Curated News: Grant Funded News

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Newswise: SLU Clinic to Remove Barriers to Parkinson’s Speech Therapy in Missouri
Released: 11-Apr-2023 5:50 PM EDT
SLU Clinic to Remove Barriers to Parkinson’s Speech Therapy in Missouri
Saint Louis University

A Texas nonprofit clinic is collaborating with Saint Louis University's Paul C. Reinert, S.J., Speech-Language and Hearing Clinic, to help all residents of Missouri with Parkinson’s Disease access high-quality speech treatment.

Newswise: UTEP Researcher Receives Prestigious NSF Grant for Early-Career Faculty
Released: 11-Apr-2023 5:05 PM EDT
UTEP Researcher Receives Prestigious NSF Grant for Early-Career Faculty
University of Texas at El Paso

Alexander Friedman, Ph.D., assistant professor in the UTEP College of Science, received a $1.15 million grant from the National Science Foundation’s Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program. The funding will support his work on the neural mechanisms of decision-making.

Newswise: New approach targets norovirus, world’s leading cause of foodborne infection
Released: 11-Apr-2023 2:20 PM EDT
New approach targets norovirus, world’s leading cause of foodborne infection
Washington University in St. Louis

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have found a creative way to make a vaccine for norovirus, the leading cause of foodborne infections, by piggybacking on rotavirus, an unrelated virus for which there are already several highly effective vaccines.

Released: 11-Apr-2023 11:05 AM EDT
$9.5M to fund cross-disciplinary chronic fatigue research
Cornell University

A Cornell multidisciplinary research center that studies chronic fatigue syndrome has received a five-year, $9.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease – funding that will enable experts from disparate fields to work together on the mysterious and debilitating condition.

Newswise: TTUHSC El Paso Receives $50,000 Gift from El Paso Attorney Steve Ortega for Foster School of Medicine and Hunt School of Dental Medicine Scholarships
Released: 11-Apr-2023 10:00 AM EDT
TTUHSC El Paso Receives $50,000 Gift from El Paso Attorney Steve Ortega for Foster School of Medicine and Hunt School of Dental Medicine Scholarships
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

TTUHSC El Paso is addressing the region’s provider shortage by recognizing the importance of educating local students committed to serving their communities and improving access to health care in their hometown. Currently, 52% of TTUHSC El Paso students are from our Borderplex region.

Released: 11-Apr-2023 9:35 AM EDT
Financial toxicity of cancer impacts partners’ quality of life
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A cancer diagnosis can cause financial strain on patients as they cope with the cost of treatment and lost work. But what about their partners? A new study from University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center researchers surveyed the partners of colorectal cancer patients and found the financial impact of a loved one’s diagnosis also impacts the partner’s health-related quality of life.

Newswise: UAH researchers win awards totaling $750K to advance steps toward “holy grail” fusion clean energy project
Released: 10-Apr-2023 12:15 PM EDT
UAH researchers win awards totaling $750K to advance steps toward “holy grail” fusion clean energy project
University of Alabama Huntsville

Mechanical and aerospace engineering faculty at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) have won a pair of research awards totaling $750,000 to collaborate with the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) on research to advance knowledge toward one of the most sought-after goals of plasma physics, plasma fusion energy. This project marks the first experimental collaboration between the university and the LANL, helping to bring fusion and high energy density (HED) plasma research to UAH, a part of The University of Alabama System.

Released: 10-Apr-2023 12:10 PM EDT
Researchers use nanoparticles to target, treat inflammatory bowel diseases
Iowa State University

Researchers are designing nanoparticles to treat inflammatory bowel diseases such as such as Chron’s disease and ulcerative colitis. Key innovations are the design of self-assembling nanoparticles that carry drugs and naturally target inflamed colons. The nanoparticles could deliver relief to more than 3 million Americans who suffer from the diseases.

Newswise: UTEP to Investigate Pancreatic Cancer Risk Factors with $1M NIH Grant
Released: 6-Apr-2023 4:55 PM EDT
UTEP to Investigate Pancreatic Cancer Risk Factors with $1M NIH Grant
University of Texas at El Paso

The University of Texas at El Paso will undertake potentially transformative research on how specific risk factors promote pancreatic cancer development with support from a $1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health’s National Cancer Institute.

