Media Coverage

# results: 76-100 of 465
Show items per page
Date Media Coverage Topic
Mar 5, 2013

''Construction That Focuses on Health of Residents''

The New York Times interviews Aaron Wernham, project director for the Health Impact Project, about the growing field of health impact assessments.

More


Source: The New York Times

Health Impact Assessment
Feb 28, 2013

2011 Pew Scholar Wins Paul Allen Distinguished Investigators Award to Unlock Fundamental Questions in Biology

Jeff Gore, 2011 Pew Scholar and assistant professor of physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has won the Paul Allen Distinguished Investigators Award to Unlock Fundamental Questions in Biology. The award, announced today by the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, provides $7.5 million in exploratory grant funding to a carefully selected group of scientists who will embark on five new pioneering research projects that aim to unlock fundamental questions in biology. Dr. Gore will use single-celled yeast to explore how ideas from game theory can provide insight into cellular decision making.

More


Source: The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation

Biomedical Research
Feb 27, 2013

''The Loophole That Keeps Precarious Medical Devices in Use''

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced last month that it will classify metal-on-metal hip implants as high-risk devices. That comes after the artificial joints were found to have failed at high rates, causing disability and meaning additional surgery for thousands of people. But hundreds of other potentially high-risk medical devices remain in use without what many consider to be adequate testing

More


Source: The Atlantic

Drugs and Devices at the FDA
Feb 25, 2013

2001 Latin American Fellow Wins Collaborative Activity Award

Sidarta Ribeiro, a 2001 Pew Latin American Fellow, with the Brazilian Society for Neuroscience and Behavior (SBNeC), wins a Collaborative Activity Award: Understanding Human Cognition from the James S. McDonnell Foundation.

More


Source:

Feb 25, 2013

2007 Pew Scholar Wins The Vilcek Prize

Dr. Michael "Micha" Rape, a 2007 Pew Scholar, has been named winner of The Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science for his work on ubiquitination, a process which "tags" damaged or bad proteins for destruction, as it relates to many diseases, including cancer or neurodegeneration.

More


Source: vilcek.org

Feb 21, 2013

''Children in U.S. Are Eating Fewer Calories, Study Finds''

"American children consumed fewer calories in 2010 than they did a decade before, a new federal analysis shows. Health experts said the findings offered an encouraging sign that the epidemic of obesity might be easing, but cautioned that the magnitude of the decline was too small to move the needle much."

More


Source: The New York Times

School Food
Feb 21, 2013

2009 Pew Scholar Identifies “Molecular Master Switch” for Pancreatic Cancer

Ben Stanger, named a Pew biomedical Scholar in 2009, co-authored a paper in Genes and Development describing a master regulator protein, which may explain the development of aberrant cell growth in the pancreas spurred by inflammation.

More


Source: EurekAlert

Biomedical Research
Feb 20, 2013

Pew Scholar Reveals Role of ''Braveheart'' Molecule

Laurie Boyer, named a Pew biomedical scholar in 2008, has helped uncover the functions of ribonucleic acids (RNAs) that don’t code for proteins. In a paper published in Cell, her MIT laboratory  demonstrated how a long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) they dubbed “Braveheart” stimulated the transformation of stem cells into heart cells.

More


Source: MIT News

Biomedical Research
Feb 19, 2013

''USDA Wants Healthy Fare in School Vending Machines''

"The USDA proposal, authorized by the 2010 Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, will require changes everywhere, said Jessica Donze Black, the director of the Kids' Safe and Healthful Foods Project at the Pew Charitable Trusts, in Washington."

More


Source: Education Week

School Food
Feb 14, 2013

2011 Pew Scholar Identifies Treatment Target for MRSA

Anthony Richardson, a member of the 2011 class of Pew biomedical scholars, has pinpointed the gene that makes one strain of antibiotic-resistant bacteria more infectious than others. In a study in Cell Host & Microbe, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill assistant professor proved that a single gene made one strain of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) impervious to a skin compound that kills off other strains. Manipulating that gene could provide a potential treatment target for all strains of MRSA.

More


Source: UNC Health Care

Biomedical Research
Feb 6, 2013

2011 Pew Scholar Uncovers Clues to Cancer and the Aging Process

2011 Pew Scholar Eros Lazzarni Denchi, an assistant professor at Scripps Research Institute, has uncovered the details of a protein that help keep chromosomes from sticking together. In a paper published online ahead of print in Nature, Dr. Denchi described how the protein TRF2 actively and passively suppresses DNA repair machinery that would fuse chromosomes together. This work has significant implications for our understanding of cancer and the aging process.

