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Released: 13-Sep-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Studies Deepen Understanding of LGBTQ Health Disparities
Harvard Medical School

Three new studies pinpoint challenges and opportunities for closing health disparities for LGBTQ+ people, showing how the convergence of political and social environments, structural inequities, and implicit and explicit bias within the medical system erode LGBTQ+ well-being.

Newswise:Video Embedded a-new-artificial-intelligence-tool-for-cancer
VIDEO
29-Aug-2024 5:05 PM EDT
A New Artificial Intelligence Tool for Cancer
Harvard Medical School

The new approach marks a major step forward in the design of AI tools to support clinical decisions in cancer diagnosis, therapy. The model uses features of a tumor’s microenvironment to forecast how a patient might respond to therapy and to help inform individualized treatments.

Newswise: Deadly Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus Is a Familiar But Formidable Foe
Released: 29-Aug-2024 12:30 PM EDT
Deadly Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus Is a Familiar But Formidable Foe
Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School virologist Jonathan Abraham has studied EEE virus in detail. In research published in Nature in 2022 and 2024, Abraham and team mapped the structure and behavior of the cell receptors — the entryways on the surfaces of cells — that allow EEE virus and similar viruses to infect their hosts and cause mischief.

Newswise: What Enables Herpes Simplex Virus To Become Impervious to Drugs?
26-Aug-2024 4:30 PM EDT
What Enables Herpes Simplex Virus To Become Impervious to Drugs?
Harvard Medical School

At a glance: New research explains how herpes simplex virus can develop resistance to antiviral medicines. Study shows that movements in specific parts of a protein that enable viral replication can alter susceptibility to drugs The findings answer long-standing questions about viral drug resistance and can inform new approaches to designing more effective therapies.

20-Aug-2024 7:05 PM EDT
How Thyroid Hormone Fuels the Drive to Explore
Harvard Medical School

Research in mice sheds light on how thyroid hormone alters wiring in the brain. Findings reveal that thyroid hormone syncs up the brain and body to drive exploratory behavior. Researchers say their work could illuminate new treatments for certain psychiatric conditions.

Newswise: New AI Tool Captures How Proteins Behave in Context
Released: 19-Aug-2024 8:00 AM EDT
New AI Tool Captures How Proteins Behave in Context
Harvard Medical School

In a marked advance over current AI models, the new approach captures how proteins act not in isolation but in their cellular and tissue environments.

Released: 12-Aug-2024 12:05 PM EDT
The Risks of Artificial Intelligence in Weapons Design
Harvard Medical School

Researchers outline dangers of developing AI-powered autonomous weapons

30-Jul-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Which Strains of Tuberculosis Are the Most Infectious?
Harvard Medical School

Highly localized TB strains are less infectious in cosmopolitan cities and more likely to infect people from the geographic area that is the strain’s natural habitat.

   
Newswise: What Will The New Cardiovascular Risk Calculator Mean For Patients?
25-Jul-2024 1:45 PM EDT
What Will The New Cardiovascular Risk Calculator Mean For Patients?
Harvard Medical School

If current guidelines for cholesterol and high blood pressure treatment remain unchanged, a newly unveiled heart risk calculator would render 16 million people ineligible for preventive therapy.

Released: 25-Jul-2024 1:05 PM EDT
How Evolution Tamed a Deadly Virus and Why We Should Still Worry
Harvard Medical School

Over the last century, a once-deadly mosquito-borne virus has evolved so that it no longer sickens humans. New research shows that changes in the virus’s ability to target human cells paralleled the decline in illness and death. The findings offer important lessons in virology that may help guide better preparedness for future outbreaks of other viral diseases.

   
Newswise: How Machine Learning Is Propelling Structural Biology
Released: 22-Jul-2024 2:05 PM EDT
How Machine Learning Is Propelling Structural Biology
Harvard Medical School

Cell biologist embraces new tools to study human development on the smallest scale

   
Newswise: Exploring Our Sense of Touch from Every Angle
Released: 11-Jun-2024 5:05 PM EDT
Exploring Our Sense of Touch from Every Angle
Harvard Medical School

Harvard Medical School researchers are studying one of the most mysterious — and most essential — senses

Released: 11-Jun-2024 11:00 AM EDT
2024 Warren Alpert Foundation Prize Honors Four Pioneers in CAR T-Cell Therapy
Harvard Medical School

At a glance: The four scientists developed genetically engineered immune cells to combat several blood cancers. CAR T-cell therapy has redefined the treatment of blood cancers, saving the lives of tens of thousands of people.

Released: 24-May-2024 10:05 AM EDT
What’s at Stake With the U.S. Supreme Court Case on Misinformation?
Harvard Medical School

Concerns over medical misinformation are not new, but the COVID-19 pandemic magnified long-simmering tensions over two fundamental concepts: Freedom of speech and the federal government’s responsibility to protect people from what it considers false and dangerous claims.

   
Released: 20-May-2024 11:05 AM EDT
Is a Global Pandemic Prevention Pact Within Reach?
Harvard Medical School

The World Health Organization’s governing body is scheduled to meet on May 27 to discuss a critically needed plan for global pandemic preparedness.

Newswise: Measuring Lung Function More Accurately and More Equitably
16-May-2024 1:30 PM EDT
Measuring Lung Function More Accurately and More Equitably
Harvard Medical School

Race-based assessments of lung function have historically assumed different levels of “normal” for different patient groups. New analysis shows that removing from lung function estimates would increase the number of Black patients diagnosed with serious disease.Greater estimated disease severity would change a patient’s diagnosis, disability compensation, eligibility for certain jobs.

13-May-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Study Reveals Mixed Public Opinion on Polygenic Embryo Screening for IVF
Harvard Medical School

Survey reveals nearly three-quarters of U.S. adults support using emerging technology to screen embryos during IVF for risk of developing certain health conditions or traits that arise from more than one gene. Only about one-third of respondents approved of using the technology to predict traits unrelated to disease. Nearly all expressed concerns about potential negative outcomes for individuals or society. Findings underscore need for public education about benefits, limitations, ethical hazards of polygenic risk scores for embryos.

Newswise: Turning to Artificial Intelligence to Disentangle the Exposome
Released: 13-May-2024 12:15 PM EDT
Turning to Artificial Intelligence to Disentangle the Exposome
Harvard Medical School

Understanding the human exposome — a person’s myriad health exposures over a lifetime — can reveal unknowns about diseases not explained fully by our DNA. Artificial intelligence will be indispensable in efforts to understand the role of biology and environment in disease and health.

Released: 6-May-2024 2:05 PM EDT
New Physicians’ Exam Scores Tied to Patient Survival
Harvard Medical School

How well a newly minted doctor scores on their medical board exam appears linked to patients’ odds of dying or being readmitted to the hospital. Findings offer reassurance that certification exams, which aim to demonstrate the competence of physicians, capture critical knowledge and clinical judgment skills for physicians.

Released: 17-Apr-2024 4:05 PM EDT
Telemedicine Can Help Change Care for the Better — If We Get the Rules Right
Harvard Medical School

Experts say pandemic-era rules that promoted telemedicine should be made permanent to protect gains in quality of care and greater access for millions of patients. New analysis shows enhanced telemedicine services led to higher quality of care and better access and only a modest increase in spending.



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