Kinnear named UC's second Macy Faculty Scholar in three years
June 29, 2020
Benjamin Kinnear, MD, associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics, has been selected as one of five Macy Faculty Scholars for 2020.
June 29, 2020
Benjamin Kinnear, MD, associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics, has been selected as one of five Macy Faculty Scholars for 2020.
June 30, 2020
A researcher with the University of Cincinnati Gardner Neuroscience Institute thinks walking backward on a treadmill might help patients who have experienced stroke learn to walk again.
July 1, 2020
WVXU highlights research by Oluwole Awosika, MD, who is examining how walking backward on a treadmill might help stroke survivors learn to walk again.
July 2, 2020
COVID-19 appears to be a multi-system inflammatory disease. It may begin in the lungs but is escaping to other parts of the body. Richard Becker, MD, director of the UC Heart, Lung and Vascular Institute, shares his knowledge about COVID-19 and the cardiovascular system with Texas Public Radio.
July 4, 2020
UC digestive diseases expert Kenneth Sherman, MD, PhD, discusses study showing COVID-19 patients in China shown mildly elevated liver enzyme levels.
July 6, 2020
Krushna Patra, PhD, received one of 10 Career Development Awards from PanCAN to continue his work studying genetic mutations that cause pancreatic cancer.
July 6, 2020
The grant-funded HEALTH Pathways program, a partnership between Cincinnati Public Schools and UC College of Nursing, succeeded in helping more high school students enter college and pursue health care careers.
July 6, 2020
Carl Fichtenbaum, MD, of the UC College of Medicine Division of Infectious Diseases talked to Popular Science Magazine about what summer activities are riskier than others during the COVID-19 pandemic.
July 6, 2020
Rebecca Howell, MD, expert in voice, swallow and airway at the University of Cincinnati discusses the challenges of treating swallowing patients in the midst of COVID-19 with Fox 19 morning news.
July 7, 2020
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine say E. coli Nissle may protect human cells against other more pathogenic strains of E. coli such as E. coli 0157:H7, which is commonly associated with contaminated hamburger meat.