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New foaling service at New Bolton

New foaling service at New Bolton

Penn Vet’s New Bolton Center (NBC) is offering a new foaling service for healthy mares that provides around-the-clock observation as they approach their due date, and care throughout and after foaling.

Penn Med establishes program for rare disease

Penn Med establishes program for rare disease

The London-based LouLou Foundation and the Orphan Disease Center of the Perelman School of Medicine have established a Program of Excellence to develop effective treatments for children with CDKL5, a rare X-chromosome-linked genetic

PennDesign partners with National Park Service

PennDesign partners with National Park Service

The Architectural Conservation Laboratory at PennDesign has received funding to support the National Park Service’s Vanishing Treasures Program—a leader in the preservation of traditionally built architecture—in meeting its future education and tr

Nearly 20 years of research on the AIDS epidemic in Malawi

Nearly 20 years of research on the AIDS epidemic in Malawi

It was 1998 when demographer Hans-Peter Kohler first got involved with a research project in rural Malawi. Nearly two decades later, the project, dubbed Malawi Longitudinal Study of Families and Health, which explores the AIDS epidemic, is still in full swing. So is Kohler’s commitment to it.

Lauren Hertzler

From Broadway to Penn’s grandest stage

From Broadway to Penn’s grandest stage

Just because tickets to see the musical “Hamilton” on Broadway are sold out through December doesn’t mean the Penn community won’t get to see Lin-Manuel Miranda anytime soon.

Lauren Hertzler

PIK Professor discusses controversial new dietary guidelines

PIK Professor discusses controversial new dietary guidelines

Some of the country’s leading epidemiologists, including Penn Integrates Knowledge Professor Karen Glanz, have alleged that the latest federal dietary guidelines have been tainted by the political and financial interests of food industry giants: interests that conflict with the public good. Glanz, the George A.

Christina Cook

For the Record: Medical lecture tickets

For the Record: Medical lecture tickets

When formal medical education began in North America in the 1760s, students were required to purchase tickets to attend a course of faculty lectures. Medical schools were proprietary in nature, with the faculty comprised of independent entrepreneurs who directly collected fees from students, practicing doctors, and apprentices, and then issued admission tickets to lectures.

Jeanne Leong