Latest News from: University of Illinois Chicago

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Released: 20-Sep-2018 3:15 PM EDT
Smart Pills Dumb Down Medical Care, Experts Warn
University of Illinois Chicago

Enthusiasm for an emerging digital health tool, the smart pill, is on the rise but researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have published a paper in the American Journal of Bioethics that cautions health care providers and policymakers to slow down when it comes to allowing this technology in patient care settings.

Released: 20-Sep-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Chicago Universities to Host Community Forum on City’s Cancer Inequities
University of Illinois Chicago

The Chicago Cancer Health Equity Collaborative (ChicagoCHEC), a National Cancer Institute-funded initiative to reduce cancer disparities in Chicago’s low-income neighborhoods, will provide a detailed look at the ongoing work of the ChicagoCHEC partnership, which is led by researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago, Northeastern Illinois University and Northwestern University, during a community forum on Sept. 21.

Released: 20-Sep-2018 2:05 PM EDT
UIC 2018-19 Theater Season Offers Contemporary Takes on Classic Plays
University of Illinois Chicago

"Electricidad" kicks off the 2018-2019 University of Illinois at Chicago theatre season, which features the theme this year of “Desperately Holding on to Pieces of the Past.”

Released: 18-Sep-2018 4:50 PM EDT
For-Profit Hospitals Correlated with Higher Readmission Rates
University of Illinois Chicago

Patients who receive care in a for-profit hospital are more likely to be readmitted than those who receive care in nonprofit or public hospitals, according to a new study published by University of Illinois at Chicago researchers.

Released: 17-Sep-2018 4:20 PM EDT
UIC Lauded with National Award for Diversity, Inclusion
University of Illinois Chicago

Oldest and largest diversity-focused publication in higher education recognizes UIC.

Released: 17-Sep-2018 11:05 AM EDT
Shifting Focus From Life Extension to ‘Healthspan’ Extension
University of Illinois Chicago

The Journal of the American Medical Association published an article by University of Illinois at Chicago epidemiologist S. Jay Olshansky on the need for researchers and clinicians to focus less on prolonging lifespan and more on prolonging "healthspan."

Released: 13-Sep-2018 11:05 AM EDT
U.S. Department of Defense Funds UIC Research on Prostate Cancer
University of Illinois Chicago

A new three-year grant totaling nearly $1 million from the U.S. Department of Defense will fund University of Illinois at Chicago research on the gene SELENOF and its role in the development of prostate cancer among black men.

Released: 13-Sep-2018 11:05 AM EDT
Point-of-Care Sensors to Detect Manganese From Single Drop of Blood
University of Illinois Chicago

A three-year, $1.8 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will enable researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago to develop portable, easy-to-use sensors that can detect toxic metals in a single drop of blood. The sensors would allow for faster and cheaper research, as well as rapid detection of metals including manganese and lead, both of which are powerful neurotoxins that can affect cognitive development and neuromotor function.

Released: 12-Sep-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Program will educate, empower ER visitors with uncontrolled high blood pressure
University of Illinois Chicago

A new $3 million, five-year grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute will allow researchers to determine whether a unique program designed to educate people with uncontrolled hypertension — also known as high blood pressure — about the importance of getting their blood pressure under control can help reduce the risk of developing chronic and expensive-to-treat secondary cardiovascular conditions among this high-risk group.

Released: 12-Sep-2018 10:05 AM EDT
UIC continues record enrollment growth with 31,683 students
University of Illinois Chicago

UIC enrollment for fall semester maintains upward trend that began four years ago

Released: 11-Sep-2018 12:05 PM EDT
UIC company develops hybrid air-conditioning system with help from DOE
University of Illinois Chicago

NETenergy, a clean tech startup company based on technology developed at the University of Illinois at Chicago and licensed from UIC, will commercialize its unique hybrid, super-efficient air-conditioning system with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy.The $500,000 grant was awarded to NETenergy’s partner, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, as part of the DOE’s Technology Commercialization Fund.

Released: 5-Sep-2018 8:05 AM EDT
First-Ever Guidelines for Detecting, Treating Perimenopausal Depression
University of Illinois Chicago

It is well-recognized that women are at increased risk of depression during the postpartum period when hormone levels are changing, but the risk of depression associated with perimenopause — the time right before menopause when female hormones are in decline — remains under-recognized and clinical recommendations on how to diagnose and treat this kind of depression in women have been lacking until now.

