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Multifaceted approach key to eradicating malaria
Throughout the twentieth century, researchers hoped to discover a “magic bullet” to cure malaria. But today experts realize that efforts to curb or eradicate the mosquito-borne disease must be multifaceted, from…

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Multiple micronutrient supplements to mothers improve survival for newborn girls
Multiple micronutrient (MMN) supplements given to pregnant women reduced deaths among female newborns and provided better birth outcomes than iron and folic acid supplements alone, especially among anemic and undernourished women, according…
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2017 HAA Award recipients announced
The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) Awards were established in 1990 to recognize outstanding service to Harvard University through alumni activities. This year’s awards ceremony was held Oct. 26, during the…
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2017 Aloian Memorial Scholarship winners announced
The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) has named Aldís Elfarsdóttir ’18 of Eliot House and Hannah Smati ’18 of Adams House this year’s David and Mimi Aloian Memorial Scholars. Each year,…

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Phillips Brooks House to host Public Service Recruiting Day Oct. 27
On Friday, Oct. 27, Harvard College will host Public Service Recruiting Day, aimed at matching public service employers with students interested in beginning public service oriented careers. Nearly 20 diverse…
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Harvard, collaborators receive $64.7 million NIH grant to build a detailed brain map
Researchers from Harvard will be part of an ambitious new initiative to develop a better understanding of the brain. Neuroscientists have dreamed for years of understanding the role that each…

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Faculty Council meeting — Oct. 25, 2017
On Oct. 25 the members of the Faculty Council discussed a motion by Professor Danielle Allen. They also discussed legislation on the timing of the meetings of the Faculty, on…
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Dentistry behind bars: Harvard dental students provide care to the incarcerated
Of the more than two million incarcerated Americans, many suffer from chronic health conditions, disease, and substance-use disorders, however some of their most urgent health concerns can be a throbbing…

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Askwith Essentials: Learning to Change the World
Our motto at Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) is “Learn to Change the World,” and as part of Worldwide Week at Harvard, we are celebrating and showcasing HGSE’s global presence and…

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Three million Americans may carry loaded handgun daily
An estimated three million Americans carry a loaded firearm daily, and an estimated nine million do so on a monthly basis, according to new study from the University of Washington…
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University Choir alumni reunite to make music in Memorial Church
Generations of Harvard University Choir member voices filled the sanctuary, Appleton Chapel and even the hallways of Memorial Church last weekend in a musical reunion of Harvard’s celebrated chorus. More…

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Seeing White live podcast performance at the Harvard Ed Portal
Last week’s “Seeing White” live podcast performance at the Harvard Ed Portal brought together Allston-Brighton community members, followers of event co-sponsors podcast Teaching While White and the PRX Podcast Garage,…

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Obesity rate soars in American adults and youth
Approximately 40 percent of U.S. adults and about 20 percent of adolescents are obese, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report. This is the highest obesity rate…
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Harvard establishes strategic research alliance with Servier
Agreement supports collaborative advancement of research in a range of therapeutic areas by researchers from across Harvard Harvard University has established a 3-year strategic research alliance with Servier to support…
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Aging, longevity the focus at annual School of Public Health Alumni Weekend
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health alumni returned to campus for their annual weekend Oct. 13-15, 2017 where they heard about public health perspectives on aging and longevity from…
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Millions die in pain each year without morphine
More than 25 million people around the world die every year in pain—even though off-patent morphine, which could ease their suffering, costs just pennies per dose, according to an Oct.…
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Charles Lieber elected to National Academy of Medicine
Charles M. Lieber, the Joshua and Beth Friedman University Professor at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences…

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Celebrate new Allston installation, ‘WE ALL,’ Oct. 21
Join the Allston-Brighton community for the opening celebration of “WE ALL” at the Grove in Barry’s Corner, Allston (167 Western Ave.) on Saturday, Oct. 21, from 4–7 p.m. This public…

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Addressing disparities in prostate cancer death rates between black and white men
African-American men with prostate cancer die at almost 2½ times the rate of white men in the United States. One explanation is that they receive unequal access to health care,…
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Siyuan Ma and Boyu Ren win Boston Datathon
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s Department of Biostatistics is pleased to announce that Ph.D. student Siyuan Ma and postdoc Boyu Ren were part of the winning team at the Boston Datathon. Along with…
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Targeting ‘lipid chaperones’ may hold promise for lifelong preservation of metabolic health
Researchers have found that, in a mouse model, it may be possible to achieve lifelong metabolic health. The Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health scientists found that mice that…
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Faculty Council meeting — Oct. 11, 2017
On Oct. 11 the members of the Faculty Council discussed a motion by Professor Danielle Allen and a proposal on the timing of the meetings of the Faculty. They also…
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Inauguration of the Max Planck-Harvard Research Center for the Archaeoscience of the Ancient Mediterranean
The analysis of DNA extracted from archaeological remains has transformed the study of the human past. Until now the new insights have been restricted chiefly to “pre-history,” and to northern,…
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A public health approach to stemming gun violence
In the wake of a mass shooting on Oct. 1 in Las Vegas that left at least 59 people dead and more than 500 injured, David Hemenway, professor of health…
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Millions of suburban residents in US lack health insurance
Nearly 40 percent of the uninsured population in America lives in the suburbs and nearly one in seven suburban residents lacks health insurance. Despite the suburbs’ general reputation of affluence,…
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Even ‘green’ homes contain hazardous chemicals
Thirty remodeled “green” public housing units in Boston were each found to have at least one toxic chemical — including concentrations of formaldehyde that exceeded the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s…
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Seeing White
John Biewen (Scene on Radio) and Chenjerai Kumanyika (Uncivil) will present a live performance of their podcast series “Seeing White,” followed by a panel discussion on solutions and responses to…

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Restoring access to clean water a priority for hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico
Puerto Rico is facing an unfolding public health disaster in the wake of Hurricane Maria. Stephanie Kayden, vice chair and chief of the division of International Emergency Medicine and Humanitarian…
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Alma mater semi-finalists announced
The Presidential Task Force on Inclusion and Belonging has announced a long-list of 20 semi-finalists in the competition to revise the final line of Harvard’s alma mater. These text entries…
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Faculty Council meeting — Sept. 27, 2017
On Sept. 27 the members of the Faculty Council discussed a draft of the final report of the Committee on Unrecognized Single-Gender Social Organizations and voted on proposed legislation. The…