Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Released: 14-Nov-2022 10:05 AM EST
Major financial pain follows major injury, study shows
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

The percentage of working-age people with medical debts so overdue that a collection agency has gotten involved, and the size of those debts, were both much higher in those who had suffered a traumatic injury serious enough to require a hospital stay in the last two years, compared with others like them.

Released: 14-Nov-2022 8:05 AM EST
Mount Sinai Researchers Building Database to Understand Racial Segregation and Its Impact on Patient Outcomes
Mount Sinai Health System

A team of equity researchers at Mount Sinai’s Institute for Health Equity Research (IHER) will use a $2.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to assess how unequal access to health care impacts patient health.

Released: 11-Nov-2022 9:55 AM EST
Penn Medicine Receives $3.5 Million NCI Grant to Improve Cervical Cancer Care in Botswana
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

Penn Medicine experts have worked with local partners to improve health care in Botswana for years. Now, a new $3.5 million grant from the NCI will help further that work by addressing one of Botswana’s most serious health challenges: cervical cancer.

Released: 10-Nov-2022 3:50 PM EST
Researchers bring eating disorder awareness to MO schools
Washington University in St. Louis

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has awarded researchers Ellen Fitzsimmons-Craft and Denise Wilfley a grant to help improve outcomes for eating disorders in adolescent girls.

Released: 10-Nov-2022 3:15 PM EST
EPA Awards $1 Million to UAlbany Researchers for Community Air Pollution Monitoring Projects
University at Albany, State University of New York

The projects are focused on enhancing air quality monitoring in communities across the U.S. in areas that are underserved, historically marginalized and overburdened by pollution, supporting President Biden’s Justice40 Initiative.

Released: 10-Nov-2022 1:20 PM EST
Department of Energy Announces $10 Million for Traineeships in Computational High Energy Physics
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Today, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced $10 million in funding for three projects providing classroom training and research opportunities in computational high energy physics to train the next generation of computational scientists and engineers needed to deliver scientific discoveries.

Released: 10-Nov-2022 11:55 AM EST
Dimension Inx and Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago awarded joint NIH grant to expand fertility restoration options
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago

Dimension Inx, a regenerative biomaterials company, and Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago have been jointly awarded an NIH Exploratory/Developmental Research Grant.

Released: 10-Nov-2022 10:55 AM EST
Smoking & drinking means higher surgery risks, but health coaching before surgery could help
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Two habits are riskier than one when it comes to surgery-related problems, according to a new study of cigarette and alcohol use before an operation. A second study shows coaching about drinking-related surgical risks in the weeks before their operation helped patients cut their drinking in half on average.

Newswise: NCCN Announces Funding for Bladder Cancer Research Projects, in Collaboration with Pfizer and EMD Serono
Released: 10-Nov-2022 8:30 AM EST
NCCN Announces Funding for Bladder Cancer Research Projects, in Collaboration with Pfizer and EMD Serono
National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®)

The National Comprehensive Cancer Network’s Oncology Research Program selects projects focused on improving patient care and outcomes in locally advanced or metastatic bladder cancer.

Newswise: Researchers Receive $3.2 Million to Study Efficacy of Mind-body Practices in Improving Pain, Surgical Outcomes
Released: 10-Nov-2022 8:05 AM EST
Researchers Receive $3.2 Million to Study Efficacy of Mind-body Practices in Improving Pain, Surgical Outcomes
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Can mind-body practices such as gentle yoga or self-reflection benefit patients undergoing surgery? It’s a question that researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine are examining with the support of a five-year, $3.2 million grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

Released: 10-Nov-2022 6:05 AM EST
Thirsty wheat needed new water management strategy in ancient China
Washington University in St. Louis

Research from Washington University in St. Louis shows that a practice of purposeful water management, or irrigation, was adopted in northern China about 4,000 years ago as part of an effort to grow new grains that had been introduced from southwest Asia. But the story gets more complex from there. Wheat and barley arrived on the scene at about the same time, but early farmers only used water management techniques for wheat.

