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Lucian Leape, patient safety champion, honored at retirement symposium
Colleagues, friends, and family gathered to celebrate the career and legacy of Lucian Leape, adjunct professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management (HPM) at Harvard T.H. Chan School of…
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Harvard Business School launches new podcast series
Harvard Business School (HBS) is pleased to announce the launch of a new online series, “Cold Call”, which takes the School’s legendary case method and distills it into podcast form.…
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Harvard Graduate School of Education adds 11 new faculty members
Dean James Ryan has announced the appointment of 11 new faculty members to the Harvard Graduate School of Education. “I am thrilled that these 11 new faculty will be joining…
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HGSE announces fall 2015 Askwith Forums
The Harvard Graduate School of Education is pleased to announce its fall 2015 Askwith Forums, a series of public lectures dedicated to discussing challenges facing education, sharing new knowledge, and…
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Mobile phone records may predict epidemics of mosquito-borne dengue virus
A new study led by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health finds that mobile phone records can be used to predict the geographical spread and timing of…
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Gift allows CSWR to host ‘Hindu View of Life’ lectures
The Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) at Harvard Divinity School announced today that it will soon host a new annual lecture focused on the value of the…
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Expanded insurance coverage under ACA linked with major improvement in chronic disease diagnosis, treatment
People with health insurance are more likely to have their high cholesterol, diabetes, and high blood pressure correctly diagnosed—and to have these chronic conditions under control—than similar uninsured people, according…
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When your ZIP code costs you more
What if you can save hundreds of dollars on SAT tutoring by one weird trick? Try a different ZIP code. When researching the Princeton Review website for SAT tutoring, four…
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Is the sharing economy leaving anyone behind?
Asians in Oakland and Berkeley, Calif., may earn on average $90 less per week or 20 percent less than white hosts when renting out similar one-bedroom apartments that they list…
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Atul Gawande remembers Oliver Sacks
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Professor Atul Gawande reflected on the legacy of renowned neurologist Oliver Sacks — and the profound influence Sacks had on his own evolution…
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Should scientists experiment with highly contagious pathogens?
The current controversy about the wisdom of conducting experiments with pathogens that are genetically engineered to be more contagious presents a unique opportunity to set an effective precedent on the…
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Is it okay to eat fish every day?
Government dietary guidelines recommend that people eat fish twice a week. And we know that fish are full of omega-3 fatty acids—which can benefit both heart and brain. But is…
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Flexible leadership helped save Boston Marathon bombing victims
On the afternoon of April 13, 2013, after two bombs exploded at the Boston Marathon, scores of severely injured people were rushed to hospitals across the city. Although three people…
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Renewable energy projects can improve health
Renewable electricity projects and energy efficiency measures could have health benefits worth millions of dollars a year, according to a new study published August 31, 2015 in Nature Climate Change.…
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The public health case for gun control
In the wake of the shooting of two journalists on live television in Virginia on August 25, 2015, several news stories have referenced gun violence research by David Hemenway, professor…
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Cell phone data effective in tracking infectious disease transmission
A new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Princeton University researchers shows that data from cell phones captures population fluctuations that can predict infectious disease…
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Maintaining rigorous drug development standards in personalized cancer treatment
New advances in genomic testing have the potential to radically change the way cancer drugs are developed and prescribed, offering personalized therapy with treatment tailored to the patient’s tumor genome.…
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Breastfeeding may expose infants to toxic chemicals
A widely used class of industrial chemicals linked with cancer and interference with immune function — perfluorinated alkylate substances, or PFASs — appears to build up in infants by 20%–30%…
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One or two drinks per day may boost risk of certain cancers
Light to moderate drinking of alcohol—considered up to one alcoholic drink a day for women (about 4 ounces of wine) and up to two drinks (about two 12-ounce beers) per…
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Choose replacements carefully when cutting saturated fats
When cutting saturated fats from your diet, carefully consider what you will eat instead. That’s the advice from Frank Hu, professor of nutrition and epidemiology at Harvard T.H. Chan School…
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Processed meats may affect male fertility
A new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health researchers found that frequent consumption of processed meats may harm a man’s ability to fertilize an egg, while…
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Harvard Global Health Institute names five Burke Fellows
The Harvard Global Health Institute (HGHI) is pleased to announce five Harvard faculty members have been selected as Burke Global Health Fellows. The Burke Fellowships support global health research and leadership opportunities…
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Two NEH Public Scholars grants awarded to Harvard writers
Truth can be stranger than fiction, and equally readable. Two Harvard employees were among the 36 grant recipients of the National Endowment for the Humanities’ new Public Scholars Program, which…
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Clean Power Plan promises health benefits
The health benefits federal officials predict would result from implementing President Obama’s proposed Clean Power Plan —which calls for reducing carbon emissions from power plants by nearly one-third of the…
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Racial bias and its effect on health care
Eliminating racial and ethnic disparities in health in the U.S. isn’t just the job of the health care sector—it’s the job of society as a whole, argues David R. Williams,…
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No traffic jams in asthmatic cells
An unexpected new discovery—that, in people with asthma, the cells that line the airways in the lungs are unusually shaped and “scramble around like there’s a fire drill going on”—suggests…
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Shorenstein Center announces fall 2015 fellows
The Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School is pleased to announce the appointment of their fall 2015 fellows. “This fall’s fellows are exceptional for…
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New Harvard journal launches
On Tuesday, August 11, 2015, Harvard launches the first issue of Technology Science with a series of original research papers with revelations about weaknesses in Facebook’s privacy policies, price differences…
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New research shows larger health insurers increase rates higher on ACA-mandated state exchanges
Does size matter when it comes to health insurance rates? In the latest research published August 11 in the first issue of Technology Science from Harvard University’s Institute for Quantitative Social Science, two…
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Harvard case study exposes Facebook’s slow response to privacy vulnerability in messaging app
A new case study released today in the inaugural edition of Technology Science published by Harvard University examines Facebook’s response to the discovery of a glaring privacy vulnerability in its…