Engaging with Asia
How do you define a category that includes hundreds of cultures and languages and millennia of history? Penn Arts & Sciences programs are advancing knowledge about Asia and Asian populations.
FULL STORY AT OMNIA →
In brief, what’s happening at Penn—whether it’s across campus or around the world.
How do you define a category that includes hundreds of cultures and languages and millennia of history? Penn Arts & Sciences programs are advancing knowledge about Asia and Asian populations.
FULL STORY AT OMNIA →
Penn Medicine has formed the BETTER Center (Behavioral Economics to Transform Trial Enrollment Representativeness), designed to foster greater diversity, equity, and inclusion among people who participate in clinical trials designed to improve the prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases. The BETTER Center will seek to more actively engage and recruit individuals from historically underserved racial and ethnic groups, women, and people of low socioeconomic status, among other historically underrepresented groups.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
The Executive Director of Penn Dental Medicine’s Center for Integrative Global Oral Health, has been recognized for his leadership by the Academy of Dentistry International for 2021. The award honors career contributions to dentistry, international education, and service.
FULL STORY AT Penn Dental Medicine →
Prior research linked a more positive social environment—one where people feel connected to each other and are willing to help one another and where community members feel safe—to better health outcomes. A Penn LDI team surveyed 300 low-income mothers and caregivers of preschool-aged children in Philadelphia on their stress levels and their views of their neighborhood social environment, and found that mothers who perceived their neighborhoods as safer had lower stress, as did mothers who perceived their neighborhood as having higher collective efficacy.
FULL STORY AT Leonard Davis Institute →
Five HBCUs—Howard University, Morehouse College, Oakwood University, Spelman College, and Xavier University of Louisiana—partner with the Penn Access Summer Scholars Program to expand the pipeline of students underrepresented in medicine.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
A study co-written by Penn Medicine’s Emily Ko finds that Black women with endometrial cancer have an increased risk of death directly related to their endometrial cancer compared to white women, regardless of the stage and type of the cancer.
FULL STORY AT Leonard Davis Institute →
Penn Medicine and CHOP together pioneered the research and development of the world’s first personalized cellular therapy for cancer—CAR T cell therapy. They will collaborate with Costa Rica’s Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social (Social Security Program) to facilitate CAR T research in Costa Rica.
FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News →
This latest group of distinguished research fellows is largely based within the Penn community, bringing the group to a total of 58 eminent scholars whose work complements the research and engagement being conducted by the policy center.
FULL STORY AT Annenberg Public Policy Center →
Professor of Perinatal Nursing and the Helen M. Shearer Term Professor of Nutrition in Penn Nursing’s Department of Family and Community Health has two new appointments. Domestically, Spatz has joined the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine work group titled Inclusion of Pregnant and Lactating Persons in Clinical Trials. Internationally, Spatz has been elected to the Board of Directors for the International Society for Research in Human Milk and Lactation.
FULL STORY AT Penn Nursing News →
The Penn GSE professor’s book, “Free Speech and Why You Should Give a Damn,” co-written with editorial cartoonist Signe Wilkinson, has been honored with a gold prize in the IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award program’s “Political & Current Events” category.
FULL STORY AT Graduate School of Education →