Saturday 26 July 2025
From sunrise to sunset, people consume all kinds of information from television, online and from other sources.
UC Merced public health Professor A. Susana Ramirez wants to know how that influences people's health decisions and behaviors. Quite often, misconceptions about leading a healthy life can have serious implications on a person’s overall health.
You probably know that carbon monoxide can be lethal. But one UC Merced professor is working to harness its health benefits to treat people with sickle cell disease.
By Rebecca Plevin, Valley Public Radio
This Saturday, community members are invited to attend Valley Fever Research Day at the UCSF Fresno Center for Medical Education and Research. The event is an opportunity for researchers from UCSF Fresno, UC Merced, and Fresno State to connect with community members who have been impacted by the disease.
The Health Disparities Cluster of HSRI will hold its monthly Brown Bag Lunch Seminar on November 21, 2013 from 12p-1p in the Half Dome Room (SSM 317).
Researchers will present their current or planned health disparities research and a discussion will follow. All faculty, staff, and graduate students are welcome to attend.
Please join us for the Health Sciences Research Institute's Research Day on Valley Fever, “Creating an Agenda for Research and Action to Address Valley Fever” at 9:00am on Saturday, November 9th at UCSF Fresno Center for Medical Education and Research
Parking will be free and available in the lot located to the north of the UCSF Fresno Center for Medical Education and Research building, 155 N Fresno St, Fresno, CA 93701.
An upcoming forum will generate more discussion about the disease and aid in developing a plan to improve healthcare, research and community interventions
An interdisciplinary team of researchers at the University of California, Merced, has begun an ambitious quest to discover common principles that guide evolution of structures at the linguistic and molecular levels.
Dyslexia is one of the oldest diagnosed learning disabilities – and one of the most widely researched. However, a UC Merced professor believes there is still more to learn and his recent research has shed new light on what many have considered to be a disease.