Newswise: Green Tea and Resveratrol Reduce Alzheimer’s Plaques in Lab Tests
Released: 9-Nov-2022 2:45 PM EST
Green Tea and Resveratrol Reduce Alzheimer’s Plaques in Lab Tests
Tufts University

Using a 3D model of a network of living brain cells, researchers found that two common compounds—green tea catechins and resveratrol found in red wine and other foods—reduced the formation of amyloid plaques linked to Alzheimer’s disease

Newswise: Evolution of tree roots may have driven mass extinctions
Released: 9-Nov-2022 12:50 PM EST
Evolution of tree roots may have driven mass extinctions
Indiana University

IUPUI scientists have found evidence that the evolution of tree roots over 300 million years ago triggered mass extinction events through the same chemical processes created by pollution in modern oceans and lakes.

Newswise: National Institutes of Health awards Case Western Reserve University $7.3M for eye research
Released: 9-Nov-2022 12:45 PM EST
National Institutes of Health awards Case Western Reserve University $7.3M for eye research
Case Western Reserve University

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has awarded the Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) School of Medicine a five-year, $7.3 million grant to identify new technology, methods and models to study the impact of inflammation and pain on eye health, specifically the surface.

Newswise: Silicon nanochip could treat traumatic muscle loss
Released: 9-Nov-2022 11:05 AM EST
Silicon nanochip could treat traumatic muscle loss
Indiana University

Technology that can change skin tissue into blood vessels and nerve cells also shows promise as a treatment for traumatic muscle loss.

8-Nov-2022 4:40 PM EST
Rejuvenated immune cells can improve clearance of toxic waste from brain
Washington University in St. Louis

Rejuvenating the immune cells that live in tissues surrounding the brain improves fluid flow and waste clearance from the brain — and may help treat or even prevent neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s, according to a study by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

3-Nov-2022 1:05 PM EDT
Protected From a Form of Cell Death, Women are More Resilient to Kidney Disease
Duke Health

In the battle of the sexes, women beat men in their ability to recover from kidney injury, but the reasons are not well understood. A study led by Duke Health researchers provides some insights: Females, it turns out, have an advantage at the molecular level that protects them from a form of cell death that occurs in injured kidneys. This protection could be exploited as a potential therapeutic.

Newswise: FAU Awarded $1.8 Million Grant to Improve Pre-K English Proficiency
Released: 8-Nov-2022 8:30 AM EST
FAU Awarded $1.8 Million Grant to Improve Pre-K English Proficiency
Florida Atlantic University

“PRAISE, Preparing for Readiness and Academic Improvement for pre-School English Learners.” PRAISE is designed to improve the quality of instruction for English language learners and enhance educators’ ability to support preschool English language learners’ readiness for kindergarten. FAU is one of 44 institutions nationwide selected to receive this grant in 2022.

Released: 7-Nov-2022 3:45 PM EST
New Research Suggests Political Events Impact Sleep
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Researchers show how major sociopolitical events can have global impacts on sleep that are associated with significant fluctuations in the public’s collective mood, well-being, and alcohol consumption.

Released: 7-Nov-2022 2:00 PM EST
U of U Health Expands Efforts to Diagnose Rare Childhood Disorders
University of Utah Health

The Mark and Kathie Miller Pediatric Genomics Fund will contribute $3.6 million over the next five years to support a pair of pediatric genetic research programs at the Center for Genomic Medicine (CGM) at University of Utah Health.

Released: 7-Nov-2022 10:05 AM EST
After Showing Early Potential, Cholesterol Medication Fenofibrate Fails to Cut Severe Symptoms or Death in COVID-19 Patients
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania

After showing promise in early laboratory research, the cholesterol-lowering drug fenofibrate had no significant effect on COVID-19 outcomes in a multicenter international randomized clinical trial led by Penn Medicine scientists.

Released: 6-Nov-2022 9:15 AM EST
Largest Randomized Trial Evaluates Steroids for Infant Heart Surgery
Duke Health

For more than four decades, doctors have been split on whether giving steroids during a pediatric open-heart surgery could be helpful for post-operative recovery. A new study is providing a bit more clarity, suggesting there are some benefits for certain kinds of patients.

