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A collection of press releases, audio content and media clips featuring INFORMS members and their research.

New Research Showcases Pivotal Shift Toward Energy Democracy
News Release

BALTIMORE, MD, November 12, 2024 – New research in the INFORMS journal Manufacturing & Service Operations Management is guiding the development of more inclusive and efficient electricity markets. The work demonstrates how aggregating small-scale, distributed energy resources (DERs) like solar panels can effectively balance the power of large utility companies.

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Spikes in violent theft frightening customers, damaging business of brick-and-mortar retailers
Media Coverage

Retail insiders blame soft-on-crime policies, understaffing, urban trends

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De-risking global supply chains: Looking beyond material flows
Media Coverage

Global supply chains are undergoing an irrevocable shift. While material flows remain critical, they are only the most visible aspect of this transition. Beneath the surface, changes in information exchanges, financial reconfigurations, and human capital movements are posing far greater risks to the benefits of global trade. The US, China, and the rest the world must handle these changes with care and perspective.

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Resoundingly Human Podcast

An audio journey of how data and analytics save lives, save money and solve problems.

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Hoosiers Await COVID-19 Vaccine as Indiana Lags in Distribution

Hoosiers Await COVID-19 Vaccine as Indiana Lags in Distribution

South Bend Tribune, January 6, 2021

Sarah Bowers has called fruitlessly around to multiple county and state officials to see if she could find any information on when her 95-year-old mother would be eligible for the vaccine. Bowers’ mother resides in the independent living section of a senior facility in Indianapolis. Residents in the skilled nursing part of the campus have been vaccinated, but not Bowers’ mother, who’s in quarantine right now in her apartment.

COVID-19 Vaccine: How to Know When It's Your Turn

COVID-19 Vaccine: How to Know When It's Your Turn

Spectrum News 1, January 6, 2021

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear announced Monday, Jan. 4, the four-phase plan for administering the commonwealth’s allotment of COVID-19 vaccines, and some hospitals and health departments developed plans to ensure people included in those phases are made aware then it is their turn. The first phase includes three stages, and Kentucky is still in Phase 1A, which includes healthcare personnel and residents of long-term care and assisted living facilities. When one phase ends and another begins, members of the prioritized groups will need to know the vaccine is available to them and where to get it. 

NC COVID Hospitalizations Hit Record High, With Expected Holiday Bump Yet to Come

NC COVID Hospitalizations Hit Record High, With Expected Holiday Bump Yet to Come

The News & Observer, January 5, 2021

North Carolina COVID-19 hospitalizations hit a record high Tuesday for a fourth straight day. The numbers could continue to rise in coming weeks as the state sees the brunt of coronavirus spread from Christmas and other holiday gatherings, experts said. “Unfortunately, we’re seeing the very early stages of a post-holiday surge,” said Dr. Joseph Rogers, chief medical officer for Duke University Health System. “And I think many of us that are working in health systems across the Triangle are worried about what this ends up looking like.”

Some Worried People Will Try to Cut the Line to Get COVID-19 Vaccine Faster

Some Worried People Will Try to Cut the Line to Get COVID-19 Vaccine Faster

7 News Boston, January 7, 2021

With more and more people in the United States getting vaccinated, many are worried that some will try to cut the line. More than 140,000 Massachusetts residents, mostly COVID-19 facing healthcare professionals, have already received their first dose, according to state officials. Public health statistics show that while the federal government has shipped 328,000 doses of the vaccine, only 44 percent have been administered. “Certainly we would like this vaccine to be going out more quickly,” Vaccine distribution expert and Carolina University Professor Julie Swann said.

With Help From National Guard, Private Docs, Vaccine Distribution Can Be Sped Up

With Help From National Guard, Private Docs, Vaccine Distribution Can Be Sped Up

WRAL, January 6, 2021

Getting the COVID-19 vaccine into people's arms has proven to be a big stumbling block in North Carolina. Help is on the way, though, from many sources. The North Carolina National Guard has mobilized 50 members to help administer the vaccine and to help input data into the state's COVID-19 tracking system. "We increase our number of guardsmen on duty to help North Carolina get needles into arms with the immunization for those that are willing to take the vaccines," said Brig. Gen. Jeff Copeland.

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