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8-Apr-2022 6:05 PM EDT
Adolescent drug overdose deaths rose exponentially for the first time in history during the COVID pandemic
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

The rate of overdose deaths among U.S. teenagers nearly doubled in 2020, the first year of the COVID pandemic, and rose another 20% in the first half of 2021 compared with the 10 years before the pandemic, even as drug use remained generally stable during the same period.

Newswise: L.A.’s injury rate from e-scooters may exceed national rate for motorcycles
4-Apr-2022 9:00 AM EDT
L.A.’s injury rate from e-scooters may exceed national rate for motorcycles
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

For a recent six-year period, the injury rate for riders of electric scooters in one section of Los Angeles was higher than the national rates for riders of motorcycles, bicycles and cars, and pedestrians.

Released: 5-Apr-2022 6:05 PM EDT
Primary Care Medical Home Found to Be More Effective Than Usual Care in Treating Patients with Serious Mental Illness
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A new study led by researchers at UCLA has shown that a specialized primary care medical home improved the care and treatment of patients with serious mental illness, resulting in better mental health-related quality of life.

Released: 28-Mar-2022 10:25 AM EDT
Layover or nonstop? UCLA Health research says unique pattern of connectivity lets highly creative people’s brains take road less traveled to their destination
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A new study led by UCLA Health scientists shows highly creative people’s brains appear to work differently from others', with an atypical approach that makes distant connections more quickly by bypassing the “hubs” seen in non-creative brains.

Newswise: UCLA’s HIV prevention and treatment center receives $7.5 million grant from NIH
Released: 17-Mar-2022 5:15 PM EDT
UCLA’s HIV prevention and treatment center receives $7.5 million grant from NIH
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

The National Institute of Mental Health has renewed its support for UCLA’s collaborative Center for HIV Identification, Prevention and Treatment Services, or CHIPTS, with a five-year, $7.5 million grant.

Released: 16-Mar-2022 3:50 PM EDT
UCLA researcher says focused research and treatment guidelines are needed to ensure ‘behavioral psychedelics’ help patients make lasting, positive change
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

psychedelics may find new, legitimate roles in treatment for anxiety, depression, stress disorders, addiction, and other mental and behavioral health problems. But ensuring they do requires developing rigorous, standardized methods to study and apply the results, according to a new report.

Released: 15-Mar-2022 4:55 PM EDT
Enrollment is complete for the largest national clinical trial on approaches for dementia care
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

The Dementia Care Study (D-CARE), a nation-wide clinical trial assessing the effectiveness of different approaches to caring for people with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, has reached its recruitment goal by enrolling 2,176 persons living with dementia and their caregivers

7-Mar-2022 8:00 AM EST
Researchers say treatment of long COVID could be hampered by lack of consensus in identifying and diagnosing the condition
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers say the challenges of treating long COVID are amplified by a critical issue: we do not know what constitutes long COVID or how to formally diagnose it, an issue that is further exacerbated by limited research data of varying quality and consistency.

Released: 3-Mar-2022 11:55 AM EST
Researchers find that a national housing and support program works to help homeless veterans
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers at UCLA Health have found that Housing First, a national program to provide housing and support for homeless persons, was effective in helping homeless veterans access housing and remain in their homes five years after it was implemented.

   
Newswise: Black overdose death rate exceeds white rate in U.S. for first time in 20 years
Released: 2-Mar-2022 3:45 PM EST
Black overdose death rate exceeds white rate in U.S. for first time in 20 years
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

In 2020, the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the rate of drug overdose deaths among Black Americans surpassed that of whites for the first time since 1999 — a sharp reversal of the situation a decade earlier, when rates were twice as high for whites as for Blacks.

Newswise: Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researcher urges caution on AI in mammography
Released: 25-Feb-2022 2:15 PM EST
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researcher urges caution on AI in mammography
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Analyzing breast-cancer tumors with artificial intelligence has the potential to improve healthcare efficiency and outcomes, but doctors should proceed cautiously, according to a new editorial in JAMA Health Forum co-written by Dr. Joann G. Elmore, a researcher at the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.

