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Tag: Case Western Reserve University

  • Pro-Palestine Students Speak Out Against Case Western Reserve University’s Encampment Punishments

    Pro-Palestine Students Speak Out Against Case Western Reserve University’s Encampment Punishments

    click to enlarge

    Mark Oprea

    Task Force member and Case senior Yousef Khalaf spoke out against Case Western’s decision to ban certain pro-Palestine protestors, at the MLK branch of the Cleveland Public Library on Friday.

    This weekend, in a hall at Case Western Reserve University, some 2,700 undergraduates and graduates will don their black caps and tasseled gowns and walk across the graduation stage.

    And 53 might not, according to students. (That number is just three, according the school.)

    Earlier in the week, on Monday, several dozen students who were involved with the pro-Palestine encampment on the Kelvin Smith Library green were delivered emails from Case’s Office of Student Conduct effectively banning them from campus activity. And, most direly, from not receiving their diplomas as investigations from the office continue.

    As those punished students, deemed personas non grata by Case admins, pursue remedy through the university’s conduct process, a handful of them gathered on the second floor of the nearby MLK branch of the Cleveland Public Library to call out what they see as Case President Eric Kaler’s mishandling of what was a peaceful protest.

    The six present, members of the Palestine Task Force, spoke passionately about what Kaler, unlike more progressive university chiefs around the country, has not seemed to get.

    “Case Western has retaliated against their students for exercising their right to academic freedom and inflicted disproportionate punishment on their students,” Faten Odeh, the director of the Cleveland chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations, told the crowd, “simply because they disagree with them that an ongoing genocide should not be paid and funded with their tuition”

    The Task Force, which worked with Students for Justice for Palestine members to erect a tent village in early May, has been placing increasing pressure on CWRU to both disclose and divest in any financial stakes in Israel-owned companies.

    Protesters at colleges around the world have used encampments and graffiti with varying levels of success. At Trinity College in Dublin, university admins agreed not to renew any investments with Israeli ties next March. And on Wednesday, the Harvard Out of Occupied Palestine encampment disbanded after failing to earn a divestment commitment from university admins.

    At Case, what protesters see as a communication breakdown between them and Kaler has led to, what students said on Friday, a misjudging of their original goal to spotlight war casualties. A 180 from what, Task Force members and Case senior Yousef Khalaf said, the college’s guiding mission.

    “They accepted us because they knew that we stand for these ideas,” he said. “They knew that we’re willing to fight for what we believe in, and we’re willing to pursue these different ideas and have dialogue and do revolutionary things.

    “And now we’re being punished for those same things.”

    click to enlarge Jad Oglesby, a senior and former head of Case's Students for Justice for Palestine, speaking on Friday with the five other Task Force affiliates. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Jad Oglesby, a senior and former head of Case’s Students for Justice for Palestine, speaking on Friday with the five other Task Force affiliates.

    Since February, Case Western officials have long maintained a sense of openness regarding freedom of expression on campus, and has categorized some of the protesters’ behavior—some Free Palestine chants, or “YOU CAN’T HIDE” painted on Eldred Hall—as “threatening” or “hateful.”

    It’s why, along with an encampment on Case property, 53 students received notices of interim suspension. Yet, according to a statement on Friday, Case’s Office of Student conduct has “moved expeditiously” to hurry those punished through the hearing process in time for graduation.

    As of Friday’s press conference, only 12 were in midst of the conduct procedure; and just three students, the university said, are to be banned from commencement. (I don’t know where they’re getting that number from,” law graduate Mike Grimm told press.)

    “All others have been permitted to take part in their degree-conferral ceremonies,” the statement read, “among other commencement-related activities. Decisions on the awarding of degrees will be made once the conduct process is complete.”

    But what about after graduation? Many of the anxieties expressed by Task Force affiliates dealt with issues extending past May—from securing a spot on a scheduled bar exam to starting internships or locking down hoped-for jobs.