Released: 4-Sep-2018 3:05 PM EDT
UIC to Lead Study of Negative Pressure Wound Therapy in Obese and Diabetic Patients
University of Illinois Chicago

Surgical site infections are a significant complication that can prevent proper wound healing, require expensive treatment and may even lead to death in severe cases. Patients with higher body mass indices and with diabetes have an increased risk of developing incision infections.With a $1.7 million, two-year grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, researchers in the University of Illinois at Chicago Epicenter for Prevention of Healthcare Associated Infections — one of six such centers funded by the CDC — will determine whether negative pressure wound therapy can help reduce the incidents of surgical site infections in obese and diabetic patients.

Released: 4-Sep-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Tailoring Behavioral Therapy for Depression, Obesity Based on How the Brain Responds
University of Illinois Chicago

Precision lifestyle medicine is an emerging field that tailors behavioral treatments and lifestyle modification recommendations based on an individual’s genetics, lifestyle and environment.Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago, in collaboration with their colleagues at Stanford University and the University of Washington, will look at how an integrated behavioral therapy aimed at helping people with co-occurring obesity and depression can be adapted for individuals based on how their brain function changes in response to the intervention.

Released: 31-Aug-2018 12:05 PM EDT
UIC faculty member among 5 chosen as US-Japan creative artist fellows
University of Illinois Chicago

Since 1978, the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission (JUSFC) and the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), along with the International House of Japan and the Government of Japan’s Agency for Cultural Affairs, have administered the program.

Released: 30-Aug-2018 1:05 PM EDT
National Cancer Institute funds research on computer-generated patient care summaries
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago has received nearly $1.5 million in funding from the National Cancer Institute, one of the National Institutes of Health, to expand research and development of computer-generated patient care summaries as a tool for reducing hospital readmission rates.

Released: 27-Aug-2018 3:05 PM EDT
UIC Urban Forum to Explore Pensions, Debt, Government Services
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago’s 2018 Urban Forum, titled “The People’s Money: Pensions, Debt and Government Services,” will examine the paradox of improving economic conditions alongside the challenging fiscal situations of the nation’s cities and other local governments.

Released: 27-Aug-2018 12:55 PM EDT
UIC Awarded $7 Million to Develop Depression Prevention Program
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago has been awarded $7 million in funding from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) to develop programs to prevent depression among teens.

Released: 27-Aug-2018 11:05 AM EDT
Study Finds 1 in 12 Children Taking Multiple Medications at Risk
University of Illinois Chicago

About one in five children regularly use prescription medications, and nearly one in 12 of those children are at risk for experiencing a harmful drug-drug interaction. Adolescent girls are at highest risk.

Released: 15-Aug-2018 1:05 PM EDT
Evening Preference, Lack of Sleep Associated with Higher BMI in People with Prediabetes
University of Illinois Chicago

People with prediabetes who go to bed later, eat meals later and are more active and alert later in the day — those who have an “evening preference” — have higher body mass indices compared with people with prediabetes who do things earlier in the day, or exhibit morning preference. The higher BMI among people with evening preference is related to their lack of sufficient sleep, according to a University of Illinois at Chicago-led study.

Released: 14-Aug-2018 11:05 AM EDT
UIC students to set off on Arctic adventure through Northwest Passage
University of Illinois Chicago

A select group of University of Illinois at Chicago students will be aboard a polar vessel for three weeks as part of the Northwest Passage Project, a historic, educational excursion across the remote Canadian Arctic.

Released: 13-Aug-2018 1:05 PM EDT
Hijacking cellular ‘mail’ for regenerative medicine
University of Illinois Chicago

University of Illinois at Chicago researchers have received approximately $2 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health to develop a better way to regenerate bone or tissues that have been lost to disease or injury.

Released: 10-Aug-2018 2:05 PM EDT
UIC Campus Film Office Spotlights ‘Chicago’s Most Film Friendly Campus’
University of Illinois Chicago

UIC is formalizing its campus-filming program as a one-stop shop for Chicago’s growing film industry.

Released: 9-Aug-2018 11:05 AM EDT
Discovery Could Lead to Better Treatment for Leukemia
University of Illinois Chicago

Previous research has revealed that patients with acute myeloid leukemia who also have a particular mutation in a gene called NPM1 have a higher rate of remission with chemotherapy. About one-third of leukemia patients possess this favorable mutation, but until now, how it helps improve outcomes has remained unknown.Scientists from the University of Illinois at Chicago report on how this mutation helps improve sensitivity to chemotherapy in patients in the journal JCI Insight.

Released: 2-Aug-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Lung Cancer Screening Guidelines Inadequate for High-Risk Minorities
University of Illinois Chicago

Data from a Chicago-based lung cancer screening program provides evidence that national lung cancer screening guidelines may be insufficient for individuals in underrepresented communities.

