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Health - Administration - 08.06.2015
Study will identify ways of supporting over-50s back into work
Helping the unemployed over 50s back into work is the focus of a new study by researchers at the University of Glasgow. In the UK the number of people on long term health related benefits has steadily increased over the last 40 years to 2.6 million despite work becoming much safer and less physically demanding.

Administration - Environment - 27.05.2015
Scientist Invents New Technique to Understand Cloud Behavior
Scientist Invents New Technique to Understand Cloud Behavior
New Solar Energy Research Center will foster development of fuels from sunlight; building will be named for Steven Chu, former Berkeley Lab Director and Energy Secretary Berkeley, CA, May 26, 2015- Mother Nature makes it happen so effortlessly and efficiently-turning sunlight, water and carbon dioxide into the building blocks for fuel for plants, that is.

Health - Administration - 20.05.2015
More people are dying in hospices
The proportion of people dying in hospices in England has nearly doubled since 1993, but the gap in hospice deaths between people living in the least and most deprived areas appears to be growing, find a new study by the Cicely Saunders Institute at King's College London.

Health - Administration - 15.05.2015
Taxes on goods and services 'linked with increased infant mortality'
A new study published in The Lancet suggests that taxes on goods and services could potentially increase infant mortality in developing countries because they make it harder for poor families to afford food and basic health care. The researchers from Oxford University, Stanford University, and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine examined different healthcare funding systems used by low-income and middle-income countries.

Health - Administration - 06.05.2015
Study Indicates that Gene Therapy Efficacy for LCA is Dynamic: Improvement is Followed by Decline in Vision
For more than 100 years, exposing students to basic and clinical research has been an essential component of a medical school education in the United States. However, today, new models of medical education in which research plays a minimal role are likely to create a two-tiered system of education, decrease the physician-scientist pipeline and diminish the application of scientific advances to patient care.

Administration - Law - 02.05.2015
Warwick experts help West Midlands Police convict killers
Unique collaboration sees cutting edge research used to prove murder cases Futuristic 3D scanning technology at WMG , University of Warwick is helping West Midlands Police to convict killers thanks to a pioneering new partnership which is providing juries with microscopic evidence previously beyond the reach of forensic testing.

Law - Administration - 30.04.2015
Texas Lawmakers Should Use Evidence-Based Policy More Often
Government "reforms are advocated as though they were certain to be successful," yet most "programs end up with no interpretable evaluation" of their success. Donald Campbell wrote those words in 1969, but he could easily have been writing about Texas today. The state launches, expands and cuts programs without using evidence of whether they are achieving their goals.

Health - Administration - 23.04.2015
Asthma's potential root cause
A team of scientists have for the first time identified the potential root cause of asthma and an existing drug that offers a new treatment. Published in Science Translational Medicine , Cardiff University researchers, working in collaboration with scientists at King's College London and the Mayo Clinic (USA), describe the previously unproven role of the calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) in causing asthma, a disease which affects 300 million people worldwide.

Health - Administration - 22.04.2015
Alcoholic hepatitis treatments fail to keep patients alive
The main drugs used to treat alcoholic hepatitis are not effective at increasing patients' survival, a major study has found. In a trial of over 1,000 patients, prednisolone and pentoxifylline, treatments recommended in international guidelines, did not achieve a statistically significant reduction in mortality after 28 days, 90 days or a year.

Health - Administration - 16.04.2015
New method helps establish south Asian perceptions of dementia
New method helps establish south Asian perceptions of dementia
Dementia care for south Asian people could be improved after researchers from The University of Manchester adapted a commonly used tool for judging perceptions of the disease. Dementia care for south Asian people could be improved after researchers from The University of Manchester adapted a commonly used tool for judging perceptions of the disease.

Health - Administration - 14.04.2015
Children with type 1 diabetes at fivefold risk of hospitalisation
Welsh data shows pre-schoolers and those from disadvantaged backgrounds most at risk Children living with type 1 diabetes are nearly five times more likely to be admitted to hospital than non-diabetic children, a new study has found. The number of children being diagnosed with type 1 diabetes is increasing 3-4% every year and more so in school-aged children.

