Sep 24, 2019
The yearlong Penn State Clinical and Translational Science Institute Translational Research Training Program welcomed its 2019-2020 academic year cohort.
Penn State College of Medicine graduate students recently recognized faculty members Lisa Shantz, Ralph Keil and Kent Vrana for their outstanding teaching.
Sep 20, 2019
A Penn State College of Medicine researcher and his team will receive almost $1.2 million over three years to examine the effects of state policies on pregnant women with opioid use disorder (OUD) and their infants.
SMaRT Connects will be held from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Oct. 17, 2019, in Lecture Room D at Penn State College of Medicine. This session will highlight the utility of REDCap in human subjects research studies.
Sep 18, 2019
Penn State Clinical and Translational Science Institute's Community-Engaged Research Core Faculty Fellowship is now accepting applications for its next fellows.
Sep 17, 2019
The 10th annual Resident/Fellow Research Day held Aug. 28, 2019, was an opportunity for graduate medical education trainees from Penn State Health to share their research work.
Allen Kunselman, senior instructor, public health sciences, Penn State College of Medicine, will present "The Basics of Randomization and Sample Size Estimation" at the next Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Research Design (BERD) Research Methods Seminar Series.
Can a computer model be used to explain why an environmental toxin might lead to neurodegenerative disease? According to Penn State College of Medicine researchers, a programmatic simulation allowed them to see how a toxin produced by algal blooms in saltwater might cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
Sep 12, 2019
Dr. Keith Cheng, Penn State College of Medicine pathology professor and director of experimental pathology, shares his passion for making a difference through his research.
Papillomavirus has traditionally been considered strictly a sexually transmitted disease, but a recent study found that rabbit and mouse papillomaviruses could be transferred by blood to their respective hosts.