9789 Results
2

MSN, Yahoo highlight UC blueberry study

May 17, 2022

The University of Cincinnati's Robert Krikorian's research into blueberry supplementation for certain middle-aged adults was featured on MSN and Yahoo among other news sites.

3

Putting control in patients' hands

February 6, 2024

A new University of Cincinnati trial, in partnership with Spark Biomedical, will test a wearable neurostimulation device to help patients with opioid use disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder stick with medication treatment while finding the right dose.

4

Digging deeper into cannabis research

February 23, 2022

The University of Cincinnati's Dr. LaTrice Montgomery recently reviewed published research on cannabis use among different racial and ethnic groups and found there are large gaps in the field since most studies compare each group to white populations.

6

How psychiatrists can improve transgender care

May 15, 2023

University of Cincinnati’s Melanie Thomas-Castillo, PsyD, and Stephen Rush, MD, recently published commentary on how psychiatrists can work to create a supportive environment for transgender and gender diverse patients in the journal Current Psychiatry.

7

Improving youth mental and physical health

October 27, 2023

A new large-scale study led by researchers at the University of Cincinnati and Northwell Health found the drug metformin can help prevent or reduce weight gain in youth taking medication to treat bipolar disorder.

8

Neuroimaging, AI help detect brain changes

May 1, 2024

Researchers at the University of Cincinnati and Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin are leading a study using state-of-the-art neuroimaging techniques and artificial intelligence to identify changes in the brains among children of adults living with bipolar disorder.

9

Legacy of federal opioid intervention: communities equipped to act

June 17, 2024

A national effort to reduce opioid-related overdose deaths has laid the groundwork for more widely available opioid use disorder treatment, safer prescribing practices, and community-based overdose education and naloxone distribution that can save lives, according to researchers who led Ohio’s participation in the initiative.