Professor of Hematology/Oncology at the University of Chicago, there are just not enough players in the generic specialty drug market that have the capability to manufacture these drugs.
Professor at Tulane University Freeman School of business. ompetition is great for consumers, but it can limit innovation
Ken Holroyd, Assistant Vice chancellor for Research at Vanderbilt University Medical center, agreed that companies would probably feel less pressure
But, according to Kenneth Thorpe, Chair in the Department of health Policy and Management at Emory University, there is more to Medicare Part D than meets the eye.
University of Chicago Conti agrees that Medicare Part D has been a success, and would like to see the model extended to other arms of Medicare.
Despite the complicated physiology involved, NC State biomedical engineer Greg Sawicki and Temple University postdoctoral researcher Ben Robertson show that
Two University of Utah researchers have now found a way to create LEDS from food and beverage waste.
according to new research co-authored by scientists at Washington University in St louis. For example, people with ositivebehavioral traits,
The project is led by scientists at Washington University, University of Minnesota and Oxford university in the United kingdom. Describing the findings as mpressive, Washington University School of medicine in St louis neuroscientist Marcus E. Raichle,
MD, told Nature News that the research confirms it possible to istinguish people with successful traits
a biomedical engineer at the University of Oxford and lead author of the study. ot only is the number of subjects we get to study large,
using just the power of the sun. Chemists at the University of Reading say a new catalyst,
Ricardo Grau-Crespo, from the Chemistry department of the University of Reading, led the team that made the discovery."
and Women Hospital in Boston and is now an assistant professor of medicine in the nephrology division at the University of Washington. nswering this question was important for understanding the potential of mini-kidneys for clinical kidney regeneration and drug discovery.
University of Alberta researchers have created a starch-based bioactive film that is both eco-friendly and rich in antioxidants.
#Model Could Predict Drug's Side effects Researchers at the University of California, San diego have developed a model that could be used to predict a drug's side effects on different patients.
or obese, study participants who took 500 milligrams of Vitamin c daily saw equal improvement in blood vessel tone key measure of cardiovascular health as did those who took up a three-month regimen of brisk walking five to seven times a week, investigators at the University of Colorado at Boulder
said Dr. David Milzman, a professor of emergency medicine at Georgetown University School of medicine.""Even more than food, you need clean water,
a professor at the University of London's School of Oriental and African Studies, told The Guardian."
"said Dr. Glenn Green, a pediatric otolaryngologist at the University of Michigan's C. S. Mott Children's Hospital and the senior author of a new report on the boys'cases.
a research fellow and resident surgeon at the University of Michigan Health System, told Live Science.
a biomedical engineer at the University of Michigan, told Live Science.""This is very important for quality and design control,
said Adriano Aguzzi, professor of neuropathology at the University of Zurich, who led the study.
Peter Nilsson, a chemical biologist at Linköping University in Sweden, was experimenting with conductive plastics,
Keith Baar, an associate professor at the University of California, Davis who has studied the gene for irisin
and that alpha-synuclein is the first new bona fide prion to be discovered, to our knowledge, in the last 50 years,"the researchers, from the University of California,
study researcher Amanda Woerman, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California, San francisco.""Until we have those answers,
Dr. Valerie Sim, of the Centre for Prions and Protein Folding Diseases at the University of Alberta in Canada, said that the traditional definition of a prion is an infectious protein that can transmit disease to another host.
"said Harrison King-Mcbain, an engineering graduate student from the University of Toronto. India treasures Colin Clarke, the director of the Canadian Centre for Epigraphic Documents, said he became aware of the need for such a device during a trip to Kerala, India, last September.
which is part of the Mahatma Gandhi University. Syriac is a dialect of Aramaic and was used by Christians throughout Asia,
he contacted King-Mcbain and Michael Cino, a graduate student at Mcmaster University in Hamilton, Canada.
demonstrating it at the University of Toronto on Aug 19. The team has also found a place in Kottayam
"said Dr. William Petri, an expert on parasitic infections and chief of the Division of Infectious diseases & International Health at the University of Virginia.
But a chance meeting between Petri and a bladder cancer expert, Dr. Dan Theodorescu, who is director of the University of Colorado Cancer Center,
"said Dr. William Petri, an expert on parasitic infections and chief of the Division of Infectious diseases & International Health at the University of Virginia.
But a chance meeting between Petri and a bladder cancer expert, Dr. Dan Theodorescu, who is director of the University of Colorado Cancer Center,
professor of molecular engineering at the University of Chicago and one of the authors of a recent study on the tardigrade-inspired glass, said in a statement.