    Several protesters, including Jad Oglesby, a Case senior and former SJP president, brought up a forest for the trees mentality, that history would see the encamped in a better light rather than being a burden. He reminded those present there was a reason that the encampment began around the 54th anniversary of the May 4th Kent State Shootings.

    “In the past, protesters have been labeled as radicals, as malefactors to society,” Oglesby said, wearing a black suit wrapped in a keffiyeh. “That’s how we were labeled during the Civil Rights movement. That’s how we were labeled during the Vietnam war. That’s how we were viewed during protesting South African apartheid.

    He added: “And that’s how we are being labeled today.”

    Mark Oprea

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  • Case Western temporarily withholding degrees for some protesters

    Case Western temporarily withholding degrees for some protesters

    CLEVELAND (WJW) – Mike Grimms was set to get his doctorate from the School of Law at Case Western Reserve University.

    “It’s actually not expected in the sense that Friday I went back to campus to pick up my regalia for graduation,” said Grimms.

    Monday morning, Grimms learned he was flagged as “Persona Non-Grata” through an email for his involvement in the pro-Palestinian encampment.

    “There’s an interim hold on my degree and the PNG order means I can’t come back to campus, can’t participate in any commencement or graduation ceremonies, which my mom was not psyched about,” said Grimms.

    University President Eric Kaler promised he would immediately begin the student conduct process when the encampment ended Friday morning.

    The university confirms they are temporary withholding degrees and banning those students from university property until the process is completed.

    The school said in a statement, “This action follows repeated warnings from Kaler to those remaining in the unsanctioned encampment and later, to those blocking access to Adelbert Hall.”

    “The other extra hurdle to this is the longer it takes for my degree to get conferred to me, the longer the Ohio Bar is waiting to approve me to sit for the bar in July,” said Grimm.

    Grimms said so far, around 30 students have been flagged.

    “For people with summer housing, I don’t know what that means for them. People with a student visa,” said Grimms.

    University officials said they’ve also “issued notices to third parties who were involved with the protest, prohibiting them from campus.”

    Meanwhile Grimms said his formal conduct hearing is set for Wednesday.

    “I have a lot of issues I want to raise. Sure, there is a conduct policy, but are we dealing with the First Amendment at all? What about the new expression policies that have come up since the encampment went up?” said Grimms.

    Melissa Reid

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  • Case Western Reserve University Bars Some Pro-Palestine Student Protesters From Graduation, Campus

    Case Western Reserve University Bars Some Pro-Palestine Student Protesters From Graduation, Campus

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    Mark Oprea

    Pro-Palestine protestors at the Kelvin Smith Library Oval last week.

    Last Friday, after a week and a half of operating a tiny tent village in front of Case Western’s Kelvin Smith Library on campus, pro-Palestine protesters announced that they would be dissolving the Gaza Solidarity Encampment they created.

    They cited two escalating sources of tension: That President Eric Kaler had days before threatened the students with possible civil law violations, and that a growing list of dissenters had been causing safety concerns, from “extremist agitators” to Zionists vowing to “set fire to the encampment,” a letter from student leaders said.

    “While the encampment is coming to an end, the commitment to the cause remains unwavering,” it continued.

    On Monday morning, despite the agreement to vacate, some protesters affiliated with the encampment were sent emails from the university’s Office of Student Conduct and Community Standards bearing news that they were the subject of an investigation concerning their involvement in the encampment.

    Those receiving notices  were issued an interim ban from campus and all campus activities, and graduating seniors would have their degrees withheld, pending the outcome of the investigation.

    “Case Western Reserve has initiated its student conduct process—including temporary withholding of degrees and bans from university property,” a spokesperson for Case wrote, “and issued notices prohibiting from campus third parties involved with the unsanctioned encampment on private property.”

    “This action follows repeated warnings from President Kaler,” it went on, “to those remaining in the unsanctioned encampment and, later, to those blocking access to Adelbert Hall.”

