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Released: 24-Mar-2020 12:05 PM EDT
Help line requests for food skyrocket as pandemic spreads
Washington University in St. Louis

In the first week since COVID-19 was designated a pandemic, requests for food pantries skyrocketed across the United States. Requests for home-delivered meals more than tripled in the same time period, said a Brown School researcher who tracks calls to 2-1-1 help lines across the U.S.Matthew Kreuter, the Kahn Family Professor of Public Health at Washington University in St.

   
Released: 24-Mar-2020 11:55 AM EDT
WashU Expert: Don’t overlook health equity during coronavirus crisis
Washington University in St. Louis

We must consider this coronavirus crisis as a wake-up call to prioritize equity and challenge ourselves to consider how to better serve historically underserved communities, says a public health expert at Washington University in St. Louis.“In the middle of a pandemic, it is easy to overlook health equity,” said Darrell Hudson, associate professor at the Brown School.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 11:50 AM EDT
WashU Expert: Coronavirus crisis highlights need for health insurance in Missouri and other states
Washington University in St. Louis

As the St. Louis region and the state of Missouri confront the coronavirus challenge, it has posed a number of serious issues for health policy analysts and health economists.“This is the most unprecedented challenge to the health system I have seen in my career,” said Tim McBride, the Bernard Becker Professor at Washington University in St.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 11:05 AM EDT
Michigan Medicine physician on the pandemic: “This is a marathon, not a sprint.”
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

Following Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer's “stay home, stay safe” executive order Monday, Michigan Medicine doctor shares his top three messages with the community.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 11:00 AM EDT
The Coronavirus: Communicating With Virtual Teams
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

The COVID-19 crisis has accelerated the number of teams working virtually. Here: tips for leaders of virtual teams on how to communicate expectations clearly, choosing the appropriate communication style and supporting a team from afar.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 10:50 AM EDT
Leading Mindfully: COVID-19 and the Big Human Pivot, Part I
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

What’s novel about COVID-19 isn’t just the coronavirus. It’s the sheer scale and depth of The Big Human Pivot that this tiny infectious particle has triggered. In unprecedented times, what can you do to lead mindfully through it? In this series, Lili Powell introduces a Leading Mindfully strategy: “see it, name it, tame it and reclaim it.”

   
Released: 24-Mar-2020 10:35 AM EDT
Is Your Organization Coronavirus Agile? 10 Tips
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

COVID-19 has sent us into a grand and growing telework experience. How do organizations, employees and leaders function in a world in which operations must continue but face-to-face may be impossible? Included: alternatives to in-person communication and physical contact, developing relationships virtually, and managing yourself and productivity.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 10:25 AM EDT
The Coronavirus and Managing Your Organization’s Response
University of Virginia Darden School of Business

The coronavirus has spread around the world rapidly. Here, one Darden professor examines the financial implications versus the ethical ones. What would an uncontrolled outbreak mean in the U.S.? What can we learn from China and Italy? And what questions should organizations be asking?

Released: 24-Mar-2020 9:40 AM EDT
Talking to your children about COVID-19
Texas A&M University

Dr. Krystal Simmons, clinical associate professor in the Department of Educational Psychology, studies school psychology and counseling. We spoke with her for advice on how to speak with your children during a public crisis such as COVID-19.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 9:35 AM EDT
COVID-19 just a problem for elderly people, right? Think again.
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

According to the CDC, based on the preliminary report on outcomes for patients in the U.S., when examining the age range of cases, the largest group with confirmed cases was ages 20-44 years old (29%). Among those hospitalized, adults ages 65-84 years old comprised over a third of patients, but young people were not immune; 1 in 5 of those needing hospitalization were between the ages of 20 and 44 years old. The CDC also reports that in cases with known outcomes, 20% of the deaths occurred in those ages 20-64 years old.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 9:00 AM EDT
COVID-19 Tip Sheet: Story Ideas From Johns Hopkins
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The following are various story ideas regarding the COVID-19 illness. To interview Johns Hopkins experts on these topics or others, contact [email protected].

Released: 24-Mar-2020 9:00 AM EDT
Kids Need Calm Not Chaos Amid Covid-19
University of South Australia

Elbow bumps in lieu of high-fives, segregated lunchtimes and hyper hand hygiene ¬– they’re are all a part of our children’s new reality in response to Covid-19. But while kids are seemingly adapting well to the changes, University of South Australia child development experts say adults need to be increasingly mindful of their own reactions to the pandemic and take care when explaining the situation to children.

