News

Introducing COVID19questions.org

Clinicians, researchers, patients and the general public are invited to submit questions that could be answered by COVID-19 patient medical record data from 200+ hospitals

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, there is an urgent need to determine who is at greatest risk for severe disease, better understand how the disease and treatments evolve, and predict the need for resources. But to get there, researchers and clinicians need more data about what patients have experienced so far, and what factors are associated with different patient outcomes.

Can Dogs Detect COVID-19?

Alumna Is Studying Canines' Abilities to Identify, Respond to Virus Metabolites

Jenna Gadberry ’03 is using her extensive background in chemical and biological defense to answer the question: Could dogs detect COVID-19?

Gadberry, a researcher with the U.S. Army’s Combat Capabilities Development Command Chemical Biological Center, has studied canine detection for military explosives. When the question about COVID-19 arose, her team partnered with the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine Working Dog Center.

COVID-19 and Flu Season Are About to Merge

Worried Doctors Stress Flu Shots More Important Than Ever

wo things are certain about the flu season knocking at our door during the COVID-19 pandemic: First, it’s never been more important to get your flu shot. Next, no one knows how this influenza season will play out.

The uncertainty covers almost every aspect of the flu — how dangerous this year’s strain will be, how contagious it will be, how the flu will interact with COVID-19, and what might happen if a person gets both the flu and COVID-19.

NIH grant will allow UC Davis Health to train community health workers in COVID-19 contact tracing

Funding will help the UC Davis Clinical and Translational Science Center and the Center for Reducing Health Disparities reach underserved population during pandemic

(SACRAMENTO)

UC Davis and two other universities have been awarded a $2.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to train and empower community health workers in research best practices, which could help reduce disparities related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

COVID-19 Taking a Toll on Everyday Lives, UC Davis Research Suggests

More Stress Expected as Lockdowns Continue, People Get Sick, Unemployment Persists

Rare research on the effects of a pandemic undertaken during an ongoing disaster shows that COVID-19 has severely affected people’s daily emotional lives and mental health, increasing their stresses the longer lockdowns, fear of getting sick and financial strains continue.

Read More...

UC Davis Begins Injections in COVID-19 Trial

Patients at UC Davis Health on Thursday (Aug. 20) became the first in Sacramento to receive a vaccine candidate for COVID-19, which is part of a major clinical trial involving 30,000 participants worldwide.

The six people who received the injections are part of a late-stage study that will enroll about 200 participants through UC Davis Health’s clinical trials program.

Read More...

Genomic Analysis Reveals Many Animal Species May Be Vulnerable to SARS-CoV-2 Infection

Humans are not the only species facing a potential threat from SARS-CoV-2, the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19, according to a new study from the University of California, Davis.

An international team of scientists used genomic analysis to compare the main cellular receptor for the virus in humans — angiotensin converting enzyme-2, or ACE2 — in 410 different species of vertebrates, including birds, fish, amphibians, reptiles and mammals.

COVID-19 research activities at UC Davis Medical Center

Webinar features inpatient research updates

The Cypress Building was a blur of activity this week as a clinical trials team prepped and launched its first COVID-19 vaccine study. It’s just one of 14 clinical trials for the disease taking place at UC Davis Health. There are also a number of related activities, all focusing on addressing the challenges of the novel coronavirus.