News+

  • News+

    New FDA regulations on e-cigarettes a “mixed bag”

    E-cigarettes, cigars, pipe tobacco, and hookah tobacco will soon be regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and their sale will be banned to anyone under age 18, it was announced May 5. Vaughan Rees, director of the Center for Global Tobacco Control at Harvard Chan School, discusses the impact of this new…

  • News+

    2016 Hoopes Prize winners announced

    The Faculty of Arts and Sciences recently awarded the Hoopes Prize to 64 Harvard College seniors. Given in recognition of outstanding scholarly work or research, the prize is funded by the estate of Thomas T. Hoopes ’19, who established it to “promote excellence in the art of teaching.” Awards are given both to undergraduates and…

  • News+

    2016 Howard Hughes Medical Institute Fellows named

    Sixty-six medical and veterinary students from 34 schools across the nation will spend a full year conducting mentored basic, translational and applied research as fellows in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Medical Research Fellows Program This year’s class includes 11 students who will begin conducting their research at Harvard Medical School this summer. Two students from the…

  • News+

    Gun research faces roadblocks

    There are tons of records about guns—who sells them, who buys them, and, if they were used in crimes, when and where—but those records don’t necessarily make it into any database available to researchers. Although evidence suggests that fewer guns mean fewer suicides and homicides, there’s just not enough data to influence national policy, according…

  • News+

    BSC presents Barrett Award to 3 students

    On May 2, 2016, the Bureau of Study Counsel (BSC) presented the Joseph L. Barrett Award to Jasmine Fernandez ’16, Ana Barros ’16, and Ted White ’17. The award commemorates Joseph L. Barrett ’73, by honoring exceptional students who give their time to support their peers in developing more meaningful college experiences. Jasmine, Ana, and…

  • News+

    To press (coffee) or not to press?

    European pressed coffee has become more fashionable in the U.S. But it may have a negative impact on health if you drink too much, according to nutrition expert Eric Rimm of Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Pressed coffee is made by mixing ground coffee beans with boiled water in a special glass pitcher…

  • News+

    2016 Cabot Fellows named

    Eleven faculty members have been awarded 2016 Walter Channing Cabot Fellowships for their outstanding publications. The 2016 honorees are: Suzanne Preston Blier, Allen Whitehill Clowes Professor of Fine Arts and of African and African American Studies, “Art and Risk in Ancient Yoruba: Ife History, Power, and Identity c. 1300” (Cambridge University Press, 2015) Khaled El-Rouayheb, James Richard…

  • News+

    The Textalyzer? New efforts aim to curb texting by drivers

    Although most states ban texting by drivers, the problem appears to be getting worse—and road fatalities are on the rise. To change people’s behavior, lawmakers and public health experts are devising new strategies, some of which mimic strategies to combat drunk driving that began nearly three decades ago. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health…

  • News+

    Centuries to celebrate: Harvard Divinity School turns 200

    Two hundred years. Even in an institution as venerable as Harvard University, that’s a long time. Harvard Divinity School, the nation’s first nonsectarian theological school, will celebrate its bicentennial during the 2016-17 academic year with events and exhibits that highlight the School’s mission to illuminate, engage, and serve the world through the pursuit and practice…

  • News+

    HPV vaccination expected to reduce cancer burden in all races, may not eliminate all disparities

    Human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated cancers occur more frequently, and sometimes with more deadly consequences, among Hispanics, blacks, and American Indian and Alaska Natives than among whites. A new study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health finds that HPV vaccination is expected to reduce the cancer burden across all racial/ethnic groups. However, some disparities in…

  • News+

    In memoriam: James H. Ware, renowned biostatistician, admired leader and mentor

    James H. Ware, the Frederick Mosteller Professor of Biostatistics and associate dean for clinical and translational science at the Harvard Chan School, passed away April 26 after a long battle with cancer. Ware was a deeply respected and admired member of the Harvard Chan School community for nearly 40 years, having joined the faculty in 1979 after…

  • News+

    A call for reparations for Roma slavery

    Reparations for historical injustices should extend to the Roma, who were slave laborers in parts of Romania for nearly 500 years, say two human rights researchers from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Roma slavery has left a legacy of troubling consequences, including poverty, homelessness, limited access to fundamental social and economic rights, social…

  • News+

    2015 Harvard Sustainability Report released

    How can we best enhance the well-being of people across generations on Harvard’s campus, in the region, and the globe? Today, in a message to the Harvard community, Office for Sustainability Director Heather Henriksen announced the release of Harvard’s 2015 University-wide Sustainability Report detailing just some of the ways we’re seeking to answer this question, and posing other important questions…

  • News+

    Young adult survivors of childhood cancer report overall health similar to middle-aged in general population

    Do survivors of childhood cancer return to normal health as they grow up? According to new research from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, overall health-related quality of life in young adult survivors of childhood cancer resembles that of middle-aged adults. In a study published today in the…

  • News+

    Nieman Foundation announces new fellows in class of 2017

    The Nieman Foundation for Journalism, a leading global voice in professional journalism education and journalistic innovation for 79 years, has selected 24 journalists as members of the Nieman class of 2017. The group includes reporters, writers, correspondents, editors, producers, columnists, filmmakers, a photographer, a director, digital strategists, and news executives who work around the world.…

