Feature Channels: Race and Ethnicity

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Newswise: Diversity in Hospitality Gets a Boost from Troon
Released: 3-Mar-2022 12:05 AM EST
Diversity in Hospitality Gets a Boost from Troon
University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)

UNLV Harrah College of Hospitality receives $25K in scholarship funds from Troon golf company to help recruit minority and underserved students into hospitality program and across service industry.

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: Finding Resources for Colorectal Cancer Screening
Released: 1-Mar-2022 11:40 AM EST
Finding Resources for Colorectal Cancer Screening
Rutgers Cancer Institute

We know that colorectal cancer screening and early detection and prevention can save lives. Anita Kinney, PhD, shares what resources are available for colorectal cancer screening and how to learn more about them.

Newswise: Exploring Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Colorectal Cancer Screening
Released: 1-Mar-2022 11:30 AM EST
Exploring Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Colorectal Cancer Screening
Rutgers Cancer Institute

Significant disparities persist among some racial and ethnic groups in regards to screening for colorectal cancer. Rutgers Cancer Institute researcher Denalee O'Malley, PhD, focuses her research on this topic. She shares more.

Newswise: Why is Colorectal Cancer on the Rise in Younger People?
Released: 1-Mar-2022 11:20 AM EST
Why is Colorectal Cancer on the Rise in Younger People?
Rutgers Cancer Institute

Colorectal cancer has become prevalent among individuals younger than the age of 50 in recent years. Dr. Patrick Boland at Rutgers Cancer Institute shares what we know about this trend.

Newswise:  Black engineer awards distinguish Sandia Labs
Released: 28-Feb-2022 11:05 AM EST
Black engineer awards distinguish Sandia Labs
Sandia National Laboratories

Ten Sandia National Laboratories engineers received Black Engineer of the Year Awards this year, including Most Promising Scientist in Government, Research Leadership, Science Spectrum Trailblazers and Modern-Day Technology Leaders.

Released: 25-Feb-2022 3:05 PM EST
Biden nominee could shake up court’s liberal wing
Washington University in St. Louis

If President Joe Biden follows through on his promise to nominate a Black woman to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, longer-term change to the court is possible, based on voting patterns of Black female judges versus white male judges, suggests new research from Washington University in St. Louis.The study, “Replacing Justice Breyer,” suggests that in the near term, the court’s center of power is unlikely to shift to the left, given that the list of possible Biden nominees is ideologically close to Breyer.

Newswise: CSU’s Statewide Super Sunday to Highlight the Transformative Power of Higher Education
Released: 24-Feb-2022 6:05 PM EST
CSU’s Statewide Super Sunday to Highlight the Transformative Power of Higher Education
California State University (CSU) Chancellor's Office

All-time high number of African American students earned a degree from the CSU in 2020-21.

Released: 24-Feb-2022 4:40 PM EST
Nurse Anesthetists Highlight the Impact of Racism and Nursing
American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology

A national survey revealed racism remains a challenge across the nursing profession. Two members of the American Association of Nurse Anesthesiology (AANA) who were appointed to working groups for the study said that their participation in the survey was vital since, “at the end of the day, patient outcomes are impacted.”

Released: 24-Feb-2022 1:55 PM EST
Expert sources for your Ukraine-Russia conflict stories
Newswise

Expert sources for your Ukraine-Russia conflict stories

Newswise: TTUHSC Recognized as a Hispanic-Serving Institution
Released: 24-Feb-2022 1:45 PM EST
TTUHSC Recognized as a Hispanic-Serving Institution
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center President Lori Rice-Spearman, Ph.D., announced the U.S. Department of Education has recognized TTUHSC as a Hispanic-Serving Institution.

Newswise: UCI receives most applications in campus history for 2nd year in a row
Released: 24-Feb-2022 1:05 PM EST
UCI receives most applications in campus history for 2nd year in a row
University of California, Irvine

Irvine, Calif., Feb. 24, 2022 — The University of California, Irvine has received over 142,000 applications for fall 2022, setting a new record and continuing to solidify its position as one of the most desired schools in the country. A total of 119,165 aspiring freshmen applied for fall admittance to UCI, an increase of more than 11,000 from last year.

