cows had developed a bleeding disorder.

Higher Education/System

Agriculture

New agreement promises to boost seed variety for Wisconsin farmers

WPR

Julie Dawson is a Professor and Extension Specialist in the Department of Plant and Agroecosystem Sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She told “Wisconsin Today” parts of Bayer’s rebate program would discourage smaller seed sellers — who buy seeds from seed giants like Bayer and re-sell those directly to farmers — from testing products from multiple companies and specializing what seeds they sell to their region or customer base.

Athletics

Opinion

Opinion: On Being a Black Trainee in Medicine

The Scientist

I was on the SF Muni train on my way to lab the day the Supreme Court struck down affirmative action. I remember staring at my phone for a moment before swiping out of my news app and opening Instagram. I mindlessly reposted Canva-made infographics and video essay think pieces. I saw posts from friends and mutuals and some of the tears they shed, but I honestly felt nothing. Frankly, the ruling was a confirmation of something many Black students already understood: that our presence in academic spaces has always been conditional and could be revoked at any moment.

Opinion: Wisconsin conservation fund a casualty of GOP extremism

The Cap Times

The Stewardship Fund has protected many of our landscape-scale natural assets, such as the 40,000-acre Turtle-Flambeau Flowage and the 70,000-acre Pelican River State Forest, the Lower Wisconsin Riverway and the last undeveloped section of the Wisconsin Dells. Just as important, it has set aside natural areas and built trails close to where the majority of the population lives. Many of our local parks, bike and hiking trails and nearby green spaces are there for you to enjoy because of the Stewardship Fund.

UW Experts in the News

Wisconsin’s oversized influence on American sports

Wisconsin State Journal

There have been Super Bowls and Rose Bowls on the field and World Series on the diamond. World championships have been won on the basketball court and national titles on the ice. Athletes like Henry Aaron, Bart Starr and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar weren’t born here, but they helped deliver trophies to our state.

“The state of Wisconsin was a part of their journeys to the hall of fame,” said Ashley Brown, the Allan H. Selig Chair in the History of Sport and Society at UW-Madison.

UW-Madison Related

America 250: Historic events that have shaped Wisconsin’s history

Wisconsin State Journal

The first dairy school in the U.S. was established at UW-Madison in 1890.

At first, only two students attended the first class, before the program’s enrollment jumped to 75. The enrollment jump was around a year after Prof. Stephen Babcock developed an inexpensive and practical test that measured the butterfat content of milk. The “Babcock test” provided an incentive to produce high-quality milk and allowed farmers to be paid accordingly.