UB in the News

  • Wallet Pop: Buffalo among most affordable major U.S. housing markets
    8/25/10
    An article on Wallet Pop, a consumer finance website, reports on the five most affordable major U.S. housing markets, including Buffalo, and notes that the city "offers stately homes and [UB]."
  • National Post: Controversy over body checking in youth hockey continues
    8/25/10
    An article in Canada's National Post about the World Hockey Summit and discussions about the dangers of body checking in youth hockey reports UB researchers who followed 500 Ontario players ages four to 18 found 66 percent of injuries in junior leagues come from accidents and not deliberate hits. The article appeared in newspapers throughout Canada, including the Leader-Post and Ottawa Citizen.
  • Third Age: Resveratrol one of the health benefits of drinking wine
    8/24/10
    An article on Third Age about the growing number of people who drink wine reports a recent UB study found that there was a reduction in heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes in subjects who took resveratrol pills, and notes that resveratrol is a substance found in red wine.
  • Fox News: Why potentially poisonous venom is good for you
    8/23/10
    An article on Fox News about using venom from snakes, scorpions and other poisonous animals to treat disease reports that according to biophysicists at UB, tarantula venom, which contains the protein GSMTx4, may replace morphine for pain relief from muscular dystrophy.
  • Wall Street Journal: Study finds stress can make PMS symptoms worse
    8/23/10
    An article distributed by Dow Jones Newswires reports that a study conducted by researchers at the National Institutes of Health, UB and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst found that high levels of stress can trigger severe psychological and physical symptoms during ovulation and menstruation, leaving women to feel much worse than usual during that stage of their reproductive cycle. The article appeared in news outlets that include the Wall Street Journal.
  • Albany Times Union: UB researchers to examine shale for promising underground sites
    8/21/10
    An article in the Albany Times Union about the controversy over the safety of drilling into the Marcellus Shale reports researchers from UB will examine the Marcellus and other shale formations in the state for promising underground sites.
  • UPI: Asian Americans face health care barriers
    8/21/10
    A UPI article reports research conducted by Wooksoo Kim and Robert Keefe of the UB School of Social Work showed that despite full access to health care, many Asian-Americans have the same health care barriers as other immigrant groups.
  • UPI: Are prescriptions for pain a gateway to heroin?
    8/21/10
    A UPI article reports a study conducted by Richard Blondell, professor of family medicine, found that about one-third of patients hospitalized for opioid detoxifications say they first got hooked on drugs prescribed for pain. South Asia's ANI news service, the Hartford Examiner, Futurity, Science Daily, PsychCentral and PhysOrg also reported on the research.
  • Toronto Globe and Mail: Is a trial for controversial MS treatment worth trying?
    8/19/10
    An editorial in the Toronto Globe and Mail calls on Canadian medical bodies to assess as quickly as possible whether there is merit to the theory that vein blockages play a key role in multiple sclerosis, and notes that UB has begun studies to determine whether people with MS are more likely to have vein blockages than those who don't have MS.
  • ABC News: Forensic psychologist release from hospital following insanity plea
    8/19/10
    Charles Patrick Ewing, professor of law, was interviewed for an article on ABC News about a Florida woman who was found not guilty by reason of insanity after claiming the Virgin Mary told her to drown her three young daughters nearly 30 years ago, and now medical professionals say she is well enough to be release from the state hospital where she was committed. It's not easy to get released after using the insanity defense, he said, but it is possible for individuals to be granted freedom after years in a mental institution.

UB faculty frequently offer expert perspectives on issues that are part of the current public discourse, including ones that may be perceived as controversial. It is our belief—and at the core of UB’s academic mission—that constructive, thoughtful dialogue fosters a better understanding of our world. Thus, we openly share these perspectives.