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Nathan C Nickel

(MENAFN - The Conversation) Dr. Nickel is an Associate Professor of Community Health Sciences at the University of Manitoba, Research Scientist and Associate Director at the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, Scientist at the Children s Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, and Co-Director of the Manitoba Interdisciplinary Lactation Centre (MILC). Nickel received his Master of Public Health (MPH) degree in Community Health Sciences from the University of California, Los Angeles and his PhD in Maternal and Child Health Policy from the Gillings School of Global Public Health, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Nickel is an applied population health scientist. He uses administrative data to conduct health and social policy research. Nickel s research program centres on examining how social and structural determinants impact population health and well-being and health and social inequities. Within this framework he has conducted evaluation research looking at prog

To All the Boys 3: Always and Forever Book vs Movie Differences Explained

Here are all the differences between the To All the Boys: Always and Forever book versus the movie. The Covey s Trip to Korea is A Lot Shorter In the books, the Coveys actually head off to Korea for a whole month after graduation in the middle of the book. Meanwhile, the film shows them going on their trip during spring break and is actually what kicks off the movie. The Covey s Trip Also Has a Different Reason Behind It While Lara Jean and her family set out to find the special love lock in Seoul Tower that her mom left when she was last there in the movie, there s a different reason for their trip in the books. Dr. Covey actually sends the girls to Korea to hang out with her grandmother and get to know her more.

Why It s So Hard to Make Antiviral Drugs for COVID and Other Diseases

Nominations invited for $250,000 Kabiller Prize

Northwestern Now Nominations invited for $250,000 Kabiller Prize World’s largest monetary award for achievement in nanomedicine to be presented alongside $10,000 Kabiller Young Investigator Award February 11, 2021 | By Mark Heiden Northwestern University is now accepting nominations for two prestigious international prizes: the $250,000 Kabiller Prize in Nanoscience and Nanomedicine, and the $10,000 Kabiller Young Investigator Award. The deadline for nominations is May 17, 2021. Recipients will be evaluated and chosen by an independent committee of experts in nanotechnology.  Established in 2015, the Kabiller Prize is the world’s largest monetary award for outstanding achievement in nanomedicine. It recognizes researchers who have made significant, career-long contributions to the field of nanotechnology and its application to medicine and biology. The Kabiller Young Investigator Award is given to emerging researchers who have made recent groundb

Young planets with teenage sun give space studies a lift

 E-Mail IMAGE: The newly discovered TOI 451 planetary system features three planets orbiting the same sun. view more  Credit: Illustration courtesy of NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center HANOVER, N.H. - February 12, 2021 - A newly discovered planetary system will provide researchers with the rare chance to study a group of growing planets, according to research co-led by Dartmouth. The new system, named TOI 451, is made up of at least three neighboring planets that orbit the same sun. The planets range in size between that of Earth and Neptune. According to the research team, NASA s Hubble Space Telescope and its planned successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, can be used to study the atmosphere of each planet. Such research could lead to information on how planetary systems like our own solar system evolve.

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