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Displaying 1 - 30 of 110
  • Dangerous Beauty

    Cell biologist and engineer Matthew Kutys, PhD, and his team harness organoids – living tissues derived from patient tumors – to study how cancer spreads.

    Microscopy image of human breast cancer tissue
  • A Prescription for Loneliness

    What a tiny grassroots program in the Tenderloin is teaching doctors about healing through human connection.

    Painted illustration of an older man sitting on a staircase, his head leaning down, with shadows of trees in the background.
  • The Road to Rejuvenation

    Fortified stem cells. Enhanced memory. A longevity hormone. UCSF researchers are finding out whether we can cancel – or at least delay – old age.

    Photo realistic collage illustration of an older man, fractured with cut out shapes and half a face of an older version of himself.
  • The Cancer Breakthrough Boom

    Engineered immune cells. Supercharged scans. Drug implants. Gene manipulators. Blood biopsies. Read how these breakthroughs are transforming cancer care.

    Illustration of dark, ominous cells, with a person breaking through with growing flowers.
  • The Sleep Prescription

    Drawing on his experience as a sleep scientist at UCSF, Aric Prather, PhD, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, shares his simple but powerful seven-day plan to achieve restorative rest.

  • Mission: A Tobacco-Free World

    With vaping taking over the youth market, Pamela Ling, MD ’96, MPH, applies her research-driven social media and marketing expertise to beat the tobacco industry at its own game.

    Portrait of Pamela Ling
  • Big Little Lives

    Trillions of invisible organisms make up the human microbiome. Now, medical scientists want to put these bugs to work.

    Hand-colored image from a scanning electron microscope of oral bacteria.
  • Trip Therapy

    Could psychedelics become mainstream medicines?

    Illustration of a silhouette of a woman with mushrooms blooming in her mind.
  • As Prescribed

    This weekly podcast features conversations with UCSF luminaries on breaking research ranging from sleep genetics to screen time for kids to COVID surges.

  • Wildhood: The Astounding Connections between Human and Animal Adolescents

    Does your rambunctious teen seem like an animal? You may be on to something. Harvard evolutionary biologist Barbara Natterson-Horowitz, MD ’87, and science writer Kathryn Bowers reveal startling similarities between humans and animals in young adulthood.

  • UCSF’s Robin Carhart-Harris, PhD, on “The Psychedelic Therapy Podcast”

    Explore the power of psychedelic therapy to treat the ailing human mind with international expert Carhart-Harris, who joined UCSF in 2021 as the Metzner Distinguished Professor and director of the new Neuroscape Psychedelics Division. Discover what his comparison of psilocybin with an antidepressant revealed on the Aug. 19 episode.

  • Surprise! It’s a Nobel Prize

    UCSF’s David Julius won the 2021 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work on pain sensation. “It was really a shock,” he says.

    David Julius, and his wife, Holly Ingraham, field congratulatory calls in the early morning of October 4 from their home in Walnut Creek.
  • Five Questions for Monica Gandhi

    Monica Gandhi, MD, MPH, an infectious disease expert and professor of medicine, has been an ardent voice for science during the coronavirus pandemic.

    Portrait of Monica Gandhi, MD
  • “Science is Fun!”

    Can dieting help you live longer? Do microbes control your immune system? Can studying snakes help stop the next pandemic? UCSF microbiologist Peter Turnbaugh, PhD, interviews famous scientists and rising stars about research quests that span the spectrum of health.

  • How Can We Thwart the Next Pandemic?

    Leading scientists share some of the tools and strategies that could help us better confront and contain future outbreaks.

    Illustration of three large humans standing on the Earth, pushing back coronaviruses.
  • Why Can’t I Sleep?

    Insomnia is miserable, and lost sleep can harm our health. Now, researchers are seeing the promise of solutions in our genes.

    Photo of a man and woman in bed; the woman is fast asleep and the man eats popcorn, wide awake.
  • Infiltrating Healthcare: How Marketing Works Underground to Influence Nurses

    UCSF School of Nursing alum Quinn Grundy, PhD ’15, RN, shines a light on how sales reps from pharmaceutical and other health care companies skirt scrutiny, and get their products used in hospitals and doctors’ offices, by forging relationships with nurses.