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(10/03/22 6:48am)
Menstruation and premenstrual symptoms affect a large percentage of the University community. A U.Va. Health study from this month established that premenstrual symptoms are so common that they constitute a “key public health issue globally.” University experts and students are advocating for greater awareness of PMS and periods, with students taking action to make menstrual products and education more accessible on Grounds.
(06/12/22 8:43pm)
The University will invest more than $75 million in neuroscience research as a part of its Grand Challenges Research Investments, which aims to provide strategic investments — such as new faculty hires — that will have a greater impact on key research areas as identified in the 2030 Plan.
(01/31/21 8:33pm)
U.Va Lifetime Learning — in partnership with Morven Farm — held the virtual panel Food and Justice in Virginia Wednesday as part of the University’s Community MLK Celebration. The five panelists discussed the influence of systemic racism on food accessibility and farm working conditions and common problems — including food security and worker safety — while urging the public to become more involved in food-related policy, especially in the Charlottesville community.
(12/16/20 4:53am)
A team of scientists, which included University researchers, found that dexamethasone, a steroid used to treat severe cases of COVID-19, is less effective to treat COVID-19 for those with diabetes and other risk factors. The discovery suggests that further research is necessary to understand how to better treat diabetic and at-risk patients with COVID-19.
(12/26/20 9:47pm)
While adjusting to a pandemic-altered semester, students have learned how to develop personal plans for safely socializing and going about daily life. They have also navigated difficult conversations with roommates and peers on how to best limit the risk and spread of COVID-19.
(10/15/20 2:22pm)
In the midst of a semester altered by the COVID-19 pandemic, many students have found their mental health worsening due to a combination of school and pandemic-related stressors. As the semester goes on, University mental health professionals recommend finding new and positive ways to adapt to these unprecedented circumstances.
(08/25/20 1:48am)
Since the initial announcement March 18 to limit all ongoing research amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the University has been slowly ramping up research in an effort to return to previous conditions. For the department of environmental sciences, the restrictions have hit graduate and undergraduate students hard, as they are unable to travel to or enter field stations to conduct research.