Articles

  • Dec 30, 2024 | news.uthscsa.edu | Steven Lee

    Latest funding brings foundation’s total 2024 support to $2.4 millionThe IBC Foundation has donated $400,000 to the Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine at UT Health San Antonio to fund acquisition of a Thermo Altus model mass spectrometer, a state-of-the-art instrument critical for advancing research into diabetes-related kidney disease.

  • Dec 13, 2024 | counterpunch.org | Steven Lee

    Late at night on December 3, soldiers stormed into South Korea’s National Assembly in armored vehicles and combat helicopters. Assembly staff desperately blocked their assault with fire extinguishers and barricades. South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol had just declared martial law to “eliminate ‘anti-state’ forces.”Outside the National Assembly, people gathered from all over Seoul and beyond. Within the hour, thousands were violating the martial law’s ban on all political activities and protests.

  • Dec 12, 2024 | counterview.in | Steven Lee

    Late at night on December 3, soldiers stormed into South Korea’s National Assembly in armored vehicles and combat helicopters. Assembly staff desperately blocked their assault with fire extinguishers and barricades. South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeol had just declared martial law to “eliminate ‘anti-state’ forces.”Outside the National Assembly, people gathered from all over Seoul and beyond. Within the hour, thousands were violating the martial law’s ban on all political activities and protests.

  • Nov 26, 2024 | news.uthscsa.edu | Steven Lee

    Led UT Health San Antonio’s COVID-19 clinical managementThomas F. Patterson, MD, professor of medicine and chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio), has been awarded the highly prestigious Mastership from the American College of Physicians (MACP). Patterson, who also is vice chair for clinical research for the Department of Medicine in the Joe R.

  • Nov 21, 2024 | medicalxpress.com | Steven Lee

    A new neuroimaging marker of cerebral small vessel disease is related to general cognition and may serve to identify persons at risk of dementia in future clinical trials, a landmark study has found. The study led by researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) is especially relevant to the Hispanic population, which has a higher dementia risk from vascular injury compared to non-Hispanic white persons.

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