Expanding Horizons Journal: Sabine

My name is Sabine Fischer-Daly and I am a member of the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine’s class of 2018. American Samoa will be my home for two months this summer, where I will work as an Expanding Horizons fellow. I recently completed my second year at the Cornell University College of Veterinary…

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Eating dirt: what about it?

In most African markets you can buy earth intended for human consumption (Credit: Sera Young)

In most African markets you can buy earth intended for human consumption (Credit: Sera Young)

Eating dirt can even become an addiction, an impulsive act hidden from others. “With geophagy, the language of substance abuse is really common,” says Sera Young, Assistant Professor of Global Health and Nutrition in the Department of Population Medicine and Diagnostic Sciences at the College of Veterinary Medicine.

It’s easy to dismiss geophagy as a disgusting habit of children, a wacky pregnancy craving, or an exotic behaviour from far-away lands, but none of these approaches really do it justice. Moreover, such characterisations risk alienating people who find it difficult to explain their ‘unnatural’ desires.

To fully grasp this phenomenon, and understand whether its effects are positive, negative or a subtle mix of the two, researchers need to undertake hypothesis-driven tests that take both biomedical and cultural factors into account.

“I’m not saying ‘everyone should be eating three spoonfuls of earth a day,’” says Young. “But we certainly don’t know enough yet to write this behaviour off entirely.”

This summary was adapted from an article published by the BBC. Read the full article here.

Lambert aids in Zika virus rapid diagnostic test development

Screen Shot 2016-06-29 at 2.37.59 PMAn international, multi-institutional team of researchers that included Guillaume Lambert, a Sesquicentennial Faculty Fellow in Applied and Engineering Physics at the College of Engineering, has developed a low-cost, rapid paper-based diagnostic system for strain-specific detection of the Zika virus, with the goal that it could soon be used in the field to screen blood, urine, or saliva samples.

A team made up of experts from Harvard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), University of Toronto, Arizona State University, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Boston University, Cornell University and Addgene joined their efforts to quickly prototype a rapid diagnostic test to detect the Zika virus.

“The growing global health crisis caused by the Zika virus propelled us to leverage novel technologies we have developed in the lab and use them to create a workflow that could diagnose a patient with Zika, in the field, within 2-3 hours,” said James Collins, Ph.D. at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and one of the study’s authors.

This summary has been adapted from the original article published in CornellEngineering. Read the full article here.

“Ecological Approach” benefits troubled-youth facilities

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After a three-year study on the Cornell-developed program model CARE: Children and Residential Experiences, a long-term initiative of the Residential Child Care Project (RCCP) in the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research at the College of Human Ecology, researchers have found that de-emphasizing behavior control in favor of creating opportunities for children’s success results in less violence at troubled-youth facilities.  Charles Izzo, BCTR research associate and lead author of the Prevention Science report, explains that by using an “ecological approach,” CARE program advocates help agencies transition from simply maintaining compliance to creating a living environment that offers youth developmentally enriching experiences and a “sense of normality.” Staff at troubled-youth facilities learn to foster a more supportive environment and see children’s behavior as pain- or trauma-based and transformable.

This summary has been adapted from the original article published in the Cornell Chronicle. Find the full article here.

College Researchers Finding Novel Ways to Fight Foodborne Outbreaks

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) believes that about 17% of Americans get sick from foodborne diseases each year. The CDC estimates that 59% of these illnesses are caused by viruses and 39% are caused by bacteria. The some of the most commons pathogens are Norovirus, Salmonella,…

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Public Health Fellows

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Public Health Fellow Lee, Bonney-Burrill and Eng

The Public Health Fellows program was launched in 2011 with the purpose of drawing on recent Cornell graduates to enhance the work of the Skorton Center for Public Health. Fellows play a critical role in expanding and reflecting the university’s emerging public health approach to college student health. Nicolette Lee, Andrew Eng and Jessie Bonney-Burrill are the 2015-2016 Fellows.

Read the full article here.

Health Services Expansion

Groundbreaking460Cornell University’s Health Services began a $55 million expansion and renovation in May 2015. The facility will “support collaboration among mental health, medical and health-promotion staff to provide state-of-the-art, integrated clinical and public health services to all people … whose health is influenced by the academic and social environment of this campus and this community.” In addition, the expansion will include a new Skorton Center for Health Initiatives where a multidisciplinary team of health professionals “will create and implement programs to support the community’s physical, mental and sociological health (and) will become a model of integrated medical and mental health services where patients will be treated as whole persons.” The building is scheduled to open in 2017.

Read the full article here.

Cornell receives 2015 Healthy Campus Award

Home_CornellThe Healthy Campus Award celebrates U.S. campuses each year that champion student voices, create equal opportunity for health, are data-informed and data-driven, and strategically invest in student health for the long term through public health initiatives. Cornell University was announced as one of five universities to receive the award in 2015.

“This award reflects the collective efforts of students, staff and faculty to create a more caring and healthy campus,” said Tim Marchell, director of the Skorton Center for Health Initiatives at Gannett Health Services. “It does not mean our campus has achieved all that needs to be done, but it does reflect a deep and demonstrable commitment to the ongoing and multifaceted work of making Cornell more supportive of student health and well-being.”

Read the full story here.

Anne Jones (Public Health)

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Interim Director of Medical Services at Gannett Health Services DO, MPH Jones places special importance on the connection between health and healthcare with the community in which we live, eat, work and play. Expertise in the fields of primary care, family medicine, public health, population medicine, and college health. Find her full…

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