Freddie Gray’s death and the road to reform in Baltimore
April 17, 2025
Mayor Brandon M. Scott (D) and former Senator Jill P. Carter recently reflected on the 10 years that have passed since the death of Freddie Gray. In two separate events, the leaders spoke on the “Baltimore Uprising” that followed Gray’s funeral and how the city has changed.
Featured Expert

Source: The Philadelphia Tribune
Behind the story of the decades-long journey of xenotransplantation
April 17, 2025
Dr. Bartley Griffith, who was the surgeon involved here, told us how nervous he was about broaching it and then how this patient responded with humor. He said, you know, what do you think I’m gonna oink? That first operation, that first transplant, lasted only two months.
Featured Expert

Source: Associated Press
University of Maryland Medical System: A better state of care for head and neck cancers
April 17, 2025
The University of Maryland Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center (UMGCCC) offers a head and neck multidisciplinary clinic where ear, nose and throat surgeons like Dr. Rodney Taylor, and other experts from oncology, pathology and neuroradiology take a patient-centered approach.
Featured Expert

Source: WMAR-TV
Why You Shouldn’t Ignore Loud Snoring in Kids
April 15, 2025
The rattling or whistling noises of regular snorers are famously hard on those who share their beds. Middle-aged men and people who are overweight come frequently to mind as perpetrators because they are the most common sufferers of sleep apnea, often caused by a temporarily collapsing airway that makes the person snore heavily. But recent studies in children and pregnant women have revealed that even mild snoring can negatively affect health, behavior and quality of life.
Featured Expert

Source: Scientific American
Why ADHD Meds Work for Some and Not Others
April 15, 2025
Despite widespread, lingering shortages, traditional attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) meds – such as methylphenidate (MP) – persist as a reliable front-line treatment. Even so, a frustrating number of patients – nearly a third – fail to respond to the drug. New research might explain why.
Featured Expert

Source: Psychiatrist.com
Insights Into Chronic Itch From Shawn Kwatra, M.D.
April 15, 2025
Shawn Kwatra, M.D., professor and chair of dermatology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, recently spoke with Managed Healthcare Executive about new discoveries in chronic itch, how treatment options are improving, and the challenges patients face in getting access to the right therapies.
Featured Expert

Source: Managed Healthcare Executive
GLP-1s Eyed as Key to Managing T1D with Obesity
April 14, 2025
Rozalina McCoy, MD, MS was interviewed for this article about GLP-1s and diabetes.
Featured Expert

Source: Medscape
Baltimore leaders discuss justice and reform 10 years after Freddie Gray’s death
April 13, 2025
Ten years after the police-involved death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray on April 11, 2015, the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law and Campaign for Justice, Safety and Jobs held an event to reflect on the events of the “Baltimore Uprising” and where the city is now.
Featured Expert

Source: Afro News
Panels at museum, University of Maryland help community reflect on Freddie Gray's death
April 11, 2025
The Reginald F. Lewis Museum and the University of Maryland Frances King Carey School of Law hosted panels reflecting on events surrounding Freddie Gray's death.
The panels, held Friday, helped communities remember Gray, who was arrested on April 12, 2015, and died after suffering injuries in police custody a week later

Source: WBAL-TV
Maryland law school reflects on Freddie Gray's death, looks at what work still needs to be done
April 11, 2025
It's almost been ten years since Freddie Gray died, and an event in downtown Baltimore Friday aimed to not only remember him but also remember what needs to be done when it comes to ensuring fair policing.
Still Rising 10 Years After Freddie Gray's Death was put on by the Gibson-Banks Center for Race and the Law, which is apart of the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law.
Featured Expert

Source: WJZ-TV
Tobin: Building A Better Law School Rankings Mousetrap
April 10, 2025
There must be a better way. U.S. News has dominated law school rankings for several decades, and its decisions about what to rank and how to weigh those factors have had a significant impact on legal education, and, in my view, not in a good way.
Featured Expert
Source: Tax Prof Blog
How Physicians Can Stay Up-to-Date on the Legal Status, FDA Approval, & Safety of Cannabis Use
April 10, 2025
While many medical professionals praise the benefits of cannabis use, there are certainly medical professionals who do not support its use. Professor of psychiatry at the University of Maryland School of Medicine’s Psychiatric Research Center in Baltimore, David Gorelick, MD, asserts that there is a concerning public misconception that cannabis and cannabinoid products are harmless.
Featured Expert

Source: Physician's Weekly
Researchers collaborate to develop a dual-action nanotherapy for obesity
April 10, 2025
Scientists at Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation, in collaboration with the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, have developed a new nanoparticle therapy that tackles obesity through two complementary mechanisms: converting energy-storing white fat into calorie-burning beige fat while simultaneously reducing obesity-related inflammation.
Featured Expert

Source: Bariatric News
Can the US return man deported to El Salvador? Immigration lawyers think so
April 9, 2025
On 12 March, Kilmar Abrego Garcia was driving home with his young son in Maryland when he was stopped by agents from US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Agents took Mr Garcia into custody, then shuttled him to detention facilities in Louisiana and Texas.
Featured Expert

Source: BBC
Community kitchen keeps food on the table across several Baltimore nonprofit organizations
April 8, 2025
Rise Early Learning and Family Support Center is another nonprofit organization that provides free early childhood education, respite care, resources and a sense of community.
"We provide breakfast, lunch and snack for all families," said Lezley Lewis-Anthony, with Rise Early.
Featured Expert

Source: WBAL-TV
Med Students: Show Up and Speak Up Even if It’s Hard
April 8, 2025
“I think attendings really like it when you’re enthusiastic and ready to be there, and especially keeping in mind that you don’t have to be right. But you do have to have reasoning for why you’re doing something,” said Lindsay Kohan, a fourth-year medical student at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore.

Source: Medscape
Trump Misleads on Transgender Issues
April 8, 2025
“Sex is a catch-all phrase that actually refers to a constellation of features, not just one as they’ve defined it here,” Margaret M. McCarthy, a neuroscientist and pharmacology professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, told us.
Featured Expert

Source: FactCheck.org
How Realistic Was the Poisonous Fruit on The White Lotus?
April 7, 2025
The White Lotus creators started planting seeds about Thailand’s deadly pong pong tree in the very first episode.
Featured Expert

Source: Time
Supreme Court pauses order requiring Maryland man’s return from El Salvador prison by midnight
April 7, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court temporarily paused a federal judge’s order that gave the Trump administration until the end of Monday to retrieve a Maryland man the government erroneously deported to a notorious El Salvador prison.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Sun
Why a Placebo May Work Better When You Know It’s a Placebo
April 7, 2025
For decades, the placebo effect — the phenomenon where a patient’s condition improves after receiving an inert treatment, often a sugar pill, because they believe it to be real medication — has fascinated and sometimes confounded the medical community. But what happens when you remove the deception and tell patients outright that they are receiving a placebo?
Featured Expert

Source: Medscape
In the Courts
April 6, 2025
University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law Dean Renée Hutchins Laurent was interviewed on "In the Courts with Katie Barlow."
Featured Expert

Source: FOX 5
How a new Georgia bill could change the fate of domestic abuse survivors in prison
April 6, 2025
Mary Favors is still plagued by nightmares from the days her husband beat her, choked her and verbally and sexually abused her. Now, she is in prison for killing him.
Featured Expert

Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
What to Know About Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
April 4, 2025
Jason J. Rose, MD, MBA is quoted in this New York Times article.
Featured Expert

Source: New York Times
Why Is It So Hard to Treat MASH?
April 4, 2025
MASH, an advanced form of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, refers to the inflammation of the liver caused by fat buildup. Over time, this inflammation can lead to scarring, liver failure, or even cancer.
MASH, which stands for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis, often develops in people with underlying metabolic conditions such as obesity, high cholesterol, or type 2 diabetes.
Featured Expert

Source: Verywell Health
A decade after Freddie Gray’s death, Baltimore police continue slow reforms
April 4, 2025
For a long time, the Baltimore Police Department did not respect the public’s First Amendment rights.
People were often charged with loitering or disorderly conduct if they criticized officers, participated in protests or recorded police activities...
It got worse before it got better.
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
Older Adults and Alcohol Are Not a Good Mix
April 4, 2025
Research published in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs warns many observational studies have previously suggested that moderate drinkers live longer and face fewer health issues than non-drinkers.
But newer research proposes that these reports are misleading.
Featured Expert

Source: Next Avenue
Have a disease and hoping for a cure? That’s now at risk with federal cuts, UMB scientists say
April 4, 2025
They’ve investigated blood tests to find cancer early and treat it with the best drugs. They’ve looked at new obesity drugs to curb cocaine addiction. They’ve developed medications aimed at addressing chronic pain and prevent norovirus symptoms that have plagued some cruise ships.

Source: Baltimore Banner
Switching to Tirzepatide Outweighs Upping Dulaglutide Dose
April 4, 2025
For people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) inadequately controlled on submaximal dulaglutide (Trulicity) doses, switching to tirzepatide (Mounjaro) produces significantly greater A1c and weight lowering than does escalating dulaglutide treatment.
Featured Expert

Source: Medscape
Discovery of ‘Master Regulator’ Gene Paves the Way for Enhanced Ovarian Cancer Treatments
April 3, 2025
In a significant breakthrough within ovarian cancer research, a team at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) has discovered a pivotal gene, ZNFX1, which acts as a potent “master regulator.” This discovery is anticipated to revolutionize treatment methodologies in forthcoming clinical trials for patients afflicted with therapy-resistant ovarian cancer.
Featured Expert

Source: Scienmag.com
What to Know About Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
April 3, 2025
When carbon monoxide binds to hemoglobin, it “kicks the oxygen off” the protein, and prevents tissues and organs from getting the oxygen they need to function properly, said Dr. Jason Rose, the chief of pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Featured Expert

Source: The New York Times
How a new Georgia bill could change the fate of domestic abuse survivors in prison
April 2, 2025
After her husband's death, Favors transported the body and left it elsewhere. Research shows similar snap decisions by victims in response to trauma can taint how jurors, judges and prosecutors see defendants, said Leigh Goodmark, a University of Maryland law professor who studies the criminalization of domestic violence.
Featured Expert

Source: The Argus-Press
Residency Revelations: It’s OK to Be Unsure and Ask for Help in Your Medical Career
April 1, 2025
After taking a quiz at Kingdomality.com, which tells you what type of job you would have if you had lived during the Middle Ages — jobs like dreamer-minstrel, discoverer, and even doctor — Stephen Kavic, MD, the program director of the General Surgery Residency Program at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, was less than thrilled to get shepherd.
Featured Expert

Source: Medscape
Lawmakers consider proposal to reduce potential of billions in sex abuse payouts
March 31, 2025
Kathleen Hoke, a University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law professor, said in an email that the amendments to the bill shown to her by a reporter attempt to create a system similar to one in New Hampshire. But they raise a number of legal questions, she said.
Featured Expert

Source: Southern Maryland Chronicle
Rare drug makes human blood deadly to mosquitoes: Study
March 31, 2025
The deadliest animal in the world is the pesky blood sucking mosquito, killing an estimated 700,000 people a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But a new study published Wednesday suggests that a rare medication has the potential to make human blood deadly to mosquitoes, offering a new way to treat deadly diseases like malaria, West Nile virus, yellow fever and Dengue fever.
Featured Expert
Source: News Nation
RFK Jr.’s Faulty Advice On Bird Flu
March 31, 2025
In recent news appearances, Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has suggested allowing bird flu to spread in poultry flocks unchecked. Scientists say that’s risky because it gives the virus more opportunities to replicate, increasing the chance it could change to spread easily among humans.
Featured Expert

Source: Factcheck.org
How a new Georgia bill could change the fate of domestic abuse survivors in prison
March 31, 2025
Between 74% and 95% of incarcerated women have survived domestic abuse or sexual violence, according to the Georgia Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Many were tried without fair opportunities to prove the scope of the abuse and how it led them to act in self-defense, while others were coerced into crimes, according to advocates, who add that certain laws disproportionately criminalize abused women.
Featured Expert

Source: Associated Press
Some offenders were victims first; it’s time to pass the Second Look Act
March 31, 2025
This week, the Maryland Senate is scheduled to vote on HB 853, the Maryland Second Look Act. The Second Look Act would enable people who have served at least 20 years in prison to ask the court to reconsider sentences that may have seemed appropriate when first handed down but are no longer necessary to safeguard the public. People like our clients.
Featured Expert

Source: Maryland Matters
Surgeons transplant genetically modified pig liver into Chinese patient
March 27, 2025
Prof Muhammad Mohiuddin, director of the cardiac xenotransplantation programme at the University of Maryland, said: “This is a major leap forward for the field. With a liver, you don’t have to keep it for the rest of your life.
“You can use it as a bridge until a human liver is available for transplant or it can be used as a partial support until the liver regenerates. I firmly believe that this can work.”
Featured Expert

