Science News

Collaborations with various media allow us to create a bank of science news of relevance to the Puerto Rican and Hispanic communities and give a venue that our scientific members can use to keep their communities informed and engaged with science.

Also, the news archive can be used as a resource for students and educators

In this section you can find: news written by members of the CienciaPR team and written by other news media and which are reproduced with permission from the original source.

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El Morro becomes a laboratory

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

Students from the Gabriela Mistral High School in San Juan took bacterial and fungal samples from the walls of El Morro, to determine if they can damage and slowly deteriorate the historical structure. This project, directed by Lilliam Casillas and the teacher Egda Morales, has among its purposes to establish collaboration between science students and researchers.

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Industrials focus on Puerto Rico's challenges in the global scene

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

On November 16, 2006, the Puerto Rican Industrials Association will celebrate the 2006 Executive Leadership Meeting – Innovation and Global Competition: Challenges for Puerto Rico. The activity, to be held in the San Juan Hotel & Casino, will serve as a forum to discuss the challenges that Puerto Rico faces in global competition. Also, it will promote a plan of action to secure a good position for the Island in the field of innovation.

New equipment for prostete surgeries

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

A new equipment, purchased by the Urology Department of the Medical School of the University of Puerto Rico, will allow prostate cancer and other patients with urological problems to be operated with a machine that reduces surgery time and risk, as well as post-operatory pain. The equipment can be use for procedures including prostate scraping, to diagnose bladder diseases, infections, urinary tract stones, tumors and tumor removal. The equipment mainly works using saline solution, which eliminates the risk of blood poisoning.

A home for illegal animals

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

The Species Confinement Center of the Department of Natural and Environmental Resources (DRNA) in the Cambalache Forest in Arecibo was created on 2003 to rescue, manage, monitor and relocate exotic species that enter Puerto Rico illegally. Besides rescuing and taking care of the animals, the Center has educational activities for the public, offering talks and demonstrations with the animals.

Alliance between NASA and UPR

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the University of Puerto Rico (UPR) are working together through Filius Institute, to motivate blind people to become researchers in science and mathematics. Filius was created 5 years ago, with the purpose of doing research about people with disabilities, and how to integrate them to social life. Currently the Institute together with NASA, works in an interactive program for blind students, presenting them with meteorological conditions of a hurricane and the analysis of these phenomena. Through this kind of initiatives NASA hopes to reduce the unemployment rate among the blind community in the United States that reaches 74%.

Executive orders to tackle obesity

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

In response to the alarming obesity rate in Puerto Rico, where more than 60% of the population has overweight problems, governor Aníbal Acevedo Vilá signed two executive orders to fight this epidemic through the establishment of nutritional education programs and the encouragement of physical activity. This is a joint effort of the Department of Sports and Recreation and the Department of Health.

Children obesity increases

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

An estimated 32% of the Puerto Rican children population, almost a third, has obesity or over-weight problems. With this picture, it is projected that the next generation could have a shorter life expectancy than the current generation, which is more than 71 years for men and women. Currently, 64% of the Puerto Rican adult population suffers obesity. Obesity related conditions, like cardiovascular problems, hypertension, strokes and renal problems are being detected earlier than ever before in the population.

Need for bilingual workers attracts Puerto Ricans to the US

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

Every week around a thousand Puerto Ricans migrate form the Island to the continental United States in search of better jobs, salaries and benefits. A wave of Spanish-speaking professionals and specialized workers migrates to the United States attracted by better paying jobs, but depriving the Island from the specialists it needs.

Roche creates 40 new jobs

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

Roche Diagnostic Puerto Rico inaugurated an expansion to become the plant that will manufacture 50% -world-wide- of Aviva Glucose Monitoring Strips, used to measure glucose levels in the blood.

Important to retain talents in the Island

This article is reproduced by CienciaPR with permission from the original source.

Fabrizio Bonanni, senior vicepresident of manufacture of Amgen Inc, said that it is important that Puerto Rico invests in graduate level education and research if we want to become the biotechnology leader we want to be. The executive said that the local pharmaceutical industry has the capacity to build a “phenomenal future” for Puerto Ricans in science and engineering, “and I can see the day when Puerto Rico becomes a magnet for talent, instead of an exporter.”

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