Newswise: UCLA Health seeks applicants for TechQuity – a health equity-focused innovation accelerator
Released: 17-Feb-2022 10:55 AM EST
UCLA Health seeks applicants for TechQuity – a health equity-focused innovation accelerator
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

UCLA Health, in partnership with BioscienceLA and UCLA Biodesign, has launched a new accelerator at the intersection of health equity and technology. Aimed at supporting long-term community health resilience and improvements in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, the UCLA Health TechQuity Accelerator seeks to bridge clinical excellence and innovation for diverse patient populations.

Released: 15-Feb-2022 5:40 PM EST
UCLA Health at CROI: Presenting the case of a woman with HIV-1 in remission following specialized stem cell transplantation for leukemia
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

UCLA researchers presented today the first case of a U.S. woman living with HIV-1 that is in remission after she received a new combination of specialized stem cell transplants for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The oral abstract was presented at CROI 2022, the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections.

Newswise: Teleheath Doctor Visits Rated Favorably by Patients During the Pandemic
Released: 15-Feb-2022 11:10 AM EST
Teleheath Doctor Visits Rated Favorably by Patients During the Pandemic
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

A survey of almost 60,000 Americans who had in-person or virtual telehealth appointments with a doctor in 2020 found that patients rated their experiences with virtual visits the same or even slightly better than seeing a doctor in person.

Released: 14-Feb-2022 5:00 PM EST
MRI-guided radiotherapy appears to lead to fewer side effects from treatment for prostate cancer
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

An interim analysis of an ongoing Phase III study from UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center indicates that using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to guide precisely-focused high-dose radiation treatment for prostate cancer reduced side effects associated with the treatment. The findings are being presented at the 2022 ASCO Genitourinary (GU) Cancers Symposium in San Francisco, Calif.

Newswise: UCLA Space Medicine Fellowship program aims to prepare next generation of flight surgeons
Released: 11-Feb-2022 11:15 AM EST
UCLA Space Medicine Fellowship program aims to prepare next generation of flight surgeons
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A newly launched UCLA Space Medicine Fellowship, the first of its kind in the U.S., aims to develop the next generation of flight surgeons who will support the health, safety, and well-being of human space flight and planetary expeditions.

Newswise: UCLA-led team launches new center to study Valley Fever
Released: 10-Feb-2022 7:00 AM EST
UCLA-led team launches new center to study Valley Fever
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A team led by UCLA researchers will receive a multi-million dollar grant to study why some people suffer from a devastating fungal infection called Valley Fever, while others suffer seemingly no impact from the disease.

Newswise: Ebola Vaccine Being Used in Congo Produces Lasting Antibody Response, Study Finds
Released: 8-Feb-2022 5:10 PM EST
Ebola Vaccine Being Used in Congo Produces Lasting Antibody Response, Study Finds
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

A new study by UCLA researchers and colleagues demonstrates that the Ebola vaccine known as rVSVΔG-ZEBOV-GP results in a robust and enduring antibody response among vaccinated individuals in areas of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) that are experiencing outbreaks of the disease. Among the more than 600 study participants, 95.6% demonstrated antibody persistence six months after they received the vaccine. The study is the first published research examining post–Ebola-vaccination antibody response in the DRC, a nation of nearly 90 million. While long-term analyses of the study cohort continue, the findings will help inform health officials’ approach to vaccine use for outbreak control, the researchers said.

Newswise: UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Announces The 47th Lester Breslow Distinguished Lecture
Released: 8-Feb-2022 12:25 PM EST
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Announces The 47th Lester Breslow Distinguished Lecture "Recognizing Opportunities"
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

Join the UCLA Fielding School of Public for the 47th Lester Breslow Distinguished Lecture. Dr. Roger Detels — distinguished research professor of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and infectious diseases at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA — will present opportunities realized that have contributed to advancing our understanding of disease pathogenesis as well as the shaping of public health policy and promoting of future public health leaders, both nationally and internationally. The event will be hosted by Dr. Ron Brookmeyer, dean of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

1-Feb-2022 7:00 AM EST
UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center scientists identify germline signature that predicts side effects from anti-PD1/PDL1 checkpoint therapy
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Investigators from UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center have identified a germline biomarker signature that successfully predicts which patients will suffer serious side effects that occur in up to three in 10 patients on anti-PD1/PDL1 therapy, a promising new approach to treating cancer.