  • News+

    Student-led startups vie for top prize in President’s Challenge

    Projects led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health students—one that trains Indian girls as peer health educators and another that aims to use technology to allow patients and their loved ones to interact with their hospital care in real-time—are among the 10 finalist teams in this year’s President’s Challenge. Now in its fifth…

  • News+

    Removing guns from distraught individuals may help curb suicide rate

    Friends of distressed individuals can have a role in helping to reduce the nation’s rising suicide rate by showing compassion, optimism, and coaxing the distraught person to hand over guns, pills, and poison that they might use to kill themselves, said Catherine Barber, director of the Means Matter Campaign at the Harvard Injury Control Research…

  • News+

    Things that move: Kinetic toy workshop is fun for all

    Parents and kids recently came to the Ed Portal for a vacation-week workshop on making “cardboard automata,” kinetic toys, led by Harvard Physics Artist-in-Residence Kim Bernard. Bernard explained how the cardboard frames worked — a handle moves a wheel, which spins a disk, making a top rotate — and everyone got to work building their…

  • News+

    Harvard Kennedy School’s Alumni Board presents 2016 alumni awards

    Three Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) graduates will receive alumni awards May 14 during Reunion Weekend. The HKS Alumni Board of Directors will present the following individuals with awards: Amara Konneh, M.C./M.P.A. ’08, will receive the Alumni Public Service Award. Malik Ahmad Jalal, M.P.A./I.D. ’11, will receive the Emerging Global Leader Award. Rudy Brioché, M.P.P. ’00,…

  • News+

    When eyeing research findings, media focus should be on the big picture

    When news media report — and consumers read —  stories about the latest scientific and medical discoveries, more emphasis should be placed on studies that summarize a large volume of research, Acting Dean David Hunter,  Vincent L. Gregory Professor in Cancer Prevention at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said in a April 21,…

  • News+

    New ministries for millennials

    Millennials hungry for deep connection are creating new spiritual communities even as they turn away from organized religion, the authors of two new studies said recently at Harvard Divinity School (HDS). As a result, secular groups are discovering the value of religious resources, and faith communities are innovating in new and unexpected ways. The remarks…

  • News+

    Improving health among homeless people

    During the decade she spent as a physician assistant at Boston Health Care for the Homeless Program, Jill Roncarati saw, up close and personal, the ravages people suffered when they had no place to live. Cancers went undetected until they’d reached an advanced stage. Preventable complications from untreated diabetes emerged. Substance abuse problems dragged on…

  • News+

    Putting the brakes on distracted driving

    April is National Distracted Driving Awareness Month. Jay Winsten is the Frank Stanton Director of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s Center for Health Communication and associate dean for health communication, which recently celebrated its 30th anniversary. He talks about the Center’s newest initiative: a campaign to prevent injuries and fatalities caused by “distracted driving,”…

  • News+

    Harvard team presents plan to prevent common childbirth injury in India

    Say you’ve got $30 million to develop a five-year pilot plan for preventing and treating thousands of women in India who suffer from a serious childbirth-related injury called an obstetric fistula. But you have just five days to come up with the plan. That was the challenge faced by five Harvard graduate students—two from Harvard…

  • Campus & Community

    Office for the Arts Announces 2016 Arts Prize Winners

    The Office for the Arts at Harvard (OFA) and the Council on the Arts at Harvard, a standing committee of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, are pleased to announce the 11 recipients of the annual undergraduate arts prizes for 2016. The awards, presented to more than 130 undergraduates for the past 34 years, recognize…

  • News+

    Zika epidemic forcing scientists to rethink assumptions about human biology

    On April 13, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) joined the World Health Organization (WHO) in confirming a link between Zika and the severe birth defect microcephaly. While officials at WHO also believe that there is enough evidence to conclude that the virus causes the autoimmune nervous disorder Guillain-Barré syndrome, the CDC is waiting…

  • News+

    Researchers optimistic about malaria vaccine progress

    While the world is as close as it has ever been to having a malaria vaccine, the fight to eradicate the disease is far from over. That was the consensus among experts in the field who gathered at a forum hosted by Harvard’s Defeating Malaria: From the Genes to the Globe initiative on April 6, 2016. Focused…

  • News+

    Health disparities between blacks and whites run deep

    Being a person of color in America is bad for your health. That’s the theme of a new op-ed written by David Williams, Florence Sprague Norman and Laura Smart Norman Professor of Public Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, president and CEO of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Writing…

  • News+

    Q&A with Howard Koh featured in STAT

    The late Nelson Mandela’s leadership skills and issues related to organ donation were among the topics Howard Koh, Harvey V. Fineberg Professor of the Practice of Public Health Leadership at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, discussed in an April 12, 2016 STAT news’ “Pulse of Longwood” interview. Koh returned in 2014 to Harvard…

  • News+

    Perma.cc receives grant to expand source-saving tool

    The Institute of Museum and Library Services has awarded a major grant to the Harvard Law School Library Innovation Lab to further develop its Perma.cc tool to combat link rot. The IMLS grant awards over $700,000 to the Harvard Law School Library Innovation Lab, in cooperation with the Berkman Center for Internet & Society and…