Latest News from: Rutgers University-New Brunswick

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Released: 11-Feb-2021 10:40 AM EST
Handgun Ownership Associated with Firearm Suicide
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Handgun ownership, not shotgun ownership, is associated with greater odds of a person having died from self-inflicted gunshot wound rather than another suicide method, according to Rutgers researcher

Released: 10-Feb-2021 10:45 AM EST
Is it Safe to Get COVID-19 Vaccine while Pregnant?
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Justin Brandt, an assistant professor in the Division of Maternal Fetal Medicine at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and director of quality and safety for the department of OB/GYN, talks about the information provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and what pregnant women should consider when deciding whether to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

Released: 9-Feb-2021 11:05 AM EST
“Fake News” Went Viral After the Death of King James I
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Alastair Bellany, chair of Rutgers University-New Brunswick’s history department, discusses how the death of one early-modern English king spurred a viral conspiracy theory that, through pamphlets and word of mouth, contributed to the execution of the next king – and whether parallels can be drawn to our own age of QAnon-fueled and politically driven lies about everything from vaccines to election integrity.

Released: 9-Feb-2021 7:05 AM EST
“I’d Do It Again”
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers medical faculty who have received their second COVID-19 vaccination discuss their side effects and give advice for those still to be vaccinated

Released: 8-Feb-2021 3:00 PM EST
How Rocks Rusted on Earth and Turned Red
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

How did rocks rust on Earth and turn red? A Rutgers-led study has shed new light on the important phenomenon and will help address questions about the Late Triassic climate more than 200 million years ago, when greenhouse gas levels were high enough to be a model for what our planet may be like in the future.

Released: 5-Feb-2021 2:55 PM EST
Rutgers Expert Cautions Public to Stay Home for Super Bowl to Reduce COVID-19 Spread
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Professor Lewis Nelson, chair of emergency medicine at the Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, who has treated many COVID-19 patients, cautions the public that it would be best not to attend sizeable Super Bowl parties or events to help keep COVID-19 infections rates low.

     
Released: 4-Feb-2021 9:05 PM EST
Johnson & Johnson Seeks FDA Emergency Use Authorization for COVID-19 Vaccine
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers was the second-largest Phase 3 clinical research trial site for Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine, which applied for emergency use authorization today from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Released: 4-Feb-2021 2:50 PM EST
States with More Gun Laws Have Lower Youth Gun Violence, Rutgers Study Finds
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Gun violence among children is lower in states with more gun laws, according to a Rutgers-led study.

     
Released: 4-Feb-2021 6:00 AM EST
Deadly White-Nose Syndrome Changed Genes in Surviving Bats
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Scientists have found genetic differences between bats killed by white-nose syndrome and bats that survived, suggesting that survivors rapidly evolve to resist the fungal disease, according to a Rutgers-led study with big implications for deciding how to safeguard bat populations. White-nose syndrome has killed millions of bats in North America since 2006, following its introduction from Europe. The syndrome, caused by the fungal pathogen Pseudogymnoascus destructans, is arguably the most catastrophic wildlife disease in history. It has led to unprecedented declines in many North American bat species, including the little brown bat (Myotis lucifugus).

Released: 3-Feb-2021 8:05 AM EST
In Ethiopia, Mother’s Wealth More Protective Against Child Marriage Than Father’s
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

For a girl in Ethiopia, her mother’s wealth can protect her from becoming a child bride – but if a father prefers child marriage, his own wealth may increase the likelihood that she will be married before 18, according to a Rutgers University-New Brunswick study.

Released: 2-Feb-2021 6:05 PM EST
The Impact of the U.S. Re-engaging with the World Health Organization
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The United States will begin participating in an international collaboration to distribute COVID-19 vaccines more equitably around the world after President Joe Biden reversed the Trump administration’s withdrawal from the World Health Organization on his first day in office. Richard Marlink, the director of Rutgers Global Health Institute, discusses the impact COVAX, the global collaboration to accelerate the development, production, and equitable access to COVID-19 tests, treatments, and vaccines, will have on ending the COVID-19 pandemic and strengthening global health.

   
Released: 1-Feb-2021 2:30 PM EST
More Americans Worry That the Labor Market Won’t Improve for the Next Generation
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

More Americans think that jobs, careers and employment opportunities after the pandemic will be harder to obtain for the next generation than they were following the 2008 Great Recession, according to a new Rutgers report.

Released: 31-Jan-2021 3:05 PM EST
Social and Structural Factors, Not Biology, are Strong Influencers of Racial Disparities in COVID-19 Mortality
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

COVID-19 mortality racial disparities in the U.S. are associated with social factors like income, education and internet access, according to a Rutgers study.

Released: 27-Jan-2021 11:00 AM EST
Important Climate Change Mystery Solved by Scientists
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Scientists have resolved a key climate change mystery, showing that the annual global temperature today is the warmest of the past 10,000 years – contrary to recent research, according to a Rutgers-led study in the journal Nature. The long-standing mystery is called the “Holocene temperature conundrum,” with some skeptics contending that climate model predictions of future warming must be wrong. The scientists say their findings will challenge long-held views on the temperature history in the Holocene era, which began about 12,000 years ago.

Released: 27-Jan-2021 8:15 AM EST
Why People Overuse Antibiotics
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The overuse of antibiotics occurs due to the mistaken widespread belief that they are beneficial for a broad array of conditions and because many physicians are willing to prescribe antibiotics if patients ask for the medication, according to a Rutgers study.

