UCSF study finds nerve regeneration is possible in spinal cord injuries
A team of scientists at UCSF has made a critical discovery that may help in the development of techniques to promote functional recovery after a spinal cord injury.
University of California San Francisco
Give to UCSFA team of scientists at UCSF has made a critical discovery that may help in the development of techniques to promote functional recovery after a spinal cord injury.
The UCSF School of Nursing plans a memorial service in San Francisco in January for former dean Margretta Madden Styles, who died on November 20.
In a message today on World AIDS Day, Dean David Kessler says that HIV/AIDS work at UCSF is a vivid example of the University's ability to drive important findings from basic research labs to clinicians and, ultimately, to patients.
UCSF's Integrated Program in Complex Biological Systems has been awarded a $1 million grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute to initiate fundamental changes in the way PhD scientists are trained.
UCSF scientists have discovered the first molecular evidence of a link between embryonic stem cells and cancer.
Researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical Center have uncovered part of the genetic mechanism that causes new arteries to grow in response to blocked arteries.
UCSF scientists have discovered that the activity of several embryonic stem cell genes is elevated in testicular and breast cancers, providing some of the first molecular evidence of a link between embryonic stem cells and cancer.
Margretta Madden Styles, RN, EdD, FAAN, a scholar with an international impact on the profession of nursing, died on November 20 at her home in Clearwater, Fla., at the age of 75.
Technology industry leaders gathered at QB3 on Monday to announce several major partnerships with the California institute headquartered at UCSF Mission Bay.
UCSF will collaborate with GE Healthcare to develop new techniques to enable earlier diagnosis and treatment of cancer and other diseases.
Recent studies conducted at the San Francisco VA Medical Center suggest two possible mechanisms for the widely recognized link between depression and adverse outcomes in patients with coronary heart disease
Technology industry leaders today announced several major new research alliances with QB3, the California Institute for Quantitative Biomedical Research
The AIDS Research Institute at UCSF will sponsor a symposium outlining the latest advances in HIV/AIDS research, prevention and care on the afternoon of Thursday, December 1, World AIDS Day.
The University of California, San Francisco today announced a collaboration with GE Healthcare, a unit of General Electric Company (NYSE: GE), to develop new technology for clinical use that tracks real-time changes in tissue metabolism with unprecedented sensitivity.
Longtime UCSF employee and dedicated friend and family man Marcellus Martin died on Oct. 24, 2005.
The Department of Laboratory Medicine in the UCSF School of Medicine recently received a $10 million research grant to explore causes of transfusion-related deaths.
Using harmless genetically engineered E. coli bacteria instead of photo paper, students at UCSF and the University of Texas at Austin have created the first-ever living bacterial photographs.
The UC Board of Regents on Wednesday adopted a 2006-07 budget proposal that includes funding for an average 4 percent increase in employee compensation next fiscal year, subject to collective bargaining requirements.
The AIDS Research Institute (ARI) at UCSF invites the campus community to attend a World AIDS Day symposium on Thursday, Dec. 1.
QB3 -- one of four California Institutes for Science and Innovation (CISI) -- will celebrate the opening of its new headquarters at UCSF Mission Bay at a special event on November 28.
Soaringwords, an organization that runs a number of programs for sick kids, recently spread a little bit of sunshine to patients at UCSF Children's Hospital.
Literally hundreds of faculty, staff, students, neighbors and others descended upon UCSF Mission Bay on October 28 to celebrate the creation of a new community for life.
This Friday's issue of Newsbreak will be one of the last issues of the biweekly publication, which will convert to an eight-page quarterly next year.
Veterans with HIV, their health care providers, and the general public now have a "one-stop" website – www.hiv.va.gov – designed as an informational and educational resource on HIV and AIDS.
A research agreement between QB3 and Peking University — QB3's first international collaboration -- aims to strengthen the ability of both institutions to tackle the most complex biological problems.
A new study that 21 percent of insurance premiums is spent on insurance administration in the US health care system.
UC will ensure that salaries for all employees are competitive over the next decade.
A memorial service celebrating the life of William K. Ehrenfeld, MD, an internationally recognized pioneer in vascular surgery, is being planned for January 2006.
Macy's Union Square invites everyone to join in the 16th annual ceremony to light the holiday tree at San Francisco's Union Square at 6:00 pm on Friday, November 25, the day after Thanksgiving.