Newswise: Lab-Grown Fat Could Give Cultured Meat Real Flavor and Texture
Released: 5-Apr-2023 6:15 PM EDT
Lab-Grown Fat Could Give Cultured Meat Real Flavor and Texture
Tufts University

Researchers have developed a method to produce fat tissue grown from cells at large scale. The cultured fat will help add flavor and texture to cultured meat that more closely replicates the look, feel and taste of meat derived from farm animals.

Newswise: Projects to fight biological threats receive $5 million in federal funding
Released: 5-Apr-2023 3:50 PM EDT
Projects to fight biological threats receive $5 million in federal funding
Argonne National Laboratory

To help computer models better mimic reality, Argonne National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories will collaborate on agent-based modeling projects.

Newswise: IU researchers receive $8.6M NIH grant renewal to study alcohol use, binge drinking
Released: 5-Apr-2023 2:20 PM EDT
IU researchers receive $8.6M NIH grant renewal to study alcohol use, binge drinking
Indiana University

A multi-disciplinary team of Indiana University researchers is focusing their efforts on a growing public health concern: binge and “high-intensity” drinking—extreme drinking behaviors that are increasingly prevalent among college-age adults.

Newswise: IU neuroscientists lead new study laying groundwork for Alzheimer’s disease precision medicine
Released: 5-Apr-2023 2:15 PM EDT
IU neuroscientists lead new study laying groundwork for Alzheimer’s disease precision medicine
Indiana University

A 5-year, $41 million study will help researchers better understand the biological pathways underlying Alzheimer’s disease and ultimately create more personalized patient care through the development of a blood test for multiple pathways implicated in the disease – enabling earlier and less-invasive diagnosis.

Newswise: Modified Mediterranean Ketogenic Diet May Benefit Adults at Risk for Alzheimer's Disease
Released: 5-Apr-2023 1:30 PM EDT
Modified Mediterranean Ketogenic Diet May Benefit Adults at Risk for Alzheimer's Disease
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Following a Mediterranean-based ketogenic diet may decrease the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, according to a new study from scientists at Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

Newswise: Looking Beyond the Horizon
Released: 5-Apr-2023 12:45 PM EDT
Looking Beyond the Horizon
Texas Tech University

A Texas Tech professor receives a grant to help address a challenge for the U.S. Air Force.

Released: 4-Apr-2023 3:25 PM EDT
NIH Awards $8 Million to Wake Forest University School of Medicine’s Translational Alcohol Research Center
Wake Forest University School of Medicine

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), has awarded Wake Forest University School of Medicine a renewal grant of $8 million over five years for research on alcohol use disorder. With the support of the grant, the Wake Forest Translational Alcohol Research Center will build upon a highly productive translational alcohol research program that was established with prior support from the NIH.

Newswise: Traumatic Brain Injury Interferes with Immune System Cells’ Recycling Process in Brain Cells
Released: 4-Apr-2023 1:10 PM EDT
Traumatic Brain Injury Interferes with Immune System Cells’ Recycling Process in Brain Cells
University of Maryland School of Medicine

In a new study published in the January issue of Autophagy, they found that after traumatic brain injury, the brain’s immune system cells’ internal recycling function slowed dramatically, allowing waste products to build up and interfere with recovery from injury.

Released: 3-Apr-2023 3:00 PM EDT
Hackensack Meridian Health Awarded Nearly $477,000 for Medical Research and Community Health Projects
Hackensack Meridian Health

Hackensack Meridian Health has been awarded 16 grants totaling nearly $477,000 from the New Jersey Health Foundation (NJHF) for important research and community health projects.

Newswise: Keeping COVID-19 in check likely to require periodic boosters
Released: 3-Apr-2023 2:30 PM EDT
Keeping COVID-19 in check likely to require periodic boosters
Washington University in St. Louis

A study by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis shows that vaccinating people with updated boosters as new variants of the virus that cause COVID-19 emerge could shore up population immunity even as the virus mutates, and thereby prevent another deadly COVID-19 wave.

Newswise: Center for AIDS Research Receives $15 Million Renewal Grant From NIH
Released: 3-Apr-2023 2:00 PM EDT
Center for AIDS Research Receives $15 Million Renewal Grant From NIH
University of California San Diego

The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has awarded a five-year, $15.45 million grant to the San Diego Center for AIDS Research at UC San Diego, renewing support that extends back to an original establishing grant in 1994 at the height of the AIDS epidemic.