Released: 5-Nov-2022 10:30 AM EDT
Comparative Study of Two Heart Failure Drugs Finds No Difference in Outcomes
Duke Health

In a head-to-head comparison of two so-called ‘water pills’ that keep fluid from building up in patients with heart failure, the therapies proved nearly identical in reducing deaths, according to a large study led by Duke Health researchers.

Newswise: $50M Perot Family Gift Expands UT Southwestern’s Medical Scientist Training Program
Released: 4-Nov-2022 4:45 PM EDT
$50M Perot Family Gift Expands UT Southwestern’s Medical Scientist Training Program
UT Southwestern Medical Center

The Perot family, The Perot Foundation, and The Sarah and Ross Perot, Jr. Foundation have provided a transformative $50 million endowment for UT Southwestern’s Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP), among the nation’s elite programs that provide graduates a dual M.D./Ph.D. degree to strengthen the advancement of laboratory discoveries into the clinical arena. Funding will provide a permanent endowment for the Perot Family Scholars Medical Scientist Training Program – one of just 54 M.D./Ph.D. training programs in the country supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Released: 2-Nov-2022 5:50 PM EDT
Tip Sheet: $710.5 Million Gift to Support Cancer and Infectious Disease Research, ‘Skin-on-Chip’ Technology — and a New Approach to Bone Marrow Transplantation
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center

SEATTLE — November 2, 2022 — Below are summaries of recent Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center research findings and other news.

   
Newswise: UCLA Awarded a $21 Million Grant to Study the Health Impacts of the Aliso Canyon Gas Leak
Released: 2-Nov-2022 4:50 PM EDT
UCLA Awarded a $21 Million Grant to Study the Health Impacts of the Aliso Canyon Gas Leak
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

A team of UCLA researchers has been awarded $20,993,333 by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health to conduct the Aliso Canyon Disaster Health Research Study.

   
Newswise: Seeing the Immune System in Full Color
Released: 2-Nov-2022 2:10 PM EDT
Seeing the Immune System in Full Color
Sanford Burnham Prebys

The Flow Cytometry Core at Sanford Burnham Prebys is getting a new piece of state-of-the-art research equipment, thanks to a grant from the National Institutes of Health.

Newswise: Sanders-Brown researcher receives $1.7 million to study adverse effects of Alzheimer’s drugs
Released: 2-Nov-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Sanders-Brown researcher receives $1.7 million to study adverse effects of Alzheimer’s drugs
University of Kentucky

Donna Wilcock, Ph.D., of the University of Kentucky’s Sanders-Brown Center on Aging (SBCoA) was awarded a $1.7 million National Institutes of Health grant for her lab’s exploration of adverse effects of two new Alzheimer’s disease drugs — aducanumab and lecanemab —​ which have been shown to slow the progression of cognitive decline.

Newswise: AAOS Announces 2023 IDEA Grant Program Recipients
Released: 1-Nov-2022 1:05 PM EDT
AAOS Announces 2023 IDEA Grant Program Recipients
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS)

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) supports the importance of diversity, equity and access across the field of orthopaedics. As part of the AAOS’ commitment to leading and prompting real, lasting and measurable change, AAOS recently released the names of the inaugural AAOS IDEA Grant Program recipients.

Released: 1-Nov-2022 1:05 PM EDT
A Cooler Approach to Making New Materials That Can Stand the Heat
Lehigh University

High-entropy alloys are a new class of alloys that are composed of four or more metallic elements in approximately equal amounts.

Newswise: FAU Receives U.S. Department of Defense Grant for Powerful Imaging Tool
Released: 1-Nov-2022 8:30 AM EDT
FAU Receives U.S. Department of Defense Grant for Powerful Imaging Tool
Florida Atlantic University

Transmission Electron Microscopy is essential for studying the micro- and nanostructure of inorganic, organic and hybrid materials. In inorganic samples, the instrument reveals the orientation and internal structure of crystal lattices down to individual atoms, as well as defects, such as dislocations or grain boundaries. Transmission Electron Microscopy is the preferred method to directly measure the size, grain size, size distribution, and morphology of nanomaterials.

Released: 31-Oct-2022 4:35 PM EDT
AANA President-elect Receives $1 Million Grant to Study Racial Health Equity
American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology

Dru Riddle, PhD, DNP, CRNA, FAAN, president-elect of the American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology (AANA), is part of a group of researchers that recently received a $1 million grant to study racial health equity. The grant, awarded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, positions Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs) at the forefront of driving national healthcare policy.