Newswise: UCLA Health team develops new mouse model to shed light on the mystery surrounding Huntington’s disease onset
31-Jan-2022 11:00 AM EST
UCLA Health team develops new mouse model to shed light on the mystery surrounding Huntington’s disease onset
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers at the Jane and Terry Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA and the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA have developed a new mouse model of Huntington’s disease, providing new clues to the disease and giving researchers a powerful new tool to test new therapies engaging multiple targets.

Released: 31-Jan-2022 9:55 AM EST
Study shows visual stimulation influences cell formation
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Neuroscientists at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA in collaboration with scientists at UC Berkeley have discovered that visual stimulation not only guides the way brain cells connect, but actually influences the types of cells that form in the first place – something that was thought to be genetically programmed.

Newswise: Is it Possible to Improve Nutritional Health and the Environment in One Bite?
Released: 27-Jan-2022 6:05 AM EST
Is it Possible to Improve Nutritional Health and the Environment in One Bite?
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

In ‘Recipe for Survival: What You Can do to Live a Healthier and More Environmentally Friendly Life,’ scheduled for publication in January 2022, UCLA Fielding School professor Dr. Dana Ellis Hunnes provides “recipes” for improving personal and planetary health

   
Newswise: UCLA Fielding School Center for LGBTQ+ Advocacy, Research & Health Marks Its First Year
Released: 26-Jan-2022 12:25 PM EST
UCLA Fielding School Center for LGBTQ+ Advocacy, Research & Health Marks Its First Year
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

In it’s first year, the Fielding School’s UCLA Center for LGBTQ+ Advocacy, Research & Health (C-LARAH) has had impact across a spectrum of applied research and organizational work, focused on increasing equity for an underserved community.

Newswise: Use of Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab raises concerns about Medicare spending
Released: 24-Jan-2022 9:05 PM EST
Use of Alzheimer’s drug aducanumab raises concerns about Medicare spending
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A cost analysis of the controversial new Alzheimer’s disease drug aducanumab shows that ancillary care services account for nearly 20% of total Medicare costs related to the drug, or $6,564 per patient per year.

Newswise: Access to vital health services fell during COVID, particularly for poorer Americans
Released: 24-Jan-2022 4:25 PM EST
Access to vital health services fell during COVID, particularly for poorer Americans
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Some of the most socioeconomically disadvantaged patients — those with Medicaid or Medicare-Medicaid dual eligibility insurance — were far less likely than those with other insurance plans to return to using outpatient services at rates approaching normal, pre-pandemic levels.

Released: 21-Jan-2022 11:40 AM EST
Researchers led by UCLA Health call for more work to address overlooked issues affecting women with Parkinson’s disease
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers in a multi-institution study led by UCLA Health call for more research as well as customized treatments, education and support to empower women living with Parkinson’s disease to address their unmet medical needs.

Newswise: The Lessons of COVID-19, Two Years on
Released: 20-Jan-2022 2:45 PM EST
The Lessons of COVID-19, Two Years on
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health professor of epidemiology and community health sciences, addresses the issue of how the U.S. has coped with the pandemic

Released: 20-Jan-2022 12:00 PM EST
Hearst Health Forges Partnership with the UCLA Center for SMART Health to Offer the Hearst Health Prize in Data Sciences
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

The UCLA Center for SMART Health and Hearst Health, have announced a partnership to offer the Hearst Health Prize awarding data science initiatives that demonstrate a positive impact on health outcomes.

