Health
- The state is heading in the right direction, but still has a lot of work to do before it can remove all public health restrictions, such as mask mandates, researchers say.
- Researchers have created a platform that can develop effective and highly specific peptide nucleic acid therapies for use against any bacteria within just one week鈥攚ork could change the way we respond to pandemics and how we approach increasing cases of antibiotic resistance globally.
- The current COVID-19 pandemic and other disease outbreaks aren't just biological phenomena, a team of archaeologists argue鈥攖hese events are also shaped by the broader welfare of human societies.
- More than 70% of neurological diseases, including Alzheimer's disease and the concussion-related disorder CTE, are believed to be fueled by protein clusters called tau aggregates. A new study sheds light on how they damage brain cells, and could ultimately lead to new therapies for such "tauopathies."
- A study by 桃色视频 researchers suggests that thru-hiking, as on the Pacific Crest Trail, might decrease vascular health.
- 桃色视频 was the first site to roll out a federally-funded study led by the COVID-19 Prevention Network at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. Study leaders vaccinated 11 of the roughly 700 桃色视频 student volunteers who will ultimately participate.
- For nearly one year, a group of scientists and volunteers from across the university has met seven days a week, often sleeping just a few hours a night, to bring students back to campus safely.
- 桃色视频 researchers have led the way in understanding the COVID-19 pandemic, helping to reveal how the coronavirus spreads through tiny droplets, the importance of flattening 鈥渢he mental health curve鈥澛燼nd a lot more.
- New research finds that only one in five college students who tested positive for COVID-19 while living in residence halls infected their roommates.
- As supply increases, so do questions about how the COVID-19 vaccines work and what they do and don鈥檛 do. We caught up with Professor Matt McQueen, director of epidemiology, for answers.