Released: 25-Jan-2021 10:55 AM EST
Nuclear War Could Trigger Big El Niño and Decrease Seafood
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

A nuclear war could trigger an unprecedented El Niño-like warming episode in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, slashing algal populations by 40 percent and likely lowering the fish catch, according to a Rutgers-led study. The research, published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, shows that turning to the oceans for food if land-based farming fails after a nuclear war is unlikely to be a successful strategy – at least in the equatorial Pacific.

Released: 21-Jan-2021 10:55 AM EST
What Do the New Coronavirus Variants Mean?
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

New coronavirus strains — some more contagious than the prevalent strain — continue to be identified across the globe. David Cennimo, a pediatric infectious disease expert and assistant professor at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, discusses what we know about the new variants and how to stay safe.

Released: 14-Jan-2021 8:45 AM EST
Greenland Melting Likely Increased by Bacteria in Sediment
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Bacteria are likely triggering greater melting on the Greenland ice sheet, possibly increasing the island’s contribution to sea-level rise, according to Rutgers scientists. That’s because the microbes cause sunlight-absorbing sediment to clump together and accumulate in the meltwater streams, according to a Rutgers-led study – the first of its kind – in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. The findings can be incorporated in climate models, leading to more accurate predictions of melting, scientists say.

Released: 13-Jan-2021 12:20 PM EST
How the Covid-19 Pandemic Has Changed Clinical Trials
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Reynold Panettieri, vice chancellor for Translational Medicine and Science at Rutgers University, is available to discuss how the Covid-19 pandemic has changed how clinical trials are administered.

Released: 13-Jan-2021 6:05 AM EST
Effects of Head Trauma from Intimate Partner Violence Largely Unrecognized
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

While there is an abundant amount of research about traumatic brain injuries in athletes and those serving in the military, the same data is scarce when it comes to concussions and head and neck injuries sustained due to intimate partner violence.

Released: 12-Jan-2021 2:25 PM EST
New Report: Assessment of the Capitol Riots
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Rutgers’ Miller Center for Community Protection and Resilience and Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) released a report assessing the Capitol riots that took place on January 6, 2021.

Released: 11-Jan-2021 6:00 AM EST
Big Differences in How Coral Reef Fish Larvae are Dispersed
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

How the larvae of colorful clownfish that live among coral reefs in the Philippines are dispersed varies widely, depending on the year and seasons – a Rutgers-led finding that could help scientists improve conservation of species. Right after most coral reef fish hatch, they join a swirling sea of plankton as tiny, transparent larvae. Then currents, winds and waves disperse them, frequently to different reefs.

Released: 7-Jan-2021 8:05 AM EST
Art Institutions Celebrate Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Groundbreaking Artist and Rutgers Professor
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The performance and dis-assemblage artist Raphael Montañez Ortiz, a Distinguished Professor and the longest-serving Department of Art & Design faculty member at Rutgers University’s Mason Gross School of the Arts, has defined himself for more than a half-century as an avant-garde breaker of artistic boundaries. This month, as he turns 87, he is having a moment with honors from the Whitney Museum of Art, The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and El Museo del Barrio.

Released: 5-Jan-2021 6:00 AM EST
3D-Printed Smart Gel Changes Shape When Exposed to Light
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Inspired by the color-changing skin of cuttlefish, octopuses and squids, Rutgers engineers have created a 3D-printed smart gel that changes shape when exposed to light, becomes “artificial muscle” and may lead to new military camouflage, soft robotics and flexible displays. The engineers also developed a 3D-printed stretchy material that can reveal colors when light changes, according to their study in the journal ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

Released: 4-Jan-2021 6:00 AM EST
How to Identify Heat-Stressed Corals
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Researchers have found a novel way to identify heat-stressed corals, which could help scientists pinpoint the coral species that need protection from warming ocean waters linked to climate change, according to a Rutgers-led study.

Released: 22-Dec-2020 4:50 PM EST
Secondary Bloodstream Infections Associated with Severe COVID-19
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

People with severe COVID-19 and a secondary blood infection were significantly sicker upon hospital admission, had longer hospital stays and poorer outcomes, according to a Rutgers study.

18-Dec-2020 12:40 PM EST
Safe Gun Storage Counseling and Lock Distribution Could Lower Military Suicide Rate
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Military members who receive gun locks and lethal means counseling, which focuses on ways to limit a person’s access to specific methods for suicide, are more likely to use a gun safe and unload firearms before they are stored, according to the Gun Violence Research Center based at Rutgers

   
Released: 22-Dec-2020 12:55 PM EST
Financial Literacy Can Help with Long-Term Wealth
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

The road to financial literacy – and ultimately financial independence – is a long one. Embarking on this journey requires the right mindset and desire to improve continuously, according to John Longo, a professor of professional practice at Rutgers Business School-Newark and New Brunswick.

Released: 21-Dec-2020 8:00 PM EST
Antibiotics for C-sections Effective After Umbilical Cord Clamped
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Antibiotics for cesarean section births are just as effective when they’re given after the umbilical cord is clamped as before clamping – the current practice – and could benefit newborns’ developing microbiomes, according to Rutgers co-authored research. The study, by far the largest of its kind and published in the journal Antimicrobial Resistance & Infection Control, challenges current recommendations for antibiotic use. Administering antibiotics after clamping does not increase the risk of infection at the site of C-section incisions, the study concludes.

Released: 20-Dec-2020 5:10 PM EST
Exposure to Metals Can Impact Pregnancy
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Exposure to metals such as nickel, arsenic, cobalt and lead may disrupt a woman’s hormones during pregnancy, according to a Rutgers study.



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