Source: The Guardian
Healthy collaboration How Baltimore's faith-based groups, health systems and more are banding together to improve access to health care
March 27, 2025
Yolanda Ogbolu, dean of the University of Maryland School of Nursing and point person for the collaborative, said the group — which includes faith-based organizations, academia, hospitals and hospital-related entities – is tackling an issue that's been frequently voiced by community members.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Business Journal
Letter: University presidents say funding research important even in tough times
March 27, 2025
Here in Maryland, we are grateful to state legislators for recognizing the importance of investing in research and the power of collaboration, as exemplified by MPower, a partnership between the University of Maryland, College Park and the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Featured Expert
Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS

Source: The Baltimore Banner
The Role of Child Life Specialists
March 27, 2025
According to Regina Macatangay, MD, a pediatric hematologist and oncologist at the University of Maryland Children’s Hospital and an assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, child life specialists make all the difference in the world.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore's Child
Lawmakers consider proposal to reduce potential of billions in sex abuse payouts
March 25, 2025
Kathleen Hoke, a University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law professor, said in an email that the amendments to the bill shown to her by a reporter attempt to create a system similar to one in New Hampshire. But they raise a number of legal questions, she said.
Featured Expert

Source: Maryland Matters
Trump deregulatory blitz threatens Chesapeake Bay, environmental advocates say
March 24, 2025
When the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was formed in 1970, President Richard M. Nixon said its mission would be to establish and enforce environmental protection standards, research the adverse effects of pollution and provide grants and technical assistance to help control it.
Featured Expert

Source: Bay Journal
How to Lose Your Menopause Belly
March 24, 2025
“It produces hormones such as the stress hormone cortisol, as well as inflammatory proteins known as cytokines,” explains Pamela Peeke, M.D., assistant professor of family and community medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and author of The Hunger Fix: The Three-Stage Detox and Recovery Plan for Overeating and Food Addiction.
Featured Expert

Source: AARP
Refugee program on chopping block has impacted countless lives
March 24, 2025
Op-ed co-authored by Morgan Pardue-Kim, MSW '14, a PhD. candidate at the University of Maryland School of Social Work, Kerri Evans, PhD, MSW, LCSW, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County Department of Social Work, and UMSSW student and research assistant Celene Viveros Garces.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
Baltimore seniors have died at shocking rates from drug overdoses. Help is on the way.
March 21, 2025
For years, Shanda Brown saw dozens of seniors die from drug use at the affordable housing complex where she worked in Baltimore’s Upton neighborhood.
“We definitely felt like we were out there on our own,” Brown said.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Banner
Clinical trial represents a step towards a vaccine for Lassa fever
March 20, 2025
A clinical trial of a candidate vaccine to prevent Lassa fever has begun enrolling participants at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore.
Lassa fever is a viral haemorrhagic disease that can be fatal and causes permanent hearing loss in up to one-third of those who contract it.

Source: Drug Discovery World
The doctor who believes pig hearts could end our organ shortage
March 18, 2025
Sometimes tragedies can be breakthroughs. Or the beginnings of breakthroughs. That’s what happened a few years ago when a University of Maryland Medical Center surgical team, led by Muhammad Mansoor Mohiuddin and Bartley Griffith, performed a revolutionary new procedure on a 57-year-old who had terminal heart failure. David Bennett, Sr., had been denied a traditional heart transplant due to a variety of health factors.
Featured Expert

Source: National Geographic
New Digital Badge Recognizes Age-Friendly Pharmacists Committed to Improving Care for Older Adults and Lives of Caregivers
March 18, 2025
"Pharmacists are one of the most accessible health care practitioners, and they are perfectly positioned to help older adults gain the most benefit from Age-Friendly care," said Lamy Center Executive Director Nicole J. Brandt, PharmD, MBA.
Featured Expert

Source: American Society of Consultant Pharmacists (ASCP)
Does ‘Nature’s Ozempic’ Exist? What Science Says About Natural Alternatives
March 17, 2025
Various plants, herbs, and substances are being called “nature’s Ozempic,” usually because of anecdotal evidence or small studies that show weight loss.
Featured Expert

Source: Verywell Health
'Null and void': Trump questions whether Biden was aware of last-minute pardons
March 17, 2025
President Donald Trump has claimed that a batch of last-minute blanket pardons issued by former President Joe Biden are "null and void."
Featured Expert

Source: Scripps News
Do You Need a Measles Booster? You Might Be Surprised
March 14, 2025
Measles may seem like a disease of the past. Indeed, the highly contagious virus was declared eradicated in the United States in 2000 after a full year had passed without any infections. But times have changed. Texas is now experiencing the largest measles outbreak in nearly three decades, and the virus is spreading across the country.
Featured Expert

Source: Kiplinger
Assessing pain, anxiety and other symptoms of nursing home residents unable to speak for themselves
March 13, 2025
As many as half of nursing home residents are cognitively impaired and may be unable to communicate symptoms such as pain or anxiety to the staff and clinicians caring for them. Therefore, information needed for the evaluation of symptoms and subsequent treatment decisions typically does not reliably exist in nursing home electronic health records (EHRs).
Featured Expert

Source: Science Daily
Baltimore doctor leads international effort on easing pain
March 13, 2025
Dr. Luana Colloca, a former fellow at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, now leads non-pharmaceutical pain research at the University of Maryland in Baltimore and is a professor at the universities school of nursing. She is a parishioner of St. Leo the Great in Little Italy.
Featured Expert

Source: Catholic Review
PATIENTS Program expands to include more underrepresented communities in research
March 13, 2025
"The PATIENTS Program really listens to the voices of patients and their health care providers out there in the community, and then we try to serve as a bridge between those communities and researchers, and we try to answer relevant questions to improve health right here in West Baltimore, but increasingly across the nation," Mullins told 11 News.
Featured Expert

Source: WBAL-TV
The Feminist Law Professor who Wants to Stop Arresting People for Domestic Violence
March 12, 2025
Sarah Lustbader on the feminist law professor Leigh Goodmark, who for years was convinced that the way to keep women safe was through arrests and prosecutions but who now holds an opposite view.
Featured Expert

Source: The New Yorker
Postal workers conducting the census is part of a Trump pitch for taking over USPS
March 12, 2025
But until now, public calls to increase collaboration between the two agencies had not come with the idea of folding the USPS into the Commerce Department. Such a unilateral move by the president would violate the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970, says Rena Steinzor, an administrative law expert who retired last year as a professor at the University of Maryland's law school.
Featured Expert

Source: NPR Morning Edition
Maryland "in pretty good shape" despite measles case due to high vaccination rate
March 12, 2025
Although measles was considered "eliminated" from the U.S. 25 years ago, in recent years, epidemiologists could see the writing on the wall. Vaccination rates were starting to dip in the U.S., and cases were beginning to rise globally. An outbreak was likely.
Featured Expert

Source: WMAR
Why Diversity in Clinical Trials Matters More Than Ever
March 12, 2025
INCREASING diversity in research, from basic science to clinical trials, remains essential for advancing equitable healthcare outcomes. This is according to a panel discussion at the Skin of Color Society Scientific Symposium at the American Academy of Dermatology Annual Meeting in Orlando, Florida. Systemic barriers, however, political pressures, and recruitment challenges continue to threaten progress.
Featured Expert

Source: European Medical Journal
Meningococcal Vaccine Demonstrates Safety and Efficacy in Infants Across Sub-Saharan Africa
March 12, 2025
Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) have significantly advanced the field of global health with their recent findings on a new meningitis vaccine.
Featured Expert

Source: Science Magazine
Supreme Court declines to hear Republicans’ ‘Hail Mary’ effort to block climate lawsuits
March 12, 2025
The U.S. Supreme Court said on Monday that it would not hear a case seeking to stop climate lawsuits in five Democratic-led states, which are seeking financial damages from oil and gas companies for having obscured the connection between their products and global warming.
Featured Expert

Source: Grist
For Patients Needing Transplants, Hope Arrives on Tiny Hooves
March 10, 2025
On a 300-acre farm in an undisclosed location in rural Wisconsin, surrounded by fields dotted with big red barns and bordered by wild blue chicory and goldenrod, live some of the most pampered pigs in the world.
Featured Expert

Source: The New York Times
Changes that come with aging can be hard to accept. These 3 tips can help.
March 9, 2025
Why can’t anything ever just stay still?
A patient posed this question during a therapy session, reflecting on how, as we age, many things can get thrown into disarray — home life, social relations, job security and health.
Featured Expert

Source: The Washington Post
The placebo effect can be good medicine, for pain and other problems
March 8, 2025
Catarina Craveiro, a biomedical research technician from Lisbon, had been hobbled by lower back pain from scoliosis since childhood, unable to do much physically and dependent on ibuprofen for relief.
Featured Expert

Source: The Washington Post
The Future of Transplanting Pig Organs in People
March 7, 2025
After years of research into xenotransplantation, the field is at a turning point—yet risks and ethical issues remain.
Featured Expert

Source: Smithsonian Magazine
Pax Americana: How Not to Hide an Empire
March 7, 2025
We are in a clarifying moment about the law. This includes noticing the emergence of what legal scholars like Chaz Arnett call the “datafied state,” where the State expands social control and power and widens surveillance of peoples through datafication processes.
Featured Expert

Source: Just Security
'West Baltimore Rich Collaborative' coming to B'More Healthy Expo
March 7, 2025
On a Thursday edition of FOX45 Morning News Shannon Lilly spoke with Dr. Yolanda Ogbolu, dean of the University of Maryland School of Nursing about the collective and their mission.
Featured Expert

Source: Fox Baltimore
Viewpoint: These industries hold the key to Maryland's economy
March 6, 2025
The new Institute for Health Computing in Montgomery County with AI faculty from College Park linked with medical researchers from the University of Maryland-Baltimore and University of Maryland Medical System across the state will support the existing bio cluster in the Bethesda-I-270 corridor.

Source: Baltimore Business Journal
Trump’s Immigration Crackdown Fuels Health Crisis: Detention, Depression, Deportation, and Disease
March 5, 2025
“Detention centers have become tinderboxes for infectious-disease outbreaks,” Mark Travassos, MD, an assistant professor of pediatrics and a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the University of Maryland School Of Medicine Center for Vaccine Development and Global Health, said in a statement.
Featured Expert

Source: American Journal of Managed Care
Rural Parents Don't Get the Support They Need to Breastfeed Long Term—But There Are Ways to Help
March 5, 2025
Meanwhile, Anjana Solaiman, DNP, NNP-BC, IBCLC, C-EFM, assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of Nursing, says larger-scale programs can help combat the problem as well.
Featured Expert

Source: Parents
Trump's FDA Staff Cuts Weigh on Agency's Drug Oversight Work
March 5, 2025
The Trump administration’s moves to shrink the federal workforce put the FDA’s ability to regulate drugs and oversee the pharmaceutical industry at risk, according to current and former agency employees.
Featured Expert

Source: Bloomberg Law
These scientists have a plan to demystify the vaginal microbiome
March 4, 2025
The female body has often been overlooked in science, and the vagina remains the most taboo part of it.
Featured Expert

Source: Science News
FDA Expands Access to Clozapine for Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia
March 3, 2025
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has just made it easier for patients to get clozapine, the only drug approved for treatment-resistant schizophrenia.
Featured Expert

Source: Everyday Health
Maryland has reported high child fatalities for years. Now they say they’ve overreported.
March 3, 2025
Richard Barth, professor at the University of Maryland School of Social Work, said the corrected data is not necessarily a comfort to those in his field, as he believes there are issues with the national reporting system at large.
Featured Expert

Source: Maryland Matters
What Is the Placebo Effect?
February 27, 2025
Bottom Line Personal spoke with internationally renowned placebo expert Luana Colloca, MD, PhD, MS, about the placebo effect and how it can be used in health care today.
Featured Expert

Source: Bottom Line Inc

Source: WRC-TV
The Answers Issue 2025
February 27, 2025
“D.C. loses tax revenue if these players don’t live in D.C.,” says Donald Tobin, a professor of law at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law.
Featured Expert

Source: Washington City Paper
UM School of Medicine Dermatology Researchers Discover New Skin Disease Using Innovative Diagnostic Platform
February 27, 2025
A significant number of Americans experience chronic inflammatory skin conditions with no pinpointed cause and often no effective treatments beyond symptom management. Now a new study could pave the way for precision-medicine based diagnostic testing and targeted treatment.
Featured Expert

Source: PharmaTutor
Maryland spent big on youth mental health – but then the budget crisis hit
February 27, 2025
In Baltimore City, the 11 grants the consortium issued take into account a stigma surrounding mental health services, said Jennifer Cox, director of the University of Maryland School Mental Health Program, which received a $970,000 grant to run a number of programs.“We think in Baltimore City, we have to be a little bit more creative than just saying, ‘Come get help,’ ” Cox said.
Featured Expert
Jennifer Cox, LCSW-C
School of Medicine

Source: The Afro-American
F.D.A. Expands Access to Clozapine, a Key Treatment for Schizophrenia
February 26, 2025
“There were patients who ended up relapsing into psychosis, patients who ended up hospitalized, patients who became violent,” said Raymond C. Love, a professor emeritus at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, who helped organize the effort.
Featured Expert

