Keck Medicine experts explain the preventive steps people with diabetes can take to protect their health if they get COVID-19.
Tag: Keck Medicine of USC
USC enrolling for phase 3 clinical trial to test COVID-19 monoclonal antibody treatment
Enrollment is available to those who have tested positive for COVID-19 within the last seven days and who have symptoms but do not require hospitalization.
New Virtual Dermatology Consults for Students
USC Student Health now offers virtual consults, which means physicians can send photos of students’ skin issues to a dermatologist and speed up care considerably.
Stand-up Comedian Bounces Back From Six Bedbound Years, Thanks to USC Team
Severe lymphedema left Eddie Barojas bedridden—until a team of USC physical therapists, occupational therapists, urologists and wound-care specialists got him back on his feet.
New AI Algorithm May Lead to Safer and More Efficient Treatment of Stroke
USC researchers have built and tested an AI algorithm that can extract data from a much safer type of brain scan known as pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling MRI.
New Innovations Bring Voice Assistant Capabilities to Healthcare
Keck Medicine has collaborated with UnitedHealthcare and Optum to launch voice assistant capabilities for all Keck Medicine patients in any healthcare plan.
USC’s GAIIN Data-Sharing Platform Receives Alzheimer’s Association Grant
The grant enables the USC Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute to continue expanding its Global Alzheimer’s Association Interactive Network (GAAIN).
Department of Medicine Launches USC’s First Art Therapy Institute
The program will offer patients the opportunity to participate in expressive arts in a variety of settings, as well as develop art therapy educational programs for USC students.
USC Scientist Studies how Lizard Tail Regeneration can Heal Humans
Professor Thomas Lozito’s lab at USC compares limb and tail regeneration in lizards and salamanders and ponders its application in humans.
USC Researchers Reveal Gender Differences in Kidney
Findings could help millions of Americans suffering from kidney disease by distinguishing how the illness affects men and women differently.