News+
-
News+
Will they or won’t they? Examining state Medicaid expansion
In June 2012, the Supreme Court ruled that Obamacare’s mandated Medicaid expansion for low-income Americans should be optional for states. Since then, health policy experts have been paying close attention to how individual states are proceeding with the rollout of national health reform. Two of those experts from Harvard School of Public Health—Benjamin Sommers and John McDonough—were…
-
News+
Prescription for policymakers: Look for balance between coordination and competition
Current proposals to improve the coordination of health care in the United States — such as accountable care organizations and bundled payments to providers — may be at odds with policies to promote competition to lower costs, according to a new “Perspective” co-authored by Katherine Baicker, professor of health economics at Harvard School of Public Health.…
-
News+
James Robins receives Nathan Mantel Lifetime Achievement Award
James Robins, whose work at the intersection of statistical science and epidemiology aims to estimate causal effects of exposures or drug treatments—as opposed to just associations—has received the 2013 Nathan Mantel Lifetime Achievement Award in Statistics and Epidemiology. Robins, Mitchell L. and Robin LaFoley Dong Professor of Epidemiology, who has worked at Harvard School of…
-
News+
Nanda appointed director of Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad
Ashish Nanda, the Robert Braucher Professor of Practice, faculty director of executive education, and research director at the Program on the Legal Profession at Harvard Law School, has been appointed director of the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad (IIMA), in India. Nanda’s appointment w1as announced by IIMA’s board of governors following approval by the Indian…
-
News+
Sen. Richard Blumenthal at HLS: Bring more accountability to the FISA Court
Just hours after news outlets reported additional revelations Thursday morning concerning the scope of information gathered by the National Security Agency, U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) delivered an address at Harvard Law School on proposed legislation to reform the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. Blumenthal stressed his deep respect for the intelligence agencies and institutions whose…
-
News+
Living near foreclosed homes may raise risk of being overweight
People who live near foreclosed homes may be at greater risk of being overweight than those who don’t have such homes in their immediate neighborhoods, according to a new study by Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) researchers. The study was published online July 18, 2013 in the American Journal of Public Health and will appear in the September…
-
News+
Shedding light on gestational diabetes controversies, challenges
Gestational diabetes—diabetes that women develop while pregnant—can lead to serious health problems for both babies and mothers. Babies can be born too large or have birth injuries. Mothers can face greater risk of needing a cesarean delivery. For both mothers and babies, the risk of developing type 2 diabetes later in life can increase. But…
-
News+
Harvard’s Institute of Politics announces fall fellows
Harvard’s Institute of Politics (IOP) has announced its fall resident and visiting fellows. Resident fellows lead weekly study groups during an academic semester; visiting fellows join the institute for a shorter period and meet with students and faculty. IOP fall resident fellows include: Mo Cowan, U.S. senator (D-MA; Feb. 2013-July 2013) and former senior adviser,…
-
News+
Seasons of CO2: Study finds northern ecosystems are “taking deeper breaths”
Levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere rise and fall annually as plants take up the gas in spring and summer and release it in fall and winter through photosynthesis and respiration. Now the range of that cycle is growing as more CO2 is emitted from the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities,…
-
News+
Sumner/Longfellow friendship examined at Houghton Library
Park rangers Ryan McNabb, Rob Velella and Rick Jenkins recently presented “The Tender Heart and Brave: The Politics and Friendship of Charles Sumner and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow” in Houghton Library’s Edison and Newman Room. McNabb serves with the Boston African American National Historic Site; Velella and Jenkins with the Longfellow House. “[At Longfellow House] we…
-
News+
Emerging economies look to Britain’s National Health Service as model
Although Britain’s National Health Service (NHS) has come under fire in that country for its failings, emerging economies are finding much to emulate in the NHS as they look to improve their own. The main reason is that the system provides a wide range of services to the entire population, regardless of people’s ability to…
-
News+
Harvard Allston Farmers’ Market hosts composting program drop-off
Harvard’s Allston Farmers’ Market will host one of three drop-off locations for Mayor Thomas M. Menino’s pilot program to allow Boston residents to drop off compostable food scraps for free. The other two locations are Eggleston Square and Bowdoin-Geneva. The pilot program is the City of Boston’s first public composting program and kicks off Friday,…
-
News+
HKS virtual book tours feature recently published authors
The Harvard Kennedy School Library, in conjunction with the HKS IT/Media Services office, regularly posts “Virtual Book Tours” that spotlight HKS faculty members with recently published books. The current book tour, “Nicco Mele: The End of Big: How the Internet Makes David the New Goliath,” offers an opportunity for viewers to learn more about Mele…
-
News+
NEH awards grant for WorldMap development
Professors Peter Bol and Suzanne Blier have received a $320K award from the National Endowment for the Humanities’ Digital Humanities Implementation Grant for their proposal on “Extending WorldMap to Make It Easier for Humanists and Others to Find, Use, and Publish Geospatial Information.” This work is supported by technical staff at the Center for Geographic…
-
News+
Teens who use smokeless tobacco often smoke
About one in 20 middle and high school students who chew tobacco and use other smokeless tobacco products also smoke cigarettes, a new Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) study shows. The findings suggest smokeless tobacco products may increase – rather than reduce – health risks from cigarettes and other traditional smokes. While cigarette use…
