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New Jersey Alliance for Clinical and Translational Science New Jersey Alliance for Clinical and Translational Science
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What Can Ice Worms Reveal About the Human Body?

What Can Ice Worms Reveal About the Human Body?

by William Jester | Nov 6, 2024 | Community, News

Deep within the icy stillness of the glaciers and snowfields found across Alaska, British Columbia, and the Pacific Northwest lives a scientific marvel that could hold the key to life-saving breakthroughs in medicine and health: the Mesenchytras solifugus, more...

Community-Based Programs in Senior Centers May Lower Health Care Use and Costs for People with Dementia.

by William Jester | Nov 5, 2024 | Community, News

Living with dementia in communities with senior centers providing access to adult day health and social services was associated with fewer hospitalizations and lower health care use and Medicare costs, according to researchers from Rutgers University-New Brunswick and...
Coming to Rutgers–New Brunswick: Greatly Expanded Research Opportunities for Students.

Coming to Rutgers–New Brunswick: Greatly Expanded Research Opportunities for Students.

by William Jester | Nov 4, 2024 | Community, News

Rutgers University–New Brunswick students will have even more opportunities to participate in trailblazing research, thanks to a program being developed by the Office of the Chancellor. Known as the Platforms for Education and Research Cores (PERC) initiative, the...
How Beetle Juice Led to the Discovery of a Virus and Solved the Mystery of a Superworm Die-Off.

How Beetle Juice Led to the Discovery of a Virus and Solved the Mystery of a Superworm Die-Off.

by William Jester | Nov 3, 2024 | News

Rutgers University-New Brunswick scientists have discovered a virus that caused a nationwide die-off of superworms, a common food for birds, reptiles, other pets and, more and more so, even for humans as an alternative protein source. In doing so, they pioneered a...

Researchers Examine the Persistence of Invisible Plastic Pollution.

by William Jester | Nov 2, 2024 | Community, News

Plastic pollution – tiny bits of plastic, smaller than a grain of sand – is everywhere, a fact of life that applies even to newborn rodents, according to a Rutgers Health study published in the journal Science of the Total Environment. Researchers have long understood...
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