
COVID vaccination during pregnancy halves infant hospitalizations amid shifting risks
The findings connect compliance biases, vaccination gaps, and concentrated-kratom poisoning risks.
Today's r/science highlights traced a throughline from how identities and incentives shape behavior to the public-health signals and brain discoveries that can change lives. Across studies on bias, masculinity norms, vaccines, and neurodegeneration, the community examined evidence that challenges comfortable assumptions and points toward practical levers for progress.
Power, identity, and the science of compliance
Several widely shared threads probed how identity and status bias collective judgment. New cross-national research on how political identity shapes judgments of police violence against immigrants connected with work on the “private solution trap” in climate action, suggesting that when costs and harms are uneven, those with resources often favor self-protection over shared accountability. Together they map a tension between empathy and insulation.
"So reading the study, it's actually worse than the initial finds. The study participants routinely violated the study procedures, but one of the procedures they consistently performed properly were the shocks ..."- u/Piepally (800 points)
Revisiting foundational experiments, a fresh analysis of Milgram's obedience tapes argues that procedural drift and tacit license can normalize harm, reframing compliance as negotiated coercion rather than blind obedience. At the cultural level, global data on precarious manhood beliefs and societal well-being connect rigid status performance to lower happiness, weaker institutions, and diminished social trust—evidence that roles and rules can quietly author outcomes long before policies try to fix them.
"Gender roles are a prison. Who the hell wants to live in a cage? ..."- u/Skydragon222 (315 points)
Prevention signals: vaccines steady, risks shift
On the prevention front, evidence that COVID-19 vaccination in pregnancy halves early infant hospitalizations landed alongside surveillance showing routine childhood vaccination is holding overall but slipping for flu and several early-life shots. The infant findings also directly tested and refuted “immune dysregulation” claims, while the pediatric data underscore how trust, access, and messaging still shape uptake.
"I've always thought the powder was idiot proof. Couldn't really OD if you tried. You really gonna eat 30 or 40 grams of raw powder? But these new extracts are crazy strong. Not really surprised at this point...."- u/RojoRugger (178 points)
Beyond vaccines, an MMWR review tracking a surge in kratom-related poison center reports points to potency shifts and poly-substance risks, especially with concentrated extracts and co-exposures. The pattern echoes a familiar lesson in harm reduction: surveillance needs to move as fast as the market, and messaging has to meet consumers where the risks actually are.
Mind, relationships, and the brain
Zooming in to everyday social life, new findings that socially anxious people report more meaningful interactions in small groups underscore the power of context design—smaller circles, clearer roles, shared tasks—so participation feels controllable rather than performative.
"Yes socially anxious people prefer small groups. Bonus, it's also preferred that there is something to do other than just chit chat, like games or something. Redirects focus. Makes an instant commonality. Avoids empty, directionless small talk. ..."- u/bluemaciz (328 points)
Complementing that micro-scale view, ecological momentary work tying narcissism and perfectionism together in real time suggests that shifting self-evaluations can cascade into mood and motivation from one moment to the next. At the cellular level, a newly described “overflow valve” tied to Parkinson's pathology opens a different design question for therapeutics: how to tune waste-clearance pathways without collateral damage.
Every subreddit has human stories worth sharing. - Jamie Sullivan