UCSF News
New Therapy Improves Lives of Girls and Women with Rett Syndrome
By Talya Sanders on
Katie’s Clinic for Rett Syndrome at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland is one of the few U.S. treatment centers and one of only 18 international centers of excellence for the rare disorder. It is one of the first centers to offer the first treatment for the rare genetic disease, helping improve the lives of girls like Emiliana.
Workforce Agreement Supports Local Labor for Oakland Hospital
By Lorna Fernandes on
UCSF Health and UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospitals signed an agreement to prioritize local union workers for the construction of a proposed landmark hospital building and related site improvements on its Oakland site.
Feeling Rough After Your COVID Shot? Congrats, It’s Working!
By Suzanne Leigh on
Adverse symptoms from the COVID-19 vaccine such as chills and headaches are linked to a robust antibody response, indicating increased efficacy compared with recipients who did not experience side effects.
‘There Was No Other Way’: How UCSF Got Its News Three Decades Ago
By Eric Brooks on
With no social media and cable news still in its infancy, major TV networks and daily newspapers were the only game in town.
For Type 1 Diabetes Distress, Focus First on Managing Emotions
By Jess Berthold on
Diabetes distress, the fears, worries and burdens associated with living with and managing diabetes, affects up to 75% of adults with Type 1 diabetes. The most effective way to reduce diabetes and improve glucose control is to focus on managing the emotional strain of living with the condition.
How – and Why – to Reset Your Kids’ Screen Use for Summer
By Jess Berthold on
Recent research on screen use in children and teenagers examined the effects of screen time on sleep, nutrition, body mass index (BMI) and step count.
An Insider’s View on Why It’s Important to Take UC-Required Security Trainings
UCSF boosts compliance with mandatory trainings to meet UCOP and Regents’ priorities.
How the Cell Cycle Orchestra Plays an Unexpected New Tune
By Levi Gadye on
Multiciliated cells, cells with hundreds of hair-like structures that move called cilia, keep things like mucus in the lungs and cerebrospinal fluid in the brain flowing in the right direction.
Why Do 1 in 10 Americans Get Eczema? Is it Too Much Salt?
By Elizabeth Fernandez on
A high sodium diet may increase the risk of eczema. Eating just one extra gram of sodium per day – the amount in a Big Mac – increases the likelihood of flares by 22%.
Great News, Parents: You Do Have Power Over Your Tweens’ Screen Use
By Jess Berthold on
For tweens, restricting screens in bedrooms and at mealtimes and modeling healthy practices at home are parenting practices that work best to curb screen time and addictive screen behavior: