Welcome to The EDU Ledger.com! Weâve moved from Diverse.
Welcome to The EDU Ledger! Weâve moved from Diverse: Issues In Higher Education.
Subscribe
Students
Faculty & Staff
Leadership & Policy
Podcasts
Top 100
Advertise
Jobs
Shop
Search
Article
Podcast
Video
Awards/Honors
Community Colleges
Demographics
Faculty & Staff
Health
About Us
Authors
Blogs/Opinion
Campus Issues
Companies
Contact Us
COVID-19
Disparities
Faculty
Featured Jobs
Mental Health
Nursing
Other News
Policies
Premium Employers
Research
Resources
Technology
Top 100-Health & Medical Categories
Videos
Institutions
Leadership & Policy
Military
On the Move
Opinion
Sports
Students
Enter search phrase
Search
Section: Health
Nursing
University of Louisville Nursing Scholarship Created to Honor Breonna Taylor; Four-Year Renewable Award
To honor the memory of the EMT from Louisville, the University of Louisville Health Board of Directors is creating a nursing scholarship in the name of Breonna Taylor. The Breonna Taylor Memorial Scholarship Fund in Nursing will be a four-year renewable award. In choosing the recipient, preference would be granted to a Black female who [âŚ]
June 8, 2020
Policies
Senators Press Colleges on Safety for Faculty, Staff and Students Amid Coronavirus Pandemic
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) pressed the president of Purdue University on Thursday for his plans to protect employees from the coronavirus pandemic even as the school trumpets its commitment to bring students back to campus for the fall. Low-wage workers, Warren said, are the ones cleaning dormitories and classrooms and providing food and other services [âŚ]
June 8, 2020
Other News
Racism Is a Public health Issue and âPolice Brutality Must Stop,â Medical Groups Say
As protests over George Floydâs death continue nationwide, several doctorsâ groups â the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Association and American College of Physicians â are emphasizing that racism is a public health issue and theyâre calling for police brutality to stop. The American Academy of Pediatrics posted to Twitter on Sunday night that âracism is a public [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
SUNY, Office of Mental Health Partner to Launch University Crisis Text Line
In partnership with the state Office of Mental Health, the State University of New York has launched a crisis text line and online suicide prevention training program to help New Yorkers, particularly students, confront mental health issues exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The free and confidential crisis text line can be accessed by texting Got5U to 741-741, [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
New School Furloughs Student Health Services Staff, Cutting Off Students From a Remote Medical Lifeline
Manhattanâs New School is canning most of its student health services staff to cut costs during the pandemic â right when students say they need the remote medical help the most. The private East Village institution furloughed 15 of its 19 health services staffers on May 16, including all its doctors and 2/3 of its [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
College Students Count on Their Schools for Mental-Health Help, But Now Many Canât Get It
It had been a tough five years at George Washington University, but when Hannahâs last semester arrived, so did relief. She started applying for jobs, envisioning life away from the District. The feeling didnât last. One night in March, Hannah, in Florida for a job interview, met up with friends in Fort Lauderdale, where a [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
Many Massachusetts Colleges Uncertain About Robust COVID-19 Testing on Campus
Many Massachusetts colleges are uncertain they will be able to put robust COVID-19 testing mechanisms in place on their campuses if and when they reopen for fall 2020, reported The Boston Globe. An advisory group of a dozen Massachusetts college presidents, set up by Gov. Charlie Baker, conducted a survey of nearly 90 campus leaders to ask [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
Meharry Proposes Consortium of HBCU Med Schools to Tackle COVID-19âs Uneven Toll
The president of the historically Black Meharry Medical College said on Wednesday that a consortium of the nationâs four Black medical schools would be the group best prepared to tackle the disproportionate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Black people and communities of color. In testimony on Wednesday, before a virtual convening of the House Ways and [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
HBCU Meharry Medical College Gets NIH Support to Advance COVID-19 Drug Development
This historically Black Meharry Medical College said on Friday that it will get vital research and technical support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to advance its development of a drug for patients infected with COVID-19. For Meharry, this means that MRCV-19, the compound it is developing, can sprint forward to the NIH for [âŚ]
June 1, 2020
Other News
Ohio Public Health Officials Apologized After Releasing Mask Guidance for African Americans to Avoid Wearing Face Coverings With âGang Symbolismâ
Public health officials in Franklin County, Ohio apologized last week after they released guidance on wearing face masks that targeted the African American community and urged it against wearing facial coverings that elicited âgang symbolism.â âFranklin County Public Health apologizes for a recent guidance document focused on mask coverings for African Americans,â the agency said [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
âA Dark Cloudâ: Evanston Leaders Concerned with Disproportionate Rates of Coronavirus Among Black and Latino Residents
For weeks, preliminary data showed black Americans in Illinois, among other states, were disproportionately contracting and dying from COVID-19. Not only has that trend continued in cities like Evanston, but Illinois Department of Public Health statistics show a steady increase in cases among Latino city residents as well. Black residents comprise 24.6 percent of confirmed cases, yet [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
Pandemic Underscores Need for DACA as High Court Considers Its Fate
As the nationâs doctors, nurses and other health care heroes fight a pandemic, the U.S. Supreme Court grapples with a case that could remove about 27,000 health professionals from the battlefieldâincluding 200 medical students, residents and physicians. The court case began well before the global pandemic struck. Even then, the stakes were high in a [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
COVID-19 Will Intensify Education Inequities for Black Students
In the United States, data reveal that Black Americans are contracting and dying from the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, at rates that double, and sometimes triple their representation across various states. In Illinois, 43% of people who have died are African-American, although the race makes up only 15% of the population. In Louisiana, 70% of the [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
HBCU Launches First-of-Its-Kind COVID-19 Academy
Three months after the coronavirus disease outbreak in the United States was declared a national emergency, there have been 1.6 million confirmed cases with more than 95,087 deaths. Although the CDC says the effects of COVID-19 on the health of racial and ethnic minority groups are still emerging, current data suggest a disproportionate burden of [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
Louisiana HBCU, Baylor Med Sign Medical School Agreement
A historically Black university in New Orleans has its seventh agreement to fast-track medical school acceptance for some students. Xavier University of Louisiana and Baylor College of Medicine in Houston announced their early assurance program on May 13. It will let three qualified students a year participate in the collaborative medical track program with Baylor. [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
Should Medical Schools Require Transgender Health Education?
Given the 1 million to 1.4 million transgender people in the United States, most physicians will have transgender patients at some point as part of their practice. Until recently, this situation often caused consternation and embarrassment for both the patient and the physician. I have had transgender patients tell me that a particular specialist âdoesnât [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
Public Health Education Key for Growing COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy
A growing online movement has some medical professionals concerned the nation wonât achieve a herd immunity once a COVID-19 vaccine is developed, underscoring a need for better public health education and provider communication. Although support for vaccinations is generally high â a Gallup survey recently reported that 84 percent of adults agree itâs important children get vaccinated [âŚ]
May 24, 2020
Other News
Noozhawk News Hosting Free Webinars on Mental Health, Education During COVID-19 Pandemic
Noozhawk News is hosting two free webinars next week focused on how the community is dealing with mental wellness and education during the COVID-19 pandemic. The first session, at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, May 27, is entitled âMental Wellness During the COVID-19 Crisis. Read More
May 24, 2020
Previous Page
Next Page