But the new type of glass created by researchers at the University of Chicago and the University of Wisconsin-Madison defies this definition.
Like a crystal, it has a well-defined molecular organization, de Pablo said in a statement.
according to lead study author Shakeel Dalal, a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. In a post on Reddit's Ask Me Anything (AMA) series, Dalal wrote that, in recent years,
a physicist and electrical engineer at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, told Live Science.""Therefore, a controllable cloak that can adjust its performance is very desirable."
"said study co-author Sarah Harris, a physicist at the University of Leeds in England. Building blocks of life After molecular biologists James Watson and Francis Crick first published a paper on the structure of DNA in 1953, the double helix became the iconic symbol of the code of life.
a mechanical engineer at the University of Bristol in the United kingdom. Levitating objects In the past, scientists have used everything from laser beams to superconducting magnetic fields to levitate objects.
And in 2014, researchers at the University of Dundee in Scotland showed that acoustic holograms that act like a tractor beam could theoretically suck in objects."
A team from Linköping University and Karolinska Institutet in Sweden have developed a device that delivers the neurotransmitter?
Linköping University i
#First 3d Printed Drug Approved by FDA Youl rarely see medication news on the pages of Medgadget,
Researchers from University of Sheffield have used now ultrasound to reduce healing times of diabetic wounds by 30%.
and Federal University of Rio de janeiro in Brazil has managed to develop nanoparticles capable of carrying DNA molecules through the previously impenetrable mucus barrier of the lungs.
Virtual Incision Corporation is a spin-off out of the University of Nebraska and the company just raised $11. 2m in equity financing to sponsor a feasibility study of its robotic technology.
MIT, and Emory University have developed a losed-loopoptogenetic control system that can achieve optimal excitation of neurons all on its own.
Malaria Diagnosis to Smartphones Researchers at Texas A&m University have developed a novel point-of-care device for field-based diagnosis of malaria using a smartphone.
#White blood cell Mediated Therapy for Neurons in Patients with Parkinson Disease Scientists at the University of North carolina at Chapel hill have begun researching the delivery of neurotropic factors to the brain as a potential therapeutic for Parkinson disease.
#New Self-Positioning Transcatheter Mitral valve Developed by National University of Singapore Transcatheter heart valve replacements have become life savers for many frail patients who are unsuitable for open heart surgery.
Now a team at National University of Singapore has developed a prosthetic transcatheter mitral heart valve that positions itself on its own to best fit each patient anatomy.
Created by Dr. Teri Dankovich, a postdoctoral researcher at Carnegie mellon University, the Drinkable Book features pages embedded with silver or copper nanoparticles.
Queensland University of Technology researchers have created a killer robot with the singular purpose of seeking out
"study co-author Dr. An Do, an assistant professor of neurology at the University of California, Irvine, said in a statement."
Dr. Elizabeth Tyler-Kabara, an associate professor of neurological surgery and bioengineering at the University of Pittsburgh, who was not involved with the study,
But researchers at Pohang University of Science and Technology in South korea may have made steel cool again, not to mention stronger and lighter, reports Popular Mechanics.
a biomedical engineer at the University of British columbia. t similar to when a grenade goes off
and the University of North carolina at Chapel hill have designed a novel drug release technology that relies on a stretchable elastomer
led by Kogakuin University president and professor Mitsunobu Sato, back in 2013. The electrolyte used for the battery positive electrode is made mostly from lithium iron phosphate,
New research by the Nanoparticles By design Unit at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST), in collaboration with the Materials Center Leoben Austria and the Austrian Centre for Electron microscopy and Nanoanalysis has developed an efficient
New research by the Nanoparticles By design Unit at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST), in collaboration with the Materials Center Leoben Austria and the Austrian Centre for Electron microscopy and Nanoanalysis has developed an efficient
an ARC Australian Laureate Fellow in the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular engineering at the University of Melbourne, was published today in the leading journal Advanced Materials.
Now a team of researchers at MIT and Tsinghua University in China has found a novel way around that problem:
an associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, who was involved not in this work. o me,
CVD graphene with help from intermolecular forces Flagship-affiliated physicists from RWTH Aachen University and Forschungszentrum Jülich have together with colleagues in Japan devised a method for peeling graphene flakes from a CVD substrate
Now, University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have discovered a way to grow graphene nanoribbons with desirable semiconducting properties directly on a conventional germanium semiconductor wafer.