Newswise: AAOS Announces Call for Proposals for Inspiring Diversity, Equity and Access Projects Across Orthopaedics
Released: 3-Apr-2023 1:05 PM EDT
AAOS Announces Call for Proposals for Inspiring Diversity, Equity and Access Projects Across Orthopaedics
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS)

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) today announced a call for proposals for the AAOS IDEA Grant Program, a multi-year initiative to inspire diversity, equity and access across the field of orthopaedics. Now in its second year, the program will award $300,000 in 2024 to help address decades of inertia surrounding persistent disparities across orthopaedics and, in turn, better serve patients nationwide.

Released: 3-Apr-2023 11:55 AM EDT
Irvine Health Foundation’s $14 million grant to UC Irvine will establish 7 endowed chairs
University of California, Irvine

A $14 million grant from the Irvine Health Foundation to the University of California, Irvine will establish seven endowed chairs in the Program in Public Health to recruit and retain the field’s top academic leaders and experts, who will strive for health equity among all Orange County residents.

Newswise: Rising Temperatures Alter ‘Missing Link’ of Microbial Processes, Putting Northern Peatlands at Risk
Released: 3-Apr-2023 11:40 AM EDT
Rising Temperatures Alter ‘Missing Link’ of Microbial Processes, Putting Northern Peatlands at Risk
Georgia Institute of Technology

Georgia Tech researchers show that rising temperatures in northern regions may damage peatlands: critical ecosystems for storing carbon from the atmosphere — and could decouple vital processes in microbial support systems.

Released: 3-Apr-2023 8:50 AM EDT
Mount Sinai Awarded Prestigious $1.3 Million Grant to Expand Research Training Program in Skin Biology
Mount Sinai Health System

The Kimberly and Eric J. Waldman Department of Dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai will expand its research training program in skin biology with support from a five-year, $1.3 million T32 grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS).

Newswise: Packaging mRNA for the pancreas
Released: 31-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EDT
Packaging mRNA for the pancreas
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University are developing lipid nanoparticles that are designed to carry mRNA specifically to the pancreas. Their study in mice could pave the way for novel therapies for intractable pancreatic diseases, such as diabetes and cancer.

Newswise: New Borderplex Diabetes Initiative Announced by Paso del Norte Health Foundation, Hunt School of Dental Medicine
Released: 31-Mar-2023 10:00 AM EDT
New Borderplex Diabetes Initiative Announced by Paso del Norte Health Foundation, Hunt School of Dental Medicine
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso

New initiative looks to improve health care access across our Borderplex by helping prevent diabetes and empowering screened residents with appropriate resources. The program has been in operation since February 2023.

Newswise:Video Embedded new-study-offers-clues-to-how-cancer-spreads-to-the-brain
VIDEO
Released: 31-Mar-2023 9:40 AM EDT
New study offers clues to how cancer spreads to the brain
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

To understand the molecular processes that influence how cancer cells pass through the blood-brain barrier, researchers used two microfluidic chips that mapped cancer cell migration to the brain and looked at what was happening in the blood-brain niche.

Newswise: Five Researchers Awarded Pilot Project Funding
Released: 30-Mar-2023 5:45 PM EDT
Five Researchers Awarded Pilot Project Funding
University of Utah Health

Institutional Research Grants provide important financial support for new treatments and discovering valuable genetic information. This year’s grants fund the development of a new skin cancer detection and treatment device, as well as studies that analyze the relationship between cancer treatment and mental health, how cells detect and repair broken DNA, how metabolism affects cancer cells, and the possible link between leukemia, inflammation, and aging.

Newswise: Hemp or Marijuana? Forensic Chemist Receives Federal Funding for Rapid Test
Released: 30-Mar-2023 1:55 PM EDT
Hemp or Marijuana? Forensic Chemist Receives Federal Funding for Rapid Test
University at Albany, State University of New York

The U.S. Department of Justice is supporting the Musah Lab at the University at Albany with a $401,988 grant to develop and validate the test through December 2024.

Newswise: 20-Year Study May Upend Long-Held Theory About Chromosomes and Cancer
Released: 30-Mar-2023 1:20 PM EDT
20-Year Study May Upend Long-Held Theory About Chromosomes and Cancer
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say their 20-year study of more than 200 people with premature aging syndromes caused by abnormally short telomeres, or shortened repetitive DNA sequences at the ends of chromosomes, may upend long-held scientific dogma and settle conflicting studies about how and whether short telomeres contribute to cancer risk.

