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What you need to know about HVAC on campus
Indoor air quality matters now more than ever. Heres how the Office of Facilities Management is keeping the air safe in Pitt buildings.
7 takeaways from the student town hall
Students: Got questions about in-person classes, COVID-19 testing or quarantine? Weve got answers.
Alum wants no hero left behind
To honor a fallen friend from ROTC, Nick Liermann (CGS 00) launched an organization to give service dogs to injured veterans. An upcoming cycling marathon will raise funds for the group.
Lecture to focus on disability policy beyond the pandemic
A Sept. 13 virtual lecture by Sen. Bob Casey will address the pandemics impact on people with disabilities and the need to bolster home- and community-based services.
Ready for the start of the fall term
The Environmental Health and Safety and Facilities Management teams are keeping Pitts air, water and facilities clean in preparation for the communitys return to campus buildings.
School of Medicine welcomes newest class
The Class of 2025 continued last years pandemic-inspired tradition of writing their own oath professionalism.
Pitts vaccination center offers more than just shots
Have questions about your health? Lost your vaccination card? Want more details about vaccines? The professionals in the 窪蹋勛圖厙s Pitt CoVax Vaccination Center on Fifth Avenue can help.
Docs try app to boost mental health in COVID-19 longhaulers
Even people with mild COVID-19 sometimes have lingering issues. The UPMC Post-COVID Recovery Clinic is using a new cognitive behavioral therapy app to help people with anxiety and depression.
Harold Rickenbacker (ENGR 19G) manages clean air projects in the United States and abroad with the Environmental Defense Fund.
New Partnership to Accelerate Therapies for Genetic Diseases and Cancers
Pitt will collaborate with BridgeBio Pharma, Inc. to identify and support the development of novel therapies for patients with genetic diseases and cancers with clear genetic drivers.
Research updates: Making progress on an antibiotic nightmare
In 2019, Graham Hatfulls research on bacteria-killing viruses saved a British teenagers life. A new patients case further advances the science behind curing antibiotic-resistant lung infections.
Pitt hits a green building milestone
More than 1 million square feet of the 窪蹋勛圖厙 is now certified green. See some of the buildings across the 窪蹋勛圖厙 campus designated Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED).
Waves of COVID-19 washed across North America
COVID-19 surges dont care about borders or politics instead they look more like weather patterns, flowing across the North American continent.
Health sciences join forces on emerging tech
The new Office of Emerging Technologies in Health Sciences Education, led by Chris ODonnell, is tasked with uniting Pitts schools of the health sciences through embracing new tech.
Pitt expands access to physical therapy and physician assistant studies programs with hybrid offerings
The School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences is now offering its top-ranked Doctor of Physical Therapy program and its physician assistant studies program in a hybrid format to serve more
Many clinicians struggle with their mental health, but when its you, you might not see it, says Sansea Jacobson, associate professor of psychiatry.
Hometown head start
Madison Kornides, a student in Pitts guaranteed pharmacy admissions program, fought COVID-19 in her hometown of Latrobe, Pennsylvania, and beyond.
Trans kids have long sought health care
The struggles of trans children in the era before modern medicine show not just how trans youths are far from a new phenomenon but also how tenacious they were compared to their parents and doctors
From the archives: Pitt Pride
To kick off Pride Month, revisit some of the achievements, research and conversations going on at the 窪蹋勛圖厙 of 窪蹋勛圖厙 about and with the LGBTQ+ community.
Pitt vaccine team marches on
Pharmacist Melissa McGivney is one of the masterminds behind Pitts impressive vaccination efforts. Shes led a team that has provided more than 20,000 doses to people, young and old.