Newswise: SLU Geriatric Psychiatrist: African Americans at Highest Risk for Alzheimer's Disease
Released: 24-Feb-2022 12:45 PM EST
SLU Geriatric Psychiatrist: African Americans at Highest Risk for Alzheimer's Disease
Saint Louis University

Now that the holiday season has concluded, perhaps you’ve noticed the warning signs of Alzheimer’s disease or related dementia in aging family members. George Grossberg, M.D., the Samuel W. Fordyce professor and director of geriatric psychiatry at Saint Louis University School of Medicine, said it is during family gatherings that caregivers often notice older adults 65 and over may be slipping cognitively.

Newswise: Structural Racism Is a Public Health Problem. Measuring It Can Lead to Better Solutions
Released: 24-Feb-2022 9:30 AM EST
Structural Racism Is a Public Health Problem. Measuring It Can Lead to Better Solutions
Tufts University

Systemic racism is a well-established public health issue. But in order to understand state-by-state differences, Tufts public health researcher Michael Siegel needed a way to quantify structural racism at the state level.

Released: 24-Feb-2022 8:05 AM EST
COVID-19 in Pregnancy: Studying racial disparities and adverse birth outcomes
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A group of Michigan hospitals share data to better understand how COVID-19 risks affect diverse pregnant individuals, exploring both possible racial disparities and how COVID-19 may impact birth outcomes.

Released: 23-Feb-2022 12:15 PM EST
New American College of Rheumatology Initiatives Aim to Close the Gap on Racial Disparities in Lupus Clinical Trials
American College of Rheumatology (ACR)

The ACR is launching new initiatives to reduce racial disparities in lupus clinical trials: Training to Increase Minority Enrollment in Lupus Clinical Trials with CommunitY Engagement (TIMELY) and new Continuing Medical Education (CME) for dermatologists and nephrologists.

Newswise: Study on the effectiveness of telemedicine shows that limited English proficient, medically compromised patients face barriers
Released: 22-Feb-2022 5:05 PM EST
Study on the effectiveness of telemedicine shows that limited English proficient, medically compromised patients face barriers
University of California, Irvine

The benefits of telemedicine, which has seen a rapid expansion since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, benefited some sectors of the population, but research led by a researcher at the University of California, Irvine, shows that the benefits were not evenly felt across all race/ethnic groups. Limited English proficient, medically underserved patients faced several language and socioeconomic barriers that may have compromised the services’ effectiveness.

Newswise: SLU Transplant Team Enrolls Participants in National Kidney Study
Released: 22-Feb-2022 2:35 PM EST
SLU Transplant Team Enrolls Participants in National Kidney Study
Saint Louis University

African Americans have an increased risk of kidney failure, and new research shows that some of this risk is related to variations in a gene called apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1). Scientists will address racial disparities in kidney transplant outcomes.

Newswise: UA Little Rock Professor Investigates Domestic Violence Survivorship in Older African American Women
Released: 22-Feb-2022 1:35 PM EST
UA Little Rock Professor Investigates Domestic Violence Survivorship in Older African American Women
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

Dr. Jacqueline Burse, assistant professor of social work at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, has published an article sharing the experiences of older African American women who have survived domestic violence. Burse published the article, “Domestic Violence Survivorship Among a Sample of Older African American Women: An Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis,” in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

Released: 22-Feb-2022 8:05 AM EST
Structural Racism and Anti-LGBTQ Policies Can Impact Suicide Risk
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

High suicide risk, specifically among young Black gay, bisexual and other sexual minority men, may be associated with structural racism and anti-LGBTQ policies, according to a new Rutgers study.

   
Released: 18-Feb-2022 2:20 PM EST
Public administration should consider effects of whiteness, masculinity, as well as representation, researchers say
University of Kansas

For most of the nation's history, white men have held the vast majority of U.S. government bureaucracy jobs. One recent way to address that has been representative bureaucracy, or ensuring governing bodies are made up of people who reflect their communities.

Released: 18-Feb-2022 8:00 AM EST
How racialized trauma functions as a barrier to enjoying nature
Ohio State University

A new study shows that historical trauma – and the transgressions people engaged in to overcome barriers to outdoor recreation – shape many Black and Indigenous Americans’ views about using public lands for leisure.

