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Mar 28, 2013

2009 Pew Scholar Shows Cells Can Naturally “Reprogram” Themselves

Ben Stanger, a 2009 Pew scholar and assistant professor at University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine, has demonstrated that cells can change their identities under normal conditions in the body. In a study published in Genes and Development, Dr. Stanger pinpointed the gene that allows the main type of liver cells in mammals to convert into the cells lining bile ducts.

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Source: Health Canal

Biomedical Research
Apr 2, 2013

2011 Pew Scholar awarded $1.13 million from NIH

Jeff Gore, a 2011 Pew Scholar and assistant professor of physics at MIT, has been awarded a four-year, $1,131,603 grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences – one of the 27 National Institutes of Health –  to pursue research into cooperation and cheating in the evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria.

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Source: MIT News

Biomedical Research
Apr 2, 2013

''Health Impact Assessments Take on Broader Role in Cities and States''

Aaron Wernham, director of the Health Impact Project discusses the benefits of health impact assessments in this edition of Governing.

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Source: Governing

Health Impact Assessment
Apr 2, 2013

''School Lunches: The New Battlefront in the War Against Obesity''

''With one in three American children considered overweight or obese — and the trend dangerously upward — the federal government has launched a new campaign this school year to strengthen nutritional requirements for school lunches."

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Source: The Miami Herald

School Food
Apr 2, 2013

2012 Pew Scholar Earns ARI Young Investigator Grant

Salil Lachke, a 2012 Pew scholar and assistant professor of biological sciences at the University of Delaware, has been selected by the Alcon Research Institute as a 2013 Young Investigator. As one of just eight researchers worldwide to receive the $50,000 grant, Dr. Lachke will continue his work on an online tool he created to discover genes related to glaucoma and other eye diseases.

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Source: UDaily

Biomedical Research
Apr 5, 2013

Do Healthier School Lunches Pass the Student Taste Test?

School meals may meet nutritional standards, but do they pass the student taste test?

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Source: WPSD

School Food
Apr 5, 2013

''Schools Hungry to Improve Taste, Nutrition of Lunches''

School foods are put to the "taste test" during an annual food event in Prince William County. Find out how students rated these nutritious meals.

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Source: USA Today

School Food
Apr 5, 2013

''Schools Recognized for Nutrition, Health Programs''

The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Healthier U.S. School Challenge honored eleven elementary schools for promoting a health learning environment through school nutrition and exercise.

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Source: The Garden City Telegram

School Food
Apr 6, 2013

''Viewpoints: Schools Need to Help Kids Eat Healthy''

''Whether we're relying on the school lunch or brown-bagging it, parents want to make sure our kids get a good, nutritious meal. Yet often the choices we make for kids can't compete against what the vending machines and à la carte lines have to offer.''

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Source: The Sacramento Bee

School Food
Apr 8, 2013

''It’s Time for Healthier Snacks and Beverages in Our Schools''

An opinion editorial written by Rep. Kim Norton discussing the need for USDA regulations to ensure children making healthy choices at school.

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Source: MinnPost

School Food
Apr 8, 2013

''Midlands Voices: Help students Choose Healthful Snacks''

John Skretta, superintendent of the Norris school district in Nebraska, writes an opinion editorial piece about the need for healthy snacks and beverages in schools.

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Source: Omaha.com

School Food
Apr 9, 2013

Dishing Up Grants for School Kitchen Upgrades

New standards for school meals could mean new changes to the equipment in school kitchens. Jessica Donze Black, director of Pew's Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project speaks to Education Week about the need for grant money for making these upgrades.

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Source: Education Week

School Food
Apr 9, 2013

The Junk Food Loophole in USDA's Regulations

Jessica Donze Black, director of the Pew's kids' safe and Healthful foods project speaks with the Los Angeles Times about a loophole in the USDA's new competitive foods rules that would allow junk food to be served in school cafeterias.

