(Press-News.org) About The Study: Health care employment growth decreased amid the pandemic but fully recovered by 2024. This recovery contrasts with non–health care employment trends and may result from health care financing via insurance coverage shielding health care employment from macroeconomic fluctuations.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Thuy Nguyen, PhD, email thuydn@umich.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jama.2025.8588)
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 https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/10.1001/jama.2025.8588?guestAccessKey=2fc24583-102f-4efb-82a6-5bdb87cb7ed1&utm_source=for_the_media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=060525
END
Health care workforce recovery after the end of the COVID-19 emergency
JAMA
2025-06-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Pausing chikungunya vaccination and accelerated approval
2025-06-05
About The Article: This Viewpoint, by Vinay Prasad, MD, MPH, of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, Food and Drug Administration, and colleagues discusses a safety communication recommending a pause in the use of live attenuated chikungunya virus vaccine.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Vinay Prasad, MD, MPH, email vinayak.prasad@fda.gov.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jama.2025.9393)
Editor’s ...
When the sky takes a midday dip: global patterns in ionospheric bite-outs
2025-06-05
Around midday, Earth’s ionosphere sometimes experiences sharp, short-lived dips in its electron density—an unusual phenomenon known as a noontime bite-out. A new study takes a global view of these midday disruptions, using finely detailed ionospheric maps to compare their behavior in years of high and low solar activity. The research reveals that noontime bite-outs are more widespread and frequent during solar minimum, especially in winter and at higher latitudes. With detailed tracking of timing, intensity, and ...
The National Multiple Sclerosis Society and others announce MS research and training funding opportunities
2025-06-05
As the largest MS organization in the world and a global leader of the MS movement, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society is committed to supporting research and career development that will accelerate breakthroughs in understanding, treating, and ultimately curing MS. The Society is pleased to highlight a number of new funding opportunities aimed to bolster MS research and training. Support originates both from the Society and outside entities.
Awards are summarized below along with individual links to learn more about the details of each award, eligibility, and application instructions.
The National MS Society is offering funding opportunities that invest ...
China successfully develops its first double-spoke superconducting cavity cryomodule
2025-06-05
Designed a high-performance double-spoke superconducting cavity.
The research team implemented comprehensive electromagnetic and mechanical optimizations on the double-spoke superconducting cavity, achieving three key improvements: reduction of peak electric field during normal operation, suppression of multipacting effects, and enhanced manufacturability. A dedicated Buffered Chemical Polishing tooling system was developed for double-spoke superconducting cavities with complex structures, ensuring uniform acid etching and achieving high Q-values (Q > 3.4×10¹⁰ @ Eₐcc = 9 MV/m).
Developed a high-performance cryomodule
The ...
Study helps pinpoint areas where microplastics will accumulate
2025-06-05
The accumulation of microplastics in the environment, and within our bodies, is an increasingly worrisome issue. But predicting where these ubiquitous particles will accumulate, and therefore where remediation efforts should be focused, has been difficult because of the many factors that contribute to their dispersal and deposition.
New research from MIT shows that one key factor in determining where microparticles are likely to build up has to do with the presence of biofilms. These thin, sticky biopolymer layers are shed by microorganisms and can accumulate ...
NRG Oncology study shows the addition of regional nodal irradiation does not decrease rates of invasive breast cancer recurrence in patients whose axillary nodes convert from positive to negative foll
2025-06-05
Recent results from the NRG-NSABP B-51/RTOG 1304 clinical study showed that the addition of regional nodal irradiation (RNI) does not decrease the rates of invasive breast cancer recurrence in patients whose positive axillary nodes at presentation convert to negative following neoadjuvant chemotherapy. These results were recently published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The study enrolled 1,641 patients stratified by type of surgery (mastectomy, lumpectomy), hormone receptor status (ER-positive and/or PgR-positive; ER- and PgR-negative), HER2 status, adjuvant chemotherapy use, and pathologic complete response (pCR) in the breast, then randomized to RNI vs. ...
