University of California San Francisco
Give to UCSFNew UCSF Faculty, September 2009
A 13-member team has raised $80,000 that will help UCSF’s AIDS Research Institute fund cutting-edge, early-stage research.
New UCSF Faculty, September 2009
Scientists have discovered that deer asymptomatic for a fatal brain condition known as chronic wasting disease excrete the infectious prions that cause the disease in their feces. The finding, they say, suggests a plausible explanation for transmission of the disease among deer and, possibly, elk and moose in the environment.
The campus will close from December 24 through January 3, 2010, as part of the UC-mandated furlough plan.
New UCSF Faculty, September 2009
New UCSF Faculty, September 2009
New UCSF Faculty, September 2009
As United States legislators discuss health care reform, two UCSF experts will offer insights into one public health care system that they think works on September 17.
UCSF researchers have successfully used protease inhibitors to restore to normal levels a key protein involved in early brain development. Reduced levels of that protein have been shown to cause the rare brain disorder lissencephaly, which is characterized by brain malformations, seizures, severe mental retardation and very early death in human infants.
Scientists are using old bones to completely map the DNA of Neanderthals. Comparisons may shed light on what makes our own species unique.
Zina Mirsky, associate dean of administration in the UCSF School of Nursing, is among those credited for leading the cause of Japanese-Americans, who were forced into internment camps in 1942, to earn honorary UC degrees. Read the full story on the <a href="http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/article/21748">University of California website</a>.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi reaffirmed her belief in a public option to “lower costs, improve quality, expand coverage and retain choice” in health care coverage at a summit at UCSF on Sept. 2.
UCSF researchers have developed a new approach to identify specific genes that influence how cancer cells respond to drugs and how they become resistant. This strategy, which involves producing diverse genetic mutations that result in leukemia and associating specific mutations with treatment outcomes, will enable researchers to better understand how drug resistance occurs in leukemia and other cancers, and has important long-term implications for the development of more effective therapies.
UCSF is sponsoring an event on September 12 that will promote healthy lifestyles, with a particular focus on reaching the local African American community.
Faculty members who want to develop skills to lead the University into the future are encouraged to apply for the next training program by the October 7 deadline.
A new study of mammogram use among Latina and Filipina women shows the powerful influence of culture in determining health behavior.
UCSF is sponsoring a one-day symposium to support African American faith-based organizations in promoting good health through health ministries.
UCSF scientists have demonstrated that adult human mesenchymal stem cells reverse the effects of injury in a novel human lung preparation in the lab. The finding, they say, could lead to the development of stem cell therapies for patients with acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome, conditions that presently have a high rate of mortality and no pharmacological treatments.
Members of the campus community who have a UCSF ID badge can get free seasonal flu shots during vaccination sessions beginning October 12.
Chancellor Sue Desmond-Hellman on Monday said that the University is continuing to resolve challenges presented by the UC-mandated furlough and salary reduction plan.
Chancellor Sue Desmond-Hellmann was among campus and community members on Tuesday to celebrate the upcoming opening of a new UCSF child care center on the Parnassus campus.
New research from UCSF examining HIV among men who have sex with men (MSM) in the township of Soweto in South Africa has found that a third of gay-identified men are infected with HIV.
UCSF will host the fourth annual Faculty Information and Welcoming Week from September 15 through 17.
UCSF will once again participate in the American Heart Association’s “Heart Walk” on September 18 and 26 to raise money for the fight against heart disease and stroke.
At least 49 new medical, pharmacy and dentistry students will benefit from $159,000 in federal funds over the 2009-2010 academic year.