快活app

Skip to Content

Faculty and Staff Grants from September 2023

Back to News Listing

Author(s)

Matt Meyer

Writer

Writer"

matt.meyer@du.edu

Announcement  •
New 快活app logo

Congratulations to the following faculty and staff members who received grants and awards in September 2023:

and , faculty at the

  • Grant from the National Science Foundation
  • Abstract: Cells communicate with one another through exosomes. Thus far, the study of exosomes has been useful for early disease detection and in the design of drug delivery vehicles. However, little is known about how cells regulate the process of forming and secreting exosomes. The outcome of this work has the potential to transform our fundamental understanding of how cells secrete exosomes and will likely identify new regulators of the process.

, faculty at the

  • Grant from the National Science Foundation
  • Abstract: This project will study how populations living in extreme, high-altitude environments respond to novel selective pressures and serve as a model for similar investigations in other systems that may be of urgent conservation concern.

and , faculty and staff at the

  • Grant from the State of Georgia
  • Abstract: Butler proposes to conduct a statewide assessment of Georgia's foster families who are affiliated with either public or private agencies. The Butler team will work closely with DFCS to design a rigorous mixed-methods assessment that will help DFCS identify current strengths and challenges in foster family recruitment and retention.

and , faculty and staff at the

  • Grant from Green Chimneys
  • Abstract: Since 2017, the 快活app鈥檚 Institute for Human-Animal Connection (IHAC) has been conducting research aimed at assessing if the Green Chimneys Farm programs positively affect clinical outcomes for its students. The broad goals are to provide supporting evidence for the efficacy of the animal-assisted and nature-based interventions as part of the unique Green Chimneys approach to supporting youth experiencing psychosocial challenges and to maintain the profiles of Green Chimneys and IHAC as leaders in the field of human-animal interactions.

, staff at the

  • Grant from the Mile High Council on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
  • Abstract: The Butler Institute for Families at the 快活app鈥檚 Graduate School of Social Work (Butler) will conduct a program evaluation of MHBHC鈥檚 ketamine clinic. An innovative treatment modality that MHBHC will offer with BHA Community Investment funding is the use of the fast-acting antidepressant ketamine to reduce treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (MDD) and trauma in appropriately screened adult clients receiving treatment across MHBHC鈥檚 continuum of care.

, faculty at the

  • Grant from the Russell Sage Foundation
  • Abstract: To better understand the numerous labor inequities encountered by today's imprisoned workers, as well as the constrained labor market prospects they face upon release, this study investigates the socio-legal roots and historical tensions underlying the legalized class inequality and immobility perpetuated through retributive, labor-centric approaches to corrections.

, faculty at the

  • Grant from the Denver Health and Hospital Authority (subaward Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
  • Abstract: This project will assist Denver Health by conducting qualitative evaluation of BPA Intervention.

, faculty at the

  • Grant from the Bureau of Land Management
  • Abstract: Bees are an important insect pollinator that are impacted by wildfire burn severity. This project will investigate bee abundance and diversity in comparison to nesting habitat between unburned, low-burn and high-burn severity sites across two Colorado fires. We predict that bee diversity and abundance will increase with increased nesting resources.

, faculty at the

  • Grant from the Lansing Economic Area Partnership
  • Abstract: The grant will support business consulting services specific to the use of GIS mapping for the purpose of regional ecosystem development.

, faculty at the

  • Grant from the United Nations Development Programme
  • Abstract: Restricted

Related Articles