Posts Tagged ‘Human Early Learning Partnership’
Mar. 20, 2013 | Filed under: Arts and Humanities, Business, Law and Society, Media Release, News Feed | Tags: business, Craig Mitton, Dept. of Political Science, economics, Faculty of Arts, federal budget, Gerald Baier, health care, Human Early Learning Partnership, Kevin Milligan, medicine, Paul Beaudry, Paul Kershaw, policy, politics, UBC experts list, Vancouver School of Economics
UBC experts are available to provide media commentary and analysis on the March 21 federal budget.
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Jan. 2, 2013 | Filed under: Media Release, University News | Tags: anthropology, arts, business, Clyde Hertzman, continuing studies, David Scheifele, Dept. of Anthropology, Division of Infectious and Immunological Diseases, Faculty of Arts, Faculty of Medicine, health, HELP, Human Early Learning Partnership, Jane Coop, Julie Cruikshank, medicine, Mike Harcourt, music, order of canada, School of Music, School of Population and Public Health, sustainability
Four University of British Columbia professors, four alumni and two honorary degree recipients have been named to the Order of Canada, one of Canada’s highest civilian honours.
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Oct. 18, 2012 | Filed under: Media Release | Tags: Child and Family Research Institute, CMMT, DNA, genetics, health, HELP, Human Early Learning Partnership, medical genetics, Michael Kobor, socio-economic, stress
A University of British Columbia and Centre for Molecular Medicine and Therapeutics (CMMT) study has revealed that childhood poverty, stress as an adult, and demographics such as age, sex and ethnicity, all leave an imprint on a person’s genes. And, that this imprint could play a role in our immune response.
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Feb. 7, 2012 | Filed under: Media Release | Tags: business, families, Generation Squeeze, Human Early Learning Partnership, Paul Kershaw
Canadians want to make family a priority – 85 per cent want to spend more time with their families and 60 per cent want governments to support policy changes that make it easier to raise a family, according to a national poll by McAllister Opinion Research about research led by University of British Columbia professor Paul Kershaw.
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Aug. 30, 2011 | Filed under: Media Release | Tags: Centre for Molecular medicine and Therapeutics, CFRI, Child and Family Research Institute, CMMT, gene expression, health, HELP, Human Early Learning Partnership, methylation
Researchers at the University of British Columbia and the Child & Family Research Institute have shown that parental stress during their children’s early years can leave an imprint on their sons’ or daughters’ genes – an imprint that lasts into adolescence and may affect how these genes are expressed later in life.
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