Released: 19-Jan-2022 8:05 AM EST
UCLA-led study finds no evidence of COVID-19 transmission through breast milk feeding
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A new study led by researchers at UCLA Health finds no evidence of SARS-CoV-2 transmission through breastmilk.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 5:05 PM EST
Genetics predicts toxic side effects to prostate cancer radiotherapy
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers led by a team from the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center used prostate cancer patients’ DNA to create a model that appears to predict who will have side effects from radiation.

Released: 13-Jan-2022 2:35 PM EST
Mouse study finds age, disease change body temperature rhythms
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A new study finds that while young and healthy mice show clear differences between daytime and nighttime body temperature rhythms, in older and diseased animals the difference essentially disappeared.

Released: 12-Jan-2022 3:05 PM EST
Removing brain cells linked to wakefulness and addiction may lessen symptoms of opioid withdrawal
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A study in mice led by UCLA researchers shows that removing chemical messengers in the brain that are involved in both wakefulness and addiction may make withdrawal from opioids easier and help prevent relapse.

Newswise: UCLA-led team refines ‘kick and kill’ strategy aimed at eliminating HIV-infected cells
Released: 11-Jan-2022 8:05 PM EST
UCLA-led team refines ‘kick and kill’ strategy aimed at eliminating HIV-infected cells
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

In a study using mice, a UCLA-led team of researchers have improved upon a method they developed in 2017 that was designed to kill HIV-infected cells. The advance could move scientists a step closer to being able to reduce the amount of virus, or even eliminate it, from infected people.

Newswise: Tomato concentrate could help reduce chronic intestinal inflammation associated with HIV
Released: 11-Jan-2022 5:30 PM EST
Tomato concentrate could help reduce chronic intestinal inflammation associated with HIV
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

New UCLA-led research in mice suggests that adding a certain type of tomato concentrate to the diet can reduce the intestinal inflammation that is associated with HIV. Left untreated, intestinal inflammation can accelerate arterial disease, which in turn can lead to heart attack and stroke.

Released: 11-Jan-2022 11:55 AM EST
Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers identify signaling mechanisms in pancreatic cancer cells that could provide treatment targets
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Research led by scientists at the Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center (JCCC) at UCLA provides new insights into molecular “crosstalk” in pancreas cancer cells, identifying vulnerabilities that could provide a target for therapeutic drugs already being studied in several cancers.

Newswise: New Research: Almost 400,000 Californians May Lack Access to Safe Drinking Water
11-Jan-2022 8:05 AM EST
New Research: Almost 400,000 Californians May Lack Access to Safe Drinking Water
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

An estimated 370,000 Californians rely on drinking water that may contain high levels of the chemicals arsenic, nitrate or hexavalent chromium, and contaminated drinking water disproportionately impacts communities of color in the state, according to a new analysis led by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of California, Los Angeles.

   
Newswise: What Public Health Crises Lessons
Have We Learned From the Pandemic (So Far)?
Released: 10-Jan-2022 1:55 PM EST
What Public Health Crises Lessons Have We Learned From the Pandemic (So Far)?
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

In ‘Public Health Emergencies: Case Studies, Competencies, and Essential Services of Public Health,’ published this month by Springer Publishing, Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health professor of epidemiology and community health sciences, writes that the pandemic offers the public – and public health specialists – ample lessons learned for the next public health crisis.

   
Newswise: Mental Health Conservatorships Can Result in a ‘Bottleneck’ Effect in Psychiatric Hospitals
Released: 5-Jan-2022 3:50 PM EST
Mental Health Conservatorships Can Result in a ‘Bottleneck’ Effect in Psychiatric Hospitals
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

At a time when public and private agencies and the legal system are grappling with how to best assist people who live at the intersection of homelessness and mental illness during a global pandemic, UCLA researchers have found mental health conservatorships for people with disabling, severe mental illness who are also homeless can result in lengthy psychiatric hospitalizations.

Newswise: UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center study details chromosome-level changes that allow melanomas to develop drug resistance
Released: 20-Dec-2021 2:55 PM EST
UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center study details chromosome-level changes that allow melanomas to develop drug resistance
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers led the development of a melanoma model of drug resistance, enabling them to study structures and dynamics resulting in intrachromosomal and extrachromosomal changes that support resistance in cancer cells.

