Leading members of the Class of 2022 received special recognition during the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences’ Honors Convocation, which took place April 29 at UB’s Center for the Arts.
Six Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences faculty members, five residents and three medical students received 2022 Louis A. and Ruth Siegel Awards or honorable mentions for excellence in teaching.
A University at Buffalo study has found that over the past two decades, more Black men have been dying from obstructive sleep apnea than have white people or Black females. Their death from sleep apnea has continued to rise, in contrast to rates that have flattened for white people and Black females.
Sixteen students in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences were honored for outstanding achievements at the University at Buffalo’s 2022 Celebration of Student Academic Excellence.
A University at Buffalo expert on the behavioral treatment of chronic pain disorders has been awarded $3.3 million from the National Institutes of Health to conduct a five-year clinical study of drug-free behavioral treatments for chronic pelvic pain in men and women.
The University at Buffalo surgical resident whose team of medical and surgical providers has been providing assistance in Ukraine is back in Buffalo. He will discuss his experience and how Western New Yorkers can help from 7-10 p.m. on Friday, April 29, at Coco Bar & Bistro.
The International Organization for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical Commission have approved Basic Formal Ontology as having met international standardization criteria for Top-Level Ontologies; this is the first piece of philosophy to have been accepted through a standardization process of this sort.
A chance meeting at a photocopier. The promise of a safer way to vaccinate. Unexpected calamities in the lab. Finally, a breakthrough and a major publication, only to be met with … crickets.
Ebony Omotola McGee, PhD, has seen bias in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) firsthand, and she talked about her experiences and solutions to fix the problem during a lecture and workshop April 7.
This spring, a group of Western New Yorkers with multiple sclerosis (MS) will begin helping University at Buffalo researchers break new ground in the study of this unpredictable, neurodegenerative disease that affects nearly 3 million people around the globe.
New CTSI online library of videos created by UB faculty and staff content experts contribute to a diverse and well-trained workforce of investigators and research staff.
Jeffrey M. Lackner, PsyD, professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Behavioral Medicine, has been elected to the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research (ABMR).
Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences faculty and leadership provided their insights during a virtual symposium titled “When Providers Face Bias: The Impact and How to Cope.”