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The latest news from the UW

Digital mammography research study enters trials at UW with faster imaging technique

The University of Washington Medical Clinic-Roosevelt, at 4245 Roosevelt Way NE in Seattle, is the only local site for an international study of the use of digital imaging in mammography. The research study currently recruiting about 2,500 patients will examine the ability of digital mammography to find breast cancer as compared it to current film-based techniques.

August 3, 2001

Firefighter Jason Emhoff is Upgraded to Satisfactory Condition

Jason Emhoff, the firefighter burned in the Thirty Mile Fire in Okanogan County last month, was upgraded yesterday afternoon to satisfactory condition at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. Emhoff was transferred out of the Burn Intensive Care Unit to the Acute Burn Center patient floor. If all goes as planned, his next surgery by Harborview surgeons will involve removing his left hand from the abdominal pocket and applying allograft, and autografting his ears and neck.

August 1, 2001

Cell Systems Initiative and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory will jointly probe mysteries of the cell’s inner workings

Two of the Northwest’s largest research institutions, the University of Washington and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, have agreed to jointly study the biological process that could hold the key to longer and better life.

Grant program reaches out to women who have fetal alcohol syndrome

The Parent-Child Assistance Program (P-CAP) at the University of Washington has received funding from the March of Dimes Washington State Chapter for a project called “Prevent Double Jeopardy” that will provide services to women who have a birth defect. The goal is to protect the next generation of children from this same debilitating birth defect.

July 26, 2001

How babies acquire building blocks of speech affects later reading and language ability, UW researcher tells White House Summit on Cognitive Development

One of the scientists leading the effort to understand exactly how infants go about learning language told a White House Summit on Early Childhood Cognitive Development today that the fundamental steps in language acquisition later play a critical role in the ability to read.

July 20, 2001

UW program shows students with disabilities they can DO-IT

A summer camp of a different stripe will begin later this month at the University of Washington. More than 40 college-bound high school students with disabilities from Washington and other states will gather at the UW campus in Seattle for the summer study sessions of the Disabilities, Opportunities, Internetworking and Technology (DO-IT) Program.

450 children with reading, spelling or handwriting problems needed for study seeking genetic markers for learning disabilities

One of the joys of summer is finding a great new book to read. But it’s a pleasure that eludes millions of children and adults who have difficulty reading because of dyslexia. Because so many children have trouble reading, as well as with spelling or handwriting, researchers at the University of Washington’s Learning Disabilities Center have launched a major effort designed to find a genetic marker that will allow for the early identification of youngsters with dyslexia and specific writing disability.

July 19, 2001

Keck Foundation funds major new initiative into deep-sea quakes, life

New kinds of instruments and experiments — made possible with a just announced $5 million award from the W.M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles — could give scientists the best way yet to study the rich microbial life that flourishes wherever the seafloor twists and buckles, and which is part of a biosphere beneath the Earth’s surface that may dwarf all life on land or in the sea.

June 19, 2001

Bush names two from Washington to draft new ocean policy

President George Bush has named University of Washington Professor Marc Hershman — an expert on protecting and using coastal areas, developing seaports and the laws and policies governing U.S. ocean resources — and William Ruckelshaus as initial members of the U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy. The announcement from the White House Friday said the two Washington state residents were selected for the 16-member commission from nearly 30 finalists.