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

Hidden heart-care gaps among Asian American patients

Disaggregating data reveals disparities often masked by broad “Asian” category

2026-01-14
(Press-News.org) Using nearly a decade of data (2015–2023) from 800+ U.S. hospitals and more than 700,000 patients overall, Northwestern researchers found that when Asian American heart failure patients are separated by ethnicity, rather than grouped together as “Asian,” important differences in care emerge across groups including Filipino, Vietnamese, Chinese, Asian Indian, Korean and Japanese patients. 

For example, Filipino and Vietnamese patients were least likely to receive complete, guideline-recommended heart failure care. The study wasn’t designed to identify causes, but authors note the disparities may reflect differences in health literacy, English-language proficiency or financial resources.

The bigger story is about who gets counted, and who doesn’t. Many U.S. hospitals still categorize patients simply as “Asian,” which has long masked disparities within the fastest-growing racial group in the U.S. While in-hospital death rates were similar between Asian American and White patients, the study found gaps in medications, discharge planning and overall quality of care.

Senior author Dr. Nilay Shah, a preventive cardiologist at Northwestern, says the work is personal. “Growing up in an Asian American community, I saw firsthand the challenges my family and friends experienced in accessing health care services,” Shah said. He’s available to discuss the findings, why these disparities went unnoticed for so long and what health systems could do differently.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Blood test predicts which patients with lung cancer will benefit from newly approved immunotherapy drug

2026-01-14
A team led by investigators at the Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute has discovered that a particular marker on tumor cells circulating in the blood indicates whether a patient with lung cancer will experience a lasting response to a newly approved immunotherapy called tarlatamab. The findings, which are published in Cancer Discovery, could allow clinicians to easily and noninvasively determine which patients should receive the drug.   “Isolating cancer cells from the blood has tremendous potential to guide immune-related cancer therapies, and our group has created cutting edge ...

SwRI’s Dr. Michael Davis named SPIE Fellow

2026-01-14
SAN ANTONIO — January 14, 2026 — Southwest Research Institute’s (SwRI) Dr. Michael Davis has been named a Fellow of the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Davis is an astrophysicist who specializes in the design and testing of space instruments including those used for ultraviolet (UV) imaging and spectroscopy of remote planets, galactic astrophysics, and Earth’s plasmasphere. He was named a senior member of SPIE in 2021, and this latest honor puts him in the most elite category of membership. Founded in 1955, SPIE promotes the global optics and photonics community through conferences, publications and professional ...

Exposure to “forever chemicals” linked to higher risk of gestational diabetes, major review finds

2026-01-14
Exposure to “Forever Chemicals” Linked to Higher Risk of Gestational Diabetes, Major Review Finds Largest and most comprehensive systematic review and meta-analysis to date links PFAS exposure to insulin resistance and altered insulin secretion, identifying pregnancy as a key vulnerable period New York, NY (January 14, 2026) — Exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), a class of highly persistent environmental chemicals commonly referred to as “forever chemicals,” is associated with a higher risk of gestational diabetes mellitus and altered markers of insulin ...

Insilico Medicine integrates Nach01 Foundation Model with Microsoft Discovery to enable AI-native, enterprise-ready drug discovery workflows

2026-01-14
Cambridge, Massachusetts, January 14, 2025 - Insilico Medicine (“Insilico”, HKEX:03696), a clinical-stage biotechnology company driven by generative artificial intelligence (AI), today announced the demonstration of its Nach01 multimodal foundation model deployed on Microsoft Discovery, Microsoft’s science-focused platform designed to accelerate research and development through agentic AI. This collaboration highlights Microsoft Discovery’s extensibility with third-party AI models and illustrates how R&D organizations can adopt unified, AI-native ...

New study reveals precursors for forecasting summer clustered extreme precipitation events in Northeast China

2026-01-14
Against the background of accelerated global warming, the atmospheric moisture content has increased significantly and the hydrological cycle has intensified, leading to pronounced rises in both the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation events globally. Northeast China, a region highly sensitive to climate change, has experienced increasing occurrence of clustered extreme heavy precipitation events in recent years. Improved knowledge of synoptic regimes and moisture accumulation responsible for clustered extreme heavy precipitation events (CEPEs) is essential for enhancing short-term forecasting skill and disaster prevention and mitigation. Researchers ...

A bacterial toxin can counteract colorectal cancer growth

2026-01-14
A toxin secreted by cholera bacteria can inhibit the growth of colorectal cancer without causing any measurable damage to the body. This is shown by a new study by researchers at Umeå University, Sweden. Systemic administration of the purified bacterial substance changes the immune microenvironment in tumours, and the results may open the way for research into a new type of cancer treatment. "The substance not only kills cancer cells directly. It reshapes the tumour environment and helps the immune system to work against the tumor without damaging healthy tissue," says Sun Nyunt Wai, professor at Umeå University and one of the lead authors behind ...