Newswise: UA Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture Launches Online Exhibit Commemorating Arkansas’s First African American Optometrist
Released: 15-Feb-2022 6:10 PM EST
UA Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture Launches Online Exhibit Commemorating Arkansas’s First African American Optometrist
University of Arkansas at Little Rock

The Center for Arkansas History and Culture (CAHC) at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock has launched a new online exhibit exploring the life and achievements of Dr. William Townsend, a civil rights leader in Arkansas who was the first African American licensed to practice optometry in the state.

Newswise:Video Embedded interactive-exhibit-honors-the-legacy-of-the-university-of-miami-s-first-black-graduates
VIDEO
Released: 15-Feb-2022 1:05 PM EST
Interactive exhibit honors the legacy of the University of Miami’s first Black graduates
University of Miami

Made possible by a generous gift from University of Miami alumnus and trustee Johnny C. Taylor, Jr., the Taylor Family/UTrailblazers Experience includes a trove of archival materials from the period immediately after and beyond the institution’s desegregation.

Newswise: Multi-Country African Research Reports High Rates of COVID-19-Related Deaths Among Hospitalized Children and Adolescents
Released: 15-Feb-2022 11:55 AM EST
Multi-Country African Research Reports High Rates of COVID-19-Related Deaths Among Hospitalized Children and Adolescents
University of Maryland School of Medicine

African children and adolescents hospitalized with COVID-19 experience much higher mortality rates than Europeans or North Americans, according to a study conducted by the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and the Institute of Human Virology Nigeria.

Released: 14-Feb-2022 12:05 PM EST
Study finds racialized disenfranchisement affects physical health of Blacks
Florida State University

Higher levels of racial inequality in political disenfranchisement are linked to negative health outcomes in Black populations in the United States, according to a new Florida State University study.Assistant Professor of Sociology and Associate Director of the Public Health Program Patricia Homan, the study’s lead author, said it revealed that racialized disenfranchisement is accompanied by health problems including depression, physical limitations and disability.

   
Newswise: Supporting Asian American and Pacific Islander Students
Released: 11-Feb-2022 5:05 PM EST
Supporting Asian American and Pacific Islander Students
California State University (CSU) Chancellor's Office

AAPI students are finding support on campus as anti-Asian hate incidents surge in their communities.

Newswise: Meet 10 Members of the CSU Community Who Are Paving the Way for Social Justice
Released: 11-Feb-2022 10:20 AM EST
Meet 10 Members of the CSU Community Who Are Paving the Way for Social Justice
California State University (CSU) Chancellor's Office

The California State University is proud to hold the title of the nation's most diverse university. Nearly one-third of our students are the first in their families to attend college. Almost 50 percent are underrepresented minorities. And we provide more than half of all undergraduate degrees earned by California’s Latinx, African American and Native American students combined.

Newswise: Johns Hopkins Health System Adopts Race-Free Kidney Function Equation
Released: 10-Feb-2022 9:00 AM EST
Johns Hopkins Health System Adopts Race-Free Kidney Function Equation
Johns Hopkins Medicine

The Johns Hopkins Health System will no longer use a long-standing clinical standard that factors a patient’s race into kidney function tests.

Released: 9-Feb-2022 9:35 AM EST
Cleveland Clinic Study Highlights How Standardizing Care Leads to Equitable COVID-19 Outcomes in the ICU
Cleveland Clinic

A Cleveland Clinic study has shown there were no significant differences in rates of mortality or length of ICU stay between racial or ethnic groups hospitalized for COVID-19 at Cleveland Clinic facilities, during the first three waves of the pandemic. Findings from the study were published in the Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.

Newswise: Stewart’s research released in The Journal of American History
Released: 8-Feb-2022 6:25 PM EST
Stewart’s research released in The Journal of American History
Cornell College

Cornell College Professor of History Catherine Stewart’s research provides new clues to how Black domestic workers in Southern households during the Great Depression found ways to survive their jobs and enjoy their lives.

Newswise: Research reveals why more Black women die from breast cancer
2-Feb-2022 2:00 PM EST
Research reveals why more Black women die from breast cancer
Sanford Burnham Prebys

New research from Sanford Burnham Prebys has revealed significant molecular differences between the breast cells of white and Black women that help explain why Black women experience higher breast cancer mortality. The findings, published in the journal Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology, suggest that changing current diagnostic and treatment strategies could help address the disparity.