Released: 1-Aug-2018 4:05 PM EDT
What Can the Herpesvirus Teach Us About Oral Inflammation?
University of Illinois Chicago

A $2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will help University of Illinois at Chicago researchers study how herpesviruses and their underlying molecular mechanisms contribute to increased inflammation in oral diseases, like periodontitis.

Released: 1-Aug-2018 1:05 PM EDT
Medicinal plants to be showcased at garden walk
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago College of Pharmacy and the UIC/National Institutes of Health Center for Botanical Dietary Supplements Research will host an open-to-the-public garden walk and lecture to celebrate the first and only urban medicinal plant garden in Chicago.

Released: 30-Jul-2018 12:05 PM EDT
Magnetic Nanoparticles Deliver Chemotherapy to Difficult-to-Reach Spinal Tumors
University of Illinois Chicago

Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago have demonstrated that magnetic nanoparticles can be used to ferry chemotherapy drugs into the spinal cord to treat hard-to-reach spinal tumors in an animal model. The unique delivery system represents a novel way to target chemotherapy drugs to spinal cancer cells, which are hard to reach because the drugs must cross the blood-brain barrier.

Released: 23-Jul-2018 4:30 PM EDT
Liquid Microscopy Technique Reveals New Problem with Lithium-Oxygen Batteries
University of Illinois Chicago

Using an advanced, new microscopy technique that can visualize chemical reactions occurring in liquid environments, researchers have discovered a new reason lithium-oxygen batteries — which promise up to five times more energy than the lithium-ion batteries that power electric vehicles and cell phones — tend to slow down and die after just a few charge/discharge cycles.

Released: 19-Jul-2018 12:05 PM EDT
UIC, John Marshall Law School join forces to create Chicago’s only public law school
University of Illinois Chicago

The board of trustees of both the University of Illinois and The John Marshall Law School have voted to create UIC John Marshall Law School -- Chicago’s first and only public law school.

 
Released: 18-Jul-2018 2:05 PM EDT
UIC Scientist Wins National Fellowship for Excellence in Teaching
University of Illinois Chicago

University of Illinois at Chicago climate scientist Max Berkelhammer is among the first recipients of the Excellence in Teaching Fellowship, a new program developed by Course Hero and the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation to support the nation's early career faculty members.

Released: 12-Jul-2018 1:05 PM EDT
$1.5 million from The Davee Foundation boosts UIC scholarship fund
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has received $1.5 million from The Davee Foundation to expand its scholarship support for high-achieving students with financial need.

Released: 11-Jul-2018 12:05 PM EDT
‘Call Me MISTER’ initiative comes to UIC to train more teachers of color
University of Illinois Chicago

Call Me MISTER” initiative at UIC focuses on training men of color to teach in CPS elementary grades. The initiative is part of a national effort started at Clemson University to get more male teachers of color in the elementary grades.

Released: 10-Jul-2018 4:45 PM EDT
Biochemists Discover Cause of Genome Editing Failures with Hyped CRISPR System
University of Illinois Chicago

Researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago are the first to describe why CRISPR gene editing sometimes fails to work, and how the process can be made to be much more efficient.

Released: 9-Jul-2018 4:05 PM EDT
Rare Pediatric Skin Conditions Often Get Expensive, Inconsistent Care
University of Illinois Chicago

New research shows that death and recurrence are rare in children with Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), but children who experience these skin conditions have high rates of complications and that treatment strategies varied among health care providers.

Released: 9-Jul-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Reducing Deaths From Opioid Overdoses in Illinois
University of Illinois Chicago

A University of Illinois at Chicago researcher says most overdoses and opioid-related overdose deaths in Illinois are now caused by heroin use, often in combination with potent synthetic opioids, such as fentanyl and carfentanyl.

Released: 3-Jul-2018 11:05 AM EDT
With changing demographics, more racial/ethnic socialization needed for white youth
University of Illinois Chicago

Without exploring how white youth are socialized about race and ethnicity current race relations will remain unbalanced

Released: 27-Jun-2018 1:05 PM EDT
Researchers Identify Key Protein Involved in Triggering Inflammation
University of Illinois Chicago

Researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago have identified a protein that is crucial for activating inflammation — both the good kind of inflammation that leads to healing wounds and fighting infection, as well as excessive inflammation where the immune system can damage tissues and organs. The protein — an ion channel that spans the membrane of immune cells — presents a new target for the development of drugs that can restrain overblown inflammatory responses.

