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UM Today | Rady Faculty of Health Sciences | Two new Canada Research Chairs awarded prestigious Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowships

UM Today Network Britt Drögemöller and Galen Wright at the Sydney Brenner Institute for Molecular Bioscience in South Africa in 2019. (Photo: David Twesigomwe) Two new Canada Research Chairs awarded prestigious Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowships March 16, 2021    UM Canada Research Chairs Dr. Galen Wright and Dr. Britt Drögemöller, faculty members in the Max Rady College of Medicine, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, were recently awarded a pair of one-year fellowships that will allow them to collaborate on neurogenomics and precision medicine with Stellenbosch University, South Africa. The Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship program, founded in 2013, is designed to develop long-term collaborations between universities in Africa and North America. The project is one of 56 through which the program will pair African-born scholars in North America with institution in Africa to collaborate on research, graduate training and mentoring activities in the coming months.

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

How has the stress from a difficult year changed your brain and what can you do about it?

How has the stress from a difficult year changed your brain and what can you do about it? Stress changes your brain and has physical, mental and cognitive side effects. Many Canadians report drastically increased stress rates during the pandemic. Psychology professor Leslie Roos joins Dr. Brian Goldman to share proven, evidence based strategies for managing stress and feeling better. Social Sharing CBC Radio · Posted: Feb 03, 2021 9:37 PM ET | Last Updated: February 4 Canadians have seen their stress levels increase since the onset of the pandemic, and experts worry there could be long-term health consequences as a result.(Credit: iStock/Getty Images)

Comfort, creativity battle COVID stress in art class

Winnipeg Free Press photos by RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Maples Collegiate student Brody McQueen has worked on various wall panels intended to spread hopeful, uplifting messages that aren’t ‘toxic positivity.’ It was only fitting the panels on which students were tasked with painting comforting messages in Brody McQueen’s Grade 12 art class this term were customized to be six-feet tall. It was only fitting the panels on which students were tasked with painting comforting messages in Brody McQueen’s Grade 12 art class this term were customized to be six-feet tall. Be the reason someone feels heard, states the board made by McQueen and his project partner, Shakira Rampersad.

New study looks at how to reduce the risk of children developing peanut allergies

  WINNIPEG A new study has found a way to potentially reduce the risk of children developing a peanut allergy. The study, led by researchers from the University of Manitoba as well as McMaster University looked at how a baby s sensitivity to peanuts was affected if the mother was eating peanuts while breastfeeding, and also introducing peanut products to babies before they were a year old. Dr. Meghan Azad, who is an associate professor at the U of M and is also with the Children s Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, is the lead researcher on this study and said the theory is called the triple exposure hypothesis.

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