The research team operating out of Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), affiliated with the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) Center for Artificial Low Dimensional Electronic systems (CALDES), reported a tunable band gap in black phosphorus (BP),
Ke Xu, a faculty scientist in Berkeley Lab Life sciences Division, has dubbed his innovation SR-STORM,
Dr Thomas Bennett from the Department of Materials science and Metallurgy at the University of Cambridge says:
Professor Yuanzheng Yue from Aalborg University adds: second facet to the work is in the glasses themselves,
including researchers from the University of Exeter, has replicated the surface chemistry found in the iridescent scales of the Morpho butterfly to create an innovative gas sensor.
Professor Pete Vukusic, one of the authors of the research and part of the Physics department at the University of Exeter said:
and also comprised of University of Exeter, State university of New york at Albany, and Air force Research Laboratory, produced these new kind of colorimetric sensors that favourably compete with conventional gas sensor arrays in simplicity, stability,
Dr. Timothy Starkey, researcher at the University of Exeter, said: ur research into these bio-inspired sensors demonstrates the huge value in applying the scientific learnings from the biological world to develop technologies for real world applications. d
Scientists at the U s. Department of energy (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the University of California (UC) Berkeley have devised an ultra-thin invisibility kincloak that can conform to the shape
"Valentyn Volkov is the co-lead author, a visiting professor from the University of Southern Denmark.
The significant advance, by a team at the University of New south wales (UNSW) in Sydney appears today in the international journal Nature. hat we have is a game changer,
But the UNSW team working with Professor Kohei M. Itoh of Japan Keio University has done just that for the first time.
Francesco Ricci, of the University of Rome, Tor Vergata, senior co-author of the study.""This DNA nanomachine can be modified in fact custom
Vallée-Bélisle of the University of Montreal, the other senior co-author of the paper.""It is rapid,
Kevin Plaxco of the University of California, Santa barbara.""The materials needed for one assay cost about 15 cents,
Ricci at the University of Rome and first-author of the paper.""For example, we could adapt our platform
a research team from the University of Wisconsin at Madison (UW) and the U s. Department of energy's Argonne National Laboratory has confirmed a new way to control the growth paths of graphene nanoribbons on the surface of a germainum crystal.
In his present position as a postdoc at the University of Maryland he has perfected now it with his Dresden colleagues and with scientists from Marburg, Regensburg and Darmstadt.
In his present position as a postdoc at the University of Maryland he has perfected now it with his Dresden colleagues and with scientists from Marburg, Regensburg and Darmstadt.
University of Wisconsin-Madison electrical engineers have created the fastest, most responsive flexible silicon phototransistor ever made.
University of Wisconsin-Madison electrical engineers have created the fastest, most responsive flexible silicon phototransistor ever made.
The device, fabricated at Purdue University's Birck Nanotechnology Center, uses a cylindrical gold"nanoantenna"with a diameter of 320 nanometers,
###Konstantin Likharev from the Department of physics and Astronomy at Stony Brook University also conducted research for this project.
'805-893-4765copyright University of California-Santa Barbaraissuers of news releases, not 7th Wave, Inc. or Nanotechnology Now, are solely responsible for the accuracy of the content.
Photovoltaic device measurements were done at the University of Utah h
#Artificial photosynthesis: New, stable photocathode with great potential Many of us are familiar with electrolytic splitting of water from their school days:
Yoke Khin Yap, a professor of physics at Michigan Technological University, has worked with a research team that created these digital switches by combining graphene and boron nitride nanotubes.
Scientists from ITMO University developed artificial blood vessels that are not susceptible to blood clot formation. The achievement was made possible by a new generation of drug-containing coating applied to the inner surface of the vessel.
head of the International Laboratory of Solution Chemistry of Advanced Materials and Technologies at ITMO University proposed a solution to the problem.
researchers from North carolina State university and the University of North carolina-Chapel hill show that magnetic nanoparticles encased in oily liquid shells can bind together in water,
and Engineering Center that facilitates interactions between Triangle universities.""said Michael Rubinstein, John P. Barker Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at UNC and one of the co-authors of the paper r
Wang is an assistant professor at the Korea University-Korea Institute of Science and Technology's Graduate school of Converging Science and Technology.
