PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Health care professionals sponsored for H-1B visas in the US

JAMA

2025-10-29
(Press-News.org)

About The Study: Over 11,000 physicians were sponsored for H-1B visas in fiscal year 2024, representing 1% of the U.S. physician workforce. H-1B–sponsored advanced practice providers (physician assistants, nurse practitioners, nurse anesthetists, and nurse midwives), dentists, and other health care workers (podiatrists, chiropractors, and optometrists) accounted for a smaller share. The percentage of H-1B–sponsored physicians was nearly 2 times higher in rural compared with urban counties and nearly 4 times higher in the highest- vs lowest-poverty counties.

Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Rishi K. Wadhera, MD, MPP, MPhil, email rwadhera@bidmc.harvard.edu.

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/

(doi:10.1001/jama.2025.20931)

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.2025.20931?guestAccessKey=b5612aed-a600-4669-97e2-5cfca498b6a6&utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_content=tfl&utm_term=102925

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study shows increase of H1-B visa fees will most impact rural and high-poverty counties

2025-10-29
Investigators at Mass General Brigham and the Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Center for Outcomes Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center have found that international doctors sponsored by H1-B visas in 2024 comprised nearly 1% of the entire physician workforce in the United States, with substantial variation in different counties’ reliance on H-1B-sponsored physicians and other healthcare professionals. The research, published in JAMA, comes out just weeks after a presidential proclamation that substantially increased employers’ fees for H1-B visa applications. “Our ...

How age affects vaccine responses and how to make them better

2025-10-29
SEATTLE, WASH. — October 29, 2025 — As flu season approaches and public health officials roll out their annual push for vaccination, Allen Institute scientists are learning why vaccines can trigger a weaker response in older adults, around age 65, and what can be done to improve them. These insights open the door to designing more effective vaccines. In the largest study of its kind, published in Nature, scientists discovered that our T cells—key players in coordinating immune responses—undergo profound and specific changes as we age. These changes, far from ...

MAGIC: AI-assisted laser tag illuminates cancer origins

2025-10-29
The human body relies on precise genetic instructions to function, and cancer begins when these instructions get scrambled. When cells accumulate genetic errors over time, they can break free of the normal controls on their growth and divide excessively. Chromosomal abnormalities – numerical and structural defects in chromosomes – are a common first step in this process, often contributing to normal cells turning cancerous.  A new AI tool developed by researchers in the Korbel Group at EMBL Heidelberg now offers a powerful method to gain deep insights ...

Major milestone achieved in capturing ribosome assembly

2025-10-29
Ribosomes are the cell's protein factories, which read the genetic code and assemble the proteins that every organism needs to live. But as far as how ribosomes themselves were formed, tantalizingly little was known.   Now, scientists have captured a key part of this process, in motion. The findings, published in Nature, combine artificial intelligence, cryo-electron microscopy, and genetics to reveal, in unprecedented detail, how cells coordinate, regulate, and safeguard the creation of the small ribosomal subunit—a machine central to forming every protein.  "We finally have a molecular movie of ribosome formation—we've ...

International research team decodes the pangenome of oats

2025-10-29
The pangenome is central to our understanding of cultivated plants such as oats, as it maps their entire genetic diversity. It encompasses not only genes that occur in all plants, but also those that are only present in certain species, serving as a kind of map. In turn, the pantranscriptome shows which genes are active in different tissues, such as leaves, roots and seeds, and at different stages of development. It serves as a gene expression atlas. However, understanding how genetic differences influence individual plant traits is challenging, particularly in the case of oats. The oat genome ...

A doorstop for the brain’s electrical gates

2025-10-29
As information zings from cell to cell inside the brain, bursts of electricity spur its transmission. At Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL), scientists have turned their attention to the tiny pores that let charged ions enter a cell—and the molecular gatekeepers that help control them. CSHL structural biologist Hiro Furukawa studies NMDA receptors (NMDARs). These ion channels open in response to chemical signals from neurons or drugs. The channels must be carefully regulated. When they open too wide or stay shut ...

