Quantcast
Channel: Harvard Gazette » Division of Biological Sciences
Browsing all 20 articles
Browse latest View live

Industrial disasters sparked field of environmental health

Two large, unnatural disasters helped to create the impetus for the field of environmental health to grow in scope. But before there was a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and before the National...

View Article



Environmental health researcher studies lead poisoning in India

Lead is a naturally occurring toxic element, and exposure poses a serious threat to children whose neurological systems are still developing. Some children suffer from brain damage, poor motor skills...

View Article

Lowering iron levels does not cut heart attack risk for men

Men who give blood reduce the amount of iron in their bodies, but that does not result in a reduction in their risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) and heart attack. Iron levels in the body had once...

View Article

Direct damage from radiation may be passed to neighboring cells

Cells communicate, organize, share resources, and form direct connections with one another. They also are affected by damage to their neighbors. Research led by John Little of the Harvard School of...

View Article

Maternal bone lead levels pose toxic prenatal risk

Although much attention has been paid to public health efforts to reduce lead exposure in children between the ages of six months and five years, when environmental lead exposures (such as from leaded...

View Article


Harvard researchers complete genomic sequence of deadly malaria parasite

Malaria is the world’s most serious parasitic tropical disease and kills more people than any communicable disease except for tuberculosis. There is more human malaria in Africa today than at any time...

View Article

Professor honored for ongoing environmental research

Harvard Professor Jack Spengler and MIT professor Mario Molina shared the $250,000 Heinz award, which recognized the independent bodies of work by Spengler and Molina, although coincidentally the...

View Article

Holding their breath for the breathless

Two researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) got the idea of studying free divers to get information that would help them help the breathless to breathe better. “We hope that by...

View Article


Fatty foods feed heart attacks, researchers say

Hold the french fries, doughnuts, and cookies, and save as many as 228,000 heart attacks and deaths from heart disease. That’s the message from a team of researchers at the Harvard School of Public...

View Article


HSPH, Broad map malaria genetic diversity

Researchers have created the first map of genetic diversity of the malaria parasite, providing new insights in the fight against a public health scourge that kills one person every 30 seconds. In work...

View Article

Industrial disasters sparked field of environmental health

Two large, unnatural disasters helped to create the impetus for the field of environmental health to grow in scope. But before there was a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and before the National...

View Article

Environmental health researcher studies lead poisoning in India

Lead is a naturally occurring toxic element, and exposure poses a serious threat to children whose neurological systems are still developing. Some children suffer from brain damage, poor motor skills...

View Article

Lowering iron levels does not cut heart attack risk for men

Men who give blood reduce the amount of iron in their bodies, but that does not result in a reduction in their risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) and heart attack. Iron levels in the body had once...

View Article


Direct damage from radiation may be passed to neighboring cells

Cells communicate, organize, share resources, and form direct connections with one another. They also are affected by damage to their neighbors. Research led by John Little of the Harvard School of...

View Article

Maternal bone lead levels pose toxic prenatal risk

Although much attention has been paid to public health efforts to reduce lead exposure in children between the ages of six months and five years, when environmental lead exposures (such as from leaded...

View Article


Harvard researchers complete genomic sequence of deadly malaria parasite

Malaria is the world’s most serious parasitic tropical disease and kills more people than any communicable disease except for tuberculosis. There is more human malaria in Africa today than at any time...

View Article

Professor honored for ongoing environmental research

Harvard Professor Jack Spengler and MIT professor Mario Molina shared the $250,000 Heinz award, which recognized the independent bodies of work by Spengler and Molina, although coincidentally the...

View Article


Holding their breath for the breathless

Two researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) got the idea of studying free divers to get information that would help them help the breathless to breathe better. “We hope that by...

View Article

Fatty foods feed heart attacks, researchers say

Hold the french fries, doughnuts, and cookies, and save as many as 228,000 heart attacks and deaths from heart disease. That’s the message from a team of researchers at the Harvard School of Public...

View Article

HSPH, Broad map malaria genetic diversity

Researchers have created the first map of genetic diversity of the malaria parasite, providing new insights in the fight against a public health scourge that kills one person every 30 seconds. In work...

View Article
Browsing all 20 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images