Source: The New York Times
On Your Side Tonight with Jamie Boll
February 25, 2025
"Permanent daylight savings time is the worst possible option." Dr. Emerson Wickwire is a sleep specialist at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and one of many experts..."
Featured Expert

Source: WBTV Television
Is Fluoride in Water Bad for You? What Dentists Want You
February 25, 2025
Fluoride fortifies your tooth enamel, the hard outer layer protecting the soft pulp and sensitive nerves inside. “It helps make the teeth stronger and more resistant to breakdown, and it helps remineralize or re-harden teeth that have begun to soften,” says Erica Caffrey, DDS, a clinical assistant professor of pediatric dentistry at the Univ. of Maryland School of Dentistry and a consultant for the American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry’s Council for Clinical Affairs.
Featured Expert

Source: AOL.com
Maryland Spent Big On Youth Mental Health — But Then The Budget Crisis Hit
February 25, 2025
Catholic Charities of Baltimore won state grants to fight chronic absenteeism in three Maryland public school districts by connecting troubled students with the mental health services they need.
Featured Expert
Jennifer Cox, LCSW-C

Source: CityBiz
Thyroid Cancer Is Overdiagnosed in the U.S.—Could Ozempic Be Making the Problem Worse?
February 25, 2025
A new study found that weight loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy may be contributing to a national trend of thyroid cancer overdiagnosis.
Featured Expert

Source: Health
Judicial branch employees – which Trump does not oversee – got Musk’s email asking for their accomplishments
February 24, 2025
Another expert noted that a number of legal challenges to the Trump administration’s executive orders are currently pending. Any effort by the executive branch to learn more about the inner workings of the judiciary would be “a profoundly significant violation of an internal judicial process,” Max Stearns, a professor at the University of Maryland’s law school, told Bloomberg.
Featured Expert

Source: Independent
Maryland spent big on youth mental health — but then the budget crisis hit
February 24, 2025
“We have to invest in it in a significant way now and going forward for the next 30 years because so many of our young people are suffering,” said Britt Patterson, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “As a result, the adults in their lives are also struggling.”
Featured Expert

Source: Capital News Service
Lived experience is crucial in guiding Baltimore’s overdose crisis response, new board members say
February 24, 2025
Paris Barnes, a senior training specialist with the PATIENTS Program at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, watched her biological father struggle with addiction when she was a child.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Beat
Anne Arundel government buildings to reopen amid cyber incident investigation
February 24, 2025
Anne Arundel County public service and government buildings will reopen on Tuesday, Feb. 25, as an investigation into a cyber incident continues, county officials say.
Featured Expert

Source: WJZ-TV
Expert: Anne Arundel County likely experiencing ransomware attack
February 24, 2025
County offices that were closed on Monday, like the Housing Resource Center and the Anne Arundel County Department of Health in Glen Burnie, will re-open on Tuesday following an ongoing "cyber incident" that led to a precautionary shutdown.
Featured Expert

Source: WMAR
The Dismantling of a Financial Watchdog Is Already Harming Consumers—and Worse May Be to Come
February 21, 2025
Five years ago, Sally Proske was 30 and desperate. She had accumulated nearly $41,000 in high-interest credit card debt—more than she could comfortably pay off on her salary as a live-event and concert production manager in Chicago and still afford rent and food. She knew there was such a thing as debt relief companies and had a vague understanding that they could help her manage and even lower her debt, so she Googled to find one.
Featured Expert

Source: Consumer Reports
MD law schools prepare for new bar exam rollout
February 19, 2025
Maryland’s two law schools will be among the first in the nation to adopt a new bar exam next year.
The NextGen exam, designed to assess law graduates’ grasp of practical legal skills instead of their ability to memorize legal doctrine, focuses on core competencies such as negotiation, legal research and client counseling.
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
MD law schools prepare for new bar exam rollout
February 19, 2025
“The traditional focus of the bar exam has been, in large part, to test the general knowledge base of law school graduates,” said Micah J. Yarbrough, director of bar programs at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law. “The NextGen aims to move the needle even farther toward aptitude assessment. The goals are to license more practice-ready applicants prepared to take on the challenges of the modern-day practitioner.”
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
Mars Launches Global Study Program on Pet Contribution to Human Wellbeing
February 19, 2025
Over the lifetime of the study program the collaborative research will include work with academic institutions and partners including Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University, University of Maryland School of Nursing, University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Liverpool, University of Arizona College of Veterinary Medicine, YouGov and the Human Animal Bond Research Institute, with the aim to deliver novel research and new insights.

Source: Pet Age
UMB Pathways for Eastern Shore Healthcare Careers Event at Londonderry on Feb 18
February 15, 2025
In an ongoing effort to help alleviate the healthcare professional shortage on the Eastern Shore in Maryland, University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) is working with Londonderry on the Tred Avon to host an event for prospective high school and college students, as well as the surrounding community, to learn more educational pathways
Featured Expert

Source: The Cambridge Spy
U. Md. studies whether life is getting better or worse for interracial, interethnic couples
February 13, 2025
“A little bit over 55% percent of our sample said things were getting a little better or much better. About 32% said things had not really changed, and about one in eight said things were really getting worse for interracial couples,” said Geoffrey Greif, a University of Maryland, Baltimore professor who holds a doctorate in social work.
Featured Expert

Source: WTOP News
Animal-to-Human Organ Transplants Hit Long-Awaited Testing Milestone
February 13, 2025
In 2022 a patient named David Bennett became the first living person to receive a genetically modified pig heart transplant. A team at the University of Maryland School of Medicine performed the surgery using a kidney with 10 edits to its genetic code from a pig engineered by Revivicor (a subsidiary of United Therapeutics, the company providing the organs for the new trial). Sadly, Bennett developed complications and died two months later.

Source: Scientific American
This Ames surgery center closed recently, canceled all appointments and scrubbed its website
February 13, 2025
A local cosmetic surgery center on the northeast side of Ames has abruptly closed for unknown reasons.
Featured Expert

Source: Ames Tribune
Ease Hip Arthritis Pain and Stiffness Naturally—Proven Tips to Restore Mobility
February 12, 2025
Arthritis “is a process by which the cartilage, or cushion in a joint, wears away over time,” explains Sumon Nandi, MD, MBA, FAOA, an orthopedic surgeon and associate professor of orthopedics at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Featured Expert

Source: Woman's World
Republican States Launch Legal Challenge To New York’s Climate Superfund Law
February 11, 2025
“It’s complete legal overreach,” Robert Percival, an environmental law professor at the University of Maryland, said of the multi-state lawsuit against New York. “A state says another state passes a superfund law, and we don’t like it so therefore it violates all our rights? Just unbelievable.”
Featured Expert

Source: Climate in the Courts
Medical Researchers react to US must restore vital AIDS relief saving lives in Africa | GUEST COMMENTARY
February 11, 2025
Dr. Cassidy Claassen is associate professor of medicine and infectious diseases at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
Maryland sues to stop Trump cuts that could cost universities millions
February 11, 2025
But Dr. Bruce Jarrell, president of the University of Maryland, Baltimore, said most of his university’s endowment money is designated by donors for scholarships or other specific uses. Foundations can’t make up the funding, and universities like his already put substantial funds toward research, he added.
Featured Expert
President Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS

Source: The Baltimore Banner
‘We run the risk of another Great Recession’: People should be outraged by Trump’s efforts to kill CFPB
February 11, 2025
“They told people to go home and not work at the office. At the same time, they’re saying to other government employees ‘no more remote work,’” says Jeff Sovern, a Michael Millemann professor of consumer law at the University of Maryland’s Francis King Carey School of Law.
Featured Expert

Source: Fast Company
Trump policy would pummel Hopkins, UMB research funding
February 11, 2025
“Indirect cost recovery is necessary and pays for important expenses used to conduct research such as building maintenance, utilities, IT support, grants administration, animal care, protection for human subjects, safeguarding against unlawful conflicts of interest, compliance with federal regulations, and many other critical functions,” UMB president Bruce Jarrell wrote in a letter to UMB staff and students on Monday.
Featured Expert
President Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS

Source: Baltimore Business Journal
New clinical trial aims to improve outcomes for older adults with hip fractures
February 10, 2025
Hip fractures in older adults can lead to serious complications, disability and even death. Traditionally, orthopaedic surgeons have repaired a common fracture of the upper part of the thigh bone, or femur, near the hip using screws and plates to piece together slightly separated pieces of bone. But many surgeons now treat these "minimally displaced" femoral neck fractures by replacing the hip joint with a metal implant.
Featured Expert

Source: News Medical Life Sciences
In Massive Betrayal of His Supporters, Trump Shuts Down Consumer Watchdog, CFPB
February 10, 2025
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau—the federal agency responsible for protecting Americans from predatory financial practices—effectively ceased operations this weekend following the abrupt firing of its director, Rohit Chopra, marking one of the most significant reversals of consumer protections in recent history.
Featured Expert

Source: Uprise RI
The FDA’s misguided thinking on antibiotics
February 10, 2025
It’s easy to criticize the FDA, whether you think the agency makes it too hard for innovative treatments to help the patients who need them or that Big Pharma holds too much sway over decisions. We’ll avoid that fight and instead focus on why the public, with the FDA’s help, has misunderstood why so many Americans die from resistant infections every year. In short: The Food and Drug Administration focuses on bugs instead of patients.
Featured Expert
John H. Powers, MD
School of Medicine

Source: Stat News
Historic West Baltimore building at center of Civil Rights Movement getting a revival
February 10, 2025
"We're going to have things hanging in the windows similar to what she hung in the window back during her time of practicing there that had inspiring messages," said Lydia Watts, the executive director of the ROAR Center.
Featured Expert

Source: WJZ-TV
Executive Alliance names 50 companies to Honor Roll for Women’s Representation
February 10, 2025
University of Maryland, Baltimore named to Executive Alliance Honor Roll Award for Women’s Representation. Each award recipient has at least 30% of their executive leadership and board of director seats held by women.

Source: The Daily Record
Public and private organizations provide services to combat high suicide rates among middle-aged men and veterans
February 7, 2025
On a hot summer day, a woman working with a state suicide prevention program was approached by her neighbor who asked to share a drink on her porch, and for a foam sleeve — known as a Koozie – to keep it cold.
The woman grabbed the first foam sleeve she saw — branded to promote ManTherapy.org — and handed it to her neighbor. The two shared a drink and the neighbor went back home, Koozie in hand.
Featured Expert

Source: Spartan Newsroom
The Bruen decision: How police are adapting to the Supreme Court gun ruling
February 7, 2025
On the surface, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen centered on how New York issued permits to people who wanted to carry their guns in public. The Court said that the state’s practice of issuing concealed carry permits only to those who could prove they had a special need to carry a gun — like a threat to their personal safety — was a violation of their constitutional rights.
Featured Expert

Source: Vox
The Erin Levitas Foundation Launches Q&A Portal to Support Conversations on Safety and Boundaries
February 6, 2025
The Erin Levitas Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to ending sexual violence by providing early education resources for youth, young people, caregivers, and educators, has launched a new question-and-answer portal, Every Body Has Questions, to support and encourage conversations about bodies, boundaries, and safety.
Featured Expert

Source: City Biz
Progress in Psychopharmacology Over the Last 40 Years
February 6, 2025
As Psychiatric Times celebrates its 40th anniversary all year long, Sara Robinson, DNP, RN, PMHNP-BC sat down to discuss 40 years of mental health care and what has changed in psychiatry.
Robinson is a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner and a professor at the University of Maryland School of Nursing in Baltimore. She is also the director of the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program at the university.
Featured Expert

Source: Psychiatric Times
How to Spice up Your Marriage in 2025, a Relationship Expert Reveals
February 6, 2025
Authors and University of Maryland School of Social Work researchers Geoffrey Greif, DSW, MSW, and Kathleen Holtz Deal, PhD, MSW, conducted more than 400 interviews with couples. The researchers found that maintaining friendships with other pairs could assist with solidifying a sense of self in couples and even up partners' attraction to each other.
Featured Expert

Source: Parade
Under Trump’s New Order, Kamala Harris Would Not Have Been a Citizen or Vice President
February 6, 2025
Epps’ colleague Mark Graber, a law professor at the University of Maryland, has also studied the 14th Amendment. He tells Information: “Trump and his legal advisors’ argument collapses when you consider that children born to non-Americans can be deported. If they can be deported, it means they fall under U.S. jurisdiction.”
Featured Expert

Source: American Notebook
What Is a Budget?
February 5, 2025
WalletHub asked a panel of experts to share some budgeting advice.
Featured Expert
Robert A. Gordon, JD
Carey School of Law

Source: WalletHub
Maryland sees steep drop in opioid overdose deaths
February 5, 2025
“We are coming to the realization that there are certain gold standard treatments that we have to provide for our patients, which include medications for opioid use disorder,” Weintraub said.
Featured Expert