-
News+
Hatchery Project receives first ever Envision rating
The largest indoor sport fish hatchery in North America is the first ever recipient of the EnvisionTM Gold award for sustainable infrastructure. The award ceremony on July 24 that honored the William Jack Hernandez Fish Hatchery of Anchorage Alaska was the culmination of 6 years of collaboration by the Zofnass Program for Sustainable Infrastructure at…
-
News+
New strategies needed for preventing eating disorders
The U.S. health care system needs more trained professionals and prevention specialists to take on the often overlooked―and sometimes deadly―issue of eating disorders. “Eating disorders need to be higher up on the public health agenda,” said S. Bryn Austin, associate professor in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH)…
-
News+
Promoting slow-to-catch-on health innovations one person at a time
With health innovations that are slow to catch on, it may be best to promote them person-to-person. In an article published online July 22, 2013 in The New Yorker, Atul Gawande, professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at Harvard School of Public Health, discussed efforts to spread safe childbirth practices — which are known to…
-
News+
Bacterial metabolites regulate immune system; may reduce IBD
Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) researchers have discovered that chemicals generated by bacteria in the colon help important immune cells known as Tregs in the colon grow and function well. The researchers also found that these bacterial metabolites reduced colitis in mice with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a chronic disease of the intestines that…
-
News+
Harvard to launch Ivy League Digital Network
This upcoming season, fans of Harvard’s sports teams will have an all new way to follow and support the Crimson as they take on the rest of the Ivy League. The August Launch of The Ivy League Digital Network will give students, alumni and all supporters of the Crimson a unique fan experience. Harvard fans…
-
News+
Schlesinger exhibit showcases materials from immigration organizations
“Stepping Stones for New Americans,” at the Radcliffe Institute’s Schlesinger Library showcases books, photographs, audiovisual materials, and ephemera related to four Boston-area organizations founded to support new immigrants. The exhibit is a companion to Radcliffe’s conference “Gender and Immigration.” The organizations featured in the exhibit are Denison House, Window Shop, North Bennet Street Industrial School,…
-
News+
Institute for World Literature holds monthlong forum in Cambridge
Though it’s first and foremost thought of in economic and political terms, globalization is having profound cultural effects as well – effects Harvard scholars and their peers around the globe are working to understand. To explore the impact of globalization on literature, Harvard’s Institute for World Literature (IWL) earlier this year invited 140 participants from…
-
News+
Intel’s Sadasivan Shankar named scientist in residence
Materials design expert to spend fall semester at Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences A leader in computational materials design will bring an industry perspective to the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) this year. Sadasivan Shankar will be the first Distinguished Scientist in Residence at the Institute for Applied Computational Science…
-
News+
A tireless advocate for the science of healthy eating
The Boston Globe Magazine profiled Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) nutrition expert Walter Willett in the cover story of its July 28 issue. Willett, Fredrick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition and chair of the Nutrition Department at HSPH, is the single-most-cited nutritionist in the world. He oversees two long-term studies that have gathered data on…
-
News+
Medicaid expansion faces challenges as Jan. 1 deadline looms
With just months remaining before the Jan. 1 rollout of changes to the Medicaid program that will expand health care coverage to as many as 10-20 million Americans, substantial implementation challenges remain — namely, uncertainty regarding costs and the number of states willing to accept the federal subsidy to expand Medicaid coverage to their citizens.…
-
News+
Lue discusses online learning revolution
Robert A. Lue, Richard L. Menschel Faculty Director of the Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, faculty director of HarvardX, and professor in the department of molecular and cellular biology at Harvard University, writes about how online learning has the potential to improve the campus experience. The piece, appearing in Scientific American, emphasized the importance…
-
News+
Skipping breakfast may increase coronary heart disease risk
A new study from Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) adds to evidence that eating breakfast is important for good health. HSPH researchers found that men who regularly skipped breakfast had a 27% higher risk of heart attack or death from coronary heart disease than those who did eat a morning meal. Non-breakfast-eaters were generally…
-
News+
Three cups of milk a day? That may be too many
Federal dietary guidelines recommending that Americans of all ages consume three cups per day of reduced fat milk or other dairy products may be influenced more by lobbying from the dairy industry than by scientific evidence, according to a new commentary co-authored by Walter Willett, Fredrick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition at Harvard School…
-
News+
Turkey fellowships give HSPH postdocs chance to teach, collaborate
Three Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) postdoctoral researchers spent a week at Kocaeli University in Turkey in May 2013 under a fellowship program offering them opportunities to lecture, learn, and establish collaborations with fellow academics. The Kocaeli University School of Medicine International Travel Award, now in its second year, provides postdocs with professional opportunities at…
-
News+
Harvard-organized conference in New Delhi focuses on gender justice
Leading lawmakers, police officials, and social activists met July 12-13 in New Delhi, India, for a conference titled “Gender Justice and Criminal Law Reform,” which was organized by the Harvard Gender Violence Project (HGVP), a collaboration between Harvard School of Public Health’s FXB Center for Health and Human Rights, Harvard Law School, the Harvard South…