Newswise: $3.2 Million Grant Supports Study of New Genetic Testing Approach to Reduce Racial Health Disparities
Released: 30-Mar-2023 8:05 AM EDT
$3.2 Million Grant Supports Study of New Genetic Testing Approach to Reduce Racial Health Disparities
Rutgers Cancer Institute

With the aid of a near $3.2 million National Cancer Institute grant (R01CA277599) recently awarded, investigators from the state’s leading cancer program, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey,  and Georgetown University’s Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, both NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Centers, will work to close racial disparity gaps in cancer care delivery by examining a novel approach to genetic testing and care based on community identified needs.

Released: 30-Mar-2023 8:05 AM EDT
BD² Announces First $15 Million in Grants to Advance Genetic and Biological Understanding of Bipolar Disorder
BD²

BD²: Breakthrough Discoveries for Thriving with Bipolar Disorder today announced its first grants, totaling $15 million, to advance scientific understanding of the genetic and biological foundations of bipolar disorder.

   
Newswise: Groundbreaking Lymphoma Tumor Model Paves Way for New Therapies
Released: 29-Mar-2023 2:40 PM EDT
Groundbreaking Lymphoma Tumor Model Paves Way for New Therapies
Georgia Institute of Technology

Led by researchers at Georgia Tech, an interdisciplinary team bioengineered a synthetic tumor model to understand and then demonstrate how the tumor microenvironment impacts the effectiveness of targeted therapies for a specific type of lymphoma called Activated B Cell-like Diffuse Large B cell lymphoma (ABC-DLBCL). Their synthetic tumor model could change the game for designing and testing personalized cancer therapies.

Newswise: Method for improving seasonal flu vaccines also aids pandemic prediction
29-Mar-2023 1:05 PM EDT
Method for improving seasonal flu vaccines also aids pandemic prediction
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

The seasonal flu vaccine is less effective in some years than others. New St. Jude research showed one reason behind this lack of efficacy is the inclusion of flu strains with an unstable viral protein.

Not for public release

This news release is embargoed until 29-Mar-2023 2:00 PM EDT Released to reporters: 28-Mar-2023 1:50 PM EDT

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Newswise: Learning to love music
Released: 29-Mar-2023 1:10 PM EDT
Learning to love music
University of Delaware

Cross-college innovation helps children with autism while providing high-impact learning experience

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Medicine to Receive $21.4 Million to Advance Viability of Animal Organs for Transplants and Enable Human Clinical Trials
Released: 29-Mar-2023 1:00 PM EDT
Johns Hopkins Medicine to Receive $21.4 Million to Advance Viability of Animal Organs for Transplants and Enable Human Clinical Trials
Johns Hopkins Medicine

As part of the worldwide effort to facilitate a research and clinical pathway toward successful xenotransplantation — the transplantation of living cells, tissues and organs from one species to another — two Johns Hopkins Medicine surgeons, Kazuhiko Yamada, M.D., Ph.D., and Andrew Cameron, M.D., Ph.D., will receive a total of $21.4 million in funding over the next two years under two sponsored research agreements with biotechnology company United Therapeutics Corporation.

   
Released: 29-Mar-2023 12:05 PM EDT
DoD funds new project aimed at protecting global supply chains, infrastructure
Northern Arizona University

A new project led by Northern Arizona University, with various collaborators throughout the nation, will help the United States better protect the critical supply chain infrastructure and the supply chains that keeps the country and its economy running.

Newswise: FDA-approved drug shows promise in lab models for blinding childhood disease 
Released: 29-Mar-2023 12:05 PM EDT
FDA-approved drug shows promise in lab models for blinding childhood disease 
NIH, National Eye Institute (NEI)

A National Eye Institute-led team has identified a compound already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that keeps light-sensitive photoreceptors alive in three models of Leber congenital amaurosis type 10 (LCA 10), an inherited retinal ciliopathy disease that often results in severe visual impairment or blindness in early childhood.

27-Mar-2023 3:45 PM EDT
Ancient DNA Reveals Asian Ancestry Introduced to East Africa in Early Modern Times
Harvard Medical School

The largest-yet analysis of ancient DNA in Africa, which includes the first ancient DNA recovered from members of the medieval Swahili civilization, has now broken the stalemate about the extent to which people from outside Africa contributed to Swahili culture and ancestry.

