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海角社区: GI Cancer Rates Don鈥檛 Easily Represent Diverse Groups
Released: 2-May-2025 9:00 PM EDT
GI Cancer Rates Don鈥檛 Easily Represent Diverse Groups
University of Washington School of Medicine and UW Medicine

Among the subpopulations, researchers also found marked differences in health outcomes, socioeconomic status, education, and immigration status that can be easily obscured when these groups are characterized as a single population, the authors wrote.

海角社区: Social Support Weighted in Endometrial Cancer Outcomes
Released: 2-May-2025 9:00 PM EDT
Social Support Weighted in Endometrial Cancer Outcomes
University of Washington School of Medicine

Newly funded research by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) will study 250 women over five years to find out how they fare after their diagnosis and the extent social support, or lack thereof, plays a part in their recovery and survival. The $6.8 million study will begin in September and continue through 2030.

海角社区: New Guidelines Aim to Improve Cystic Fibrosis Screening
Released: 3-Apr-2025 6:05 PM EDT
New Guidelines Aim to Improve Cystic Fibrosis Screening
University of Washington School of Medicine

All states should adopt updated screening protocols so more newborns with cystic fibrosis can be diagnosed in the first weeks of life, when interventions can have the greatest benefit, according to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation guidelines published April 2 in the International Journal of Neonatal Screening.

Released: 2-Apr-2025 9:20 PM EDT
Children Exposed to Higher Ozone Levels Early in Life Are More Likely to Develop Asthma
University of Washington

Children exposed to higher levels of ozone in their first two years of life were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with asthma or wheezing at ages 4-6 鈥 but researchers didn鈥檛 observe the increased risk of asthma at ages 8-9.

海角社区: Prostate Cancer Is Not a Death Knell, Study Shows
Released: 10-Mar-2025 7:50 PM EDT
Prostate Cancer Is Not a Death Knell, Study Shows
UW Medicine

鈥淏eing diagnosed with prostate cancer is not a death knell,鈥 said Montgomery, senior author of a literature and trial review that appeared in JAMA today. Montgomery is the clinical director of Genitourinary Oncology at Fred Hutch Cancer Center and University of Washington Medical Center, and a professor of medicine and urology at the UW School of Medicine.

海角社区: Effort Seeks to Increase Cancer-Gene Testing in Primary Care
Released: 7-Mar-2025 7:40 PM EST
Effort Seeks to Increase Cancer-Gene Testing in Primary Care
University of Washington School of Medicine and UW Medicine

In the JAMA Network Open study published today, Dr. Elizabeth Swisher and colleagues assessed two ways that primary-care practices could assess patients鈥 hereditary cancer risks and deliver testing to those identified as higher risk.

海角社区:Video Embedded video-the-uw-s-assistive-feeding-robot-gets-tested-outside-the-lab
VIDEO
Released: 4-Mar-2025 6:25 PM EST
Video: The UW鈥檚 assistive-feeding robot gets tested outside the lab
University of Washington

UW researchers deployed a robotic feeding arm in a pair of studies outside the lab. In the first, six users with motor impairments used the robot to feed themselves a meal in a UW cafeteria, an office or a conference room. In the second study, a community researcher and co-author on the research used the system at home for five days.

海角社区: Child ADHD Risk Linked to Mother鈥檚 Use of Acetaminophen
Released: 20-Feb-2025 7:55 PM EST
Child ADHD Risk Linked to Mother鈥檚 Use of Acetaminophen
University of Washington School of Medicine and UW Medicine

Acetaminophen metabolites were detected in 20.2% of maternal plasma samples. Children whose mothers had these biomarkers present in their plasma had a 3.15 times higher likelihood of an ADHD diagnosis compared with those without detected exposure.

海角社区: Coffee Grounds and Reishi Mushroom Spores Can Be 3D Printed Into a Compostable Alternative to Plastics
Released: 18-Feb-2025 6:30 PM EST
Coffee Grounds and Reishi Mushroom Spores Can Be 3D Printed Into a Compostable Alternative to Plastics
University of Washington

University of Washington researchers developed a new system for turning used coffee grounds into a paste, which they use to 3D print objects, such as packing materials and a vase. They inoculate the paste with Reishi mushroom spores, which turn the coffee grounds into a resilient, fully compostable alternative to plastics.

