As a digital renaissance producer currently working in Brand Strategy, User Experience, and Interactivity within the Office ...
New study finds that, among many factors, speaking Spanish is the most likely to result in lower scores on self-reported ...
Tires and degrading garbage shed tiny pieces of plastic into the air, creating a form of air pollution that UC San Francisco researchers suspect may be causing respiratory and other illnesses. A ...
Or at least that’s what artificial intelligence (AI) experts prophesized in 2016 when they said AI would outperform radiologists within the decade. Today, AI isn’t replacing imaging specialists, but ...
Trese Biagini, NP, left, and Kathleen Kinda, NP, nurse practitioners in the UCSF Neurovascular Service, take care of a patient in the Emergency department at UCSF Medical Center at the Parnassus ...
Some people bounce back from trauma, but others get caught in depressive loops that sap the joy from their lives. Now, scientists at UC San Francisco are learning how the brain creates these divergent ...
UCSF Medical Center has received the highest possible rating for maternity care by U.S. News & World Report. The ratings are designed to help expectant parents identify the best hospitals for ...
UCSF scientists have developed a “molecular GPS” to guide immune cells into the brain and kill tumors without harming healthy tissue. It is the first living cell therapy that can navigate through the ...
More than 1.6 million U.S. middle and high school students reported vaping in 2023, and nearly 90% used flavored vapes. But America’s youth vaping epidemic may be no accident. UC San Francisco ...
What does the future hold for health and science? Five of UC San Francisco’s emerging leaders offered their unique, forward-looking perspectives during Chancellor Sam Hawgood’s State of the University ...
Researchers from UC San Francisco and Cedars-Sinai have developed a new way to prompt stem cells to form specific organs. It sets the stage for growing human organs from scratch – a long-time goal of ...
Excessive drinking can damage the liver. Yet, unlike obesity or high cholesterol, clinicians only screen for alcohol use by asking their patients how much they drink. Turns out that method is not ...