Source: WYPR
Keep Current Friends and Make New Friends This Year
February 5, 2025
"Men construct friendships in shoulder-to-shoulder ways, like [playing] sports or watching sports," says Greif. "They feel less comfortable interacting face-to-face, the way women construct friendships. Women like to get together and have more intimate conversations."
Featured Expert

Source: Next Avenue
Stalled lawsuits resume after MD high court upholds Child Victims Act
February 4, 2025
“Some defendants will, appropriately, seek to negotiate settlements,” Hoke told The Daily Record. “And many survivors will be willing to do so particularly if the settlements are not confidential. A huge part of the campaign for the CVA was about exposing organizations that harbor abusers. Survivors are far more motivated by bringing that to light and protecting today’s children than by money.”
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
The science behind the first pig-organ transplant trial in humans
February 4, 2025
Trials will enable researchers to select people who are in better health than those first compassionate-use recipients to assess the transplant’s safety and efficacy, says Muhammad Mohiuddin, a surgeon and researcher at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore.
Featured Expert

Source: Nature
Hunt Valley-based SYZMIK leads charge for protective headgear in flag football
February 4, 2025
Dr. Brian Corwell, an emergency and sports medicine physician at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, downplayed the idea that participants wearing protective garments put themselves at an increased risk.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
USC to lead $10.8 million study on hip fracture surgery options
February 4, 2025
The trial leadership team includes co-principal investigators Gerard Slobogean, MD, director of clinical research for the Department of Orthopaedics at University of Maryland School of Medicine,
Featured Expert

Source: News Medical
Overdose deaths dropped sharply last year in Maryland, Baltimore
February 4, 2025
Dr. Eric Weintraub, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Maryland’s School of Medicine, said some populations have a harder time accessing appropriate health care and putting their trust in traditional medical institutions.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Banner
Public Policy in Psychiatry Over 40 Years
February 3, 2025
As Psychiatric Times celebrates its 40th anniversary all year long, Sara Robinson, DNP, RN, PMHNP-BC sat down to discuss 40 years of mental health care and what has changed in psychiatry.
Robinson is a psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner and a professor at the University of Maryland School of Nursing in Baltimore. She is also the director of the Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner program at the university.
Featured Expert

Source: Psychiatric Times
Should Maryland Grant Parole To More Elderly And Ill Inmates? Lawmakers Disagree
February 3, 2025
Under current state law, “you can only be considered for geriatric parole if you’ve been convicted of multiple violent offenses,” said Lila Meadows, an assistant public defender and clinical faculty member at the University of Maryland’s Francis King Carey School of Law. “That wouldn’t have been the [General Assembly’s] intent.”
Featured Expert

Source: CityBiz
The Long Quest for Artificial Blood
February 3, 2025
In Baltimore, the rabbits were receiving a somewhat different concoction. They belonged to the lab of Allan Doctor, the director of the Center for Blood Oxygen Transport and Hemostasis, at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and the co-inventor of ErythroMer, a synthetic nanoparticle that mimics the oxygen-carrying role of red blood cells.
Featured Expert

Source: The New Yorker
Breaking through limits in kinase inhibition
January 31, 2025
Protein kinases, enzymes that add phosphate groups to other proteins, are often dysregulated in diseases. This makes kinase inhibitors popular drugs, although they often target things they aren’t supposed to. To mitigate these off-target effects, scientists like Paul Shapiro are finding ways to target specific functions of a kinase, rather than inhibiting the whole enzyme.
Featured Expert
Source: ASBMB Today
Moore said Maryland will follow the Constitution on immigration policy. What does the Constitution say?
January 30, 2025
Mark Graber, a professor at the University of Maryland’s Francis King Carey School of Law, pointed to the 1996 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Printz v. United States. In that case, justices set the precedent that the Necessary and Proper Clause of the Constitution does not give the federal government the authority to force state officials to carry out federal programs.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
University of Maryland and Wexford Celebrate Opening of 4MLK
January 30, 2025
The University of Maryland, Baltimore opened a 250,000-sf innovation center in January of 2024 to drive biomedical advances and accelerate the discovery of new health solutions.

Source: Tradeline Inc
Maryland’s youth are unfairly criminalized | GUEST COMMENTARY
January 29, 2025
All children must be seen, viewed and treated as children, receive the benefit of their adolescence and be provided the supports and services needed to overcome any challenges they may face. Michael Pinard and Monique L. Dixon are the faculty director and executive director, respectively, of the Gibson-Banks Center for Race and the Law at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
How Bad Could Trump’s Assault on Public Health Get?
January 29, 2025
Five years after a novel virus rocked the world, killed millions, and continues to sicken people; amid ongoing outbreaks of bird flu and mpox and tuberculosis, public health and scientific research are being gutted in America—and it’s happening more quickly than even experts thought possible.
Featured Expert

Source: The New Republic
Researchers Uncover New Approach to Predict Pain Sensitivity
January 29, 2025
“More people live with chronic pain than cancer, diabetes, and heart disease combined,” Da Silva said. “This study is a breakthrough in developing an accurate pain biomarker that could not only predict individuals’ pain but also help prevent who will develop such a debilitating condition—chronic pain.”
Featured Expert

Source: Dentistry Today
ETC Baltimore Marks Milestone with Opening of Venture Hub at Connect Labs Baltimore
January 29, 2025
ETC Baltimore, dedicated to elevating Baltimore as a national leader in tech startups, announces the opening of its inaugural ETC Venture Hub at Connect Labs Baltimore in the newly constructed 4MLK Building in the University of Maryland BioPark.

Source: CityBiz
Brain Activity Patterns Could Predict Pain Sensitivity
January 28, 2025
In an international effort, researchers at Western, the University of Maryland School of Dentistry (UMSOD) and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA) uncovered how specific patterns in brain activity can predict an individual’s sensitivity to pain, expanding opportunities for improved pain management strategies.

Source: Technology Networks
Would You Get Sick in the Name of Science?
January 28, 2025
Mr. Laurenson was part of a study at the University of Maryland School of Medicine to test a new monoclonal antibody designed to prevent malaria transmission. Specifically, he had agreed to take part in a human challenge trial, a research method in which volunteers are knowingly infected with a pathogen.

Source: The New York Times
Child Care Has a Branding Problem
January 28, 2025
As a pair of scholars, Elizabeth Palley and Corey Shdaimah, wrote in 2014: Caring for very young children in the United States has not been framed as part of larger universal policies to support families. As a result, it has been left on the sidelines of major political discourse
Featured Expert

Source: The Family Frontier
Does the non-alcoholic craze just keep us drinking?
January 27, 2025
Everyone needs their vice. For me, it’s tacos. Tacos and a cheap can of beer. But each January, the tacos hit differently because the beer is gone. I’ve been Dry Januarying for longer than I can remember, and will be the first to praise the hashtag. Over time, mine has extended to February, March, and now through most of the year until the Midwest grows cold and the parties feel cozy.
Featured Expert

Source: Fast Company
Trump order on EVs targets Maryland programs. Experts say parts might not stick.
January 27, 2025
With a Day 1 executive order involving electric vehicles, President Donald Trump is seeking to upend Maryland programs to grow EV sales and install car chargers.
But experts say the path ahead is legally cloudy.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
University of Maryland School of Medicine, hospitals partner to give free health screenings
January 26, 2025
The University of Maryland School of Medicine partnered with the engAGE with Heart initiative to provide free health screenings at Baltimore area churches.
On Sunday, inside Mount Pleasant Church and Ministries, people got a little extra care from the inside out.
Featured Expert

Source: WJZ-TV
Maryland Carey Law Professor Discusses Birthright Citizenship
January 26, 2025
Mark Graber, professor, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, discusses birthright citizenship on WBAL Radio.
Featured Expert

Source: WBAL Radio
More Thyroid Cancers Found After Starting GLP-1s: Researchers Think They Know Why
January 24, 2025
Of over 350,000 adults with type 2 diabetes, thyroid cancer risk was significantly higher within the first year after GLP-1 agonist initiation compared with SGLT2 inhibitors, DPP-4 inhibitors, or sulfonylureas (HR 1.85, 95% CI 1.11-3.08), reported Rozalina McCoy, MD, MS, of the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, and colleagues.
Featured Expert

Source: MEDPAGE TODAY
U.S. Awards $590 Million to Moderna for Bird Flu Vaccine Development
January 24, 2025
Researchers are also exploring adjuvants to enhance the effectiveness of bird flu vaccines. Matthew Frieman, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, is developing an adjuvant that could move to early-stage clinical trials within a year. “You don’t want to wait until it’s everywhere and then you decide to make a vaccine,” Frieman said.
Featured Expert

Source: Times News Global
Are MD coastline protections safe in the Trump era?
January 24, 2025
Robert Percival, director of the environmental law program at the University of Maryland, said Trump tried to repeal coastline protections in his first term and got some pushback.
"It would be difficult," Percival explained. "When Trump tried to roll back, during his first term, some areas that had been protected by previous presidents, a judge said that the Act did not clearly give the president the authority to roll them back. So, it's kind of an open legal question."
Featured Expert

Source: Public News Servie
From tax lottery to tax credit: A better way to help disaster victims
January 23, 2025
As victims of several natural disasters are facing homelessness and economic ruin, many are searching for an economic lifeline. The tax code will provide some assistance, but the benefit is haphazard, somewhat random, and mostly helps wealthy individuals. The provision is so complicated that receiving assistance under it is like winning the tax assistance lottery.
Featured Expert

Source: The Hill
Virus season roars back with "quad-demic" of illness
January 22, 2025
The spread of influenza A, COVID and RSV is "high" or "very high" across much of the U.S. at the same time norovirus cases are well above normal levels, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and wastewater surveillance data shows.
Featured Expert

Source: Axios
Dry January goes mainstream. What are the benefits?
January 22, 2025
Dry January, a month-long stint of sobriety at the beginning of the new year, is growing in popularity in the United States.
According to data from Civic Science, 23 percent of U.S. adults 21 and over said they intended to take part in Dry January in 2023. That grew to 27 percent in 2024.
Featured Expert

Source: WYPR
It’s Time to Reconcile With Medication Reconciliation
January 22, 2025
Psychiatric training instills in us the importance of completing a comprehensive initial evaluation of patients. We are each afforded varying time windows to complete our assessments with different documentation systems and sometimes additional information to satisfy requirements.
Featured Expert

Source: Psychiatric Times
Big Oil May Finally Have To Face Trial In Climate Deception Lawsuits. Why It Matters - And What Comes Next
January 21, 2025
Robert Percival, an environmental law professor at the University of Maryland, called the Alabama et al. petition the “most outlandish of all” and said he expects the Supreme Court will reject it. “It doesn’t have a legal leg to stand on,” he said.
Featured Expert

Source: Climate In The Courts
When to call time on a toxic sibling relationship
January 21, 2025
In researching for his book, co-authored with Michael E Woolley, Adult Sibling Relationships Dr Geoffrey Greif found that one in five (21 per cent) of interviewees had a strained relationship with their adult siblings. The cosy ideal of supporting each other through the ups and downs of life like the Waltons siblings just isn’t realistic.
Featured Expert

Source: The Telegraph
Maryland enshrines access to abortion in state constitu
January 20, 2025
The University of Maryland, Baltimore received $10.6 million for the state's Abortion Care Clinical Training Program and about $5 million was set aside to increase Medicaid provider's reimbursements for abortion care.
Featured Expert

Source: WJZ-TV
Maryland Perspectives: The Positive School Center
January 19, 2025
The Positive School Center is a non profit that provides coaching and staff development, community school programming and policy recommendations for Maryland schools. Director Shantay McKinily talks about development strategies, school programs and what policy recommendations they have on the books for 2025.
Featured Expert

Source: 98 Rock
Exclusive: Trump's Plan to Eliminate Certain Humanitarian Visas Could Have 'Devastating' Effects on Crime Victims
January 17, 2025
But unlike other immigration documents, eliminating U and T visas, with their humanitarian angles designed to help marginalized communities, would have devastating effects for immigrants who seek refuge in the U.S., Iris Cardenas, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of Social Work said.
Featured Expert

Source: The Latin Times
Look inside 4MLK, the University of Maryland BioPark’s new 250k-square-foot life sciences hub
January 16, 2025
Years of efforts across the University System of Maryland, the real estate industry, local government and a variety of private and nonprofit players led to Wednesday night’s star-studded ribbon-cutting for 4MLK. Even the news that Baltimore was again left off the federal Tech Hubs funding list couldn’t dampen the excitement.
Featured Expert
Bruce Jarrell, MD, FACS President, University of Maryland, Baltimore

Source: Technical.ly
Pharmapreneurship: Creating Your Career As a Pharmacist-Entrepreneur
January 16, 2025
Magaly Rodriguez de Bittner, PharmD, MS, FAPhA, FNAP is the Gyi Endowed Memorial Professor of Pharmapreneurship and Associate Dean for Clinical Services and Practice Transformation at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy. She spoke with the Student Doctor Network about the University of Maryland Pharmapreneurship® pathway.
Featured Expert

