A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.
Now researchers in Australia are reporting in the Clinical & Experimental Allergy journal that they've made "promising early signs" that using boiled peanuts to treat children with peanut allergies could be safe and effective.
"Unfortunately, oral immunotherapy doesn't work for everyone and we are in the process of improving our understanding of how these treatments work and what factors can influence how people respond to treatment," Flinders University researcher Tim Chataway says in a press release.
In the clinical trial, 70 peanut-allergic children between the ages of 6 and 18 ate boiled peanuts for 12 hours a day for 12 weeks, two-hour boiled peanuts for 20 weeks, and roasted peanuts for 20 weeks.
The children were given small and increasing doses of boiled peanuts, and when they showed no signs of an allergic reaction, increasing doses of roasted peanuts were then provided to increase their tolerance in the next stage of treatment.
Of the 70 participants, 66% became desensitized to peanuts after eating 12 roasted peanuts without allergic reactions, and only three withdrew from the trial due to adverse events.
"This clinical trial could help develop...
Selected Grant News Headlines
"One day there will be a cure," Ashkan Novin says.
"And I hope that we will play a part in that."
Novin, a PhD candidate at the University of Connecticut, is the winner of the school's...more
When Matthew Love took over as CEO of Nicklaus Children's Hospital in Palm Beach, Fla., four years ago, the hospital was losing about $40 million a year.
"We were in a solid market position,...more
If you're looking for a new job, there's a good chance you'll soon find one in Maine.
Gov.
Janet Mills announced Tuesday that more than 111,000 health care jobs have been created in the state...more
Some 24 million people in 128 low- and middle-income countries now have access to HIV treatments that once would have cost tens of thousands of dollars a year, the BBC reports.
According to a...more
Kaakpema Yelpaala grew up in Kenya, attended Harvard, and now lives in Yale, where he's a professor and the new director of the university's health technology program, the New York Times...more
"We are in an age of incredible innovation" in the health care industry, writes Lee Murray in a blog post about a meeting with a private equity investor.
Murray's mother in law suffered two brain...more
"Access to financial advice and banking services is essential for any community to thrive and our Community Center Branches are at the center of lifting up communities by creating opportunities for...more
It's World Intellectual Property Day, and the pharmaceutical industry is taking note.
In a press release, the industry's trade group, the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers Association,...more
The Star-Friedman Challenge, an annual contest that aims to spur cutting-edge scientific research, has announced its 2024 winners.
Among the winners: a study on fat-handling organelles in...more
"We're like the kindling that gets the fire going," says Dr. Bryan Hartley, an associate professor of Radiology and Radiological Sciences at Vanderbilt University Medical Center who's working on a...more
Rivaayat is an initiative by Shri Ram College of Commerce, Delhi to revive various dying art form and solve innumerable problems faced by the artisans. Rivaayat began with reviving a 20,000-year-old art form of pottery that is a means of survival for 600 families residing in Uttam Nagar, Delhi.