    Like many of the protests and encampments that have popped up on college campuses in the past month, the protesters at Case had used their sudden tent village—with its First Aid tent and own library—to attempt pressure CWRU into divesting its financial stakes in Israeli companies. Kaler hit back on May 8 with a foot-down measure: “Divestment is and remains something the university will not do,” he wrote.

    In the past week, as commencement ceremonies loom, such protests have come to a head, in a wild variety of directions. At the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, admins agreed to join calls for a cease-fire, and possibly abandon Israeli investments, after protesters agreed to dismantle their encampment. At Trinity College in Dublin, officials said they would do away with all of their stakes in companies tacked to Israel altogether.

    For Case protesters, their week preceding graduation is different. For the two dozen or so students that stayed for long bouts of time in the encampment, the university will now deem them “persona non grata,” and essentially bar them from campus until a formal hearing to, the email said, “ensure the safety and well-being of members of the university community.”

    Those with student housing, the office said, will have to vacate by 3 p.m. Monday. None can be on campus until their formal hearing.

    “Failure to adhere to this notice will be considered an additional code of conduct violation and may result in further conduct charges and sanctions,” the email read.

    Although about three dozen or so protesters were detained briefly in mid-May, acts of blatant violence have either not existed or not warranted major charges. In interviews with the encamped last Wednesday, those present told Scene they had been verbally assaulted by Zionist sympathizers, and had even prepared tiered response plan if counter-protesters got physical. Or, of course, if their village was raided by police.

    click to enlarge A scene from the encampment at Case Western Reserve University. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    A scene from the encampment at Case Western Reserve University.

    On Kaler’s side, the president and his Office of Student Conduct claimed that recent chants and graffiti—especially one spelling “YOU CAN’T HIDE” on Eldred Hall—veered on antisemitism, and were threatening to Jewish students who wished to remain neutral and unopposed.

    Which, to students now banned from campus, seems a bit misdirected.

    “This is terribly consistent with what the university has been doing from the beginning of this movement,” Olivia Cobb, a third-year student and member of Law Students for Justice in Palestine, told Scene.

    “They are spinning a narrative in which they are heroes,” she added, “while they are using backdoor channels to threaten, intimidate and harass students into giving up their ability to access free speech, and giving up their ability to effectively protest.”

    Cobb, who was once hopeful for her graduation on May 18, expressed a sour feeling of discontentment at this week’s news.

    When asked if she regrets setting up camp, given the university’s response, Cobb turned immediately to Gaza’s casualties of war.

    “Yes, [the ban’s] devastating to me,” she said. “But I’m still here. I’m not starving, and I’ve never been hit with a bomb. And until I have to decide between that and standing up, then there’s not a moment of hesitation.”

    One student affiliated with SJP, and who wished to remain anonymous, told Scene he believe punishment of not graduating with his peers was overbearing for a protest that was, for the most part, reasonable and nonviolent.

    “It’s really disheartening and disappointing for me, personally,” the student said in a phone call. “It’s unfortunate that the campus claims to support First Amendment freedom of speech—but doesn’t.”

    All protesters linked to the encampment will be able to, later this week, appeal the college’s decision to ban them. One of the qualifications to win an appeal is for such students to comply with a mental health evaluation, Case’s Code of Conduct reads.

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    Mark Oprea

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  • Encampment expands on day 5 of protest at Case Western

    Encampment expands on day 5 of protest at Case Western

    CLEVELAND (WJW) — Tensions are building on the campus of Case Western Reserve University, where an anti-war protest continues.

    Students and other pro-Palestine demonstrators have been protesting the conflict in Israel on the Kelvin Smith Library oval since Monday.

    The school announced Thursday night that demonstrators are no longer welcome and are considered trespassers. Protesters expanded the encampment overnight and Friday was blocking off anyone who used the quad to get to classes.

    The school posted no trespassing signs Thursday night.

    The university said it has no intention to forcefully remove the protesters. So as of Friday afternoon, the encampment continued on school grounds.

    Recently, organizers of the pro-Palestinian anti-war movement released a list of demands. Among those demands, were to divulge and divest from any investment in Israel.

    One of the main organizers has said for days they have no plans to leave until their demands are met. After the university’s decision that protesters aren’t welcome, he said they’ll stick to the same plan.

    “We will stay here and protest until our demands are met,” said Jad Kamhawi Oglesby, a senior at Case. “We will stay here until we feel the students have been treated with respect by Case Western University.”

    The Palestine Task Force CLE released a statement saying the encampment will hold Jummah prayer Friday afternoon and an interfaith Liberation Shabbat Friday evening.

    The statement went on to say:

    “While the students are working to move their tuition dollars out of war, they are also building a movement that reflects the world they want to see, one where there are no divisions based on religion and race, no institutional barriers for care and wellness, and where all are welcome. 

    The movement the students have started stands in direct contrast to the way the university has treated students. The university has put politics and profit over students, specifically Palestinian students and those who have spoken up in support of Palestine.”

    Darcie Loreno

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  • 20+ detained in pro-Palestine protest at Case Western

    20+ detained in pro-Palestine protest at Case Western

    CLEVELAND (WJW) — More than 20 people were detained and released on the Case Western Reserve University campus on Monday, as a group of local pro-Palestine demonstrators “occupied” part of the campus, a university spokesperson confirmed.

    Students protesting the conflict in Israel are demonstrating on the campus’ public green, KSL Oval, footage from SkyFOX shows. A nearby sign reads, “Welcome to the People’s University for Palestine.”

    Protesters are demanding that administrators “divest from the state of Israel,” according to a Monday news release.

    “As anti-war protests occur across university campuses in the U.S. with increasing hostility from university administration, CWRU students feel it is imperative to take a stand, as students have always led the way in the anti-war movement,” reads the news release.

    According to the news release, students are demanding:

    1. Amnesty for all students and faculty disciplined for advocating for Palestinian liberation.
    2. Divest all of CWRU’s finances from the companies that profit from Israeli apartheid, genocide, and occupation in Palestine including implementing Resolution 31-15.
    3. Disclose CWRU’s investments.
    4. Retract remarks made against Resolution 31-15, statements in support of the Israeli goverment, and accusations of antisemitism towards the student body.
    5. Call for a permanent ceasefire and an end of the occupation of Palestine.
    6. Academic Boycott – cut ties with all Israeli academic institutions which includes

    Statement from Palestine Task Force CLE

    In the player below, watch previous Associated Press coverage of anti-war protests at U.S. universities:

    The university’s student government in November 2022 approved Resolution 31-15, calling on Case Western leaders to examine the university’s financial assets, to determine if its investments indirectly support Israeli “apartheid” from which the university should divest itself within two years.

    Specifically, the resolution calls for Case administrators to determine whether the university has invested in companies that provide weaponry or military support for “the illegal occupation of the Palestinian territories,” and identifies several by name.

    The resolution identifies other companies that support “illegal Israeli settlements” or operate private prisons in the U.S. and Palestine and elsewhere in the world, that are “profiting from exploitative prison labor.”

    Following that resolution, President Eric Kaler issued a statement expressing disappointment in the resolution, which he called “profoundly anti-Israel and anti-Semitic.”

    “Vigorous political debate is welcome and encouraged, but hate towards any group will be opposed at every step, including categorically rejecting the calls to action outlined in this resolution,” it reads.

    Case Western administrators earlier this year suspended the pro-Palestine student group Students for Justice in Palestine, alleging violations of the university’s student code of conduct.

    Several members of the group were accused of “[gluing] fliers to various surfaces around campus” on three separate days. The Monday news release claims students were fined $2,600 “for posting fliers.”

    “The relationship between CWRU administration and its students is forever tainted by its deliberate creation of a hostile and unsafe student environment as a way to ignore their own complicit role in shedding Palestinian blood,” reads a March statement from the group.