Source: Student Doctor
On the basis of sex: A framework for clinical algorithms
January 16, 2025
With an approaching federal deadline, healthcare and legal experts have developed a framework for evaluating the use of AI-powered algorithms.
As AI, clinical algorithms and predictive analytics become more prevalent in healthcare, HHS finalized a rule April 26 to ensure that these tools do not discriminate "on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, age and disability."
By May 6, CMS-funded entities must comply with the rule.
Featured Expert

Source: Becker's Clinical Leadership
4MLK life science hub opens at the University of Maryland BioPark
January 16, 2025
Baltimore gained a new hub for life science activity with the grand opening this week of an eight-story tower at the University of Maryland BioPark.
4MLK is the name of the $180 million, 250,000-square-foot multi-tenant lab and office building that opened at 4 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. on what would have been the slain civil rights leader’s 96th birthday.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Fishbowl
First half of $320M West Baltimore science hub opens
January 16, 2025
An eight-story science and tech hub that's been years in the making celebrated its grand opening this week, introducing new space to West Baltimore that a city developer believes can become an innovation center for the region.
Developer Wexford Science & Technology and the University of Maryland, Baltimore unveiled the 250,000-square-foot 4MLK building at 4 N. Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. on Wednesday.
Featured Expert
Bruce Jarrell, MD, FACS

Source: Baltimore Business Journal
Can you take gabapentin and meloxicam together?
January 16, 2025
While both drugs work for pain relief, Mary Lynn McPherson, PharmD, PhD, BCPS, a professor and executive director at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy in Baltimore, Maryland, explains that the two drugs are only taken together if a patient is experiencing a relatively complex pain situation.
Featured Expert

Source: The Checkup by SingleCare
Baltimore's largest biotech complex opens at UMB BioPark
January 15, 2025
4MLK is the newest addition to the University of Maryland's BioPark, set to bring a wave of innovation and opportunity to Southwest Baltimore.
"This is going to represent a bold vision for breaking down silos between traditional engineering, bioengineering, and medicine," says Dr. Mark Gladwin, Dean of the University of Maryland School of Medicine.
Featured Expert

Source: WMAR 2
UMB hopes to educate public and professionals about psychedelic therapies
January 15, 2025
The use of psychedelic-assisted therapy to treat trauma and other ailments is on the rise. University of Maryland, Baltimore puts it front and center with an interdisciplinary speaker series across social work, pharmacy, and nursing called Multidisciplinary Perspectives on the Science and Practice of Psychedelic Therapies.
Featured Expert

Source: WYPR: On the Record
How exposure to wildfire smoke can put your health at risk
January 14, 2025
As wildfires rage in southern California, Scripps News spoke with Dr. Omer Awan, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, about the health risks involved for those nearby.
Featured Expert

Source: Scripps News
Updated Guidelines for Preventing Osteoporosis-Related Fractures Released
January 14, 2025
“Too often, the first sign of osteoporosis is a broken bone, which can lead to serious health issues,” USPSTF member Dr. Esa Davis said in a statement from the group.
Featured Expert

Source: Health Day
University of Maryland receives $10 million for research collaboration
January 14, 2025
The University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) and the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP) have announced a $10 million gift from Edward and Jennifer St. John and the Edward St. John Foundation in support of a center focused on translational engineering and medicine.
Featured Expert

Source: Philanthropy News Digest
World of Hyatt and Headspace Launch New Series to Help Travelers Find a Good Night’s Sleep
January 13, 2025
In addition to guests, members and colleagues, Hyatt is extending its purpose of care to help enhance sleep routines, Hyatt is also providing complimentary, one-year subscriptions to Headspace to support nonprofit organizations, including Salt & Light Coalition Chicago, ReStore NYC, University of Maryland Safe Center for Human Trafficking Survivors, Safe House Project, BEST Alliance and Survivor Alliance.
Featured Expert

Source: Green Lodging News
Where's Marty: UMD School of Pharmacy discusses history and new technology
January 13, 2025
Featured Expert

Source: WJZ-TV
Jimmy Carter Took on the Awful Guinea Worm When No One Else Would — And Triumphed.
January 13, 2025
Christopher Plowe, adjunct professor of medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, agrees that Carter’s advocacy has helped governments and public health agencies around the world stay focused on eradicating Guinea worm disease. The Carter Center has pitched in, too, investing about $500 million since 1986.
Featured Expert

Source: St. Kitts & Nevis Observer
Democratic states train non-doctors on providing abortions to expand US access
January 13, 2025
Democratic states across the country are embarking on a pioneering effort to increase access to abortion by teaching people who are not doctors to offer and perform the procedure.
Featured Expert

Source: The Guardian
University of Maryland merges engineering and medicine to turn ideas into companies
January 11, 2025
“Grandpa can come [along] now,” said Dr. Bartley P. Griffith, a professor of transplant surgery in the university’s School of Medicine, about the artificial lung support device he helped create and commercialize before it was bought by Johnson & Johnson.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Banner
Dr. Elizabeth Clayborne, the CEO and Founder of NasaClip ™ for Nosebleeds
January 9, 2025
Dr. Clayborne is currently a faculty member at the University of Maryland School of Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine with an academic focus on ethics, health policy, end-of-life care, and innovation/entrepreneurship.
Featured Expert
Elizabeth Clayborne, MD, MA
School of Medicine

Source: The Narrative Matters
Charting the Future of Genetically Modified Pig Heart Transplants: Insights from the Second Patient
January 8, 2025
Dr. Bartley Griffith, the lead surgeon involved in both the first and second pig heart transplantations at the University of Maryland, emphasized the need for continuous exploration of xenotransplantation as a feasible option for patients like Mr. Faucette, especially those who are ineligible for standard human heart transplants.
Featured Expert

Source: Morning News
HMPV, Bird Flu and Norovirus: What Should US Be Most Worried About?
January 7, 2025
As infections from three viruses—human metapneumovirus (HMPV), bird flu, and norovirus—continue to climb, infectious disease and population health experts told Newsweek about the recent rise in cases, prevention measures, and what may come next.
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Source: Newsweek
Canadian wildfire pollution negatively impacted Eastern US residents’ lungs, heart
January 7, 2025
Despite living far away from Canada, Maryland residents experienced more cardiopulmonary disease health concerns in June 2023 believed to be due to Canadian wildfire pollution, according to findings published in JAMA Network Open.
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Source: Healio
Fluoride once again scrutinized for possible effect on children's brains
January 6, 2025
A new report once again raises the question of whether there is a link between fluoride in drinking water and lower IQ levels in children.
The research, published in JAMA Pediatrics on Monday, is a review of 74 other studies exploring how the mineral may affect children’s IQ levels.
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Source: NBC News
Surgeon general issues advisory on link between alcohol and cance
January 3, 2025
“We have had the data on some of the cancers for a very long time that they directly associate with cancer, and those were breast, colon, these two we've known for a long time. Liver, you know, these are big cancers,” said Dr. Niharika Khanna of University of Maryland School of Medicine. “I think the entire medical community has known that, but the surgeon general hadn't stepped up yet to recommend these guidelines.”
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Source: Scripps News
Maryland is training more health workers to offer abortion care
January 1, 2025
Expanding the pool of health care providers with reproductive health care skills outside of the state’s urban centers is vital, said Mary Jo Bondy, associate dean of the School of Graduate Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. She helped create the new training program.
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Source: Yahoo News
MD eyes new gambling frontier, but critics say state must reckon with sports betting harm
December 30, 2024
Now 53 and in recovery, Hinman helps people struggling with a gambling problem navigate the resources available to them. As a peer recovery specialist at the Maryland Center of Excellence on Problem Gambling, he fields calls and messages from those seeking help for trouble with gambling at casinos, on the lottery or on sports, whether for themselves or for a loved one.
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Source: The Daily Record
Why are my feet two different sizes?
December 29, 2024
A number of birth conditions can lead to one foot being a significantly different size than the other. For instance, "if you're born with a club foot, that whole extremity is smaller than the opposite side," Dr. Jacob Wynes, an associate professor and chief of podiatric services at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, told Live Science.
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Source: Live Science
5 Key Drug Approvals and CRLs in 2024
December 27, 2024
Megan Ehret, PharmD, MS, BCPP, professor and codirector of the Mental Health Program, University of Maryland, School of Pharmacy, explained that the new target of the treatment helps to control the adverse effects of the medication.15 Xanomeline is the part of the treatment that helps with psychosis, but trospium is only working to help with the side effects of the xanomeline.
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Source: American Journal of Managed Care
How to see the good in families and connections in the holiday season
December 22, 2024
Christopher W.T. Miller, MD, is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst practicing at the University of Maryland Medical Center and an associate professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He is the author of “The Object Relations Lens: A Psychodynamic Framework for the Beginning Therapist.”
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Source: The Washington Post
Remote Wildfire Smoke Across the U.S. Tied to Rise in Heart and Lung-Related Medical Visits
December 18, 2024
“Baltimore had very dark skies, and we could all smell the smoke in the air,” said Mary Maldarelli, MD, a pulmonary critical care fellow at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM), who is the first author on the study. “But most importantly, my patients came in to me saying they were coughing quite a bit more and needed their medications more often, so they felt much sicker than they usually did when these wildfires occurred.”
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Source: MedBound Times
The toll of gun violence, through the eyes of nurses
December 18, 2024
For some, it’s the sound of wailing parents that are indelible. Hershaw Davis, who has worked as an emergency nurse at Johns Hopkins for years and teaches nurses at the University of Maryland Medical School, said the sounds of grieving parents stay with him.
“When you hear a mother or a father cry over their child's dead body, and I've heard it a lot, you will never forget that cry in your life,” Davis said.
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Source: Chief Healthcare Executive
Which states mandate fluoride in drinking water
December 17, 2024
The Trump administration can’t overrule those state laws, said Kathi Hoke, director of the Network for Public Health Law’s eastern region and a professor at the University of Maryland law school. They can’t tell a state “how it can act within its own borders on a public health measure, generally speaking,” she said.
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Source: The Washington Post
Who wants a pig organ? Patients sick and tired of waiting years for a transplant
December 17, 2024
“We have to have the courage to continue,” said University of Maryland transplant surgeon Dr. Bartley Griffith. Back in 2022, Griffith had a hard time figuring out how to ask a dying patient if he’d consider undergoing the world’s first transplant of a gene-edited pig heart.
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Source: Associated Press
Training prepares health care workers across Maryland to provide abortions
December 16, 2024
To find out how that program is going, we turn to Dr. Jessica Lee, an associate professor of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and co-principal investigator of the training program. And we speak with Samantha Marsee, a nurse practitioner who recently completed the training.
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Source: WYPR-FM
As juvenile crime subsides, legislative debate continues over more reforms
December 16, 2024
Michael Pinard, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Law, runs a legal clinic through which law students represent kids who are facing expulsion, suspension or other discipline at school, with the goal of keeping them out of the juvenile and criminal justice systems.
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Source: The Daily Record
Prurigo Nodularis Linked to Sleep Diorders And Increased CV Risk: Study Finds
December 16, 2024
Against the above background, Shawn G. Kwatra, Maryland Itch Center, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA, and colleagues aimed to assess the risk of sleep disorders in prurigo nodular patients and explore their connection to system inflammation and negative cardiovascular outcomes.
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Source: Medical Dialogues
Exposure to Remote Wildfire Smoke Drifting Across the U.S. Linked to Increased Medical Visits for Heart and Lung Problems
December 16, 2024
Researchers from the University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing (UM-IHC) found that medical visits for heart and lung problems rose by nearly 20 percent during six days in June, 2023, when smoke from Western Canadian wildfires drifted across the country, leading to very poor air quality days in Baltimore and the surrounding region.
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Source: Environmental News Network
Researchers discover new neurons that suppress food intake
December 16, 2024
"BNC2 neurons in the hypothalamus, which are activated by the hunger hormone leptin, provide the potential for a completely new class of obesity drugs," said Mark T. Gladwin, MD, who is the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and Dean of UMSOM, and Vice President for Medical Affairs at University of Maryland, Baltimore. "These drugs would be distinct from Ozempic and other GLP-1 agonists, which stimulate insulin secretion."
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Source: Science Daily
Don’t Quit Quitting: What to Know About Smoking Cessation Today
December 16, 2024
If a person has smoked for a decade or more, the addiction might be more challenging to break because of how ingrained that behavior is, according to Dr. Niharika Khanna. Khanna, a professor of family and community medicine at Baltimore’s University of Maryland School of Medicine for more than 30 years, is the director of the Maryland Tobacco Control Resource Center.
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Source: Baltimore Style
University of Maryland Baltimore, the Foundry Church and WJZ team up to host 9th annual Christmas Store
December 14, 2024
It's a Christmas miracle for West Baltimore resident Paulette Carroll.
"My granddaughter, she is three months old. But we need toys to have her looking around and moving her head and stuff. So this is wonderful, and it plays music," said Carroll.
Today she gets to holiday shop for her grandchildren for a fraction of the price these toys would cost in stores.
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Brian Sturdivant, MSW
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Source: WJZ-TV, CBS News Baltimore
Remote exposure to Western wildfire smoke causing heart and lung problems nationwide: Study
December 13, 2024
Wildfire smoke wafting across the country from North America West blazes may be leading to cardiac and respiratory issues thousands of miles away, a new study has found.
Medical visits for heart and lung issues in the Baltimore region surged by 20 percent during six days in June 2023, when smoke from Western Canada blazes drifted across the continent, according to the study, published on Friday in JAMA Network Open.
Featured Expert