Co-authors are former Rice research scientist Jae-Hwang Lee, an assistant professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at the University of Massachusetts
Now, University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers have discovered a way to grow graphene nanoribbons with desirable semiconducting properties directly on a conventional germanium semiconductor wafer.
and the University of Nebraska takes existing approaches to photodynamic therapy and makes them significantly more effective by adding compounds that make cancer cells vulnerable to reactive oxygen species,
Now, researchers from the University of Bristol in the UK and Nippon Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) in Japan, have pulled off the same feat for light in the quantum world by developing an optical chip that can process photons in an infinite number
Professor Jeremy O'brien, Director of the Centre for Quantum Photonics at Bristol University, explained:""Over the last decade, we have established an ecosystem for photonic quantum technologies,
"The University of Bristol's pioneering'Quantum in the Cloud'is the first and only service to make a quantum processor publicly accessible
a faculty scientist in Berkeley Lab's Life sciences Division, has dubbed his innovation SR-STORM, or spectrally resolved stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy.
head of the Department of physics at Fudan University and a co-author on the paper.""What you really would like to do is get this temperature above room temperature,
an author of the paper now based at Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea."
and flexible electronics University of Vermont scientists have invented a new way to create what they are calling an electron superhighway in an organic semiconductor that promises to allow electrons to flow faster
FOM workgroup leader prof. dr. Bart van Wees and his Phd student Ludo Cornelissen, both from the University of Groningen and FOM workgroup leader dr. Rembert
Duine from Utrecht University have succeeded to use spin waves in an electric circuit by carefully designing the device geometry.
from the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany, have pushed the boundaries of a well-established imaging technique.
"explained Michael Zürch, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany and lead researcher.""The computer emulates the lens."
Zürch and a team of researchers from Jena University used a special, custom-built ultrafast laser that fires extreme ultraviolet photons a hundred times faster than conventional table-top machines.
#University of Houston researchers create fatigue-free, stretchable conductor: Material moves foldable electronics, new implantable medical devices a step closer Abstract:
Zhifeng Ren, a physicist at the University of Houston and principal investigator at the Texas Center for Superconductivity,
including from the University of Exeter, has developed techniques that will allow the first memory chip that can capture light.
from the University of Exeter's Engineering department said:""With our prototype we have, for the first time,
"Professor Wolfram Pernice, from the Institute of Physics at Mnster University and who led the work said:"
The design was created by the research group of Alexis Vallée-Bélisle, a professor in the Department of chemistry at University of Montreal."
"said Sahar Mashid, postdoctoral scholar at the University of Montreal and first author of the study."
Francesco Ricci, a professor at University of Rome Tor Vergata who also participated in this study,
#A new single-molecule tool to observe enzymes at work A team of scientists at the University of Washington
Now researchers from the University of Zurich, Switzerland have made a breakthrough by obtaining the first nanometer (one billionth of a meter) resolved image of individual tobacco mosaic virions
"said Jean-Nicolas Longchamp, the primary author and a postdoctoral fellow of the Physics department at the University of Zurich, Switzerland."
#Wearable electronic health patches may now be cheaper and easier to make A team of researchers in the Cockrell School of engineering at The University of Texas at Austin has invented a method for producing inexpensive and high-performing wearable patches
The University of Texas at Austin is committed to transparency and disclosure of all potential conflicts of interest.
The university investigator who led this research, Nanshu Lu, has submitted required financial disclosure forms with the university.
Lu is cofounder and scientific adviser for Stretch Med Inc.,a medical device company in which she has an equity partnership.
#Scientists pave way for diamonds to trace early cancers Physicists from the University of Sydney have devised a way to use diamonds to identify cancerous tumours before they become life threatening.
researchers from the University investigated how nanoscale diamonds could help identify cancers in their earliest stages."
and cheaply perform important chemical reactions is reported today by Tufts University researchers in the journal Nature Communications.
#Researchers from Kiel and Bochum develop new information storage device Scientists from Kiel University and the Ruhr Universität Bochum (RUB) have developed a new way to store information that uses ions to save data
"Six plus seven makes three-plus one carried over",calculated Professor Hermann Kohlstedt, Head of the Nanoelectronic group at Kiel University.
In an experiment researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have got an artificial atom to survive ten times longer than normal by positioning the atom in front of a mirror.
Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology have placed an artificial atom at a specific distance in front of a short circuit that acts as a mirror.
of Paris at Sorbonne University, Dr. Vasily Stolyarov from the Laboratory of Topological Quantum Phenomena in Superconducting Systems at MIPT,
and their colleagues from Paris-Saclay University studied the emergence of Yu-Shiba-Rusinov (YSR) states bound around single magnetic atoms embedded in a two-dimensional superconductor.