海角社区: New Blood Test Accurately Predicts Preeclampsia
Released: 12-Feb-2025 7:30 PM EST
New Blood Test Accurately Predicts Preeclampsia
University of Washington School of Medicine and UW Medicine

A new blood test has an 80% accuracy in predicting preterm preeclampsia, according to a study published today, Feb. 12, in the journal Nature Medicine.

海角社区: Whale Poop Contains Iron That May Have Helped Fertilize Past Oceans
Released: 6-Feb-2025 8:15 PM EST
Whale Poop Contains Iron That May Have Helped Fertilize Past Oceans
University of Washington

A recent theory proposes that whales weren鈥檛 just predators in the ocean environment: Nutrients that whales excreted may have provided a key fertilizer. Analysis of whale excrement shows significant amounts of bioavailable iron, a vital element that's often scarce in ocean ecosystems, and nontoxic forms of copper, another essential nutrient. Large populations of whales in past oceans may have helped support marine ecosystems.

海角社区: UW Researchers Are Designing Cancer Therapeutics That Can Kill Cancer Cells and Restore Healthy Tissue
Released: 4-Feb-2025 7:10 PM EST
UW Researchers Are Designing Cancer Therapeutics That Can Kill Cancer Cells and Restore Healthy Tissue
University of Washington

Two University of Washington researchers are developing treatments that aim to simultaneously treat cancer and improve patients鈥 quality of life. For World Cancer Day, UW 海角社区 asked them to discuss their novel materials and how these materials can treat both the cancer and the patient.

海角社区: Q&A: How Rate of CO2 Rise Can Affect a Global Ocean Current
Released: 28-Jan-2025 8:30 PM EST
Q&A: How Rate of CO2 Rise Can Affect a Global Ocean Current
University of Washington

How fast the level of atmospheric carbon dioxide 鈥 and with it, the temperature 鈥 goes up matters for the ability of humans and ecosystems to adjust. A slower increase gives humans time to move away from low-lying coasts and animals time to move to new habitats. It turns out the rate of that increase matters for non-living systems, too.

Released: 21-Jan-2025 6:45 PM EST
Study Finds Strong Negative Associations with Teenagers in AI Models
University of Washington

A UW team studied how AI systems portray teens in English and Nepali, and found that in English language systems around 30% of the responses referenced societal problems such as violence, drug use and mental illness. The Nepali system produced fewer negative associations in responses, closer to 10% of all answers.

海角社区: Distance Affects Use of Telehealth to Access Abortion Pills
Released: 9-Jan-2025 10:20 PM EST
Distance Affects Use of Telehealth to Access Abortion Pills
University of Washington School of Medicine

The distance between a patient鈥檚 home and an abortion-services facility where they would seek care significantly influences how they receive birth-control medications, according to a study published Jan. 8 in the American Journal of Public Health.

海角社区:Video Embedded a-smart-ring-with-a-tiny-camera-lets-users-point-and-click-to-control-home-devices
VIDEO
Released: 8-Jan-2025 10:45 PM EST
A Smart Ring with a Tiny Camera Lets Users Point and Click to Control Home Devices
University of Washington

UW researchers have developed IRIS, a smart ring that allows users to point and click to control smart devices. The prototype Bluetooth ring contains a small camera which sends an image of the selected device to the user鈥檚 phone. The user can control the device clicking a small button or 鈥 for devices with gradient controls, such as a speaker鈥檚 volume 鈥 rotating the ring.

海角社区: How a UW Teaching Professor Adds the Context Behind the Science in Her Chemical Engineering Courses
Released: 7-Jan-2025 7:50 PM EST
How a UW Teaching Professor Adds the Context Behind the Science in Her Chemical Engineering Courses
University of Washington

Alex Prybutok, University of Washington assistant teaching professor of chemical engineering, studies anti-racism, diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility in engineering education.

   
海角社区: The Carbon in Our Bodies Probably Left the Galaxy and Came Back on Cosmic 鈥楥onveyer Belt鈥
Released: 3-Jan-2025 7:30 PM EST
The Carbon in Our Bodies Probably Left the Galaxy and Came Back on Cosmic 鈥楥onveyer Belt鈥
University of Washington

University of Washington scientists recently discovered that the giant 'conveyer belt' currents that push star-forged material out of our galaxy and pull it back in can also transport carbon atoms. That means that a good deal of the carbon here on Earth, including the carbon in our bodies, likely left the galaxy at some point!



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