Source: The Hill
FDA Advisors Say More Data Needed for RSV Vaccines in Young Kids
December 13, 2024
FDA advisors said that more data are needed to fully understand if there are broader safety concerns related to use of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccines in young children after an mRNA vaccine trial was halted earlier this year.
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Source: MedPage Today
Self-tests recommended for women ages 30 to 65 to screen for cervical cancer
December 12, 2024
“Women who would be more comfortable collecting their HPV test sample themselves can now do so,” Dr. Esa Davis, a task force member and a professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, said in a statement. “We hope that this new, effective option helps even more women get screened regularly.”
Featured Expert

Source: USA Today
Luigi Mangione faces tough legal challenges, says Baltimore lawyer with ties to family
December 12, 2024
University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law professor Doug Colbert does not think a competency hearing will be needed due to Mangione’s educational background and academic prowess. Colbert said Mangione likely understands the gravity of the case against him.
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Source: Yahoo News
What a new innovation index tells us about Baltimore
December 11, 2024
In a word: diffusion. Innovation works best in density — where invention and commercialization can walk to get a coffee. Plenty of Baltimore leaders get this: look at University of Maryland Biopark’s chief Jane Shaab, UpSurge executive director and obsessive organizer Kory Bailey and the well-regarded Impact Hub Baltimore, all tireless connectors.
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Jane Shaab, MBA

Source: Technical.ly
Yes, it is unconstitutional to deport U.S. citizens
December 11, 2024
Although deporting U.S. citizens is unconstitutional, it has happened illegally in the past, according to Mittelstadt and Maureen Sweeney, the director of the Chacón Center for Immigrant Justice at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law.
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Source: Verify
USPSTF endorses HPV self-collection tests for cervical cancer screening
December 11, 2024
“Women who would be more comfortable collecting their HPV test sample themselves can now do so,” said task force member Esa Davis, associate VP for community health at the University of Maryland Baltimore. “We hope that this new, effective option helps even more women get screened regularly.”
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Source: Fierce Biotech
Baltimore wants $5 billion to combat the opioid crisis. Here’s what the city would do with it.
December 11, 2024
Jay Unick, a professor at the University of Maryland School of Social Work, said harm reduction outreach needs to reach communities that have been disproportionately affected by the opioid crisis in Baltimore, specifically older African American men. Historically, many in the city smoked or snorted opioids, Unick said.
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Source: The Baltimore Sun
‘This is our community’: Inside the programs helping college workers with home down payments
December 10, 2024
“Our goals were to revitalize the neighborhoods near the university and offer an awesome benefit to our employees,” said Dawn Rhodes, the institution’s chief business and finance officer and senior vice president. “This is our community, and we care enough that we want to invest in it.”
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Dawn M. Rhodes, DBA

Source: Higher Ed Dive
Does a protein hold the key to Alzheimer’s?
December 10, 2024
In a recent study published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Joanna Cooper at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, Aurelien Lathuiliere at Massachusetts General Hospital and a team of researchers focused on a receptor called Sortilin-related receptor 1, or SORL1, that is involved in tau accumulation inside the cells.
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Source: ASBMB Today
No, zinc supplements are not proven to prevent or treat colds
December 10, 2024
“The evidence on zinc is far from settled: we need more research before we can be confident in its effects,” Susan Wieland, an assistant professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine who authored a 2024 review of existing studies on zinc supplements and the common cold, said.
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Source: WFAA-TV
HPV testing preferred over Pap for cervical cancer screening starting at age 30, task force’s draft recommendation says
December 10, 2024
“We are highlighting that HPV screening, as the primary screening for women ages 30 to 65, is the best balance between the benefits and the harms in finding cervical cancer, and that should be offered first and when available,” said task force member Dr. Esa Davis, professor and senior associate dean for population health and community medicine at the University of Maryland in Baltimore.
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Source: CNN
How to Reduce the Risk of Falling
December 9, 2024
Lower-body weakness, cognitive impairment, problems with balance, poor hearing or vision, and certain medications all can increase the risk of falling, says Barbara Resnick, PhD, RN, an endowed chair in gerontology at the University of Maryland in Baltimore. Blood pressure medications are particularly worrisome. “When you stand up, your blood pressure automatically goes down, and if it goes too low, you can get dizzy,” says Dr. Resnick.
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Source: Brain & Life
UMSOM research finds misdiagnosis of behavioral issues due to snoring
December 6, 2024
Frequent snoring is a driver of behavior problems like inattention in the classroom, rule-breaking and aggression, but a new study from the University of Maryland School of Medicine recently found that overtime snoring does not appear to have a cognitive impact on teen’s academic abilities.
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Source: Fox 45 News
Supreme Court likely to uphold ban on medical treatments for transgender minors
December 5, 2024
Hearing a high-profile culture-war clash, the Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed likely to uphold Tennessee’s ban on gender-affirming care for minors.
The justices’ decision, not expected for several months, could affect similar laws enacted by another 25 states and a range of other efforts to regulate the lives of transgender people, including which sports competitions they can join and which bathrooms they can use.
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Source: WBAL
Act on a mandate to protect research subjects’ privacy
December 5, 2024
In Michigan, a federal judge has held that the state’s newborn screening program violates parents’ constitutional rights by retaining newborn blood spots for research purposes and purportedly turning them over to police for investigative use. Research data related to drug use, chemical exposure, criminal sentencing, and child abuse have been sought for investigation and criminal and civil cases
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Source: Science
Can an ‘ambitious’ plan to fix Chesapeake Bay survive Trump?
December 5, 2024
President-elect Donald Trump’s pledge to ensure clean water while slashing the federal bureaucracy will soon face a major test, with his administration set to influence the future of the nation’s largest estuary.
An Obama-era blueprint for protecting the Chesapeake Bay faces a critical deadline at the end of next year. The states surrounding the sprawling body of water must now determine next steps, working with input from the federal government.
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Source: E&E News
Discovery of leptin-responsive neurons offers new hope for obesity treatment
December 5, 2024
In a study published in the Dec. 5 issue of Nature, a team of researchers from the Laboratory of Medical Genetics at Rockefeller University in New York, the Institute for Genome Science (IGS) at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) in Baltimore, as well as New York and Stanford Universities discovered a new population of neurons that is responsive to the hormone leptin.
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Source: News Medical Life Sciences
Microbiome interventions for children raise the ethical stakes
December 5, 2024
Probiotics — live microorganisms, typically bacteria and yeasts, that are intended to improve health — have intrigued scientists for more than a century, but interest has grown dramatically over the past decade. Their potential for treating or preventing a range of diseases, coupled with their apparent safety, has made probiotics an enticing and lucrative industry that is only expected to grow.
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Source: Nature
New Policy Paper Highlights Urgent Need To Reduce Gun-Related Domestic Violence In Maryland
December 4, 2024
“ROAR’s attorneys have represented many survivors of domestic violence in their protection order hearings in Baltimore City. Many of them tell the judge they are fearful because their partner has a gun, and the judge replies that the order requires the partner to turn over their gun to the state police."
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Source: The Bay Net
Justice Dept.’s Apolitical Tradition Is Challenged by 2 Presidents
December 3, 2024
The special counsel appointed to investigate President-elect Donald J. Trump is wrapping up his work without the charges he brought in two cases ever going in front of a jury.
The special counsel named to lead the inquiry into Hunter Biden, the president’s son, has just seen the two convictions he secured wiped away by a presidential pardon.
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Source: The New York Times
Improving Maternal and Infant Health Through Multisector, Community-Driven Partnerships
December 3, 2024
This report features two studies of multisector, community-driven partnerships committed to advancing maternal and infant health outcomes: B’more for Healthy Babies in Baltimore, Maryland, and Cradle Cincinnati in Cincinnati, Ohio. While the impetus for these initiatives was concern over alarming infant mortality rates, these partnerships also strive to center the voices and experiences of expectant mothers.
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Source: The Commonwealth Fund
BDC and Maryland Department of Commerce Announce Board of Estimates Approval of Conditional Loan for 4MLK Flex Lab Space
December 3, 2024
The Baltimore Development Corporation (BDC) and the Maryland Department of Commerce are pleased to announce the Baltimore City Board of Estimates’ approval of a $200,000 conditional loan to support the establishment of 4MLK Connect Labs, a state-of-the-art flex lab space in the University of Maryland BioPark in Baltimore, Maryland.
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Jane M. Shaab, MBA

Source: City Biz
I got malaria on purpose and so can you
December 3, 2024
March 26, 2024, was a weird day for me because it was the only one in my life where I was actively trying to get bitten by mosquitos.
I had volunteered to be exposed to malaria as part of a study at the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) evaluating MAM-01, an injectable drug meant to prevent infection. And by “exposed to malaria” I mean “bitten by mosquitos infected with malaria.”
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Source: Vox
Handcuffs and Unexpected Deaths — “I Can’t Breathe” as a Medical Emergency
December 2, 2024
Cases in which someone in apparently good health is physically restrained by police and has a cardiac arrest represent a failure of the medical profession — not just of law enforcement.
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Source: New England Journal of Medicine
Maryland facing daunting shortfall of behavioral health workers
December 2, 2024
Maryland is facing a daunting shortfall of nearly 33,000 behavioral health workers over the next few years to keep the state fully staffed and fight off attrition. The number comes from a report commissioned by the Maryland Health Care Commission and presented to the state’s Medicaid Advisory Board.
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Source: WYPR-FM
This blood type is at the highest risk of brain stroke, says research
December 2, 2024
The study found that compared to those with other blood types, those with blood type A had a 16% increased chance of having an early stroke. While having blood type A does not ensure a stroke, it does suggest that this population may be at greater risk. The most prevalent blood type, O, on the other hand, appears to provide some protection; individuals in this group had a 12% reduced risk of an early stroke than those in other blood types.
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Source: Medium
Interracial and Intercultural Marriages During the Holidays
December 1, 2024
Now that phase one of the holidays is over, it is time for families to prepare for the longer, and often more nettlesome, Christmas season. A bunch of religious and cultural holidays fall around this time also (e.g., Ashura [the beginning of December], Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Korean and Chinese New Year [the end of January], and others).
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Source: Psychology Toda
Maryland Government’s Psychedelics Task Force Begins Work On Recommendations Due To Lawmakers Next Year
November 28, 2024
A newly formed psychedelics task force in Maryland held its initial meetings this month, beginning work on what will eventually become a report to lawmakers on how to reform the state’s laws on substances such as psilocybin, DMT and mescaline.
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Source: NewsPub
University of Maryland holds annual Thanksgiving drive
November 27, 2024
WJZ partnered with the University of Maryland, Baltimore and the University of Maryland Medical Center Midtown Campus for their annual Thanksgiving drive.
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Source: WJZ-TV
Developers of Baltimore flex-lab space hope to create more than 100 jobs
November 27, 2024
Boosters of the project say the building was designed to provide much-needed wet laboratory space for researchers and companies and foster collaboration between the University of Maryland, Baltimore and the University of Maryland Medical Center.

Source: Baltimore Sun
Maryland trains more health workers to offer abortion care
November 27, 2024
In the two counties around nurse practitioner Samantha Marsee's clinic in rural northeastern Maryland, there's not a single clinic that provides abortions. And until recently, Marsee herself wasn't trained to treat patients who wanted to end a pregnancy.
"I didn't really have a lot of knowledge about abortion care," she said.
Featured Expert

Source: Public News Service
10 sharing activities for toddlers and preschoolers
November 26, 2024
You’ve likely heard the phrase, “Sharing is caring.” Perhaps you’ve even used some version of this expression when talking to the children in your life. It’s true that sharing is a way to show we care for others, but it’s not an automatic skill we hold — it’s a developmental milestone that has to be established and nourished.
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Source: care.com
BioPark program gets $2.2M in state, city funding
November 25, 2024
The $2.2 million funding package from the state and the city will help fuel the creation of Connect Labs, a combination of pre-built lab space, support services and office space that will be located in the upcoming 4MLK tower on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard.

