CSU awarded $6.7 million NIH award for research facility focused on bat health, disease transmission
Bats can harbor coronaviruses, so studying bats and pathogens is critical to global public health.
Bats can harbor coronaviruses, so studying bats and pathogens is critical to global public health.
When the Columbine Health Systems Center for Healthy Aging set out to start a podcast a year ago, the goal was to highlight research from faculty members across CSU who are investigating these critical issues in aging and to bring aging studies out of the lab and into the earbuds of listeners across Northern Colorado.
Building on its response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Colorado State University has received a $2 million commitment from The Anschutz Foundation to further the development of new solutions for building resilience and agility in stopping infectious disease transmission among animals and people.
The dashboard will help facility managers understand the risks of COVID-19 outbreaks.
Lindsey Gray and Katherine Rocci were among fewer than 900 women nationwide to receive the award for their research.
The vaccine candidate helped minimize changes in tissues in the lungs caused by SARS-CoV-2.
Researchers aim to create a vaccine candidate that would protect people from a spectrum of coronaviruses.
Researchers will use the translational model to study interventions to prevent or slow the decline in overall musculoskeletal function with aging in humans.
The goal of the research is to identify and follow the course of infection in people for at least six months.
The teams were selected from a competitive pool of applicants to pursue significant issues in our society using research partnerships to create new opportunities and solutions.