Newswise: NCI Grants Awarded to IHV to Prevent Cancer and Improve Screening in Sub-Saharan Africa
Released: 31-Oct-2022 4:10 PM EDT
NCI Grants Awarded to IHV to Prevent Cancer and Improve Screening in Sub-Saharan Africa
University of Maryland School of Medicine

Institute of Human Virology researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine have received two five-year awards from the National Institutes of Health’s National Cancer Institute for a total of $7.5 million. One award aims to reduce the incidence of lung cancer and other cancers associated with using tobacco in Botswana. The other is focusing on improving screening and treatment of anal precancer in Nigeria. Both grants will make use of existing HIV treatment and prevention infrastructure in low- and middle-income countries to reach people living with HIV who are most at risk for these particular types of cancers.

Newswise: UIC Grant Will Increase Public Health ‘Boots on the Ground’ in Underserved Areas
Released: 31-Oct-2022 2:00 PM EDT
UIC Grant Will Increase Public Health ‘Boots on the Ground’ in Underserved Areas
University of Illinois Chicago

UIC is one of 29 institutions nationwide and the only institution in Illinois to secure a grant from the funds. UIC’s program will provide scholarships for in-state students who are committed to serving medically underserved communities throughout Illinois, with preference for those who come from traditionally underrepresented groups, specifically Black, Hispanic, Native American or tribal, and Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander students.

Released: 31-Oct-2022 1:15 PM EDT
Breast Cancer Research Foundation Renews Support for Mount Sinai Research on Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
Mount Sinai Health System

The Breast Cancer Research Foundation (BCRF) has renewed its funding to Elisa Port, MD, and Hanna Irie, MD, PhD, to study new therapeutic approaches that target aggressive triple-negative breast cancer. The latest installment of $225,000 brings the total to almost $2 million over the past nine years. It will fund research into the immune microenvironment of triple-negative breast cancer in order to identify new strategies to enhance cancer-fighting immune responses for this aggressive breast cancer, which traditionally has few options for treatment.

Released: 31-Oct-2022 12:05 PM EDT
Industry payments to physicians and advanced practice clinicians compared
Duke Health

A new study led by Duke Health found that advanced practice clinicians received more payments from drug companies, while physicians accepted more funds from medical device companies. The same proportion of each group accepted payments, but the physicians received a much greater sum.

Newswise: UA Little Rock Receives $800K NSA Grant to Expand Cybersecurity Education, Standardize National Curriculum Guidelines
Released: 31-Oct-2022 9:05 AM EDT
UA Little Rock Receives $800K NSA Grant to Expand Cybersecurity Education, Standardize National Curriculum Guidelines
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock, a leader in cybersecurity education, has received a nearly $800,000 grant from the National Security Agency (NSA) to expand a national cybersecurity education program for teachers, as well as develop a standardized curriculum to build pathways for cybersecurity education between high schools and colleges.

Newswise: FAU Nurse-Led Mobile Health Unit Will Bring ‘CARE’ Where It’s Needed Most
Released: 31-Oct-2022 8:30 AM EDT
FAU Nurse-Led Mobile Health Unit Will Bring ‘CARE’ Where It’s Needed Most
Florida Atlantic University

FAU researchers from the Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing have received a four year, $3.9 million grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for a nurse-led mobile health unit to create healthier populations in rural and medically underserved regions.

Newswise: Cedars-Sinai Awarded $8 Million to Launch New Stem Cell Clinic
Released: 28-Oct-2022 7:20 PM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Awarded $8 Million to Launch New Stem Cell Clinic
Cedars-Sinai

Cedars-Sinai has been awarded a five-year, $8 million grant from California’s stem cell agency to launch an innovative new clinic that will expand patients’ access to stem cell and gene therapies, increase research and training in regenerative medicine, foster greater collaboration with eight similar clinics across the state and help educate the public about stem cell and related therapies.

