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  • Health

    One-tenth of medical residents feel unprepared

    Findings from a study suggest that gaps exist in the preparedness of physicians to manage the full range of patients, procedures and problems they may encounter. A surprising one in…

  • Campus & Community

    Resistance to antibiotics is reversed

    Infectious bacteria that have developed resistance to even the most potent antibiotics are making hospital stays increasingly hazardous. Take the drug vancomycin, for example, which used to be a last line of defense against virulent strains of enterococci and staphylococci that can be life-threatening. These bacteria continually develop new ways to beat vancomycin.

  • Health

    Resistance to antibodies is reversed

    It’s a frightening — and increasingly common — problem. A patient seeks treatment for a particular ailment in a hospital and develops an entirely different disease: a bacterial infection that…

  • Health

    Common aspirin reveals mechanism of insulin resistance

    In 1876, a German professor described a treatment that led to rapid improvement in two men who were suffering from what doctors now recognize as classic type 2 diabetes. In…

  • Health

    Cell death in eggs traced to smoking

    A woman is born with just so many egg cells, called oocytes. When she begins ovulating, she has about 400. Even though that may seem like a lot, considering the…

  • Health

    Sorting good eggs from bad ones

    An oocyte is an immature egg cell in the ovaries. Before a woman is born, her ovaries will contain about five million eggs. At birth, about three million of those…

  • Science & Tech

    Medicaid coverage for anti-AIDS drugs would be cost effective

    It’s long been said that “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” A new study from the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis applies the principle to treating…

  • Health

    Researchers discover new type of cancer

    A team led by a Harvard researcher has identified a new type of cancer that primarily affects young girls. Sara Vargas, an instructor in pathology at Harvard Medical School and…

  • Campus & Community

    Scientists identify chromosome location of genes associated with long life

    Researchers at Harvard-afilliated Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Children’s Hospital, and other institutions have pinpointed a region on human Chromosome 4 that is likely to contain a gene or genes associated with extraordinary life expectancy. Their findings, reported in the Aug. 28 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, may lead to…

  • Health

    Harvard scientists identify chromosome location of genes associated with long life

    Scientists have long thought of aging as a complex process affected by perhaps a thousand genes. So a recent discovery by Harvard scientists that a gene or genes located on…

  • Science & Tech

    In N.J. study, 43% of new teachers plan to leave teaching

    Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) researchers are studying the future of teaching through the Project on the Next Generation of Teachers. With the number of students growing across the…

  • Health

    Nutrition book author Willett rebuilds USDA food pyramid

    For more than 20 years researchers at Harvard and elsewhere have been looking at the long-term health effects of eating certain types of foods. These researchers now have a good…

  • Science & Tech

    U.S. stepped aside during Rwandan genocide

    Samantha Power, executive director of the John F. Kennedy School’s Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, conducted a three-year-long investigation into what the United States government knew, didn’t know, and…

  • Health

    Study shows obesity can increase risk of pancreatic cancer

    Each year almost 30,000 people in the United States are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. About the same number of people are killed by it. Pancreatic cancer is the fifth-leading cause…

  • Health

    Drug hits new molecular target in mice

    When doctors diagnose and plan treatment for breast cancers they look for various indicators of how aggressive they are and what treatments will work best. Two-thirds of breast tumors are…

  • Campus & Community

    Scientists explore antimatter

    It’s the rarest, shortest-lived matter in the universe. In fact, it’s antimatter – the opposite of matter. When the two meet, they annihilate each other in a burst of energy.

  • Campus & Community

    2001 Rappaport Public Service Interns

    Merrell Aspin is working as an intern with the Massachusetts Division of Medical Assistance in the Managed Care Program, where she is researching contracting issues for the divisions upcoming contracting process. She is a student at the School of Public Health (SPH).

  • Campus & Community

    Technology for educators

    Glenn Kleiman recalls the time his 7-year-old son asked him when color was invented.

  • Campus & Community

    Medical center and affordable housing are result of swap

    Harvard University joined Brigham and Womens Hospital and the nonprofit tenants organization Roxbury Tenants at Harvard in an unusual three-way land-swap agreement that will make way for a new medical center while preserving affordable housing in Bostons Mission Hill neighborhood.

  • Campus & Community

    Leadership takes faith-based route

    Forty-nine concerned citizens from all over the United States came to the Summer Leadership Institute (SLI), sponsored by the Divinity Schools (HDS) Center for the Study of Values in Public Life to train clergy, lay leaders, and community developers in inner-city economic improvement.

  • Campus & Community

    In Brief

    Biomedical trade show to be held next month The 2001 Biomedical Research Equipment and Supplies Exhibit will be held on Wednesday, Sept. 19, and Thursday, Sept. 20, from 9:30 a.m.…

  • Campus & Community

    Swanson’s work recognized

    This is how Jordan Swanson is spending his last summer as a Harvard undergraduate: June in Bangladesh as a U.S. State Department intern investigating human rights abuses, July and August in Thailand conducting malaria research.

  • Campus & Community

    A perfect day for a picnic

    Blue skies shone and balloons bobbed over Tercentenary Theatre on July 31, as Harvard University and the city of Cambridge welcomed nearly 1,000 Cambridge senior citizens to the 26th annual Harvard Yard Picnic.

  • Campus & Community

    Summer of study

    Summer school occupies one of the darkest chambers of high schools hall of horrors. Theres the shame of having failed a class – or several – during the year, the agony of waking up early and going to school on beautiful summer days, the ache of spending sultry evenings with homework assignments instead of with…

  • Campus & Community

    KSG sets up leadership program with Taiwan

    Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. of the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) and Taiwanese foreign minister Hung-mao Tien signed an agreement last month establishing the KSG-Taiwan Leadership Program. The new…

  • Campus & Community

    Talking about revolution

    During the late 18th and early 19th centuries, revolutions and rebellions were occurring at a rate that made established regimes tremble. In addition to the American Revolution of 1776, the French Revolution of 1789, and a dozen rebellions that swept across Europe from Italy to Ireland, there were slave insurrections in Surinam (1763) and Haiti…

  • Campus & Community

    Public service interns funded by institute

    Improving the quality of mental health services has been an abiding concern of Kennedy School student Joshua Rubin.

  • Campus & Community

    Keylatch Program opens door to fun

    They met dinosaurs and tigers, marched in a parade, sailed a boat, and traveled to an island.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard’s new PIN system goes into effect in libraries

    Beginning Sunday, Aug. 19, the HOLLIS Portal, a gateway to Harvard libraries electronic resources such as Lexis-Nexis, MEDLINE, OED, and all electronic journals, will institute a University-wide authentication system – the University personal identification number (PIN) service.

  • Campus & Community

    KSG service fellowship awarded

    The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) has awarded the prestigious Hassenfeld Public Service Fellowship for Rhode Island to Providence resident Caroline Benedict-Drew. The award carries a years tuition and stipend to study at the KSGs internationally acclaimed masters program in public administration.