Released: 24-Mar-2020 8:15 AM EDT
Do-It-Yourself Medical Devices, Protective Gear Fuel Battle Against COVID-19
Georgia Institute of Technology

The race is on to improvise ventilators, face shields, respirators, surgical gowns, and other health care gear to help the hundreds of thousands of people expected to swamp hospitals with waves of critical COVID-19 illness. Using 3D-printed parts, plastic-lined tablecloths, laser-cut gears and similar substitutions, a research team from the Georgia Institute of Technology is racing to develop “do-it-yourself” health care gear that can be assembled where it’s needed from components available locally.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 11:15 PM EDT
Wichita State University chemist working to develop antiviral drugs in fight against COVID-19
Wichita State University

Up until recently, COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) may have been a relatively new phenomena to the general public, but Wichita State University medical chemist Bill Groutas, two virologists from Kansas State University, and a physician/virologist from the University of Iowa have been working on a cure for coronaviruses for more than three years.

   
Released: 23-Mar-2020 4:50 PM EDT
Anesthesia professionals at high risk for exposure to COVID-19 should wear most-protective masks
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA)

Anesthesia professionals – who are in close contact as they help patients breathe through airway equipment – are at increased risk of exposure to COVID-19 and should wear N95 masks or similarly protective equipment in all diagnostic, therapeutic and surgical procedures, according to an updated statement from The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), the Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF), the American Academy of Anesthesiologist Assistants (AAAA) and the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists (AANA).

Released: 23-Mar-2020 4:20 PM EDT
Johns Hopkins APL Biologists Sequencing Genome of the Virus Causing COVID-19
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

Inside the molecular diagnostics laboratory at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore two biologists from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) are working alongside them. Peter Thielen and Tom Mehoke, members of APL’s Research and Exploratory Development Department, are waiting for the positive tests. Certainly, positive tests are no cause for celebration; but for Thielen and Mehoke, they are an invaluable sample — and a key to learning more about the rapidly spreading virus.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 3:50 PM EDT
Healthcare Leaders Highlight Need to “Raise the Line” of Healthcare Capacity In addition to “Flattening the Curve” of the Spread of COVID-19
LifeBridge Health

While healthcare and government leaders around the world are focused on “flattening the curve” of the spread of COVID-19, an emerging concurrent rallying cry to “raise the line” of healthcare service capacity is being showcased in a new educational video recently released and set for international distribution. LifeBridge Health, an academic community health system in Baltimore, MD, and Osmosis, an international medical education video platform, released the collaborative video aimed at educating both medical practitioners and the general public on the importance and practical ways to flatten the curve and raise the line of capacity.



Released: 23-Mar-2020 3:45 PM EDT
How and where to allocate stockpiled ventilators during a pandemic
Mary Ann Liebert

Key factors must be taken into account in determining the need for and allocation of scarce ventilators during a severe pandemic, especially one causing respiratory illness.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 3:15 PM EDT
FSU public health professor, students assist with statewide tracking effort
Florida State University

By: Mark Blackwell Thomas | Published: March 23, 2020 | 2:43 pm | SHARE: The coronavirus pandemic has left the state of Florida’s disease experts facing an event with no modern precedent. Officials working to track the spread of COVID-19 are stretched thin and faced with the inevitable prospect of more diagnoses, prompting them to reach out to public health experts and students at Florida’s universities for help.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 3:10 PM EDT
Staying Two Steps Ahead of the Coronavirus
Weizmann Institute of Science

A method of predicting the coronavirus spread – pioneered and developed by Weizmann Institute scientists – may enable authorities to focus efforts on areas where an outbreak is anticipated and relieve measures taken in others. Several countries, including the U.S., are adopting the new method

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:50 PM EDT
How Will COVID-19 Impact My Upcoming Surgery?
The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

If you or a loved one just had a scheduled cardiac or thoracic operation postponed because of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, you are not alone.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:45 PM EDT
Mount Sinai Developing an “End-to-End” Diagnostics Solution for COVID-19 That Incorporates Diagnosis, Treatment Selection, and Monitoring of Disease Course
Mount Sinai Health System

An expert team of researchers and clinicians have been working together to design, validate, and implement an “end-to-end” clinical pathology laboratory solution that will allow for the testing of approximately several hundred people per day in order to rapidly diagnose and help guide the selection of treatment and monitor disease course.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:35 PM EDT
ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers may increase the risk of severe COVID-19
Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center - New Orleans

James Diaz, MD, MHA, MPH & TM, Dr PH, Professor and Head of Environmental Health Sciences at LSU Health New Orleans School of Public Health, has proposed a possible explanation for the severe lung complications being seen in some people diagnosed with COVID-19.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:30 PM EDT
Allergies or COVID-19?
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist

How do you know if the nasal congestion and sneezing you’re experiencing is spring allergies or COVID-19?

