News and Announcements
- Wayne State receives $1.7 million NIH award to understand and address ototoxic side effects of anti-cancer drug
- Wayne State receives EPA grant to evaluate chemical mixture health risks
- Major NIH award to Wayne State to offer state-of-the-art proteomic research capabilities
- Institute of Environmental Health Sciences research featured on PBS
- TEDx posts presentation on contaminants by Dr. Tracie Baker
- Wayne State leading efforts to alleviate fatbergs
- Wayne State fights "fatbergs" with the help of IEHS faculty
- Announcement: Request for CURES Pilot Project Proposals
- New NIH study to research the risk of hearing loss in Detroit firefighters
- Urban Environmental Influences on Metabolic Health Symposium
- CURES 2017 - 2018 Seminar Series Announced!
- Wayne State receives $7.5 m NIH renewal for environmental center
- Requests for Proposals - Local Small Grants Program for Prenatal Exposures and Child Health Outcomes: A Statewide Study "" LOIs due Jan. 5
- $4.8M NIH grant addresses environmental influences on child health
- Inaugural Genomics@Wayne Symposium
- WSU's Center for Urban Responses to Environmental Stressors guides Detroiters on having healthier homes
- Wayne State research team to evaluate possible link between Flint water system and health problems
- CURES Investigator Dr. Shawn McElmurry to lead independent team looking at the Legionella cases in Flint water crisis
- Dr. Douglas Ruden featured in "Researchers investigating how lead exposure could affect DNA "
- Ph.D. Dissertation Defense: Candidate for Ph.D. in Pharmacology with Concentration in Molecular and Environmental Toxicology- Asmita Pant
- CURES Seminar Series 2015 - 2016 Schedule
- The Center for Urban Responses to Environmental Stressors (CURES): Announces a Request for Pilot Project Proposals
- Wayne State researchers discover evidence that lead exposure in mothers can affect future generations
- Presentation: Residential Changes and Their impacts: Analyzing the Experiences of Older Detroiters - June 24
- Karmanos researchers collaborate with CURES to study environmental links to disease development