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...cost was the principal barrier [to treatment], whereas in Canada waiting times were an issue,” the report reads. The authors of the study said they were undecided, however, about how strongly its results are linked to Canada’s universal healthcare provision, and about the study??s implications for Massachusetts, which recently announced its own compulsory universal insurance plan. Lasser was cautious about concluding that Canadians’ better health was a result of their universal healthcare system, pointing out that the nature of the study allowed the researchers to compare the two healthcare...

Author: By John R. Macartney, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Canada Trumps U.S. in Healthcare, Study Says | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

From her marriage partner to her career choices, Marina von Neumann Whitman ’56 has always known what she wanted.Growing up in the household of a faculty member at the Institute for Advanced Study??a leading research center in Princeton, New Jersey—meant having Albert Einstein as a frequent dinner guest and a childhood focused on high intellectual standards.“I was my father’s only child, which means all his expectations were focused on me,” recalls Whitman, whose Hungarian father, John von Neumann, is known...

Author: By Lulu Zhou, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Working Whitman Breaks Ground | 6/3/2006 | See Source »

...give a good lecture, you’re sexy.” Kenan Professor of Government Harvey C. Mansfield ’53, who was an outspoken critic of plans to make CUE Guide ratings compulsory for most classes at a recent Faculty meeting, said that the study??s results were “shocking” but “unsurprising.” “[They] might suggest that going online, as course evaluations at Harvard are now, makes students less serious in evaluating, as one professor said in the faculty debate...

Author: By Alexandra C. Bell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: In Ratings Of Profs, It’s Body Over Mind | 5/17/2006 | See Source »

...human subjects began about six years ago, using a full aggregated strand of the protein. But this trial was cancelled in 2002 when 6 percent of the patients tested experienced brain inflammation. Ultimately, researchers would like the new vaccine to be tested on humans, according to one of the study??s authors, Cynthia A. Lemere, who is an associate professor of neurology at the Medical School and an associate neuroscientist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in the Center for Neurologic Diseases. “We would very much like to take one of our short...

Author: By Kevin C. Reyes, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: HMS Seeks Alzheimer’s Vaccine | 5/5/2006 | See Source »

...that little research has been done on the long-term health effects of composite fillings. The IAOMT filed complaints against Harvard, the University of Washington, the University of Maine, and other sponsors of the study on Tuesday with each of the respective institutional review boards. Bellinger, however, defended the study??s methods and said that telling the parents about the experimental method would not have contributed to the quality of the study. “These things are always complicated,” he said. “So, we could have told the parents how many micrograms...

Author: By Amanda C. Shanks, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Group Calls Mercury Study 'Outrageous' | 4/21/2006 | See Source »

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