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Survivors of Severe COVID Face Persistent Health Problems

A study reveals the life-altering impact of COVID-19 on individuals who developed severe illness, the majority of whom had to be placed on mechanical ventilators. Two-thirds still had physical, psychiatric, and cognitive problems for up to a year later.

Dr. Anil Makam examines a male patient with a stethoscope at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital.

UCSF Grad Slam: This is Your Brain on Your Mother Tongue

Ten UCSF graduate students presented their research in accessible, 3-minute talks at the 2024 Grad Slam event. This year’s first-place talk was by Ilina Bhaya-Grossman on how our brains make meaning out of groups of vowels, consonants and pauses in our native tongues to recognize words.

2024 Grad Slam winner Ilina Bhaya-Grossman presents her research onstage. In the background is a presentation slide showing an illusration of measurements of brainwaves.

UCSF Scientists Build a Molecular ‘GPS’ to Guide Cell Therapies

UCSF scientists have been awarded more than $30 million to develop “tissue GPS,” a new system using engineered T cells to guide therapies directly to their targets in the brain to treat neurological diseases like cancer, multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer’s.

A scientific image of T-cells attacking a glioblastoma (brain tumor).

‘In the Bubble Crib, I Would Press Against the Plastic and Get Hugs’

At age 2, UCSF construction project manager Michael Valero was treated at UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland for a congenital heart defect. He is now giving back to the hospital that saved his life by leading its upgrade and expansion efforts to expand state-of-the-art care.

Construction project manager Michael Valero stands inside a construction zone and wears a white construction hat with the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital Oakland logo on it.