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    Newswise: Hackensack Meridian Pascack Valley Medical Center Earns An ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group
    Released: 15-Nov-2024 12:05 AM EST
    Hackensack Meridian Pascack Valley Medical Center Earns An ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group
    Hackensack Meridian Pascack Valley Medical Center

    Hackensack Meridian Pascack Valley Medical Center earned an “A” Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group, an independent national nonprofit watchdog focused on patient safety. Leapfrog assigns an “A,” “B,” “C,” “D” or “F” grade to general hospitals across the country based on over 30 performance measures reflecting errors, accidents, injuries and infections, as well as the systems hospitals have in place to prevent them.

    Newswise: Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group
    15-Nov-2024 12:05 AM EST
    Keck Hospital of USC earns an ‘A’ Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group
    Keck Medicine of USC

    Keck Hospital of USC earned an “A” Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group, an independent national nonprofit watchdog focused on patient safety.

    Newswise: Hackensack Meridian Mountainside Medical Center Nurse Wins Research Award at ACC Quality Summit
    Released: 15-Nov-2024 12:00 AM EST
    Hackensack Meridian Mountainside Medical Center Nurse Wins Research Award at ACC Quality Summit
    Hackensack Meridian Health (Mountainside Medical Center)

    Alyssa Stolarik, RN, BSN, clinical coordinator of Cardiology at Hackensack Meridian Health Mountainside Medical Center, received the Second Best Research Poster Award at the American College of Cardiology (ACC) Quality Summit held in San Antonio, Texas. Her work, titled “Improving Compliance with Post-PCI Creatinine,” highlights significant advancements in the management of post-procedural care and patient outcomes. The research addresses the critical issue of acute kidney injury (AKI) post-percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), demonstrating a marked reduction in risk-standardized AKI rates, which significantly surpasses national benchmarks.

    Newswise: Breakthrough Idea for CCU Technology Commercialization from 'Carbon Cycle of the Earth'
    Released: 15-Nov-2024 12:00 AM EST
    Breakthrough Idea for CCU Technology Commercialization from 'Carbon Cycle of the Earth'
    National Research Council of Science and Technology

    The research team led by Dr. Hyung-Suk Oh and Dr. Woong Hee Lee at the Clean Energy Research Center at Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) has developed a silver-silica composite catalyst capable of reversible local pH control through a silica-hydroxide cycle, inspired by Earth’s natural cycles.

    Released: 14-Nov-2024 6:30 PM EST
    Launch of Nationwide Map Viewer and Database AIDS Wildfire Planning and Understanding of Treatment Effects
    Northern Arizona University

    The launch of the Treatment and Wildfire Interagency Geodatabase, known as TWIG, now provides an open-access platform where all federal fuel treatment and wildfire data can be viewed, downloaded and analyzed. This comprehensive data compilation enables users to assess, plan and monitor fuel treatment interactions with wildfires across boundaries.

    Release date: 14-Nov-2024 5:30 PM EST
    ASN Kidney Week 2024: Live Event
    American Society of Nephrology (ASN)

    ASN Kidney Week 2024 Live Event on Oct. 24th & Oct. 25th.

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    Newswise: Scientists Gain New Insights into How Mass Is Distributed in Hadrons
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 5:20 PM EST
    Scientists Gain New Insights into How Mass Is Distributed in Hadrons
    Department of Energy, Office of Science

    The trace anomaly is one of the quantities that encodes the energy and momentum of particles built from quarks. Scientists believe the trace anomaly is crucial for keeping quarks bonded in subatomic particles. In this study, scientists calculated the trace anomaly for nucleons and pions. The calculations show that in the pion, the mass distribution is similar to the charge distribution of the neutron and in the nucleon, the mass distribution is similar to the charge distribution of the proton.

    Released: 14-Nov-2024 4:55 PM EST
    MSU Expert: What the History of Lame-Duck Presidents Can Tell us About President Biden’s Final Actions
    Michigan State University

    Jordan Cash is an assistant professor of political theory and constitutional democracy at Michigan State University’s James Madison College. Here, he answers questions about the history of lame-duck presidents in the U.S. and what it suggests about how President Biden could spend his final days.

    Newswise: katie-wright.jpg
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:55 PM EST
    Helping Soldiers Serve on a Full Stomach
    University of Northern Colorado

    Cadet Wright is a Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) program member and a senior studying Nutrition and Dietetics at the University of Northern Colorado (UNC). She’s combining her two passions of serving her country and nutrition by learning how to properly meet soldiers’ dietary needs.

