(Press-News.org) About The Study: Many physicians and scientists in this survey study reported being harassed on social media during the COVID-19 pandemic, often due to their advocacy and on the basis of gender, race, sexual orientation, or disability. Many reported sexual harassment and sharing of their private information.
Authors: Regina Royan, M.D., M.P.H., of the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.18315)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.
# # #
Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.18315?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=061423
About JAMA Network Open: JAMA Network Open is an online-only open access general medical journal from the JAMA Network. On weekdays, the journal publishes peer-reviewed clinical research and commentary in more than 40 medical and health subject areas. Every article is free online from the day of publication.
END
Physician, biomedical scientist harassment on social media during pandemic
JAMA Network Open
2023-06-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Key building block for life found at Saturn’s moon Enceladus
2023-06-14
SAN ANTONIO —Wednesday, June 14, 2023 —The search for extraterrestrial life in our solar system just got more exciting. A team of scientists including Southwest Research Institute’s Dr. Christopher Glein has discovered new evidence that the subsurface ocean of Saturn’s moon Enceladus contains a key building block for life. The team directly detected phosphorus in the form of phosphates originating from the moon’s ice-covered global ocean using data from NASA’s Cassini mission. Cassini explored Saturn and its system of rings and moons for over ...
Study shows psychedelic drugs reopen ‘critical periods’ for social learning
2023-06-14
Neuroscientists have long searched for ways to reopen “critical periods” in the brain, when mammals are more sensitive to signals from their surroundings that can influence periods of brain development. Now, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine say a new study in mice shows that psychedelic drugs are linked by their common ability to reopen such critical periods, but differ in the length of time the critical period is open — from two days to four weeks with a single dose.
The findings, published June 16 in the journal Nature, provide a new explanation for how psychedelic drugs work, say the scientists, and suggest potential to treat a wider ...
Building a new vaccine arsenal to eradicate polio
2023-06-14
Despite some of the most successful international vaccination campaigns in history, the poliovirus continues to circulate around the world, posing a threat of neurological damage and even paralysis to anyone who is not vaccinated.
While the original polio strains, called wildtype, have largely been eliminated, new strains can develop from the oral polio vaccine (OPV), which is the one most used in the developing world. Oral vaccines use live, weakened virus that occasionally mutates to an active form, leading to outbreaks even in countries believed to have eliminated polio.
Scientists at UCSF and the UK’s National Institute of Biological Standards and Control (NIBSC) have developed ...
Food allergy is highest among Hispanic, Black and Asian individuals
2023-06-14
· Many racial and ethnic groups not well aware of food allergies
· Lack of food allergy research in racial and ethnic communities
· ‘These individuals need to be aware so they can be diagnosed and treated’
CHICAGO --- Food allergy has not been on the radar of most racial and ethnic communities. But a new Northwestern Medicine study — the first population-based food allergy study in the U.S. to explore racial and ethnic differences in all age groups — shows why it should be.
The new study found the prevalence of food allergy is highest among Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black and ...
World’s first transgenic ants reveal how colonies respond to an alarm
2023-06-14
Ants navigate their richly aromatic world using an array of odor receptors and chemical signals called pheromones. Whether foraging or defending the nest, mating or tending to their young, ants both send and receive chemical signals throughout their lives. The importance of this system is underscored by how well equipped the ant brain is to process the abundance of scents: The olfactory processing center in the ant’s brain has 10 times as many subdivisions as fruit flies do, for example, even though their brains are about the same size.
And yet how the ant olfactory system encodes scent data has remained largely unknown. To whittle ...
For experimental physicists, quantum frustration leads to fundamental discovery
2023-06-14
AMHERST, Mass. – A team of physicists, including University of Massachusetts assistant professor Tigran Sedrakyan, recently announced in the journal Nature that they have discovered a new phase of matter. Called the “chiral bose-liquid state,” the discovery opens a new path in the age-old effort to understand the nature of the physical world.
Under everyday conditions, matter can be a solid, liquid or gas. But once you venture beyond the everyday—into temperatures approaching absolute zero, things smaller than a fraction ...
Metamaterials with built-in frustration have mechanical memory
2023-06-14
Researchers from the UvA Institute of Physics and ENS de Lyon have discovered how to design materials that necessarily have a point or line where the material doesn’t deform under stress, and that even remember how they have been poked or squeezed in the past. These results could be used in robotics and mechanical computers, while similar design principles could be used in quantum computers.
