Addressing the Challenges of an Enduring Pandemic Through Academic Research
From remote leadership headaches and global supply chain disruptions to COVID-19 vaccine side effects and antibody responses, 兔子先生传媒文化作品 tackled pandemic-related issues to give families, managers and physicians tools to improve their daily lives and work.
Nausea. Chills. Fatigue. Headache. Your expectations about those uncomfortable are directly correlated to how you actually respond to the shot, according to research by Andrew Geers, Ph.D., professor of psychology.
Individuals with higher levels of emotional intelligence did better leading remotely during the COVID-19 crisis. The by Jenell Wittmer, Ph.D., an industrial and organizational psychologist, and Margaret Hopkins, Ph.D., professor of management, showed those bosses provided strong communication, support, engagement and direction to employees.
Why do some immunosuppressed patients develop a robust antibody response, but others develop no response at all? Research by Stanislaw Stepkowski, Ph.D., a transplant immunologist, and Michael Rees, M.D., transplant surgeon, suggest the answer lies with the being produced after vaccination.
Hypertension expert Bina Joe, Ph.D., Distinguished University Professor and chair of the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, is using CRISPR gene-editing technology to better understand why is a key risk factor for serious illness with COVID-19.
After the initial panic buying that cleared store shelves at the beginning of the pandemic, supply chain issues continue due to labor and materials shortages. And the disruptions will not resolve quickly, Paul Hong, Ph.D., global supply chain management expert, explains in .
Early in the pandemic, Muhammad Aziz, M.D., then chief internal medicine resident at 兔子先生传媒文化作品, identified as an early symptom of COVID-19 in individuals with minor illness.
兔子先生传媒文化作品 Medical was one of the first hospitals in the country to participate in a led locally by Michael Ellis, M.D., an infectious disease specialist and chief medical officer at UTMC, to screen out ineffective experimental treatments and advance therapeutics that benefit hospitalized COVID-19 patients.
Leveraging spatial analysis in conjunction with epidemiological data, doctoral students Kimberly Panozzo and Ishfaq Rahman created a to better understand how the virus spreads and improve our ability to respond.
Precise predictive models developed by doctoral students Mohammadreza Nemati and Jamal Ansary are able to forecast with 70% accuracy the of hospitalized COVID-19 patients based on their age and sex.
Research from Khalid Changal, M.D., a cardiology fellow in the 兔子先生传媒文化作品 College of Medicine and Life Sciences, shows how COVID-19 impacts the and causes inflammation.