Released: 17-Dec-2021 2:05 PM EST
Holiday Gatherings During COVID-19: A Q&A with Dr. Anne Rimoin
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

For those gathering with colleagues, friends, and family this holiday season, Dr. Anne Rimoin — UCLA Fielding School of Public Health professor of epidemiology and the Gordon-Levin Endowed Chair in Infectious Diseases and Public Health — shares tips about how to minimize risk.

9-Dec-2021 7:05 PM EST
UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers at ASH 2021 Annual Meeting and Exposition
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers from UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center and UCLA Health will participate in dozens of presentations at the annual meeting of the American Society of Hematology (ASH), held virtually and in person in Atlanta Dec. 11-14. A few of these are highlighted here.

9-Dec-2021 5:35 PM EST
UCLA-led study provides first indirect evidence that PSMA PET/CT surpasses conventional imaging in detecting occult prostate cancer spread and predicting long-term course and outcomes
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers at UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center led a large international study providing what is believed to be the first evidence (albeit indirect) that a recently approved imaging technique improves risk-stratification and long-term prognostic capabilities for patients with high-risk prostate cancer whose conventional imaging showed only localized disease.

Newswise: A longer-lasting COVID vaccine? UCLA study points the way
Released: 10-Dec-2021 12:10 PM EST
A longer-lasting COVID vaccine? UCLA study points the way
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Researchers at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA have identified rare, naturally occurring T cells that are capable of targeting a protein found in SARS-CoV-2 and a range of other coronaviruses.

Newswise: Natural infection and vaccination together provide maximum protection against COVID variants
Released: 7-Dec-2021 6:20 PM EST
Natural infection and vaccination together provide maximum protection against COVID variants
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A combination of vaccination and naturally acquired infection appears to boost the production of maximally potent antibodies against the COVID-19 virus, new UCLA research finds.

Newswise: Meth use, intimate partner violence weaken immune function in HIV-positive men
Released: 3-Dec-2021 4:05 PM EST
Meth use, intimate partner violence weaken immune function in HIV-positive men
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Among HIV-positive black and Latino men who have sex with men, the use of methamphetamine combined with intimate partner violence may increase the risk for developing chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease and other disorders.

Newswise: UCLA to Sponsor Conference Series on Climate Change and Public Health in California
Released: 29-Nov-2021 5:05 PM EST
UCLA to Sponsor Conference Series on Climate Change and Public Health in California
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

In the aftermath of the 26th UN Climate Change Conference of the Parties (COP26) this month, experts from the public and private sectors will meet Tuesday, Nov. 30, at UCLA to discuss the expected impact of climate change on the health of Californians.

   
Released: 29-Nov-2021 5:05 PM EST
University of California Team’s Research Suggests More Than 400 Hazardous Sites in California Face Flooding
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health

Unless climate change is slowed significantly, more than three feet of sea level rise (SLR) is expected in California by the end of the century, potentially flooding communities that are currently home to more than 145,000 residents. In addition to the threat to residential neighborhoods, new research suggests sea level rise will expose over 400 industrial facilities and contaminated sites in California, including power plants, refineries, and hazardous waste sites, to increased risk of flooding. Increased flooding can come with risks of contamination releases into nearby communities.

Released: 29-Nov-2021 10:50 AM EST
UCLA research shows why immune checkpoint blockade impedes but does not stop glioblastoma progression
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

Like locking the door but opening windows, an immune checkpoint therapy temporarily slows glioblastoma progression but fails to establish an effective anti-tumor microenvironment and appears to increase molecular interactions inhibiting long-term immune response.

Released: 24-Nov-2021 11:35 AM EST
New study shows that treating insomnia with cognitive behavioral therapy can prevent major depression in older adults
University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Health Sciences

A new study led by researchers at UCLA Health has found that cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT-I) prevented major depression, decreasing the likelihood of depression by over 50% as compared to sleep education therapy in adults over the age of 60 with insomnia.



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