The Laboratory was set up in 2014 using funds from a mega grant awarded to Alexander Golubov, a professor at the University of Twente (Netherlands.
Discussions are now under way for tests to be carried out at the University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV.
#Researchers transform slow emitters into fast light sources Researchers from Brown University, in collaboration with colleagues from Harvard, have developed a new way to control light from phosphorescent emitters at very high speeds.
Discussions are now under way for tests to be carried out at the University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV.
New Option to Diagnose Leukemia Iranian researchers from Tarbiat Modarres University designed a biosensor that enables the early diagnosis of leukemia in the test sample by using naked eyes.
The trio, working at the University of Innsbruck and the IQOQI, suggest overcoming the challenges by detaching the logical qubit from the physical implementation.
"explains co-author Philipp Hauke from the Institute for Theoretical physics at the University of Innsbruck, Austria."
a chemist with Berkeley Lab's Materials sciences Division and the University of California (UC) Berkeley who is leading this research."
Nanoparticles were fabricated in the Australian National University by e-beam lithography followed by plasma-phase etching.
who served an internship in the University as a part of Presidential scholarship for studying abroad.
"In our experimental research me and my colleague Polina Vabishchevich from the Faculty used a set of nonlinear optics methods that address femtosecond light-matter,
#Magnetic Nanosorbents Eliminate Fluoride from Water Researchers from Tehran University of Medical sciences used low-cost and available raw materials for the laboratorial production of nanosorbents with high efficiency in elimination of fluoride from contaminated water.
senior author Jeffrey Long, a UC Berkeley professor of chemistry and faculty senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory."
#Chameleon-like artificial'skin'shifts color on demand Borrowing a trick from nature, engineers from the University of California at Berkeley have created an incredibly thin,
Developed by engineers from the University of California at Berkeley, this chameleon-like artificial skin"changes color as a minute amount of force is applied.
an HHMI early career scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, used a single automated process to synthesize 14 distinct classes of small molecules from a common set of building blocks.
"researchers at Max Planck Florida Institute for Neuroscience and Kanazawa University describe how they have built the new AFM system optimized for live-cell imaging.
Now, engineers from the University of Pennsylvania and Exxonmobil have teamed up to answer this question. With a vested interest in the chemistry and performance of lubricants, scientists at Exxonmobil worked with scientists at Penn
Now, engineers from the University of Pennsylvania and Exxonmobil have teamed up to answer this question. In their experiments, the tip of an atomic force microscope stands in for an individual point of roughness on engine surfaces.
Cyborg insect research led by engineers at the University of California, Berkeley, and Singapore's Nanyang Technological University (NTU) is enabling new revelations about a muscle used by beetles for finely graded turns.
By strapping tiny computers and wireless radios onto the backs of giant flower beetles and recording neuromuscular data as the bugs flew untethered,
#Spherical nucleic acids set stage for new paradigm in nanomedicine drug development A research team led by Northwestern University nanomedicine expert Chad A. Mirkin
Currently on sabbatical from the University, Desimone has focused on bringing the technology to market, while also creating new opportunities for graduate students to use the technique for research in materials science and drug delivery at UNC and NCSU.
and defects, says a Texas A&m University biomedical engineer who is part of the team developing the biomaterial.
led by the University of Sydney. The researchers from the Centre for Ultrahigh bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems,(CUDOS) based at the University of Sydney published their results in Nature Communications today("Enhancing
and inhibiting stimulated Brillouin scattering in photonic integrated circuits")."from left: Professor Benjamin Eggleton, Thomas Bttner and Moritz Merklein, researchers from CUDOS at the University of Sydney with the chalcogenide photonic chip.
This breakthrough is a fundamental advance for research in photonic chips and optical communications, said Moritz Merklein,
lead author from the Universitys School of Physics. In optical communications systems optical nonlinearities are regarded often as a nuisance,
I am delighted our CUDOS team at the University of Sydney in collaboration with our CUDOS colleagues at the Australian National University have achieved this fundamental important result t
#Putting batteries on stage spotlights performance at the nanoscale Used in everything from electric vehicles to laptop computers,
Gorodetsky of the University of California at Irvine (UCI) turned to squid skin for inspiration.
has been demonstrated recently by a research group at the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH). Vibrant optical colors are generated from ultra-thin single layer silicon films deposited on a thin aluminum film surface with a low cost manufacturing process.
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