Source: Baltimore Business Journal
Here’s What Businesses and Consumers Can Do To Prevent Listeria Outbreaks
November 22, 2024
A rash of high-profile Listeria recalls has many wondering what’s gone wrong in the United States food system. What appears to be a surge could actually be due to more effective contamination testing. Still, with Donald Trump set to return to the Oval Office, the threat of declining food safety is very real.
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Source: Triple Pundit
Religious beliefs, lack of trust could explain Black patients’ hesitancy to join cancer trials
November 22, 2024
Spiritual beliefs and lack of trust in clinical research may influence Black individuals’ decisions about whether to participate in cancer trials, according to findings presented at American Society for Radiation Oncology Annual Meeting.
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Charlyn Gomez
School of Medicine

Source: Healio
Snoring in adolescents linked with problem behaviors but not cognitive deficits
November 22, 2024
Adolescents who snore frequently were more likely to exhibit behavior problems such as inattention, rule-breaking, and aggression, but they do not have any decline in their cognitive abilities, according to a new study conducted by researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM).
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Source: News-Medical.net
U of Md. combats rural health disparities with new med school program
November 21, 2024
Eastern shore residents often lack the access to the healthcare they need. The University of Maryland School of Medicine is tackling that problem with the ‘Rural Health Equity and Access Longitudinal Elective’ (or R-HEALE) program. Students are mentored and trained with a focus on rural health needs. We talk with the director, Dr. Leah Millstein and first year student Sarah MacDonald.
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Source: WYPR
Improving Multiple Sclerosis Care for Black Patients
November 21, 2024
For decades, the common medical shorthand has been that if you have a young-to-middle-age white female patient of northern European ancestry with neurological symptoms, you should immediately suspect multiple sclerosis (MS). That shorthand is not wrong, but it also doesn't capture the true complexity and prevalence of MS.
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Source: Medpage Today
Report calls for reforms in Maryland’s handling of youth tried and imprisoned as adults
November 20, 2024
Maryland is among the worst states in the nation when it comes to the number of prison inmates who began their time behind bars for crimes they committed as children, according to a report set to be released Wednesday.
Featured Expert

Source: WAMU-FM
Scrap Clozapine's REMS Program, FDA Advisors Say
November 20, 2024
A joint FDA advisory committee on Tuesday overwhelming voted to eliminate the risk evaluation and mitigation strategy (REMS) program designed around the risk for severe neutropenia associated with clozapine, a drug used to treat schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder.
Featured Expert

Source: Medpage Today
BSO’s top oboist leads the charge in classical music’s #MeToo fight
November 20, 2024
Leigh Goodmark, a professor at The University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law who has studied gender-based violence and the law, said recent high-profile court cases are cause for concern. In 2022, Johnny Depp won a defamation case against ex-wife Amber Heard, who alleged abuse in an op-ed for The Washington Post.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Banner
Agritourism Laws Evolve as More Farms Offer Entertainment, Education
November 19, 2024
Ag law experts from Ohio and West Virginia along with a county planner from Maryland gave a rundown on agritourism trends and legal implications at the 10th annual Agriculture and Environmental Law Conference hosted Nov. 12 by the University of Maryland’s Agriculture Law Education Initiative.
While activities such as corn mazes, petting zoos and hay rides on working farms are typical agritourism practices, some other money-making ventures are not as clearly defined.
Featured Expert

Source: Lancaster Farming
Trump’s pardon promises add complexity to DOJ’s January 6 prosecutions
November 19, 2024
"The pardon power is unlimited," said Mark Graber, a constitutional law professor at the University of Maryland. "Let’s imagine a different president who decides, ‘I’m going to pardon everyone engaged in insider trading who is over six feet tall.’ Utterly arbitrary. They can do it."
Featured Expert

Source: WTTG-TV
Why UMD offers full med school tuition for a promise to serve the Eastern Shore
November 19, 2024
The Eastern Shore is designed as a medically underserved area, said Dr. Donna Parker, a senior associate dean at the UM School of Medicine. “People there have trouble getting to the doctor, finding doctors that are available with appointments in a timely fashion, having to drive too far to get a doctor,” she said.
Also on WYPR-FM
Featured Expert

Source: WRC-TV
Cannabis-related emergency department visits up this year as Maryland begins tracking data
November 18, 2024
Maryland has experienced a “significant increase” in cannabis-related emergency department visits, according to the Maryland Department of Health.
The health department launched a data dashboard last week to track public health impacts of cannabis and visualize trends pre- and post-marijuana legalization in the state.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Sun
Maryland is training more health workers to offer abortion care
November 16, 2024
In the two counties around nurse practitioner Samantha Marsee's clinic in rural northeastern Maryland, there's not a single clinic that provides abortions. And until recently, Marsee herself wasn't trained to treat patients who wanted to end a pregnancy.
"I didn't really have a lot of knowledge about abortion care," she said.
Featured Expert

Source: ABC News
Breaking Down RFK Jr.’s Vaccine Doublespeak
November 16, 2024
In order to find any information on Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vaccine policy on his Make America Healthy Again website, you must first scroll through sections asking for donations, official MAHA merch, and an ad offering the opportunity to “secure your place” on a tile in a mosaic of Trump and RFK Jr. shaking hands. Only then, after clicking through eight pages of videos, will you find a video titled “My Take on Vaccines.”
Featured Expert

Source: Rolling Stone
What RFK Jr’s War on Vaccines Could Look Like
November 15, 2024
He is the most influential anti-vaxxer in the world, one of the “Disinformation Dozen.” He is an AIDS denier who has revived old conspiracy theories about HIV. He claims that Covid was “ethnically targeted” to spare certain groups of people and that Anthony Fauci and Bill Gates are part of a “vaccine cartel” that produces fake studies in order to impose global lockdowns and 5G.
Featured Expert

Source: The New Republic
Will Trump’s return to White House deal final blow to insurrectionist argument?
November 15, 2024
It isn’t ancient history. Just 1,409 days ago, on Jan. 6, 2021, Donald Trump told supporters gathered in Washington to “fight like hell,” walk down to the U.S. Capitol and give House Republicans “the kind of pride and boldness that they need” to refuse to certify the 2020 election following Joe Biden’s decisive win in the presidential election.
Featured Expert

Source: Courthouse News Service
Under 60? Your Blood Type May Impact Stroke Risk
November 14, 2024
A meta-analysis led by researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) has uncovered a surprising link between blood type and the risk of having an early stroke.
Featured Expert
Steven J. Kittner, MD, MPH,
School of Medicine

Source: Viral Chatter
Maryland is training more health workers to offer abortion care
November 14, 2024
Expanding the pool of health care providers with reproductive health care skills outside of the state’s urban centers is vital, said Mary Jo Bondy, associate dean of the School of Graduate Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. She helped create the new training program.
Featured Expert

Source: Stateline
Prenatal cannabis exposure linked to increased risk of opioid addiction later in life
November 14, 2024
"Doctors are contending with an explosion of cannabis use, and the THC content has quadrupled from what it was a generation ago. It demonstrates the enduring consequences that prenatal cannabis exposure exerts on the brain's reward system, which ultimately results in a neurobiological vulnerability to opioid drugs," Joseph Cheer, PhD, study corresponding author, Professor of Neurobiology and Psychiatry at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, said.
Featured Expert

Source: New Medical
A little girl starved to death in Baltimore. Why did no one help her?
November 13, 2024
For a child suffering from abuse or neglect to become so malnourished she appears gaunt is “exceedingly rare,” said Dr. Howard Dubowitz, a professor of pediatrics and director of the Center for Families at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Banner
Maryland Is Training More Health Workers To Offer Abortion Care
November 13, 2024
Expanding the pool of health care providers with reproductive health care skills outside of the state’s urban centers is vital, said Mary Jo Bondy, associate dean of the School of Graduate Studies at the University of Maryland-Baltimore. She helped create the new training program.
Featured Expert

Source: KFF Health News
Proud Boys organizer from Florida seeking pardon from President-elect Donald Trump, attorney says
November 12, 2024
Proud Boys organizer and Ormond Beach, Florida native Joe Biggs is chipping away at a 17-year-prison sentence for his role on January 6th.
Biggs’ attorney, Norm Pattis, is writing to President-Elect Donald Trump, saying it’s in the public interest to commute Biggs’ sentence.
Featured Expert

Source: Fox 35 Orlando
RFK Jr.’s new bully pulpit sends public health shock waves
November 11, 2024
President-elect Trump’s promise to let Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “go wild” on health is demoralizing public health experts, who worry he could meddle with key government agencies, amplify vaccine hesitancy and direct agency funding to favor his preferred views.
Those include removing fluoride from public water, promoting a wide variety of unorthodox and unproven treatments and pushing a deep skepticism of pharmaceutical companies and the agencies overseeing them.
Featured Expert

Source: The Hill
New diabetes practice guideline designed for LTC providers
November 11, 2024
Diabetes is very common in people living in post-acute and long-term environments, affecting 25% to 34% of these individuals.
Now there’s a wonderful new resource for those caring for them in the revised Clinical Practice Guideline for Diabetes Management in the Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Setting, which was recently published by the Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medical Association
Featured Expert

Source: McKnight's Long Term Care News
The Arbitration Illusion
November 11, 2024
To the Editor:
Re “It Shouldn’t Be This Easy to Sign Away Your Right to a Trial,” by Peter Coy (Opinion, nytimes.com, Oct. 28):
Mr. Coy reports the Chamber of Commerce’s claim that arbitration provides larger recoveries than litigation. In fact, arbitration clauses effectively block consumers from asserting claims unless, as multiple studies have shown, consumers have $1,000 or even more at stake.
Featured Expert

Source: New York Times
When is anxiety normal and when is it a disorder? A psychiatrist explains.
November 10, 2024
Is it normal to feel this anxious all the time? How do I know if it’s too much?
These are questions many of my patients ask. Anxiety affects all of us and can be thought of as tension or worry about a situation or stressor.
Anxiety can be adaptive and is a necessary survival skill, given that our environments can be dangerous and unpredictable.
Featured Expert

Source: Washington Post
Maryland is training more health workers to offer abortion care
November 7, 2024
Expanding the pool of health care providers with reproductive health care skills outside of the state’s urban centers is vital, said Mary Jo Bondy, associate dean of the School of Graduate Studies at the University of Maryland-Baltimore. She helped create the new training program.
Featured Expert

Source: WAMU
What The New Trump Presidency Could Mean For Public Health
November 6, 2024
With Donald Trump having successfully secured the presidency of the United States, significant shifts in American public health policy could be forthcoming.
Professor Omer A. Awan, MD, MPH, is a senior contributor for Forbes.
Featured Expert

Source: Forbes
Trump’s return to White House could mean pardons for Jan. 6 defendants
November 6, 2024
With Trump soon to be in office, Mark A. Graber, a professor at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, expects a major shift in how January 6 cases are handled.
"Trump is the president, and in the United States, the president basically controls prosecutions," Graber said.
Featured Expert

Source: WTTG
Placebos work. Why?
November 6, 2024
Luanna told us about this study that showed if doctors told patients they were turning off pain medication, even when they weren't, that expectation could completely reverse the effects of strong opioids.
LUANNA: We reverse completely the action of opioids. That is how much words are critical in clinical settings.
Featured Expert

Source: Vox Unexplainable
Corpus Christi embraces new mission of campus, marriage ministries
November 6, 2024
"The University of Maryland, Baltimore, is really a series of relatively independent schools,” said Deacon Bauerschmidt. "It’s catering to a graduate school population (in public health, law and human services). So that’s an incredibly important audience to reach to foster discussions on how you practice medicine or law as a Catholic. What are the church’s social teachings and how do they affect how you think about social work?"

Source: Catholic Review
AAM 2024 Report Shows Billions in Biosimilar and Generic Savings
November 5, 2024
Cherokee Layson-Wolf, PharmD, BCACP, FAPhA, a professor of practice, sciences and health outcomes research at the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy, in Baltimore, said the results are significant because “the high cost of medications has been a major obstacle for many managing their health conditions.”
Featured Expert

Source: Specialty Pharmacy Continuum
Non-Europeans Opt Out Of Genomic Databases, Leading To Lack Of Diversity
November 5, 2024
“Since we define ‘heritage’ as including culture, geography, and genetics, one of the most interesting parts of this research is that we were able to explore the distant genetic relatedness among Latin American countries through population structure and migration patterns,” said Victor Borda, PhD, corresponding author on the paper and Research Associate at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. “
Featured Expert

Source: Science 2.0
Elon Musk’s lawyer says $1M giveaway winners not randomly chosen, which could raise legal issues
November 4, 2024
A lawyer for Elon Musk said in a Philadelphia courtroom Monday that the winners of Musk’s $1 million daily prize giveaway in election swing states are not chosen at random, contradicting what Musk said when he announced the contest last month. Legal experts told NBC News that the disclosure could have legal fallout for Musk across multiple jurisdictions under laws designed to protect consumers from deceptive practices.
Featured Expert

Source: NBC News
Hooked on Rheum with Luana Colloca, MD, PhD, MS
November 4, 2024
From a young age, I was fascinated by the human body and its complexities. Growing up in a small village in southern Italy, I had an insatiable curiosity about science and how we experience pain, heal and recover.
Featured Expert

Source: Healio
Moore administration, others fear drastic impact to MD government under Trump
November 1, 2024
“If there’s unified (Republican) government, we’re going to see lots of legislation, executive orders (and) judicial rulings that the majority of Marylanders are not going to like,” said Mark Graber, a University of Maryland law professor and a leading scholar on constitutional law and politics.
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
Researchers Work to Expand Genomic Database Diversity with Latin American DNA Data
November 1, 2024
Researchers at the University of Maryland have created a comprehensive genomic database, GLADdb, to improve diversity in genomics research by including extensive Latin American DNA data.
Featured Expert