Frozen hydrogen cyanide ‘cobwebs’ offer clues to origin of life

2026-01-14
A substance poisonous to humans — hydrogen cyanide — may have helped create the seeds of life on Earth. At cold temperatures, hydrogen cyanide forms crystals. And, according to computer models reported in ACS Central Science, some of the facets on these crystals are highly reactive, enabling chemical reactions that are otherwise not possible at low temperatures. The researchers say these reactions could have started a cascade that gave rise to several building blocks of life. “We may never know precisely how life began, but understanding how some of its ingredients take shape is within reach. Hydrogen cyanide is likely one source of this chemical ...

Physics of foam strangely resembles AI training

2026-01-14
Foams are everywhere: soap suds, shaving cream, whipped toppings and food emulsions like mayonnaise. For decades, scientists believed that foams behave like glass, their microscopic components trapped in static, disordered configurations. Now, engineers at the University of Pennsylvania have found that foams actually flow ceaselessly inside while holding their external shape. More strangely, from a mathematical perspective, this internal motion resembles the process of deep learning, the method typically used to train modern AI systems. The discovery could hint that learning, in a broad mathematical sense, may be a common organizing ...

Bis-pseudoindoxyls: a new class of single benzene-based fluorophores for bioimaging applications

2026-01-14
Fluorophores are chemical compounds or molecules that absorb light energy at one wavelength and re-emit it as light at a longer, lower-energy wavelength, acting as glowing tags or markers. The absorption process is known as excitation, and the re-emission is visible as fluorescent light, which makes these molecules crucial for biological imaging, diagnostics, and tracing cellular molecules like proteins or lipids under normal or various infectious conditions. Fluorophores with red-light absorption properties are ideal for bioimaging. Red light refers ...

Blocking a cancer-related pathway helps reduce spine deformities due to genetic disorder, finds new study

2026-01-14
Spinal deformities such as scoliosis and kyphosis are among the most serious complications of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), a genetic disorder that affects about one in 3,000 people. These deformities often begin in childhood, worsen rapidly, and can lead to chronic pain, reduced mobility, and may require major surgery. Despite their frequency and severity, there are currently no approved drug treatments to prevent NF1-related spinal deformity. In a new study published in Volume 13, Issue 103 of the journal Bone Research on December ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Maternal perinatal depression may increase the risk of autistic-related traits in girls

Study: Blocking a key protein may create novel form of stress in cancer cells and re-sensitize chemo-resistant tumors

HRT via skin is best treatment for low bone density in women whose periods have stopped due to anorexia or exercise, says study

Insilico Medicine showcases at WHX 2026: Connecting the Middle East with global partners to accelerate translational research

From rice fields to fresh air: Transforming agricultural waste into a shield against indoor pollution

University of Houston study offers potential new targets to identify, remediate dyslexia

Scientists uncover hidden role of microalgae in spreading antibiotic resistance in waterways

Turning orange waste into powerful water-cleaning material

Papadelis to lead new pediatric brain research center

Power of tiny molecular 'flycatcher' surprises through disorder

Before crisis strikes — smartwatch tracks triggers for opioid misuse

Statins do not cause the majority of side effects listed in package leaflets

UC Riverside doctoral student awarded prestigious DOE fellowship

UMD team finds E. coli, other pathogens in Potomac River after sewage spill

New vaccine platform promotes rare protective B cells

Apes share human ability to imagine

Major step toward a quantum-secure internet demonstrated over city-scale distance

Increasing toxicity trends impede progress in global pesticide reduction commitments

Methane jump wasn’t just emissions — the atmosphere (temporarily) stopped breaking it down

Flexible governance for biological data is needed to reduce AI’s biosecurity risks

Increasing pesticide toxicity threatens UN goal of global biodiversity protection by 2030

How “invisible” vaccine scaffolding boosts HIV immune response

Study reveals the extent of rare earthquakes in deep layer below Earth’s crust

Boston College scientists help explain why methane spiked in the early 2020s

Penn Nursing study identifies key predictors for chronic opioid use following surgery

KTU researcher’s study: Why Nobel Prize-level materials have yet to reach industry

Research spotlight: Interplay of hormonal contraceptive use, stress and cardiovascular risk in women

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Catherine Prater awarded postdoctoral fellowship from the American Heart Association

AI agents debate more effectively when given personalities and the ability to interrupt

Tenecteplase for acute non–large vessel occlusion 4.5 to 24 hours after ischemic stroke

[Press-News.org] Hidden heart-care gaps among Asian American patients
Disaggregating data reveals disparities often masked by broad “Asian” category