Newswise: Sylvester Surgical Oncologist Awarded $375,000 NCI Grant to Investigate the Role Opioids May Play in Breast Cancer
Released: 28-Mar-2023 3:50 PM EDT
Sylvester Surgical Oncologist Awarded $375,000 NCI Grant to Investigate the Role Opioids May Play in Breast Cancer
Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center

Kristin Rojas, M.D., assistant professor of surgical oncology at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, has been awarded a three-year, $375,000 grant to investigate the role opioids may play in breast cancer.

Newswise:Video Embedded we-ve-learned-a-lot-from-lymphocytic-choriomeningitis-virus-now-the-time-has-come-to-fight-it
VIDEO
Released: 28-Mar-2023 3:25 PM EDT
We've learned a lot from lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus—now the time has come to fight it
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

There are no vaccines or therapies available for lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection. This pathogen spreads easily and is extremely common in people worldwide.

   
Newswise: UT Southwestern approved for $18 million for multicenter trial to improve postpartum care
Released: 28-Mar-2023 12:40 PM EDT
UT Southwestern approved for $18 million for multicenter trial to improve postpartum care
UT Southwestern Medical Center

Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have been approved for an $18 million funding award from the nonprofit Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) to investigate ways to improve postpartum health among primarily low-income Black and Hispanic women.

Released: 28-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EDT
New grant to reveal tillage effects on crop yield, farmland sustainability
College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Researchers from the Agroecosystem Sustainability Center (ASC) at the University of Illinois can detect soil tillage practices from space, weaving together data from ground images, airborne sensors, and satellites. Now, with a grant from the USDA’s National Institute for Food and Agriculture, they will expand on that work to produce more accurate estimates of tillage effects on corn and soybean yield, greenhouse gas emissions, nitrogen loss, and changes in soil organic carbon.

Released: 28-Mar-2023 10:05 AM EDT
$41 million federal grant to help Mayo Clinic, collaborators advance multiethnic Alzheimer’s research
Mayo Clinic

Alzheimer's disease affects people of all ethnic groups. Armed with $41 million in new federal funding, Mayo Clinic researchers and colleagues from 13 other institutions around the country are pursuing three multiethnic projects to identify targets for treatment.

Released: 28-Mar-2023 9:45 AM EDT
CWRU School of Nursing awarded $2.56M grant from The John A. Hartford Foundation for age-friendly care program in MinuteClinic at CVS locations
Case Western Reserve University

With a new three-year, $2.56 million grant from The John A. Hartford Foundation, the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing at Case Western Reserve University will evaluate improvements in care, economic impact and equity in outcomes of 1.2 million older adults receiving “age-friendly” care at MinuteClinics nationally.

Newswise: Cedars-Sinai Receives $140M Gift—Largest in Its History
Released: 27-Mar-2023 8:00 PM EDT
Cedars-Sinai Receives $140M Gift—Largest in Its History
Cedars-Sinai

Cedars-Sinai has received a gift of more than $140 million—the largest gift in the hospital’s 121-year history—from the estate of longtime supporters Susanne and Ervin Bard. This gift will propel clinical and research innovation in the medical campus’ newest building.

Newswise: Sanford Burnham Prebys researchers team up to discover potential pancreatic cancer drugs
Released: 27-Mar-2023 6:30 PM EDT
Sanford Burnham Prebys researchers team up to discover potential pancreatic cancer drugs
Sanford Burnham Prebys

Cosimo Commisso, Ph.D., and Susanne Heynen-Genel, Ph.D., have received a grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) to advance a new treatment approach for pancreatic cancer.

   
Released: 27-Mar-2023 12:45 PM EDT
UC Grant to Expand Pathways to the Professoriate for Underrepresented Minorities at UCLA School of Nursing
UCLA School of Nursing

The UCLA School of Nursing has been selected as a recipient of the UC Hispanic Serving Institutions Doctoral Diversity Initiative.

Newswise: In Bid to Make Child Cancer Treatments Safer, Scientists Find Possible Warning Signs of Severe Reaction
Released: 27-Mar-2023 12:10 PM EDT
In Bid to Make Child Cancer Treatments Safer, Scientists Find Possible Warning Signs of Severe Reaction
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Scientists seeking a way to eliminate an adverse reaction to treatments for acute lymphocytic leukemia, a common childhood cancer, have found what they believe to be an early warning indicator. Mouse studies conducted by Rutgers researchers as part of a larger scientific team are pointing to vitamin A levels as a signal that a patient may or may not be vulnerable to a dangerous toxicity.



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