The outcome is a breakthrough in the field of metamaterials: designer materials whose responses are determined by their structure rather than their chemical composition. To construct a metamaterial with mechanical memory, physicists ...
Earth was created much faster than we thought. This makes the chance of finding other habitable planets in the Universe more likely
2023-06-14
When we walk around in our everyday life, we might not think of the Earth itself very often. But this planet is the foundation of our life. The air we breathe, the water we drink and the gravity that pins us to the ground.
Up until now, researchers believed that it took more than 100 million years for the Earth to form. And it was also common belief that water was delivered by lucky collisions with water-rich asteroids like comets.
However, a new study from the University of Copenhagen suggests that it might not have happened entirely by chance.
“We show that the Earth formed by the very ...
A scorching-hot exoplanet scrutinized by UdeM astronomers
2023-06-14
An international team led by Stefan Pelletier, a Ph.D. student at Université de Montréal's Trottier Institute for Research on Exoplanets announced today having made a detailed study of the extremely hot giant exoplanet WASP-76 b.
Using the MAROON-X instrument on the Gemini-North Telescope, the team was able to identify and measure the abundance of 11 chemical elements in the atmosphere of the planet.
Those include rock-forming elements whose abundances are not even known for giant planets in the Solar System such as Jupiter or Saturn. The team's study is published in ...
A growing number of producers and industries interested in precision livestock farming
2023-06-14
Some of the world’s best minds that are focused on profitable and sustainable livestock production attended and presented at the recent Second U.S. Precision Livestock Farming Conference. Hosted by University of Tennessee AgResearch, the May 21-24 event at the UT Conference Center in Knoxville attracted 219 attendees representing 22 countries and 32 U.S. states. Participants included academics, representatives of government agencies and allied industries as well as producers. The conference had a central theme of “Field Application of PLF Technologies” and academic presentations along with two industry and producer panels included interactive dialogues among the attendees ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
National Reactor Innovation Center opens Molten Salt Thermophysical Examination Capability at INL
International Progressive MS Alliance awards €6.9 million to three studies researching therapies to address common symptoms of progressive MS
Can your soil’s color predict its health?
Biochar nanomaterials could transform medicine, energy, and climate solutions
Turning waste into power: scientists convert discarded phone batteries and industrial lignin into high-performance sodium battery materials
PhD student maps mysterious upper atmosphere of Uranus for the first time
Idaho National Laboratory to accelerate nuclear energy deployment with NVIDIA AI through the Genesis Mission
Blood test could help guide treatment decisions in germ cell tumors
New ‘scimitar-crested’ Spinosaurus species discovered in the central Sahara
“Cyborg” pancreatic organoids can monitor the maturation of islet cells
Technique to extract concepts from AI models can help steer and monitor model outputs
Study clarifies the cancer genome in domestic cats
Crested Spinosaurus fossil was aquatic, but lived 1,000 kilometers from the Tethys Sea
MULTI-evolve: Rapid evolution of complex multi-mutant proteins
A new method to steer AI output uncovers vulnerabilities and potential improvements
Why some objects in space look like snowmen
Flickering glacial climate may have shaped early human evolution
First AHA/ACC acute pulmonary embolism guideline: prompt diagnosis and treatment are key
Could “cyborg” transplants replace pancreatic tissue damaged by diabetes?
Hearing a molecule’s solo performance
Justice after trauma? Race, red tape keep sexual assault victims from compensation
Columbia researchers awarded ARPA-H funding to speed diagnosis of lymphatic disorders
James R. Downing, MD, to step down as president and CEO of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in late 2026
A remote-controlled CAR-T for safer immunotherapy
UT College of Veterinary Medicine dean elected Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology
AERA selects 34 exemplary scholars as 2026 Fellows
Similar kinases play distinct roles in the brain
New research takes first step toward advance warnings of space weather
Scientists unlock a massive new ‘color palette’ for biomedical research by synthesizing non-natural amino acids
Brain cells drive endurance gains after exercise
[Press-News.org] Physician, biomedical scientist harassment on social media during pandemicJAMA Network Open