Cancer treatments should be licensed for all ages, oncologists say
2025-06-05
Recent advances have resulted in highly effective “tissue-agnostic” drugs that treat cancers based on their molecular markers rather than their tissue of origin, but very few of these drugs are approved for use in children. In an opinion paper publishing June 5 in the Cell Press journal Trends in Cancer, oncologists call for “ag(e)nostic” cancer treatments: drugs that are both tissue agnostic and approved for cancer patients of all ages.
“Cancer treatment in children is a huge unmet need. These drugs are extremely effective, and we want to see children have access to them,” says senior author Razelle ...
US self-reported race and ethnicity are poor proxies of genetic ancestry
2025-06-05
Genetic ancestry is much more complicated than how people report their race and ethnicity. New research, using data from the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) All of Us Research Program, finds that people who identify as being from the same race or ethnic group can have a wide range of genetic differences. The findings are reported June 5 in the Cell Press journal the American Journal of Human Genetics.
As doctors and researchers learn more about how genetic variants influence the incidence and course of human diseases, the study of genetic ancestry has become increasingly important. This research is driving the field of precision medicine, ...
Living towers of worms observed in nature
2025-06-05
Nematodes are the most abundant animal on earth, but when times get tough, these tiny worms have a hard time moving up and out. So, they play to the strength of their clade. If food runs out and competition turns fierce, they slither towards their numerous kin. They climb onto each other and over one another until their bodies forge a living tower that twists skyward where they might hitch a ride on a passing animal to greener and roomier pastures.
At least that’s what scientists assumed. For decades, these worm structures ...
New AI transforms radiology with speed, accuracy never seen before
2025-06-05
CHICAGO --- A first-of-its-kind generative AI system, developed in-house at Northwestern Medicine, is revolutionizing radiology — boosting productivity, identifying life-threatening conditions in milliseconds and offering a breakthrough solution to the global radiologist shortage, a large new study finds.
The findings will be published on Thursday (June 5) in JAMA Network Open.
“This is, to my knowledge, the first use of AI that demonstrably improves productivity, especially in health care. Even in other fields, I haven’t seen anything close to a 40% boost,” said senior author Dr. Mozziyar Etemadi, an assistant professor of anesthesiology ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The Lancet: Plastic pollution is an underrecognised threat to health, experts warn as they launch a project to track plastics’ health impacts and monitor progress
The Lancet Countdown on Health and Plastics to track impact of plastic production and pollution on human health
Announcing The Lancet Countdown on Health and Plastics
Study unexpectedly finds living in rural, rather than urban environments in first five years of life could be a risk factor for developing type 1 diabetes
Editorial urges deeper focus on heart-lung interactions in pulmonary vascular disease
Five University of Tennessee faculty receive Fulbright Awards
5 advances to protect water sources, availability
OU Scholar awarded Fulbright for Soviet cinema research
Brain might become target of new type 1 diabetes treatments
‘Shore Wars:’ New research aims to resolve coastal conflict between oysters and mangroves, aiding restoration efforts
Why do symptoms linger in some people after an infection? A conversation on post-acute infection syndromes
Study reveals hidden drivers of asthma flare-ups in children
Physicists decode mysterious membrane behavior
New insights about brain receptor may pave way for next-gen mental health drugs
Melanoma ‘sat-nav’ discovery could help curb metastasis
When immune commanders misfire: new insights into rheumatoid arthritis inflammation
SFU researchers develop a new tool that brings blender-like lighting control to any photograph
Pups in tow, Yellowstone-area wolves trek long distances to stay near prey
AI breakthrough unlocks 'new' materials to replace lithium-ion batteries
Making molecules make sense: A regional explanation method reveals structure–property relationships
Partisan hostility, not just policy, drives U.S. protests
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: August 1, 2025
Young human blood serum factors show potential to rejuvenate skin through bone marrow
Large language models reshape the future of task planning
Narrower coverage of MS drugs tied to higher relapse risk
Researchers harness AI-powered protein design to enhance T-cell based immunotherapies
Smartphone engagement during school hours among US youths
Online reviews of health care facilities
MS may begin far earlier than previously thought
New AI tool learns to read medical images with far less data
[Press-News.org] Health care workforce recovery after the end of the COVID-19 emergencyJAMA