Oct 19, 2020
College of Medicine leaders updated faculty, staff and students on Oct. 16 about the ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
J. David Brensinger has always been the type of person to reach out and help others. Now, a planned gift in memory of his wife, Glenna, will help cancer patients for generations to come.
Despite the fact that we’re many months into the COVID-19 pandemic, questions are still swirling about the various types of testing for the novel coronavirus. With incidence of COVID-19 trending upward in the U.S., the topic is as timely as ever. In this interview, we learn about the various types of tests, who should be tested and much more.
Certain oral antiseptics and mouthwashes may have the ability to inactivate human coronaviruses, according to a Penn State College of Medicine research study.
Ciertos antisépticos orales y enjuagues bucales pueden tener la capacidad de inactivar los coronavirus humanos, según un estudio de investigación de la Facultad de Medicina de Penn State.
The first phase of a new Penn State Health Infonet site designed to improve the user experience will launch Monday, Oct. 26.
From bats in waiting rooms to working during the Three Mile Island accident, nurse educator Janice Mills has seen it all in her 46 years at the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center.
The number of our employees who have tested positive for COVID has recently increased. These infections generally are not acquired from patients at our clinics or hospitals.
Penn State Health and Penn State College of Medicine’s 2020 United Way campaign supports the Ready for School, Ready to Succeed program, which helps prepare children academically and socially.
Oct 18, 2020
Penn State College of Medicine researchers have discovered a new bacteria that, when paired with a common virus, may be the cause of infection-induced hydrocephalus in Uganda.