More


Source: Scripps Research Institute

Biomedical Research
Feb 4, 2013

''Let The Sunshine In: CMS Releases Transparency Rule''

"After 15 months of delay, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has finally released the long-awaited Sunshine Act rule, which establishes procedures for gathering and publishing data containing financial ties between physicians, teaching hospitals and drug and device makers, as well as group purchasing organizations."

More


Source: Pharmalot

Jan 31, 2013

Pew Scholar Awarded Novel Research Grant from The Lupus Research Institute

Deborah Lenschow, named a Pew biomedical scholar in 2008, has been awarded a three-year grant from the Lupus Research Institute. Out of nearly 100 applications submitted, the Washington University in St. Louis professor’s proposal to study interferon kappa was one of 12 chosen by the leading private research institution.

More


Source: Lupus Research Institute

Biomedical Research
Jan 30, 2013

2009 Pew Scholar Discovers Potential Key to Pain Prevention

2009 Pew Scholar Diana Bautista, an assistant professor of molecular and cell biology at University of California, Berkeley, was featured in the Daily Mail for her findings on the star-nosed mole. Her study of the animal’s nose, which is extremely sensitive, pinpointed genes linked to touch, identifying new treatment targets for chronic pain.

More


Source: Daily Mail

Neuroscience
Jan 29, 2013

Pew Scholar Featured in San Francisco Chronicle

Leor Weinberger, named a Pew biomedical scholar in 2008, discussed his virology research—programing viruses to attack themselves—in the San Francisco Chronicle.

More


Source: San Francisco Chronicle

Biomedical Research
Jan 20, 2013

2009 Pew Biomedical Scholar Charles Mullighan Identifies Possible Treatment of Childhood Leukemia

2009 Pew Biomedical Scholar Charles Mullighan discovers a possible treatment to childhood Leukemia while leading a study at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

More


Source: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Research Field
Jan 17, 2013

1989 Pew Biomedical Scholar Named Director of University of Minnesota's Center for Immunology

1989 Pew Biomedical Scholar Marc Jenkins, Ph.D., has been named director of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Immunology.

More


Source: Health Talk

Biomedical Research
Jan 17, 2013

2008 Pew Biomedical Scholar Finds New Method for Flu Prevention

NPR features 2008 Pew Biomedical Scholar, Ben tenOever, who has discovered a possible new way of preventing the flu vaccine.

More


Source: NPR

Biomedical Research
Jan 7, 2013

''After Year-Long Delay, FDA Proposes Major Regulations For Food Safety''

"For the first time in 70 years, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released two major requirements for improving food safety. On Friday, the FDA released two draft rule proposals for food safety that will allow the FDA to shift its focus on preventing, rather than simply reacting, to food borne illnesses."

More


Source: Time.com

Food Safety
Jan 7, 2013

''FDA Moves on New Food Safety Rules''

"The FDA proposed new rules today that would require US food distributors to implement additional measures to combat food-borne illness. The guidelines are aimed at improving food handling in both the agriculture and manufacturing sectors after a series of recent disease outbreaks in peanuts, cantaloupe, cheese, and leafy green vegetables that killed scores of Americans."

More


Source: abcnews.com

Food Safety
Jan 7, 2013

''FDA Releases Rules to Strengthen Safety of Food Supply''

"Looking for a little weekend reading? The Food and Drug Administration has just the thing. On Friday, the agency released two proposed rules designed to boost the safety of the nation's food supply, encompassing hundreds of pages. One rule covers operations at fruit and vegetable farms, focusing on those foods that we eat raw and have been the subject of several recent recalls."

More


Source: National Public Radio

Food Safety
Jan 7, 2013

'''New Era' in Food-Safety Rules to be Dished Out''

"After two years of delay, the Food and Drug Administration announced Friday, Jan. 4 that rules putting the United States at the forefront of food safety worldwide are finally moving forward."

More


Source: USA TODAY

Food Safety
Jan 7, 2013

''FDA Begins Implementing Sweeping Food-Safety Law''

"The Obama administration moved ahead Friday with the first major overhaul of the nation’s food-safety system in more than 70 years, proposing tough new standards for fruit and vegetable producers and food manufacturers."

More


Source: The Washington Post

Food Safety
Jan 7, 2013

''FSMA Regulations On Produce, Manufactured Food Finally Released For Public Comment''

The Food and Drug Administration released two of the five major regulations tied to the Food Safety Modernization Act for public comment on Friday, the second anniversary of the bill's passage. The newly released rules, arguably the most important two of the five, span a whopping 1,236 pages and regulate food safety protocols for produce and manufactured foods, respectively.

More


Source: Huffington Post

Food Safety
Jan 4, 2013

''F.D.A. Offers Sweeping Rules to Stop Food Contamination''

Sandra Eskin, director of the safe food campaign at the Pew Charitable Trusts, is interviewed by The New York Times about the new FDA rules to prevent food contamination.

More


Source: The New York Times

Food Safety