Seeking environments that ‘generate health’
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Seeking environments that ‘generate health’

Washington University recently announced that Sandro Galea, MD, DrPH — one of the world’s most influential public health leaders — will become inaugural dean of its planned School of Public Health, effective Jan. 1, 2025. In this critical role, Galea will help shape WashU’s first new school in 100 years. The school is part of “Here and Next,” WashU’s 10-year strategic plan to make both the university and St. Louis a global hub for solving society’s deepest challenges.

Reconciling with our past
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Reconciling with our past

The WashU & Slavery Project is an initiative started in spring 2021 to advance scholarship around WashU’s history with slavery. But the project is also reshaping public history in the St. Louis region by striving to add or improve information around slavery and racial discrimination at area historical sites, including the General Daniel Bissell House and the Missouri Botanical Garden.

In ‘Radical Atlas,’ 100 maps show the what and why of Ferguson
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In ‘Radical Atlas,’ 100 maps show the what and why of Ferguson

There are infinite ways to map a place, and capturing the many dimensions of Ferguson is what Patty Heyda set out to do in her new book, “Radical Atlas of Ferguson, USA.” With more than 100 maps that explore the distribution of libraries, fast-food franchises, airport runways and Fortune 500 companies in north St. Louis County, Heyda’s survey-like book illustrates how municipal planning has led to poverty and racial inequality.

‘Radical Atlas’ is graphic depiction of Ferguson disparity
In the News

‘Radical Atlas’ is graphic depiction of Ferguson disparity

If you want to learn about why life can be so difficult in north St. Louis County, Patty Heyda has mapped it all out in clear and convincing detail. Ten years after the killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson brought stark, unwanted attention to the North County suburb, “Radical Atlas of Ferguson, USA” provides a close, critical look into disparities in the region, how they compare with similar conditions in other parts of the county and what can be done to correct them.

A St. Louis firm races to diagnose Alzheimer’s faster
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A St. Louis firm races to diagnose Alzheimer’s faster

In the world of Alzheimer’s disease research, where the setbacks have been many, the advent of blood tests has been hailed as a welcome innovation. And a St. Louis company is on the cutting edge of the field, pioneering new tests in hopes of advancing drug research and one day giving patients earlier indicators of the disease. The company has been growing its workforce and competing in the crowded field of medical firms developing faster methods of diagnosing Alzheimer’s and other types of dementia.

WashU Expert: ‘Ferguson’ inspired generation of activists, political leaders

WashU Expert: ‘Ferguson’ inspired generation of activists, political leaders

The fatal police shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed teenager, on Aug. 9, 2014, in Ferguson, Mo., sent a shockwave through the country. Seemingly overnight, the phrase #BlackLivesMatter became a part of everyday conversation, and communities around the country were forced to have difficult conversations about racism within the justice system. The ripple effect of that moment has continued over the last decade. Clarissa Rile Hayward, a professor of political science in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis and an expert on political power and social movements, explains why this particular moment was so powerful and how it inspired a generation of activists and political leaders.

WashU Expert: In Ferguson aftermath, despite progress regression continues
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WashU Expert: In Ferguson aftermath, despite progress regression continues

While some some progress has been made in the 10 years since Michael Brown’s death on Aug. 9, 2014, in many ways we have regressed as a nation, said Kimberly Norwood, the Henry H. Oberschelp Professor of Law at Washington University in St. Louis and editor of, and contributor to, the 2016 book “Ferguson’s Fault Lines: The Race Quake That Rocked a Nation.” The reverberations from Brown’s shooting death manifested in the form of worldwide protests and contrite promises of investigations, reform and racial reckoning, Norwood said.

Food Outreach and the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis collaborate to study the impact of food and medicine on diabetes care
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Food Outreach and the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis collaborate to study the impact of food and medicine on diabetes care

Food Outreach has partnered with Dan Ferris, an assistant professor of practice at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis, to conduct a study to evaluate the effect of Food Outreach’s type II diabetes pilot program. Ferris’s study, titled “From Translation to Transformation: Medically Tailored Meals and Food-is-Medicine Approaches for Reducing Health Disparities in Diabetes Management,” aims to evaluate how a comprehensive Medically Tailored Meals program in St. Louis can improve outcomes for adults with type 2 diabetes.

Center for the Literary Arts
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Center for the Literary Arts

The Center for the Literary Arts is a transformational hub for creative writing and translation, as well as different forms of literary arts and creative practice across Washington University and the St. Louis community. As an initiative of the Arts & Sciences Strategic Plan, the Center explores all the ways in which literary art and creative practice can change the world around us. It seeks to unite communities within and beyond academia by reimagining vital literary art-making for the 21st century locally and globally.

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