    Justin Dennis

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  • Case Western Students Host ‘Die In’ Protest During University’s Annual Open House

    Case Western Students Host ‘Die In’ Protest During University’s Annual Open House

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    Maria Elena Scott

    Students for Justice for Palestine spearheading a protest at Case Western in November.

    About 80 or so Case Western students dropped “dead” in the middle of the university’s bustling Tinkham Veale University Center on Friday morning, as prospective students and their parents were scheduled to attend an open house ceremony nearby.

    The protest, led by the campus’ Students for Justice for Palestine chapter, was a signal to university admins, the organization told Scene, for their lack of transparency regarding possible financial ties to Israeli arms manufacturers. As they called for Friday, SJP has repeatedly pressured Case Western to pass a Resolution 31-15, which would lay bare the university’s dealings with foreign entities like Israel.

    The so-called “die-in” is also a prodding move by SJP to protest its suspension as an official student organization. In early March, the Palestinian supporters group was suspended by the university due to allegedly glueing flyers to the campus’ Spirit Wall, which its Office of Student Conduct claims violates its posting policy.

    From their ban to Friday’s open house protest, SJP and Case admins haven’t come any closer to reaching agreement, activists told Scene before the “die-in.” Partly because SJP members believe their apparent flyer-glue charge was made in error in the first place. (Members interviewed denied there was “hard evidence” the Spirit Wall was debased by SJP.)

    “[Case President Eric] Kaler and the administration are pretty clearly silencing pro-Palestinian advocacy and any relevant discourse about the genocide going on,” Hannah Morris, a Case junior and SJP member, said on Thursday. “I think they’re uncomfortable, and I think that [the suspension] was totally a move to try and stamp out SJP.”

    She clarified: “I don’t think there’s been much, like, positive progress towards reinstating SJP, to my knowledge.”

    After more than a half year into fighting between Israel forces and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, conflict that’s taken the lives of 34,000 Palestinians, pro-Palestinian protests are close to reaching a zenith in both scope and legal backlash in the month of April.

    Protestors blocked traffic for hours on San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge; others shut down a major freeway in Oakland. And in Cleveland, activists calling for sympathy for Gaza have blocked airport traffic, shut down City Council meetings and covered Euclid Avenue and Public Square repeatedly with chants and flag-waving.

    Case Western isn’t an island in rising tensions between student and faculty.

    click to enlarge Gaza protests have filled City Council meetings, shutting them down at one point earlier this year. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Gaza protests have filled City Council meetings, shutting them down at one point earlier this year.

    Just on Thursday, dozens of pro-Palestinian protestors encamped at Columbia University in New York were arrested and cuffed in zip ties, many of them SJP members frustrated with their own six-month suspension. Crackdowns on unauthorized protests—which, in some cases, led to students being kicked out of campus housing—ran in tandem with Columbia President Nemat Shafik’s testifying to Congress about apparent anti-semitism on campus.

    On February 26, after months of back-and-forth tension, George O’Connell, the director of Case’s Office of Student Conduct, issued an “interim loss of recognition” on SJP, stripping it as a legal club. O’Connell’s office demanded the names of all SJP members and engagement “in continued participation” with his office to “resolve” the effects of the alleged glue-posting.

    “Failure to adhere to this notice or any form of retaliation will be considered an additional code of conduct violation and may result in further conduct charges and sanctions,” O’Connell’s letter demanded.

    Another SJP member, who commented anonymously fearing retaliation from the university, told Scene that Friday’s “die-in” echoed the sentiment of SJP’s response to its ban, posted on Instagram on March 4. (“You can try to shut our organizations down, but you can’t stop the movement from growing,” the post read.)

    “Our goal at the end of the day, in everything that we do, is to make sure that we foster a safe, equitable, and just not only university community,” the student told Scene, “but broader society and fight systems of oppression and colonialism that have completely ravaged the lives of many of us.”

    “So we will not stop, and we will not let more people die quietly,” they added. “So the university can try all of its tactics in full rank as much as it wants. But at the end of the day, what we have and what they don’t is people power.”