Source: The Hearing Review
UM School of Pharmacy hosts Pharmapreneurship Summit
November 1, 2024
The University of Maryland School of Pharmacy hosted the free Pharmapreneurship Summit Oct. 8, bringing together thought leaders to engage with the university community, to propose bold and innovative ideas to address challenges and opportunities for the pharmacy world and to celebrate its successes.
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
Under Construction: Top Facility Projects of October 2024
October 31, 2024
The University of Maryland, Baltimore broke ground on its $120 million, six-story School of Social Work (UMSSW) building that is slated to be the first net-zero emissions building within the University System of Maryland and downtown Baltimore. The 127,000-square-foot building will consolidate the school’s Master of Social Work and Doctor of Philosophy programs—currently dispersed across three locations—into one modern, flexible space.
Featured Expert
Anna Borgerding, MA

Source: Facilities Management Advisor
The 2024 Power List
October 31, 2024
For nearly three decades, Dr. Bruce E. Jarrell, M.D., FACS, has served the University of Maryland Baltimore.
The kidney and liver transplant surgeon first joined the higher educational institution in 2005 as the vice dean of academic affairs.
Featured Expert
Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS President, University of Maryland, Baltimore

Source: The Daily Record
Qualified Immunity as Gun Control
October 30, 2024
Although Bruen invalidates regulations inconsistent with the historical tradition of U.S. firearm regulation, states retain significant power to disarm dangerous individuals, argue Guha Krishnamurthi, professor at the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, and Peter N. Salib, professor at the University of Houston Law Center, in a recent article.
Featured Expert

Source: The Regulatory Review
Can AI Plus Electronic Health Records Predict Childhood Obesity Risk?
October 30, 2024
“I think that it’s an interesting way to take information that we already have and synthesize it into a picture we could use like an aid to support the family,” added Mutiat Onigbanjo, MD, assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and medical director of the University of Maryland Pediatrics at Midtown in Baltimore.
Featured Expert

Source: Medscape
25 dead in 1 summer: The present and future of deadly heat in Maryland
October 30, 2024
Robyn Gilden, a nurse and environmental expert at the University of Maryland School of Nursing, said additional risk factors for heat-related illness or death include whether a person works outside, whether they’re overweight, heart disease and age.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Banner
25 dead in 1 summer: The present and future of deadly heat in Maryland
October 30, 2024
Robyn Gilden, a nurse and environmental expert at the University of Maryland School of Nursing, said additional risk factors for heat-related illness or death include whether a person works outside, whether they’re overweight and age.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Banner
4MLK: Transforming West Baltimore into a Life Sciences Epicenter
October 29, 2024
Set to open in fall 2024, 4MLK is more than just a building—it’s a game-changer for West Baltimore. This 8-story, 250,000-square-foot facility will provide critical lab and office space for scientists, entrepreneurs, and innovators working on the cutting edge of technology and medicine. Positioned at the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd and Baltimore St., 4MLK is designed to be a beacon of collaboration.
Featured Expert
Bruce E. Jarrell, MD, FACS

Source: Bio Buzz
MD law schools increase bar passage rates for July exam, data shows
October 29, 2024
The increase for the University of Maryland’s Francis King Carey School of Law comes after last year’s slight dip, and this year marks another steady increase for students at the University of Baltimore School of Law.
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
Sustainable University Building to Serve Student Social Workers
October 29, 2024
Community members and project leaders came together on Oct. 17 to break ground on the new University of Maryland Baltimore (UMB) School of Social Work. The 127,000-square-foot building will support programs that address the growing demand for social workers across the country while promoting cross-campus collaboration, environmentalism, and accessibility.
Featured Expert

Source: Green Building News
New Marker for Immunotherapy Response in Hepatocellular Carcinoma
October 29, 2024
A newly described stage of lymph node–like structures, known as tertiary lymphoid structures, identified in hepatic tumors following presurgical immunotherapy may be vital to successfully treating patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, according to a recent study published by Shu et al in Nature Immunology.
Featured Expert

Source: ASCO Post
5 Important Self Care Tips for Clinicians
October 28, 2024
Sara Robinson, DNP, RN, PMHNP-BC, shares 5 tips for clinicians on self care. While self care is a popular buzzword, it is harder to find tangible elements that you can implement as a clinician. Here's a good place to start.
Featured Expert

Source: Psychiatric Times
Unmet Needs and the Importance of Social Support in Schizophrenia
October 27, 2024
Treatment adherence is a big challenge for patients with schizophrenia, as is the appropriate use of clozapine in treatment-resistant schizophrenia, said Megan Ehret, PharmD, MS, BCPP, professor and codirector of the Mental Health Program, University of Maryland, School of Pharmacy. She also noted that telehealth hasn’t been as helpful for treating patients with schizophrenia as it has in other areas of care.
Featured Expert

Source: American Journal of Managed Care
We must prepare for hidden threat of disease from natural disasters | GUEST COMMENTARY
October 27, 2024
As a scientist who has spent my entire professional career developing countermeasures like vaccines against mosquito-borne diseases, such as malaria and dengue fever, we cannot ignore the danger posed by climate change and its effect on infectious diseases.
Featured Expert

Source: The Baltimore Sun
Four Women Selected to Lead Diversity and Inclusion Initiatives in Higher Education
October 24, 2024
Rhea Roper Nedd has been named assistant vice president of equity, diversity, and inclusion at the University of Maryland, Baltimore. She brings over a decade of experience in developing diversity programs to her new role. Most recently, she served as director of the Center for Student Diversity at Towson University in Maryland.
Featured Expert
Rhea Roper Nedd, PhD

Source: WIA Report
U. of Maryland School of Medicine Program Focuses on Rural Eastern Shore
October 24, 2024
The University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) has launched the Rural Health Equity and Access Longitudinal Elective (R-HEALE) designed to train and place incoming medical students in Eastern Shore healthcare practices.
Featured Expert

Source: Healthcare Innovation
The Nocebo Effect: How We Think Ourselves Sick, According To Psychiatrists
October 24, 2024
We are now beginning to understand some of the mechanisms—psychological and biological—that give rise to nocebo effects. Studies in both laboratory and clinical settings, some of which are described in other chapters, document the important role of information and expectations in generating nocebo effects.
Featured Expert

Source: MBG Health
WHY PEOPLE ITCH AND HOW TO STOP IT
October 23, 2024
There’s so much more compassion from doctors and family members,” Shawn Kwatra of the University of Maryland School of Medicine told me. Itch, he added, “is just not respected.” Perhaps doctors do not respect it because, until recently, they did not really understand it.
Featured Expert

Source: The Atlantic
Supreme Court powerhouse aligns with tribe to stop copper mine
October 23, 2024
The Apache Stronghold has asked the Supreme Court to block Resolution Copper from digging up more than a billion tons of copper. If the mine moves forward, the land could subside, creating a depression more than 1,000 feet deep and almost 2 miles wide. “This is the route environmentalists should be taking in trying to establish these strategic alliances,” said Robert Percival, director of the environmental law program at the University of Maryland.
Featured Expert

Source: E&E News
Anne Arundel County schools warn parents about rise in whooping cough cases
October 23, 2024
Anne Arundel County Public Schools are warning parents about a rise in whooping cough cases. The district has identified three cases since Sept. 10. Dr. Esther Liu, from the University of Maryland Baltimore Washington Medical Center, says whooping cough is preventable with vaccines.
Featured Expert
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Source: WJZ-TV, CBS News Baltimore
The Latest in New and Emerging Therapies in Schizophrenia: Dr Megan Ehret
October 22, 2024
In September, the FDA approved the first new schizophrenia treatment in decades.1 Cobenfy (xanomeline and trospium chloride) has a new mechanism of action, and there is a lot of potential for this drug in treating patients with schizophrenia, said Megan Ehret, PharmD, MS, BCPP, professor and codirector of the Mental Health Program, University of Maryland, School of Pharmacy.
Featured Expert

Source: American Journal of Managed Care
UM School of Nursing kicks off $5M collaborative to expand health equity initiatives in west Baltimore
October 22, 2024
The University of Maryland School of Nursing (UMSON) Tuesday announced it was awarded a five-year, $5 million Health Equities Resource communities (HERC) grant from the Maryland Community Health Resources Commission (MCHRC) to support the West Baltimore Reducing Inequities in Cardiovascular and Mental Health Collaborative-Stronger Together (RICH 2.0).
Featured Expert

Source: The Daily Record
Groundbreaking for University of Maryland Shore Regional Medical Center
October 22, 2024
Governor Wes Moore joined elected officials and leadership from the University of Maryland Medical System for the groundbreaking of the UM Shore Regional Medical Center. The groundbreaking and major investment reinforces the Moore-Miller Administration’s commitment to improving healthcare access and support for Maryland’s rural communities.
Featured Expert

Source: What's Up Annapolis
New rural health initiative by University of Maryland seeks to fill medical gap on Eastern Shore
October 18, 2024
Rural areas in Maryland have notoriously been medically underserved, according to the federal Health Resource and Services Administration. Students like Riaz are taking initiative to address these disparities and help close the medical disparity through the Rural Health Equity and Access Longitudinal Elective.
Featured Expert

Source: Cecil Whig
UMB breaks ground on $120M Social Work building downtown
October 18, 2024
The University of Maryland, Baltimore broke ground Thursday on a major new School of Social Work building on the westside of downtown.School of Social Work Judy Postmus said in a statement that "it will be a vibrant community hub where students, faculty, and local partners come together." School of Social Work Judy Postmus said in a statement that "it will be a vibrant community hub where students, faculty, and local partners come together."
Featured Expert

Source: WMAR-TV
9 Things You Should Do for Your Brain Health Every Day, According to Neurologists
October 17, 2024
Taking care of your cognitive health ought to be—well, a no-brainer. According to a survey published in March, 87% of Americans are concerned about age-related memory loss and a decline in brain function as they grow older, yet only 32% believe they can take action to help control that trajectory.
Featured Expert

Source: Time
Democrats in Congress seek to prevent another Jan. 6 riot, protect Electoral College certification
October 15, 2024
A group of constitutional law experts told CBS News there's no specific prescription for such a political standoff in the Constitution itself.
"The Constitution assumed a certain level of normality in our politics. But 'normal' may not describe our current politics," said University of Maryland constitutional law professor Mark Graber.
Featured Expert
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Source: CBS News
Why few communities chose Baltimore’s high-risk, high-reward opioid legal strategy
October 8, 2024
Thousands of communities across the United States have sued pharmaceutical companies in the last decade, seeking accountability and money for an opioid crisis that has killed hundreds of thousands of Americans and forced governments to spend billions of dollars on drug treatment and other remediation efforts.
Featured Expert

Source: Baltimore Banner
Solar panel install damages roof, leave thousands in damages
October 8, 2024
According to Jeff Sovern with the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, people usually don't read or understand the consumer contract's they're reading.
"If they don't understand something they should ask the provider and seller what it means and see what they say. Although if it comes to a dispute over what the provider says and what the contract says, the court will usually go with what the contract says," said Sovern.
Featured Expert

Source: WMAR-2
‘It’s safe’: VR program being used to help University of Maryland students identify life-threatening situations
October 1, 2024
Inside a computer science office in College Park, a retired firefighter studying to become a physician assistant at the University of Maryland, Baltimore, was with a patient when suddenly someone next to him put that patient in a life-threatening situation.
Featured Expert

Source: WTOP-FM
Kennedy Says Trump Will ‘Make Americans Healthy.’ His Record Suggests Otherwise.
August 27, 2024
When Robert F. Kennedy Jr. endorsed Donald J. Trump last week, he recounted speaking with the former president about "the issues that bind us together," including "having safe food and ending the chronic disease epidemic."Mr. Kennedy, a onetime environmental lawyer and longtime vaccine critic, insisted that a second Trump administration would lead to the elimination of pesticides and other hazardous chemicals in America's food and water supply.
Featured Expert

Source: The New York Times
Are DEI efforts in academic radiology under threat?
August 27, 2024
Diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts in academic radiology are under threat as anti-DEI legislation continues to be introduced to the U.S. Congress, according to a research letter published August 26 in the Journal of the American College of Radiology.
Featured Expert

Source: Aunt Minnie
Marijuana use linked to higher heart attack, stroke risks
August 27, 2024
More older adults in the U.S. are turning to cannabis for stress relief, pain relief and help with other health issues. But new research suggests doing so could come with some heart risks. A large study published Feb. 28 in the Journal of the American Heart Association found a significant association between smoking, vaping or eating cannabis products and a higher risk of heart attack or stroke, even when controlling for other cardiovascular risk factors.
Featured Expert

Source: WOOD-TV (Grand Rapids, MI)
'It's a blessing' How Baltimore's Live Near Your Work incentives keep people in the city
August 22, 2024
Some local universities and larger employers also believe the programs can help revitalize the areas around their campuses and offices.

Source: Baltimore Business Journal