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Showing 1–50 of 339 results
Advanced filters: Author: Erika Check Hayden Clear advanced filters
  • Organizations seek to help patients reintegrate into society after recovering from the virus.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
  • Some creatures have what it takes to survive long dry spells. How they do this may be revealed in their genes, reports Erika Check Hayden.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 452, P: 678-680
  • Researchers trying to develop an HIV vaccine have endured two decades of setbacks. Erika Check Hayden meets a veteran still engaged in the fight — and a rookie willing to join in anyway.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 454, P: 565-569
  • Is the abrupt closure of prominent player Codon Devices an omen for the field?

    • Erika Check Hayden
    • Heidi Ledford
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 458, P: 818
  • In 2000, former Genentech executive Victoria Hale and her husband launched the Institute for OneWorld Health from the first floor of their San Francisco home. They called the institute “the world's first nonprofit pharmaceutical company” and intended it to address diseases of poverty, which are generally neglected by drug companies. For its first project, the group tried to revive paromomycin, a 60-year-old antibiotic, to treat a disease called visceral leishmaniasis. In September 2006, India approved the drug. OneWorld Health has in the meantime grown to 50 employees and a $90 million budget. On 27 September, Hale stepped down from her role as chief executive officer of the institute. Here she tells Erika Check Hayden what's next for her and for the unique organization she launched.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 13, P: 1274
  • Erika Check Hayden ponders a call for schools to embrace genetic information as a priority.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 504, P: 32
  • One of the most devastating consequences of the Ebola outbreak will be its impact on maternal health.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 519, P: 24-26
  • The deadly toxin has been found in a letter addressed to a US senator.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
  • An increase in premature births means that more babies are at risk of neurological damage. Erika Check Hayden talks with researchers who are developing ways to help these children.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 463, P: 154-156
  • The data contained in tax returns, health and welfare records could be a gold mine for scientists — but only if they can protect people's identities.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 525, P: 440-442
  • The oldest full genome sequence, recovered from ancient horse bone, pushes back equine origins by 2 million years.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
  • Targeting the blood vessels that feed tumours is not the silver bullet once hoped for, but refinements to the strategy may suggest further ways to treat the disease. Erika Check Hayden reports.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 458, P: 686-687
  • Can a state do what a country cannot, and transform the way stem-cell research is funded? Erika Check Hayden reports on the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 453, P: 18-21
  • George Church has made a name for himself as an 'information exhibitionist'. Erika Check Hayden explores how the technological sage is turning his gaze to the next horizon - you.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 451, P: 763-765
  • Tiny pieces of the genome can already explain many human characteristics. Erika Check Hayden looks at what they might reveal in the future.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 449, P: 762-763
  • Are ageing and disease two sides of the same coin? Erika Check Hayden reports from an institute that is betting that they are.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 450, P: 603-605
  • Gene-association studies hint at better ways of treating the leading cause of death, but capitalizing on them is proving to be a slow and difficult process. Erika Check Hayden reports.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 460, P: 940-941
  • Ten people who mattered this year.

    • Declan Butler
    • Ewen Callaway
    • Mohammed Yahia
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 480, P: 437-445
  • Was setting up PEPFAR — a massive HIV treatment programme — the best thing that President Bush ever did? Erika Check Hayden investigates.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 457, P: 254-256
  • The more biologists look, the more complexity there seems to be. Erika Check Hayden asks if there's a way to make life simpler.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 464, P: 664-667
  • A high-profile scientist, a graduate student and two major retractions. Erika Check Hayden reports on a case that has rocked the chemistry community.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 453, P: 275-278
  • Geneticists looked to the human genome to understand human evolution. But it's hard to interpret without considering the inheritance of culture, finds Erika Check Hayden.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 457, P: 776-779
  • Drug that treats damage to the gut could help people undergoing radiation therapy for cancer — or victims of a terrorist attack.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
  • ZMapp is the first treatment to completely protect animals after they show symptoms of disease.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature