EH Fellow Stephanie Moore is part of a team deploying a “laboratory in a can” – an ocean robot that enables researches to gather information quickly in remote offshore locations to track harmful algae blooms. “The instrument will make it much easier to get crucial information about blooms and toxins [to the public] sooner.” –Seattle Times
Energy insecurity: the hidden and addressable hardship
Entering December, EH Fellow Diana Hernández’s emerging research on energy insecurity and the connection between household utilities’ affects on hardship and health becomes more pressing. “The physiological, behavioral, and psychological effects of what it’s like to struggle for sufficient household energy aren’t as well recognized by poverty researchers. ‘This expense and experience has largely been ignored, to the detriment of families dealing with this crisis every day’” – City Lab “Energy insecurity…
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“Why Bother? – Qualitative Research Methods in Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences”
Presentation by Madeleine K. Scammell, D.Sc. Assistant Professor of Environmental Health Boston University School of Public Health and JPB Environmental Health Fellow at Harvard University T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston University December 14, 2015 at 4 pm in NRPH B15 room
“Legionnaires’ deaths are just a symptom” EH Fellow Diana Hernández in the New York Daily News
“Water-cooling towers infected with the Legionella bacteria are not the fundamental cause of death among residents of the South Bronx. In the latest outbreak, the main culprits are the underlying health conditions that have made so many Bronxites more vulnerable to disease and death than other New Yorkers.” Read the full article HERE