Newswise: Defect in Gene Caused Massive Obesity in Mice Despite Normal Food Intake
Released: 28-Oct-2022 4:45 PM EDT
Defect in Gene Caused Massive Obesity in Mice Despite Normal Food Intake
UT Southwestern Medical Center

A faulty gene, rather than a faulty diet, may explain why some people gain excessive weight even when they don’t eat more than others, UT Southwestern researchers at the Center for the Genetics of Host Defense have discovered.

Released: 28-Oct-2022 4:30 PM EDT
UA Little Rock Receives $150,000 NSA Grant to Host Cybersecurity Educational Program Across Arkansas
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has received a nearly $150,000 grant from the National Security Agency to hold a year’s worth of free cybersecurity educational events for junior high and high school students in Arkansas. UA Little Rock will partner with Philander Smith College to host the 2nd Arkansas GenCyber Strength Training camp in Arkansas, which will support the state’s long-term investment in secondary school cybersecurity education.

Released: 28-Oct-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Cleveland Clinic Receives $12 Million NIH Grant to Investigate Use of Inflammatory Cytokines in Personalized Cancer Treatments
Cleveland Clinic

Cleveland Clinic’s Lerner Research Institute was awarded a five-year $12 million grant by the National Cancer Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health, to define how cytokines - proteins produced during immune response - regulate inflammation and interact with cells and molecules surrounding tumors.

Newswise: Building a 3D Brain Atlas
Released: 27-Oct-2022 5:10 PM EDT
Building a 3D Brain Atlas
Texas Biomedical Research Institute

Texas Biomed will help map the developing brain with unprecedented detail for the National Institutes of Health’s BRAIN Initiative Cell Atlas Network (BICAN). NIH recently awarded a total of $500 million to 11 teams that will work together to build a 3D brain atlas at single cell resolution over the next five years.

Released: 27-Oct-2022 3:20 PM EDT
Collaborative Food Is Medicine Initiative Launches in Mississippi Delta
Tufts University

A new grant from the National Institutes of Health to the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University will fund the collaborative development of community-based programs to increase local production and consumption of fruits and vegetables in the Mississippi Delta.

   
Released: 27-Oct-2022 3:15 PM EDT
Study Shows Hazardous Herbicide Chemical Goes Airborne
Washington University in St. Louis

New research from the lab of Kimberly Parker at the McKelvey School of Engineering shows that amines, sometimes used as an additive in herbicides, can enter the atmosphere, where they pose risks for human health and alter the atmosphere.

   
Released: 27-Oct-2022 3:05 PM EDT
UCI Earns Designation as CIRM Alpha Clinic with Five-Year, $8 Million Grant
University of California, Irvine

Irvine, Calif., Oct. 27, 2022 — With a five-year, $8 million grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine, the University of California, Irvine has earned designation as one of CIRM’s Alpha Clinics. The goal of the statewide network is to accelerate the development of promising stem cell and gene therapies and expand patient access to them through clinical trials approved by the U.

Newswise: FAMU-FSU Professor Will Study Superfluid Helium with $1.25M Grant From Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Released: 27-Oct-2022 2:15 PM EDT
FAMU-FSU Professor Will Study Superfluid Helium with $1.25M Grant From Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
Florida State University

FAMU-FSU Associate Professor of mechanical engineering Wei Guo studies received a $1.25 million grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through its Experimental Physics Investigators Initiative for research into the properties of this superfluid helium.

Newswise: On the Trail of Missing Genes and Cancer Clues
Released: 27-Oct-2022 12:30 PM EDT
On the Trail of Missing Genes and Cancer Clues
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) researchers have made a major breakthrough in understanding how deletion of the genes that encode TET proteins can lead to cancer growth.

Released: 27-Oct-2022 11:00 AM EDT
With $7m Grant From NIH, UCLA Scientists to Study if Brain Stimulation During Sleep Can Bolster Memory
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

New research will aim to identify the electrical activity occurring as the brain receives information and then test whether targeted, gentle electrical stimulation can strengthen a specific memory.

Newswise:Video Embedded new-lassa-fever-therapy-may-be-on-the-horizon
VIDEO
24-Oct-2022 3:20 PM EDT
New Lassa Fever Therapy May Be on the Horizon
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

The LJI team plans to use their new map of the Lassa virus surface glycoprotein to design a much-needed vaccine.

   


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