    Newswise: twm_spanish_572_enrique_bernales_albites_18_53.jpg
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:55 PM EST
    UNC’s Graduate School Waives Application Fee for Current Students and Alumni
    University of Northern Colorado

    In an effort to continue reducing barriers to higher education, the University of Northern Colorado (UNC) Graduate School will now waive application fees for all current UNC students and alumni. As opposed to having periodic application days every few months, application fees will be automatically waived for current and former UNC students. The application fee waiver applies only to the UNC Graduate School application. Any students applying to programs with a Centralized Application Service (CAS) application will still need to pay for the CAS application.

    Newswise: bear-pantry-rendering.jpg
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:45 PM EST
    Addressing Food Insecurity on Campus with Expanded Resources
    University of Northern Colorado

    In 2023, the United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Economic Research Service reported that 13.5% of U.S. households were food insecure at some point during the year. The USDA defines this as households that were uncertain of having, or unable to acquire, enough food to meet the needs of all their members due to insufficient money or other resources for food.

    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:40 PM EST
    MSU Researchers Receive $4m NIH Grant to Study Dementia Risks
    Michigan State University

    MSU researchers receive $4M NIH grant to study dementia risks

    Newswise: Publi
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:35 PM EST
    Smarter Blood Tests From MSU Researchers Deliver Faster Diagnoses, Improved Outcomes
    Michigan State University

    MSU researchers now can identify more proteins, or biomarkers, in blood plasma, including those linked to specific diseases like cancer. By identifying these biomarkers earlier, medical researchers can create better diagnostic tests and drugs that target diseases sooner, improving patient outcomes.

    Newswise: azzarello-nichols-headshot.jpeg
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:35 PM EST
    Better Typeface = Better Learning?
    University of Northern Colorado

    New Jersey native Caterina Belle Azzarello-Nichols earned an M.A. from the University of Northern Colorado’s Educational Psychology program. Continuing in the program as a doctoral student, she’s conducting research in mathematics readability and student educational dispositions.

    Released: 14-Nov-2024 3:00 PM EST
    E-Cigarette Residue Exposure in Utero Shows Lasting Effects on Immune Response
    American Physiological Society (APS)

    Results from a new animal study published in the American Journal of Physiology-Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology found that maternal exposure to e-cigarette residues, with or without nicotine, affected offspring’s immune response later in life.

    Newswise: Study Uncovers First Evidence of Resistance to Standard Malaria Treatment in African Children with Severe Malaria
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 2:45 PM EST
    Study Uncovers First Evidence of Resistance to Standard Malaria Treatment in African Children with Severe Malaria
    Indiana University

    An international team of researchers has uncovered evidence of partial resistance to artemisinin derivatives — the primary treatment for malaria — in young children with severe malaria.

    Newswise: Neuro-Oncology Experts Reveal How to Use AI to Improve Brain Cancer Diagnosis, Monitoring, Treatment
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 2:40 PM EST
    Neuro-Oncology Experts Reveal How to Use AI to Improve Brain Cancer Diagnosis, Monitoring, Treatment
    Indiana University

    An international team of neuro-oncology researchers and clinicians has released new recommendations for good clinical practice regarding the use of artificial intelligence methods to more accurately diagnose, monitor and treat brain cancer.

    Newswise: The Wistar Institute’s Education and Training Center Receives $100,000 NIIMBL eXperience Grant
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 2:40 PM EST
    The Wistar Institute’s Education and Training Center Receives $100,000 NIIMBL eXperience Grant
    Wistar Institute

    The Wistar Institute’s Hubert J.P. Schoemaker Education and Training Center was the recipient of a $100,000 eXperience grant from NIIMBL to support an immersive weeklong training program at the Institute.

    Newswise: Argonne to Explore Novel Ways to Fight Cancer and Transform Vaccine Discovery with Over $21 Million From ARPA-H
    Released: 14-Nov-2024 2:35 PM EST
    Argonne to Explore Novel Ways to Fight Cancer and Transform Vaccine Discovery with Over $21 Million From ARPA-H
    Argonne National Laboratory

    Argonne has received up to $21 million from ARPA-H to use AI and supercomputing in two projects: one targeting hard-to-treat tumors, and another aiming to create vaccines for multiple viral threats, including cancer and pandemics.

    Released: 14-Nov-2024 2:30 PM EST
    Editorial Warns of Heart Disease Risks Associated with Yo-Yo Dieting
    University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

    A new editorial – published in Nature – suggests that frequent fluctuations in diet, commonly known as "yo-yo dieting," can significantly increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. The authors, from the University of Pennsylvania Schools of Nursing and Medicine, describe how cycling between high-fat and low-fat diets in mice led to a substantial acceleration of atherosclerosis, a condition characterized by the buildup of plaque in arteries.



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