Administration - 08.04.2015
Greater use of food banks linked to higher unemployment, sanctions and cuts in welfare spending
The mass expansion of food banks across the United Kingdom is associated with cuts in spending on local services, welfare benefits and higher unemployment rates, a study has found. The findings by researchers from Oxford University, Liverpool University and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine are published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ).

Health - Administration - 07.04.2015
Study links incentives for primary care doctors to improved quality, lower cost
ANN ARBOR-Fee-for-value-a physician-reimbursement model that maintains traditional fees for service but includes quality and spending incentives-can reduce spending and improve quality in primary care, according to a study led by the University of Michigan. Christy Harris Lemak, who conducted the work as a faculty member at the U-M School of Public Health but is now at the University of Alabama-Birmingham, says it's possible to transform reimbursement within a fee-for-service framework to encourage and motivate physicians to provide high-quality care, while also reducing costs.

Mathematics - Administration - 25.03.2015
Impact singled out for recognition
A Lancaster University academic has been singled out in an international science journal for his far-reaching impact work on ship hatch designs. The weekly journal, Nature , has selected just 12 impact case studies for publication following the recent Research Excellence Framework (REF), a rigorous assessment of research work undertaken by British universities.

Administration - Health - 25.03.2015
Deep dive analysis demonstrates global impact of UK research
In an initial assessment of the nature, scale and beneficiaries of the impact of UK universities' research, investigators at King's College London say the benefits are multi-impactful and have been felt globally, across all nations, in findings published today. The Policy Institute at King's, in collaboration with the Department of Digital Humanities, used a mixture of text mining techniques and qualitative analysis to interrogate 6, 679 non-redacted 'impact case studies' submitted to the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2014.

Environment - Administration - 18.03.2015
Amazon’s carbon uptake declines as trees die faster
The most extensive land-based study of the Amazon to date reveals it is losing its capacity to absorb carbon from the atmosphere. From a peak of two billion tonnes of carbon dioxide each year in the 1990s, the net uptake by the forest has halved and is now for the first time being overtaken by fossil fuel emissions in Latin America.

Life Sciences - Administration - 16.03.2015
Consistency is the key to success in bread baking and biology
ANN ARBOR-Whether you're baking bread or building an organism, the key to success is consistently adding ingredients in the correct order and in the right amounts, according to a new genetic study by University of Michigan researchers. Using the baker's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Patricia Wittkopp and her colleagues developed a novel way to disentangle the effects of random genetic mutations and natural selection on the evolution of gene expression.

Health - Administration - 13.03.2015
Plain cigarette packaging changes attitudes to smoking but doesn’t impact smoking behaviour in the short term
Using plain packaging for just one day can change smokers' attitudes towards their cigarette packs, according to the first randomised controlled trial into the effects of short-term exposure to plain cigarette packaging on smoking attitudes and behaviour. These results come two days after politicians in the UK voted to introduce plain cigarette packaging, a measure which will be introduced in May 2016.

Life Sciences - Administration - 09.03.2015
Your brain might not be as ’old’ as you think
Our standard way of measuring brain activity could be giving us a misleading picture of how our brains age, argues Dr Kamen Tsvetanov from the Department of Psychology. We're an ageing society, with more and more people living into old age, so it's crucial that we understand how age affects how the brain functions Kamen Tsvetanov How 'old' is your brain? Put another way, how 'aged' is your brain? The standard, scientific answer, suggests that the older you get, the greater the changes in the activity of your neurons.

Administration - 24.02.2015
Researchers investigate hi-tech solutions to help patients get more out of their assistive technology
Supported by £1.86m of EPSRC funding Leading research Universities are set to collaborate on a project to improve the support mobility patients receive after leaving clinics. Adaptive, Assistive Rehabilitative Technology: Beyond the Clinic (AART-BC) will develop a platform to monitor the use of assistive technology (AT) and compliance with rehabilitation programmes (RP) and support the patient outside of the clinic.