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An article from Harvard Graduate School of Education website discusses a new working paper co-authored by Dr. Joseph Allen looking at why better air in classrooms matters.
In the months following the devastating early January wildfires in Los Angeles, researchers from Harvard Chan School have been working to provide real-time information to the affected communities about lingering toxins in the burn zone that could harm health.
Improving indoor air quality can not only reduce breathing problems—it can also lead to beneficial changes in the gut microbiome, according to a new study. The finding suggests that a healthier microbiome might help reduce air pollution’s harms.
In the wake of the Trump administration’s sweeping terminations of federally funded grants at Harvard University, researchers at Harvard Chan School are lamenting the loss of lifesaving research across multiple disciplines.
Harvard Chan School’s Marc Weisskopf spoke to Anderson Cooper about the current threats to his research on ALS in veterans, and to scientific and health research across the country.
The federal government’s defunding of health research is putting human lives on the line, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health scientists told The Times of London.
Exposure to lingering fine particulate matter was associated with increased hospitalization risks for most cardiorespiratory diseases, according to a new study from Harvard Chan School and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
As a researcher who was originally focused on infectious disease transmission models, Parham Azizi expected he would spend his career in a lab, but, as he told Inside Climate News…