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:25 PM EDT
A Message to Asthma Sufferers About a Shortage of Albuterol Metered Dose Inhalers
American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI)

Certain areas of the country are experiencing shortages of albuterol inhalers. There are options for asthma sufferers who can't get an inhaler.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:20 PM EDT
Cornell creates detailed COVID-19 website for food industry
Cornell University

To keep New York’s food processing industry safe during the COVID-19 pandemic, Cornell University’s Institute for Food Safety has created a comprehensive, practical and convenient website for commercial processors.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:10 PM EDT
Repeated novel coronavirus media exposure may be linked to psychological distress
University of California, Irvine

Irvine, Calif., March 23, 2020 – While government officials and news organizations work to communicate critical risk assessments and recommendations to the public during a health crisis such as the new coronavirus pandemic, a related threat may be emerging, according to researchers at the University of California, Irvine: psychological distress resulting from repeated media exposure to the crisis.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 2:05 PM EDT
Eating right and eating smart during COVID-19
University of Alabama at Birmingham

Worry, stress and anxiety that naturally come with a global pandemic can lead to stress eating and cravings.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 1:50 PM EDT
COVID-19 Workers get training to protect their own health
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)

Today, the National Institutes of Health will launch a new website with important educational resources for Coronavirus workers dealing with the spread of COVID-19. The initiative got underway after Congress passed a supplemental appropriation of $10 million on March 6.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 1:40 PM EDT
Campus rallies to 3-D print protective medical gear
Missouri University of Science and Technology

When representatives from Phelps Health, anticipating a shortage of protective masks due to the coronavirus outbreak, needed help, students, faculty and staff at Missouri S&T answered by harnessing the power of technology and ingenuity.Campus was abnormally quiet Saturday and Sunday, March 21-22, not only because it was the weekend before spring break but also because, due to the coronavirus outbreak, most students had moved out for the semester and a majority of faculty and staff prepared to work remotely.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 1:25 PM EDT
AACI Urges Immediate Implementation of Defense Production Act
Association of American Cancer Institutes (AACI)

The Association of American Cancer Institutes calls for the immediate implementation of the Defense Production Act to marshal American manufacturing to confront the COVID-19 emergency.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 1:05 PM EDT
Jefferson Lab Temporarily Suspends Operations
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

In an effort to minimize the risk to the Jefferson Lab workforce and in keeping with recommendations from national, state, and local authorities, the Department of Energy’s Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility is temporarily suspending operations.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 12:55 PM EDT
UNC Researchers Look to Next Generation Genetic Sequencing for Deeper Understanding of COVID-19
University of North Carolina School of Medicine

Next generation genetic sequencing – or next generation sequencing (NGS) – is becoming more common in research, although it still isn’t widely available. At the UNC School of Medicine, it is part of a research collaboration to better understand viral lung infections, including COVID-19 – the novel coronavirus sweeping the world.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 12:35 PM EDT
Zimmerli Art Museum Offers Virtual Tours, Demonstrations in Response to COVID-19
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

In response to coronavirus quarantines in New Jersey and nationwide, Zimmerli Art Museum at Rutgers–New Brunswick is taking steps to provide children and adults with online demonstrations, virtual tours and activities to keep the community productive during this period of uncertainty.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 12:25 PM EDT
Anxious About the COVID-19 Pandemic? New Study Shows Stress Can Have Lasting Impacts on Sperm and Man's Future Offspring
University of Maryland Medical Center

Prolonged fear and anxiety brought on by major stressors, like the coronavirus pandemic, can not only take a toll on a person’s mental health, but may also have a lasting impact on a man’s sperm composition that could affect his future offspring. That is the finding of a provocative new study published in the journal Nature Communications by researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 11:30 AM EDT
Rutgers Expert Discusses Development of New COVID-19 Test
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers Expert discusses his team’s role in developing the new rapid COVID-19 test and what it means in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

23-Mar-2020 8:45 AM EDT
UAH joins supercomputing effortto find drugs effective against COVID-19
University of Alabama Huntsville

A professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) is part of an effort led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) in Tennessee that applies the power of supercomputers to screen compounds for effectiveness against the pandemic COVID-19 virus.

Released: 23-Mar-2020 9:30 AM EDT
CEL-SCI to Develop LEAPS COVID-19 Immunotherapy in Collaboration with University of Georgia Center for Vaccines and Immunology
Cel-Sci Corp

Initial studies with COVID-19 coronavirus aim to replicate prior successful preclinical experiments of LEAPS against H1N1pandemic flu in mice conducted with National Institutes for Allergies and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)

   


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