Released: 22-Jun-2018 1:05 PM EDT
UIC awarded $1M grant to advance inclusion in STEM education
University of Illinois Chicago

The University of Illinois at Chicago has received a five-year, $1 million grant through the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Inclusive Excellence Initiative.

   
Released: 21-Jun-2018 3:30 PM EDT
Ketamine Acts Fast to Treat Depression and Its Effects Last — but How?
University of Illinois Chicago

In contrast to most antidepressant medications, which can take several weeks to reduce depressive symptoms, ketamine — a commonly used veterinary anesthetic — can lift a person out of a deep depression within minutes of its administration, and its effects can last several weeks. Researchers have long-wondered how ketamine can both act quickly and be so long-lasting.

Released: 19-Jun-2018 9:00 AM EDT
$1.9 million grant aims to improve behavioral health care delivery
University of Illinois Chicago

Graduate students in the Jane Addams College of Social Work at the University of Illinois at Chicago will receive specialized training to help individuals with mental health issues in Chicago’s marginalized communities.

   
Released: 18-Jun-2018 3:05 PM EDT
Use of Alternative Medicines Has Doubled Among Kids, Especially Teens
University of Illinois Chicago

A JAMA Pediatrics study shows that since 2003, the use of alternative medicines among children has doubled. Increased use of Omega-3 fatty acids and melatonin among adolescents ages 13 to 18 drives the change.

Released: 18-Jun-2018 10:05 AM EDT
Daily Fasting Works for Weight Loss
University of Illinois Chicago

A new study shows that daily fasting is an effective tool to reduce weight and lower blood pressure. The study is the first to examine the effect of time-restricted eating — a form of fasting that limits food consumption to select hours each day — on weight loss in obese individuals.

Released: 14-Jun-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Nine UIC students named Schweitzer Fellows
University of Illinois Chicago

Nine University of Illinois at Chicago students have been awarded Schweitzer fellowships, a service learning program for health professional students committed to helping Chicago’s underserved.Named in honor of humanitarian and Nobel Laureate Dr. Albert Schweitzer, the fellowship encourages exceptional students in health and human service fields to serve the most vulnerable members of society, including the uninsured, immigrants, the homeless, returning veterans, minorities and the working poor.

   
Released: 14-Jun-2018 1:05 PM EDT
EEG can determine if a depressed patient will do better on antidepressants or talk therapy
University of Illinois Chicago

People react differently to positive events in their lives. For some, a small reward can have a large impact on their mood, while others may get a smaller emotional boost from the same positive event.These reactions can not only be objectively measured in a simple office evaluation, but researchers from the University of Illinois at Chicago report that they can help clinicians determine whether a patient with anxiety or depression is responding to treatment and if they will do better on an antidepressant drug, or in talk therapy.

11-Jun-2018 11:15 AM EDT
One-Third of US Adults May Unknowingly Use Medications That Can Cause Depression
University of Illinois Chicago

A new study from University of Illinois at Chicago researchers suggests that more than one-third of U.S. adults may be using prescription medications that have the potential to cause depression or increase the risk of suicide.

Released: 7-Jun-2018 5:05 PM EDT
UIC hosts STEM Academy summer camp for high school students
University of Illinois Chicago

UIC CHANCE program partners with ComEd for STEM camp

Released: 6-Jun-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Poor Sleep Efficiency Linked to Lower Cognitive Functioning in People with Diabetes and Prediabetes
University of Illinois Chicago

A study published in the journal Acta Diabetologica reports that people with diabetes and prediabetes who have lower sleep efficiency – a measure of how much time in bed is actually spent sleeping – have poorer cognitive function than those with better sleep efficiency.“The cognitive effects of poor sleep quality are worse for this population, which we know is already at risk for developing cognitive impairment as a result of having diabetes,” said Dr.

Released: 4-Jun-2018 11:05 AM EDT
Does stabilizing female hormones help lower suicide risk?
University of Illinois Chicago

A three-year, $750,000 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health will help researchers determine whether the stabilization of ovarian hormones estradiol and progesterone can help lower symptoms associated with suicidality among females at risk for suicide.While estradiol and progesterone rise and fall over the course of the menstrual cycle, the hormones plummet to their lowest levels just before and during menses.

Released: 4-Jun-2018 11:05 AM EDT
How Does Alcohol Influence the Development of Alzheimer’s Disease?
University of Illinois Chicago

Research from the University of Illinois at Chicago has found that some of the genes affected by alcohol and inflammation are also implicated in processes that clear amyloid beta — the protein that forms globs of plaques in the brain and which contributes to neuronal damage and the cognitive impairment associated with Alzheimer’s disease.



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