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Friday, October 30, 2009

H1N1 Virus Scare Prompts One Hospital To Change Access Policies

Visiting Kansas any time soon?

To protect workers and patients, the Mercy Regional Health Center in Topeka, KA temporarily changed its visitor policy. No one under the age of 12 can visit patients and only one visitor is allowed into the Birth and Women's Center.

"They're in a category that's high-risk for the H1N1 influenza," Couchman said.

The hospital and doctor's offices in the county have seen an increase in H1N1 cases this month, but emergency services says unless you have a chronic illness or are high-risk, you shouldn't go to the doctor.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

A Warning to Couch Potatoes

Physiologists analyzing obesity, heart disease, and diabetes found that the act of sitting shuts down the circulation of a fat-absorbing enzyme called lipase. They found that standing up engages muscles and promotes the distribution of lipase, which prompts the body to process fat and cholesterol, independent of the amount of time spent exercising. They also found that standing up uses blood glucose and may discourage the development of diabetes.

Another Warning for Couch Potatoes:Physiologists And Microbiologists Find Link Between Sitting And Poor Health

Physiologists analyzing obesity, heart disease, and diabetes found that the act of sitting shuts down the circulation of a fat-absorbing enzyme called lipase. They found that standing up engages muscles and promotes the distribution of lipase, which prompts the body to process fat and cholesterol, independent of the amount of time spent exercising. They also found that standing up uses blood glucose and may discourage the development of diabetes.

Read more.

Friday, June 05, 2009

Pre-Doctoral Training Program in Interdisciplinary Methods for Field-based Research in Education




The University of Pennsylvania, Graduate School of Education offers a Pre-Doctoral Training Program designed to support and enhance the Ph.D. training of students in different disciplines who are committed to careers in applied, field-based education research. The initiative involves six University of Pennsylvania schools and multiple school districts in Pennsylvania and New Jersey and it is supported by the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) in the U.S. Department of Education. Fellows receive financial support, access to specialized resources and experts in the field of study and become part of an emerging national network of students, faculty and practitioners conducting interdisciplinary research in the education sciences.



Current fellows are students presently enrolled in PhD programs at the Graduate School of Education, the Wharton School of Business, and the School of Arts and Sciences in fields such as education, sociology, economics, and business and public policy. We encourage current students from any discipline within the University of Pennsylvania who are interested in developing expertise in rigorous scientific interdisciplinary education research to apply.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

Rice University: Negotiating the Ideal faculty Position

At Rice University we are strongly committed to increasing the diversity of science and engineering faculty and students. As part of this goal we are sponsoring an exciting workshop for senior women graduate students and post-docs who are interested in pursuing an academic career. The workshop, Negotiating the Ideal Faculty Position, (October 18-19, 2009), is designed to provide participants hands-on experience to enhance their knowledge of and ability to find the right faculty position. Through support from the National Science Foundation (NSF) ADVANCE Institutional Transformation Award, all travel, meals, and lodging costs will be provided for workshop participants. Applications are due August 13. The online application can be found at

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Job Alert: Certified Science Teachers in Newark, NJ

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Highly rated TeacherNex, a recruiting company based in Newark, NJ works with local charter schools and a select group of NPS district schools to fill open faculty positions with high quality candidates. One application to TeacherNex can connect you to over 20 Newark area school leaders.

Learn more.

New and aspiring teachers go into Twitter.com's chat room.

Monday, June 01, 2009

PAST PANDEMICS PROVIDE CLUES TO CURRENT KILLER

POLLY WANT A CRACKER?

It was a classic medical scare story: Parrots died. A few people got sick. Newspapers went wild. Then, well after the outbreak of "parrot fever" was declared dormant, researchers who dealt with the birds began to mysteriously die themselves. Historian Jill Lepore talks to host Jacki Lyden about the great parrot fever outbreak of 1929. Lepore chronicles the episode in the June 1 issue of The New Yorker magazine. Listen on NPR.

ONE LITTLE PIGGY

Like hurricane watchers, public health officials must try to predict the velocity and course of the influenza A virus causing the swine flu outbreak, a novel H1N1, because they have to make complicated and expensive decisions about how aggressively they should pursue vaccines, antivirals, and mitigation strategies like school closings.

For additional breaking news

Given the fuzziness of the data about this new virus's behavior, researchers are looking to the past for clues about the seasonality and geography of pandemic flu, the relationship between the new viruses and existing ones, and the behavior of this new H1N1's parent viruses in swine.

Read the full story on Science Magazine's website.

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