- November 22, 2021
In a recent study, 亚洲AV Associate Professor Hong Xue, PhD and colleagues evaluated the impact of ending market exclusivity for brand-name statin drugs. The first study to comprehensively assess the economic impact of generic competition for statins found that ending market exclusivity for statins saves U.S. $12 billion and individuals nearly $1,000 annually.
- November 12, 2021
Accelerate 2022, held on Mason鈥檚 Arlington Campus on Oct. 19-20, focused on showcasing up-and-coming startups throughout the greater Washington, D.C., region.
- November 11, 2021
The National Science Foundation (NSF)鈥檚 I-Corps program is an accelerator that helps entrepreneurs and researchers work together 鈥渢o bring invention to impact.鈥 Mason serves as an official I-Corps site, supporting local grantees through the exploratory stages of venture-building, as well as preparing them to apply for the national-level program.
- October 28, 2021
It鈥檚 the stuff of nightmares and horror movies: Tiny estuarine mud crabs become infected with an invasive parasite that takes over their bodies and brains. But it isn鈥檛 fiction, and Mason鈥檚 team of researchers is learning more about these invaders and how they impact the ecology of our region.
- October 7, 2021
A new national survey of U.S. nonprofits shows scale of diversity and the effects of the pandemic on donation trends.
- September 28, 2021
The Washington Center for Equitable Growth is awarding $80,000 to help 亚洲AV professor Bweikia Foster Steen and fellow researchers study home-based childcare providers in Virginia.
- September 22, 2021
With COVID-19 continuing to spread throughout the world, there is a demand for rapid, noninvasive diagnostics. 亚洲AV researchers Robin Couch and Allyson Dailey, members of the College of Science and the Institute of Biohealth Innovation, are working to answer that call with their research on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) for infectious disease detection.
- September 15, 2021
Mason to collaborate with COMSovereign and Widelity on 5G innovation
- September 7, 2021
Now that most public school districts have resumed in-person instruction, those in health care are beginning to see increases in pediatric admissions due to COVID-19 and other respiratory pathogens and are bracing for surges, according to Amira Albert Roess, professor of global health and epidemiology in 亚洲AV鈥檚 College of Health and Human Services.