Released: 8-Feb-2022 1:55 PM EST
In-law, Interracial Marriage Experts Available For Valentine’s Day interviews
University of Maryland, Baltimore

University of Maryland School of Social Work experts can discuss themes of experiences of interracial marriage, Black fathers-in-law and sons-in-law relationships, and couples friendships

4-Feb-2022 10:00 AM EST
Overdose Deaths Caused by Opioids in Combination with Stimulants Hit Black Communities the Hardest
NYU Langone Health

In the first study of its kind, researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine and Wake Forest University School of Medicine analyzed the trend of rising opioid/stimulant deaths by racial/ethnic groups and by state. Findings indicated that while overdose deaths from opioids and stimulants rose across all racial groups and across the country, opioid/stimulant deaths among Black Americans increased at more than three times the rate as non-Hispanic white people—particularly in eastern states.

Released: 8-Feb-2022 9:05 AM EST
How can legacies of genocidal violence be reshaped for the better? Professor’s new book explores possibilities
Binghamton University, State University of New York

A new book by Binghamton University's Kerry Whigham explores the enduring impacts of genocidal violence and the varied ways in which states and grassroots activists respond to it in order to bring about social and political transformation.

Newswise: Machine Learning Uncovers Violence During Apartheid, Earns Top Honor from Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation for University of Kentucky Researchers
Released: 7-Feb-2022 10:30 AM EST
Machine Learning Uncovers Violence During Apartheid, Earns Top Honor from Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation for University of Kentucky Researchers
University of Kentucky

The $45,000 award will support the Bitter Aloe Project, which uses machine learning models to extract data from records produced by South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Released: 7-Feb-2022 10:05 AM EST
Online focus groups effective in data collection for low-income and minority populations
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Online focus groups are an effective way to gather data while also reducing barriers faced by people in low-income and minority groups, according to researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth Houston).

Newswise: UCI-led study finds disparities in undiagnosed hypertension among Chinese and Korean American Immigrants
Released: 4-Feb-2022 4:05 PM EST
UCI-led study finds disparities in undiagnosed hypertension among Chinese and Korean American Immigrants
University of California, Irvine

Chinese and Korean American immigrants who lack health insurance are at an increased risk of having hypertension, but not knowing it, according to a UCI-led study recently published in the Journal of Community Health. The study, led by corresponding author and assistant professor of health, society and behavior with the UCI Program in Public Health Brittany N.

Released: 4-Feb-2022 2:05 PM EST
Spanish-language vaccine resources harder to access, while Hispanic vaccination rates remain below overall average, study finds
University of Chicago Medical Center

Researchers at the University of Chicago Medicine found that when searching for vaccine information online, Spanish language resources took extra clicks to access compared to English language resources.

Released: 4-Feb-2022 10:05 AM EST
Black and Latinx Men Are Under-Represented in Online Prostate Cancer Resources
Wolters Kluwer Health: Lippincott

Despite their higher risks of advanced prostate cancer, Black and Latinx men are under-represented on websites and in online videos providing information and education regarding prostate cancer, reports a study in The Journal of Urology®, an official journal of the American Urological Association (AUA). The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio by Wolters Kluwer.

Released: 2-Feb-2022 8:05 PM EST
Crossing the New Jim Crow Color Line: Confronting Race in Community Service Learning Behind Bars
University of Redlands

A growing number of service-learning classes bring students into jails and prisons, stepping across what Alexander (2010) might call the new Jim Crow color line created by mass incarceration. Many of these courses are part of the innovative Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program, which brings inside and outside students together in a shared college class. Drawing on ethnographic observations, interviews, and 8 years of experience teaching Inside-Out courses, this article explores the ways students construct racial identities and understand racial hierarchies as they work together behind bars.

Newswise: Expert:  Flores lawsuit highlights lack of diversity among coaches, leadership in professional sports
Released: 2-Feb-2022 5:45 PM EST
Expert: Flores lawsuit highlights lack of diversity among coaches, leadership in professional sports
Washington University in St. Louis

Former Miami Dolphins Head Coach Brian Flores has filed a class-action lawsuit against the National Football League and three of its teams for alleged racial discrimination.The lawsuit shines a light on the lack of diversity among head coaches and leadership in professional sports, according to Patrick Rishe, director of the sports business program at Olin Business School.



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