Tiny 3D printer reconstructs tissues during vocal cord surgery

2025-10-29
After vocal cord surgery, many patients develop stiff vocal folds that impact their ability to speak. Hydrogels can help prevent this by promoting healing, but delivering hydrogels to the vocal cords is difficult. Publishing October 29 in the Cell Press journal Device, a team of biomechanical engineers and surgeons have developed a 3D-printing soft robot that can accurately deliver hydrogels to the vocal cord surgical site to reconstruct tissues removed during surgery. The robot’s printhead is only 2.7 mm in size—the smallest bioprinter reported to date.   “Our device is designed not only for accuracy and printing ...

New genetic marker found to predict severe gout drug reactions in US patients

2025-10-29
A newly identified genetic marker may significantly improve the ability to predict life-threatening reactions to the gout medication allopurinol in U.S. patients. While the gene HLA-B*58:01 has long been used to screen patients in Southeast Asia — where it accounts for nearly all cases of severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs) — it misses more than one-third of patients at risk in the U.S. and up to 45% of Black individuals who would be at risk of severe reactions if prescribed. Now, researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center have discovered ...

Schizophrenia, bipolar, or major depressive disorder and postacute sequelae of COVID-19

2025-10-29
About The Study: In this cohort study of patients infected with COVID-19, patients with serious mental illness (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or recurrent major depressive disorder) compared with those without serious mental illness were at increased risk of postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC), underscoring the need for coordinated mental health and COVID-19 care strategies. PASC is defined as ongoing, relapsing, or new symptoms or other health effects occurring after the acute phase of SARS-CoV-2 infection (i.e., that present 4 weeks or more after the acute infection).  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Jyotishman ...

Fruit flies offer new insights into how human Alzheimer’s Disease risk genes affect the brain

2025-10-29
Scientists have identified hundreds of genes that may increase the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease but the roles these genes play in the brain are poorly understood. This lack of understanding poses a barrier to developing new therapies, but in a recent study published in the American Journal of Human Genetics, researchers at Baylor College of Medicine and the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute (Duncan NRI) at Texas Children’s Hospital offer new insights into how Alzheimer’s disease risk genes affect the brain. “We studied fruit fly versions of 100 human Alzheimer’s disease risk genes,” said first author Dr. Jennifer Deger, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Anna Wuttig wins Bayer Foundation Early Excellence in Science Award

Electric vehicles outperform gasoline cars in lifetime environmental impact

Kilimanjaro has lost 75 percent of its natural plant species over the last century

Spider web “decorations” may help pinpoint location of captured prey

Ancient tombs reveal the story of Chinese history

1 in 3 university students surveyed from a Parisian suburb report being unable to access desired food, with this food insecurity associated with academic dropout

Researchers uncover oldest 3D burrow systems in Hubei's Shibantan Biota

Discovery of a new principle: chiral molecules adhere to magnets

New algorithm lets autonomous drones work together to transport heavy, changing payloads

Lehigh University team develops computational model to guide neurostimulation therapy for atrial fibrillation

Survival of the blandest: Unusual sharks face highest extinction risk

Research alert: Bioinformatics uncovers regenerative therapy for spinal cord injury

Sustainable chemistry with the help of Artificial Intelligence

Quantum jam sessions teach quantum and jamming

Health care professionals sponsored for H-1B visas in the US

Study shows increase of H1-B visa fees will most impact rural and high-poverty counties

How age affects vaccine responses and how to make them better

MAGIC: AI-assisted laser tag illuminates cancer origins

Major milestone achieved in capturing ribosome assembly

International research team decodes the pangenome of oats

A doorstop for the brain’s electrical gates

Tiny 3D printer reconstructs tissues during vocal cord surgery

New genetic marker found to predict severe gout drug reactions in US patients

Schizophrenia, bipolar, or major depressive disorder and postacute sequelae of COVID-19

Fruit flies offer new insights into how human Alzheimer’s Disease risk genes affect the brain

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on mentoring programs to strengthen worker autonomy and competitive edge

International scientists issue State of the Climate Report, highlight mitigation strategies

“State of the climate” 2025: Earth’s vital signs worsen, science shows options for livable future

New nanomedicine wipes out leukemia in animal study

National TRAP Program targets ghostly issue with second round of coastal clean up funding

[Press-News.org] Health care professionals sponsored for H-1B visas in the US
JAMA