Close to 9,000 children and teens in the United States died from opioid poisonings over the last two decades, representing a nearly three-fold increase in mortality rates, Yale researchers said. These findings illustrate how the opioid epidemic continues...
Bacteria found in the small intestines of mice and humans can travel to other organs and trigger an autoimmune response, according to a new Yale study. The researchers also found that the autoimmune reaction can be suppressed with an antibiotic or vaccine...
Two Yale graduate students — Jessica Cerdeña and Demar Lewis — were recently inducted into the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Health Policy Research Scholars program.
Health Policy Research Scholars (HPRS) is a national leadership development program...
For over a decade, Yale Partnerships for Global Health has worked to reduce the burden of infectious diseases around the world by educating, training, and supporting the careers of biomedical and public health researchers.
Learn more about the initiative...
President Peter Salovey and other Yale luminaries joined experts from around the globe at the World Economic Forum (WEF), held Jan. 23-26 in Davos, Switzerland.
Read President Salovey’s account of his visit there in the latest edition of Notes from...
The new Yale Scholars in Implementation Science (YSIS) career development program has received an additional $1 million in National Institute for Health K12 grant funding, according to program director Dr. Steven L. Bernstein. The program was launched in...
In China, doctors are overestimating the severity of coronary stenosis — the abnormal narrowing of blood vessels in the heart and a hallmark of coronary artery disease — say researchers from Yale and China. These findings have been published in the Jan....