State adds $2.3M to Maui Wildfire Exposure Study, launches survivor registry
The study offers comprehensive health screenings and enrolls affected individuals into the most extensive social and bio-monitoring study in Hawaiʻi following a disaster.
The study offers comprehensive health screenings and enrolls affected individuals into the most extensive social and bio-monitoring study in Hawaiʻi following a disaster.
The technique offers hope for more effective and affordable treatments for various genetic disorders.
The program has seen increased student interest since global travel restrictions were lifted.
The UNESCO World Heritage Site was famously preserved under volcanic ash from Mount Vesuvius’s eruption in 79 AD.
The program supports students from underserved communities with ties to Hawaiʻi and the Pacific on a path to medical school.
Learn the dangers of heat stroke, identify warning signs and best practices to stay cool and safe.
Within days of the worst natural disaster in state history, University of Hawaiʻi researchers began providing assistance and support on multiple fronts.
The grant will help fund the longitudinal aspect of the study for up to 1,000 participants for two years.
More than 2,200 applied for admission to JABSOM.
The new fund will allow Director Naoto Ueno to advance the lifesaving research being done at the center.