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Newswise: Patient Safety Program Reduces Unnecessary Antibiotic Use in Long-Term Care Facilities
Released: 28-Feb-2022 12:05 PM EST
Patient Safety Program Reduces Unnecessary Antibiotic Use in Long-Term Care Facilities
Johns Hopkins Medicine

In early 2021, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine and NORC at the University of Chicago showed that the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Safety Program for Improving Antibiotic Use successfully helped more than 400 U.S. hospitals ensure that patients only received antibiotics when needed, and then, only in the correct amounts and for the prescribed dosage period.

23-Feb-2022 3:15 PM EST
New way viruses trigger autoimmunity discovered
Washington University in St. Louis

Studying mice, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have discovered that roseolovirus can trigger autoimmunity in a previously unknown way: by disrupting the process by which immune cells learn to avoid targeting their own body's cells and tissues.

Newswise:Video Embedded separator-key-when-it-comes-to-8216-stable8217-vs-8216-safe8217-battery
VIDEO
Released: 28-Feb-2022 5:05 AM EST
Separator key when it comes to ‘stable’ vs. ‘safe’ battery
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers in the lab of Peng Bai at the McKelvey School of Engineering have discovered the key to making a stable, safe battery.

Newswise: Seismic study reveals key reason why Patagonia is rising as glaciers melt
25-Feb-2022 3:30 PM EST
Seismic study reveals key reason why Patagonia is rising as glaciers melt
Washington University in St. Louis

The icefields that stretch for hundreds of miles atop the Andes mountain range in Chile and Argentina are melting at some of the fastest rates on the planet. The ground that was beneath this ice is also shifting and rising as these glaciers disappear. Geologists have discovered a link between recent ice mass loss, rapid rock uplift and a gap between tectonic plates that underlie Patagonia.

Newswise: $2.8 million NIH Grant Funds Research Into Fatal Movement Disorders
Released: 25-Feb-2022 5:05 PM EST
$2.8 million NIH Grant Funds Research Into Fatal Movement Disorders
Creighton University

The research may also advance understanding of the biochemical roots of Parkinson’s disease and other synucleinopathies, which affect more than 6.8 million Americans.

Released: 25-Feb-2022 2:10 PM EST
South Side Pediatric Asthma Center Receives $375K grant from Cigna Foundation to support children living with asthma in Chicago and beyond
University of Chicago Medical Center

The Cigna Foundation awarded a $375,000 Health and Well-Being grant to support the South Side Pediatric Asthma Center’s (SSPAC) mission to improve access to care and health outcomes for children with asthma on the South Side of Chicago.

Newswise: LJI team uncovers new subsets of CD4+ 'helper' T cells
22-Feb-2022 2:40 PM EST
LJI team uncovers new subsets of CD4+ 'helper' T cells
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

Researchers at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) have discovered new genes in CD4+ "helper" T cell subset that are linked to risk of autoimmune diseases. As they work to shed light on the exact functions of these CD4+ T cell subsets, the researchers have uncovered major differences between donors based on genetics and how the cells may function in men and women.

Newswise: UA Little Rock Launches New Program to Provide Child Care Funding for Low-Income Students
Released: 25-Feb-2022 12:25 PM EST
UA Little Rock Launches New Program to Provide Child Care Funding for Low-Income Students
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has launched a new program to help university students find and afford quality child care so they can complete their college education.

Newswise: UT Southwestern researcher, international team solve decades-old structural mystery surrounding the birth of energy-storing lipid droplets
Released: 25-Feb-2022 12:20 PM EST
UT Southwestern researcher, international team solve decades-old structural mystery surrounding the birth of energy-storing lipid droplets
UT Southwestern Medical Center

In humans, virtually every cell stores fat. However, patients with a rare condition called congenital lipodystrophy, which is often diagnosed in childhood, cannot properly store fat, which accumulates in the body’s organs and increases the risk of early death from heart or liver disease. In 2001, a transmembrane protein called seipin was identified as a molecule essential for proper fat storage, although its mechanism has remained unknown.

Released: 23-Feb-2022 12:30 PM EST
Anonymous Donor Gives $25 Million for Nursing Education, Training and Research Programs at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles
Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) announced today one of the largest charitable investments ever made in a pediatric hospital nursing program—a landmark $25 million gift by an anonymous donor that will greatly enhance the education, professional development and research endeavors of CHLA’s nursing workforce.

Newswise: Risk, resiliency in aging brain focus of $33 million grant
Released: 23-Feb-2022 11:55 AM EST
Risk, resiliency in aging brain focus of $33 million grant
Washington University in St. Louis

A large study that investigates just what keeps our brains sharp as we age and what contributes to cognitive decline has been launched by researchers from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Harvard University/Massachusetts General Hospital, the University of Minnesota Medical School and the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).

Newswise: Predicting the chaos in Tourette syndrome tics
Released: 23-Feb-2022 9:55 AM EST
Predicting the chaos in Tourette syndrome tics
Washington University in St. Louis

Interdisciplinary research from Washington University in St. Louis has uncovered a pattern in the tics associated with Tourette syndrome.

Newswise: The Conrad Prebys Foundation grants more than $1.5 million to support critical infrastructure—and a fascinating branch of immunology
Released: 22-Feb-2022 4:30 PM EST
The Conrad Prebys Foundation grants more than $1.5 million to support critical infrastructure—and a fascinating branch of immunology
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

The Conrad Prebys Foundation has given more than $1.17 million to support La Jolla Institute for Immunology's (LJI) Flow Cytometry Core and more than $415,000 to fuel infectious disease research led by LJI Instructor Julie Burel, Ph.D.

Newswise: UTEP Launches Systems Modeling and Simulation Concentration with $1M Grant from U.S. Dept. of Education
Released: 22-Feb-2022 3:40 PM EST
UTEP Launches Systems Modeling and Simulation Concentration with $1M Grant from U.S. Dept. of Education
University of Texas at El Paso

The University of Texas at El Paso’s College of Engineering will establish a concentration in Systems Modeling and Simulation under the Industrial, Manufacturing and Systems Engineering (IMSE) Department, thanks to a $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education. The new degree path will allow graduate engineering students to enhance their knowledge in data analytics, computer simulation, augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR), and machine learning for dynamic production and operations systems.

Newswise: Blood test for Alzheimer’s highly accurate in large, international study
Released: 22-Feb-2022 3:00 PM EST
Blood test for Alzheimer’s highly accurate in large, international study
Washington University in St. Louis

A blood test developed at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has proven highly accurate in detecting early signs of Alzheimer’s disease in a study involving nearly 500 patients from across three continents, providing further evidence that the test should be considered for routine screening and diagnosis. The study is available in the journal Neurology.

Newswise: Nova Southeastern University Researcher Earns Coveted Grant to Study Ocean Contaminants
Released: 22-Feb-2022 9:35 AM EST
Nova Southeastern University Researcher Earns Coveted Grant to Study Ocean Contaminants
Nova Southeastern University

Newly proposed research will test the effects of UV light exposure on chemical contaminants

Released: 22-Feb-2022 8:05 AM EST
UNH Receives Nearly $6M to Develop Protein Sensors for Biomanufacturing
University of New Hampshire

Researchers in the University New Hampshire’s Surface Enhanced Electrochemical Diagnostic Sensors (SEEDS) Lab have received an EPSCoR grant from the National Science Foundation for close to $6 million to lead a team in developing sensors to promote quality control in biomanufacturing—the production of important biomaterials used in medicine, food and even engineered human organs—a field that is becoming an important sector of the economy.

Newswise: Daily Activities Like Washing Dishes Reduced Heart Disease Risk in Senior Women
17-Feb-2022 11:00 AM EST
Daily Activities Like Washing Dishes Reduced Heart Disease Risk in Senior Women
University of California San Diego

Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science at University of California San Diego researchers studied the impact of daily life movement to cardiovascular disease risk using a machine-learning algorithm and found decrease in risk with increased activity.

Newswise: Clemson researchers continue study to develop heat-tolerant soybeans
Released: 17-Feb-2022 1:05 PM EST
Clemson researchers continue study to develop heat-tolerant soybeans
Clemson University

Soybean is one of the top cash crops grown in South Carolina, but high temperatures during the growing season limit yields and cut into profits.

Newswise: MRI may lower breast cancer deaths from variants in 3 genes
15-Feb-2022 1:05 PM EST
MRI may lower breast cancer deaths from variants in 3 genes
University of Washington School of Medicine

Annual MRI screenings starting at ages 30 to 35 may reduce breast-cancer mortality by more than 50% among women who carry certain genetic changes in three genes (ATM, CHEK2, PALB2), according to a newly published comparative modeling analysis. The findings will be published Feb. 17 in JAMA Oncology.



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