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Showing 1–46 of 46 results
Advanced filters: Author: "Erika Check" Clear advanced filters
  • Researchers in San Francisco have findings that suggest a whole new side to RNA interference. Erika Check reports on their attempts to make a revolutionary field more revolutionary still.

    • Erika Check
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 448, P: 855-858
  • 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
  • A California company is reviving a once abandoned treatment for Parkinson's disease. Erika Check assesses its odds of success.

    • Erika Check
    News
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 13, P: 770-771
  • 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
  • Biomedical scientists want funding; private foundations want cures. Erika Check hears the joys and tensions that arise when the two hook up.

    • Erika Check
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 447, P: 252-253
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • Far from the unhurried killer it seemed to be, HIV is a swift assassin,gutting the body's immune system within days of infection. Erika Check finds out how this new paradigm is transforming AIDS research.

    • Erika Check
    News
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 13, P: 116-117
  • Antibody therapies have had more than their fair share of crashes. But designers are at work on faster, fancier new models, finds Erika Check.

    • Erika Check
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 446, P: 964-966
  • HIV and clinical research drive up demand for experiments.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 453, P: 439
  • Three independent projects seek to contrast approaches in preparation for routine analysis of genetic data.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 471, P: 425
  • China launches large-scale human sequencing initiative.

    • Jane Qiu
    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 451, P: 234
  • Victory for Wisconsin foundation in landmark ruling.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 452, P: 265
  • As the challenges of analysing genomic data evolve, statistical expertise has become more valuable than ever.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    Special Features
    Nature
    Volume: 482, P: 263-265
  • University faces hard times as budget gets squeezed.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    • Rex Dalton
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 460, P: 441
  • President's executive order will allow US human embryonic stem-cell research to thrive at last.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
  • Neuroscientists face increasing pressure to disseminate results and discuss their implications with the public. Illes and colleagues consider the challenges that they face and make specific recommendations for individuals and institutions to promote this process.

    • Judy Illes
    • Mary Anne Moser
    • Samuel Weiss
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Reviews Neuroscience
    Volume: 11, P: 61-69
  • Molecular findings start to open up avenues of diagnosis and treatment.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 463, P: 278
  • Yaniv Erlich shows how research participants can be identified from 'anonymous' DNA.

    • Erika Check Hayden
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 497, P: 172-174