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How are small, rural U S states doing so well in the COVID-19 vaccine race? Why some rollouts work better than others

How are small, rural U S states doing so well in the COVID-19 vaccine race? Why some rollouts work better than others
theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United States rushes to fill void in viral sequencing

CREDITS: (MAP) K. FRANKLIN/ SCIENCE; (DATA) GISAID; JOHNS HOPKINS CORONAVIRUS RESOURCE CENTER Since May 2020, Jeffrey Milbrandt has had his systems fine-tuned to sequence 1000 coronavirus samples a week. The director of a major sequencing center at Washington University in St. Louis (WashU), Milbrandt knew months ago that the United States urgently needed to identify and track emerging variants of SARS-CoV-2, the pandemic coronavirus already spreading across the nation. But to date, fewer than 100 coronavirus samples have made it to his sequencers at the McDonnell Genome Institute, and the United States remains nearly blind to several coronavirus strains that have recently upended the course of the pandemic. “We have it all worked out but there s not a lot of takers,” Milbrandt says of his center s sequencing abilities. “We are getting more inquiries from the press than from people who need the information. … Some of us have pipelines available they are just not being util

Lipid epoxides target pain, inflammatory pathways in neurons

Date Time Lipid epoxides target pain, inflammatory pathways in neurons Comparative biosciences professor Aditi Das led a study of modified lipids that target the body’s endocannabinoid system, which is involved in regulating pain and inflammation. Photo by L. Brian Stauffer CHAMPAIGN, Ill. When modified using a process known as epoxidation, two naturally occurring lipids are converted into potent agents that target multiple cannabinoid receptors in neurons, interrupting pathways that promote pain and inflammation, researchers report. These modified compounds, called epo-NA5HT and epo-NADA, have much more powerful effects than the molecules from which they are derived, which also regulate pain and inflammation.

New PAC takes aim at HAWLEY — RIDICULOUS LINES at Springfield VACCINE site — WALSH wants developer fee HIKE

POLITICO Get the Massachusetts Playbook newsletter Email Sign Up By signing up you agree to receive email newsletters or updates from POLITICO and you agree to our privacy policy and terms of service. You can unsubscribe at any time and you can contact us here. This sign-up form is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply. Presented by Uber Driver Stories GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. NEW: ANTI-HAWLEY PAC LAUNCHES IN MASS. A new Massachusetts-based PAC has its eye on an ambitious U.S. Senator from Missouri. The U Against Hawley PAC,launched by alumni of Washington University in St. Louis, is aiming to raise $1 million from a national network of donors to support opponents running against GOP Sen. Josh Hawley by the time the primary heats up in a few years.

Bolton appointed executive vice chancellor for administration and chief administrative officer | The Source

Bolton Shantay Bolton, vice president and deputy chief operating officer at Tulane University, has been appointed executive vice chancellor for administration and chief administrative officer at Washington University in St. Louis, effective July 1, according to Chancellor Andrew D. Martin. Bolton will succeed Henry S. Webber, who will formally transition to the newly created position of executive vice chancellor for civic affairs and strategic planning when Bolton assumes her new role. A St. Louis native, Bolton has nearly two decades of experience in the areas of transformational organizational development, disruptive human resources and operational change management, complemented by savvy business acumen. She has been in her current role for the past year, after previously serving as Tulane’s first vice president for human resources and institutional equity, where she successfully led the merging of two departments to create a more diverse, equitable and inclusive community to

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