2231 Results
1

Fast Company: How to handle the challenges of a makeshift home office

December 12, 2020

A team of researchers at UC conducted an ergonomic assessment of employees at the university by sending an email survey earlier this year to 4,500 faculty and staff after the coronavirus pandemic prompted the university to ask workers to continue operations from home when possible. The survey had 843 people complete it and showed some trends and offered a glimpse into what many who work from home were encountering. Susan Kotowski, PhD, a UC associate professor of allied health sciences, was part of a team of researchers conducting the survey. She spoke to Fast Company for a story about ergonomics in makeshift home offices.

2

Dispatch: Ohio restaurants push gift cards to pay the bills

December 14, 2020

This piece in The Columbus Dispatch on how Ohio restaurants are pushing gift certificates to cover sales shortfalls includes comments by Michael Jones, assistant professor of economics with the Carl H. Lindner College of Business at the University of Cincinnati.

5

Financial Times: The designers bringing craft to streetwear

December 14, 2020

Fashion brand Graziano and Gutiérrez, founded in 2018 by Alejandro Gutiérrez and Samuel Graziano as part of a thesis project at the University of Cincinnati, places craftsmanship at the heart of the design process by working directly with artisans based in Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca and San Andrés Larráinzar, Chiapas.

6

Cincinnati Future: Skilling at scale

December 14, 2020

UC Chief Innovation Officer David Adams and Chris Carper, Microsoft director of customer success in Cincinnati answer questions about the new partnership between the University of Cincinnati and the software giant.

8

ENT Today: Preparing yourself and your practice for a surge of COVID patients

December 16, 2020

Ahmad R. Sedaghat, MD, PhD, director of the division of rhinology, allergy, and anterior skull base surgery at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, told ENT Today that because COVID-19 is a viral infection, patients may experience more severe body aches, lethargy, and fatigue compared to a bacterial sinus infection.