2231 Results
2

WCPO: Post-COVID anxiety

November 12, 2020

A UC expert discusses a new study from the University of Oxford that shows around 20% of COVID-19 survivors are struggling with mental health issues after recovering from the disease.

3

Yahoo: Hankook Tire presents ‘Design Innovation 2020,’ a proposal for the future

November 12, 2020

Launched in 2012, ‘Design Innovation’ is Hankook’s R&D project held every two years in collaboration with the University of Cincinnati, one of the world’s leading universities for design. Through joint research, the project puts forward a vision for the future of driving and develops solutions that tackle today’s challenges.

5

WVXU: Coronavirus hitting rural communities hard

November 12, 2020

UC assistant professor Diego Cuadros, director of UC's Health Geography and Disease Modeling Lab, talks to Cincinnati Edition about why coronavirus is especially devastating in rural America.

8

Atlanta Journal Constitution: Here is why your face mask could be making you itchy

November 16, 2020

Yashu Dhamija, MD, presented a case study of a patient treated for contact dermatitis after a facial mask with elastics required him to seek hospital treatment. Dhamija, a first-year fellow at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, discussed his findings during this year’s virtual American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology Scientific meeting. Medica Magazine reported the finding and so did other media.

9

TCTMD: Bleeds on anticoagulants for atrial fibrillation can unveil occult cancers

November 17, 2020

Richard Becker, MD, director of the University of Cincinnati Heart, Lung and Vascular Institute, also weighed in on a research finding out of Spain. The observational study of 9,000 elderly patients on oral anticoagulants suggests bleeding thought related to antithrombotic therapy may be an early warning sign for as-yet-undetected cancer.

10

WaPo: UC engineer talks about future of Brent Spence Bridge

November 18, 2020

UC College of Engineering and Applied Science associate professor Gian Andrea Rassati tells the Washington Post that the Brent Spence Bridge is functionally obsolete but will be safe again for motorists when it reopens in December.