A new study involving researchers at Western University, St. Michael’s Hospital and University of Toronto has found that South Asians with either heart disease or diabetes had fewer vascular regenerative and reparative cells compared to white European pa …
Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry
Philosophers focus on AI ethics
Postdoctoral associates help students view artificial intelligence from social, ethical lens
Tracing the root of vaccine-induced blood clots
Angela Huynh’s paper points to protein causing rare complications from Astra Zeneca shots
Western welcomes first Indigenous scholarship recipients
Recognized for academic excellence, commitment to community, three Indigenous students make up first cohort
From Cholera to COVID: New course melds past with present
Studying outbreaks of previous centuries, students gain context around uncertainty and change
Western researchers explore effects of weed in womb
Early research shows cannabis use during pregnancy may affect fetal development
Water detectives: Scientists test wastewater for signs of virus
Western’s ImPaKT facility site of new international research investigating new way of detecting COVID-19, variants of concern
Expert insights: Lack of exercise linked to increased risk of severe COVID-19
Addressing social inequalities to ensure physical activity is accessible to all Canadians
Expert insights: Why women are owning the podium for Canada at the Tokyo Olympics
Celebrating Canadian women’s success in sport benefits future generations and Canada
Data-driven dementia prevention
Study of Canadian incidence aims to develop cost-effective models
Unfolding the hippocampus
Western-developed technique irons out brain wrinkles for accurate insight on brain disorders
Expert insights: Delay of Olympic Games helped improve athletes’ performance
Olympic athletes continue to thrive and break records during the pandemic.
The race to row in Tokyo
Western grads Jen Martins, Jill Moffatt part of Team Canada’s biggest Olympic rowing team in recent history
Philosophers focus on AI ethics
Postdoctoral associates help students view artificial intelligence from social, ethical lens
Tracing the root of vaccine-induced blood clots
Angela Huynh’s paper points to protein causing rare complications from Astra Zeneca shots
Western welcomes first Indigenous scholarship recipients
Recognized for academic excellence, commitment to community, three Indigenous students make up first cohort
From Cholera to COVID: New course melds past with present
Studying outbreaks of previous centuries, students gain context around uncertainty and change
Western researchers explore effects of weed in womb
Early research shows cannabis use during pregnancy may affect fetal development
Water detectives: Scientists test wastewater for signs of virus
Western’s ImPaKT facility site of new international research investigating new way of detecting COVID-19, variants of concern
Expert insights: Lack of exercise linked to increased risk of severe COVID-19
Addressing social inequalities to ensure physical activity is accessible to all Canadians
Expert insights: Why women are owning the podium for Canada at the Tokyo Olympics
Celebrating Canadian women’s success in sport benefits future generations and Canada
Data-driven dementia prevention
Study of Canadian incidence aims to develop cost-effective models
Unfolding the hippocampus
Western-developed technique irons out brain wrinkles for accurate insight on brain disorders
Expert insights: Delay of Olympic Games helped improve athletes’ performance
Olympic athletes continue to thrive and break records during the pandemic.
The race to row in Tokyo
Western grads Jen Martins, Jill Moffatt part of Team Canada’s biggest Olympic rowing team in recent history