R.I. Foundation Awards $360K to 15 Medical Research Projects


Foundation: Rhode Island Foundation

credit:

Love is in the air, at least when it comes to the research projects funded by the Rhode Island Foundation.

The nonprofit has awarded more than $360,000 in seed funding to 15 medical research projects, ranging from a study looking at whether romantic relationships can reduce the risk of stroke to a project that could help better cope with attention deficit hyperactive disorder, the Providence Journal reports.

The projects range from infectious diseases, cardiac research, coronary artery disease, cerebral accidents, cancer, heart disease, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, diabetes, allergies, and performance enhancing substances.

"Together with our visionary donors, we are providing the crucial source of early funding that enables local researchers to purse promising medical advances," foundation CEO David N.cilline said in a statement.

The University of Rhode Island received seven grants totaling $165,401 for various research projects, including studies on access and safety of opioid agonist therapy in pregnant women and serotonin neuron modulation after spinal cord injury.

Island Hospital got two grants worth $50,000 to look at the health care transition of adolescents living with HIV in Rwanda and the implementation and evaluation of pre-hospital trauma program for community workers in far-west Nepal.

Roger Williams University, Brown University, and the Ocean State Research Institute each received $25,000 from the foundation for their respective projects.

Read the Entire Article


Selected Foundation News

A customized collection of news from foundations from around the Web.

Navigating Debt Challenges: G20'S Pursuit of Sustainable Solutions

The next IMF spring meetings will be held in Washington, DC, in 2024, and a group of academics is calling on the world's financial institutions to do more to help developing countries cope with the...more

Brazil and the United States: Partners for a Sustainable Future

The US and Brazil have a lot in common: They both produce about 25% of the world's food, they both have vast territories, and they both want to be more sustainable and less reliant on fossil...more

Mba Students from Top Business Schools around the Globe Are Pledging to Combat Climate Change

Columbia Business School, Harvard Business School, MIT Sloan School of Management, Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management, Stanford Graduate School of Business, the University of...more

Exploring Three Frontiers in Marine Biomass and Blue Carbon Capture

More than half of the world's biological carbon is captured and stored by marine living organisms, which are threatened by acidification, temperature change, severe storms, and...more

Healing, Bridging, Thriving: A Reflection on the Climate Arts Caucus

The National Endowment for the Arts and the White House Domestic Policy Council are hosting a summit on arts and culture in our communities on Jan. 30, 2024, and they want to know what can be...more

To Tackle Climate Change, Governments Increasingly Turn to Green Subsidies

The World Bank is out with a new report on subsidies, and it finds that governments around the world are increasingly offering them in an effort to combat climate change. Specifically, the report...more

New Innovative Crops Could Significantly Reduce Agriculture'S Climate Change Impact and ...

Scientists are working on a breakthrough that could have "sweep implications for global food security and environmental sustainability," according to a release from the Novo Nordisk...more

Innovative Spoon 'Electrocutes' Your Tongue for a Saltier Taste

A beverage company in Japan has come up with a spoon that claims to enhance the taste of salt without increasing one's sodium intake. The high-tech spoon works by emitting a weak electric field...more

Nine Key Takeaways about the 'State of Co2 Removal' in 2024

A new report on the state of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is out, and it's full of good news and bad news. The good news is that the world is on track to hit its goal of keeping the global...more

World Environment Day

Every year on June 5, the UN celebrates World Environment Day, and this year's theme is "Our Land." In a press release, the World Health Organization notes that South-East Asia has the highest...more






The Tisch, Johnson and Mara families have announced $3 million in donations to the NY/NJ Snowflake Youth Foundation, the independent charitable legacy of the NY/NJ Super Bowl Host Committee.




Federal Government Grant and Assistance Programs



Edited by: Michael Saunders

© 2008-2024 Copyright Michael Saunders