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Source: Los Angeles Times

School Food
Apr 14, 2013

2009 Pew Biomedical Scholar Charles Mullighan Helps Identify Mutations Linked to Brain Tumors

2009 Pew Biomedical Scholar Charles Mullighan was part of a research team at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital which recently found mutations responsible for more than half of a subtype of childhood brain tumors. Their paper in Nature Genetics pinpointed alterations in two genes that increased the risk of low-grade gliomas—the most common childhood tumors of the brain and spinal cord—and identified an existing drug as a possible treatment.

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Source: Herald Online

Biomedical Research
Apr 14, 2013

Pew Expert Says School Food Standards Are ''All Over the Map''

In the absence of a national policy, school snack food standards vary by state. Jessica Donze Black, director of the Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project, speaks with The Washington Post about this issue.

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Source: The Washington Post

School Food
Apr 15, 2013

''Groups Weigh in on Proposed School Snack, Vending Rules''

"High school students don't need to have access to caffeine on campus. Snacks sold at elementary and middle schools shouldn't have as many calories as those sold at high schools. And maybe schools shouldn't have vending machines or a la carte lunch lines at all."

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Source: Education Week

School Food
Apr 16, 2013

''Nashville Voices Take Concerns About Antibiotic Resistance to Washington''

Dr. Cecilia Di Pentima is in Washington, D.C., for “Supermoms against Superbugs” to push for laws to curtail the use of antibiotics in livestock farming — one of many fronts in the battle to preserve the effectiveness of the medicines. Family physicians in the South, including Tennessee, have also been identified as inadvertent purveyors of drug-resistant bacteria by prescribing too many antibiotics.

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Source: The Tennesseean

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Apr 17, 2013

''Lewiston Woman Sickened by Ground Beef Rallies Against Antibiotics in Meat''

A past bout of salmonella led Maine resident Danielle Wadsworth to travel to Washington, D.C. this week to argue for stronger regulations to curtail the use of antibiotics in livestock farming. She took part Wednesday in "Supermoms Against Superbugs," an initiative of the Pew Campaign on Human Health and Industrial Farming.

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Source: Bangor Daily News

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Apr 17, 2013

''Recipe for Success''

"Orange County Public Schools are continuing to offer up a host of different lunch options to students throughout the county, expanding their taste buds through different food choices."

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Source:

School Food
Apr 18, 2013

''Six Cent Increases Funding for School Nutrition''

"Marty Tatara has succeeded with 'Six Cent For Child' certification, which will increase federal funding for nutrition in Madison City Schools."

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Source: Madison County Record

School Food
Apr 20, 2013

''State Schools Set to Implement Updated USDA Guidelines''

"The USDA is updating the existing nutritional food standards set in 1979, which will require all snack foods sold in public schools to meet new health standards."

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Source: New Britain Herald

School Food
May 2, 2013

''Latham Renews Quest to Upgrade School Kitchens''

"Recent changes to the federal school lunch program require more fresh fruits and vegetables to be served, but many schools in Iowa and across the country lack the fridge space needed to store large quantities of fresh produce, the Republican lawmaker said."

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Source: Des Moines Register

School Food
May 6, 2013

''Pre-Ordering School Lunches Steer Kids To Healthier Meal Choices''

Jessica Donze Black, project director for Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project, is featured in Time magazine article about healthy school lunches.

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Source: Time Health & Family

School Food
May 6, 2013

''Bipartisan Bill Would Pay for School Kitchen Upgrades, Equipment''

Jessica Donze Black, director of the Pew Kids' Safe & Healthful Foods Project, speaks with Education Week about a bipartisan bill that would provide money for school kitchen upgrades.

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Source: EducationWeek

May 7, 2013

''Budget Cuts Won't Reduce Food Safety Inspections''

"The Food and Drug Administration will not reduce food inspections because of budget cuts, despite warning earlier that it could be forced to eliminate thousands of inspections by Sept. 30."

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Source: USA TODAY

Food Safety