Open Philanthropy Awards $336K to Map the Impact of Scientific Funding Cuts
Researchers are jointly leading efforts to communicate the science and community impacts of ongoing cuts to federal funding for science and medical research.
Researchers are jointly leading efforts to communicate the science and community impacts of ongoing cuts to federal funding for science and medical research.
Learn how University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing (UM-IHC) intern Abby Abaku is researching the possible links between food deserts and diabetes among Maryland residents.
UM-IHC researchers to lead the Center for Seniors Uniting Nationwide to Support Health, INtegrated care, and Economics, known as the Center for SUNSHINE, an interdisciplinary collaboration funded by a $901,000 grant from the National Institute on Aging (NIA) for the first two years to establish the center, with the potential for up to six years of support.
Dr. Nate Apathy, professor of health policy and management at UMD School of Public Health and the University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing and Dr. A Jay Holmgren of University of California, San Francisco Medical School receive NIH research funding to integrate electronic health records.
University of Maryland School of Medicine study highlights how artificial intelligence can bolster national H5N1 surveillance as virus spreads in U.S. animals.
A new study jointly led by the teams of Joshua Weitz at the University of Maryland and Laurent Debarbieux at the Institut Pasteur sheds light on the complex interplay between viruses, bacteria and the immune system.
Artificial intelligence (AI), quantum science and emerging technologies developed at the University of Maryland, College Park can help solve major societal challenges for the people of the state and the world, according to a range of leaders who gathered for a discussion.
A relatively new therapy used to treat pulmonary arterial hypertension in those with mild to moderate disease was found to be effective at preventing death in those with more advanced disease.