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Indianapolis Business Journal
Indiana University School of Medicine lands $1.25 million for increasing diversity
The Indiana University School of Medicine has won a $1.25 million grant for increasing graduate school diversity.
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Insider
4 signs that your kid has separation anxiety issues, according to psychologists
All kids can feel sad when leaving their parents, but if this persists, it could be separation anxiety.
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Medical Economics
Wearable health monitors generate data, create challenges for diabetic patients
Older adults are interested in results, but technology needs to stick and be easy to use.
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WFYI
Meet the doctor overseeing diversity and equity at IU's medical school
IU School of Medicine has selected a leader for a new role that oversees the school’s efforts on diversity, equity, inclusion and justice.
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WFYI
Lawmakers aim to get people with mental health issues into treatment, instead of jail
Indiana lawmakers are trying to divert more people away from local jails and into mental health treatment.
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Inside Indiana Business
Indiana University School of Medicine names chief diversity officer
The Indiana University School of Medicine has named Dr. Chemen Neal its first executive associate dean for DEIJ and chief diversity officer.
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HealthDay News
Some Athletes May Need an Extra Month for Concussion Recovery
Some college athletes take longer to recover from a concussion, but a new study offers them some good news.
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WBOI
Lack of data, info leaves Indiana doctors unprepared for more tick diseases
Warmer temperatures could create more places where ticks can thrive in Indiana and give them more time to feed.
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EHR Intelligence
Regenstrief Foundation, Walther Gifts Create IU Cancer Informatics Chair
The incoming cancer informatics chair will collaborate with a group of researchers at IU and Regenstrief in bioinformatics, data science, and statistics.
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Leaps.org
Leaps.org: Can blockchain help solve the Henrietta Lacks problem?
Science has come a long way since Henrietta Lacks, a Black woman from Baltimore, succumbed to cervical cancer at age 31 in 1951.
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FOX32 Chicago
Rare but invasive strep throat-A hitting kids hard, doctors warn
As kids return to school following the holiday break, there's been a big uptick in Strep-A — a rare but invasive type of strep throat.
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Medical News Today
Can researchers use stem cells to reverse damage in degenerative eye diseases?
It remained unclear whether neurons obtained upon the dissociation of the retinal organoid retained the ability to form new synapses.