    In a statement to Scene, a Case spokesperson did not acknowledged any progress, if any at all, in bringing SJP back as an official student organization.

    “Due to the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, the university doesn’t comment on student conduct issues,” they wrote. “As with all student organizations, the university follows its student judicial policies and procedures.”

    Update: Around noon on Friday, after the protestors cleared Tinkham Veale, Rachael Collyer, the director of the Ohio Student Association, told Scene that members of SJP were not directly involved in the “die-in.”

    “SJP did not participate in the planning of the demonstration or in the demonstration itself due to concerns about their safety and about receiving further backlash to their student org from the university,” Collyer wrote in a text message. “The intention of the protest was to lift up the voices of the broader CWRU community, who are voicing their support for SJP to be reinstated.”

    “Additionally,” she added, the two students interviewed for this article “are not SJP members.”

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    Mark Oprea

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  • New Case Western Reserve University study finds diabetes drug may reduce risk for colorectal cancer

    New Case Western Reserve University study finds diabetes drug may reduce risk for colorectal cancer

    Newswise — CLEVELAND—A groundbreaking study by researchers at Case Western Reserve University suggests a class of medications used to treat type 2 diabetes may also reduce the risk of colorectal cancer (CRC).

    The findings, published today (Dec. 7) in the journal JAMA Oncology, support the need for clinical trials to determine whether these medications could prevent one of the deadliest types of cancers. Eventually, the medications may also show promise in warding off other types of cancer associated with obesity and diabetes.

    “Our results clearly demonstrate that GLP-1 RAs are significantly more effective than popular anti-diabetic drugs, such as Metformin or insulin, at preventing the development of CRC,” said Nathan Berger, the Hanna-Payne Professor of Experimental Medicine at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine and the study’s co-lead researcher.

    Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, or GLP-1 RAs, are medications to treat type 2 diabetes. Usually given by injection, they can lower blood-sugar levels, improve insulin sensitivity and help manage weight. They’ve also been shown to reduce the rates of major cardiovascular ailments.

    Importantly the protective effect of GLP-1 RAs are noted in patients with or without overweight/obesity.

    “To our knowledge,” said co-lead researcher Rong Xu, a professor at the School of Medicine, “this is the first indication this popular weight-loss and anti-diabetic class of drugs reduces incidence of CRC, relative to other anti-diabetic agents.”

    Berger and Xu are members of the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center.

    National health problem

    Being overweight or obese or having diabetes are risk factors for increasing incidence of CRC and for making its prognosis worse.

    The National Institutes of Health (NIH) defines being overweight and obese as an increase in size and amount of fat cells in the body above certain levels. These conditions are common nationally and are caused by several factors—among them diet, lack of sleep or physical activity, genetics and family history.

    Healthcare providers use body mass index to measure body fat based on height and weight. Nearly 75% of adults ages 20 or older in the United States are either overweight or obese, and nearly 20% of children and teens ages 2 to 19 have obesity, according to the NIH.

    Obesity is a chronic health condition that raises the risk for heart disease—the leading cause of death in the United States—and is linked to many other health problems, including type 2 diabetes and cancer.

    The American Cancer Society estimates CRC is the third-leading type of cancer in both sexes, with 153,000 new cases per year. It is also the second-leading cause of cancer mortality with 52,550 deaths per year.

    The study

    Since GLP-1 RAs have been shown to be effective anti-diabetic and weight-loss agents, the researchers hypothesized they might reduce incidence of CRC.

    Using a national database of more than 100 million electronic health records, the researchers conducted a population-based study of more than 1.2 million patients. These individuals had been treated with anti-diabetic agents from 2005-19; the CWRU team examined the effects of GLP-1 RAs on their incidence of CRC, as compared to those prescribed other anti-diabetic drugs.

    Population-based research means matching as many people as possible with the same characteristics—sex, race, age, socio-economic determinants of health and other medical conditions—to accurately compare the drug’s effects.

    Among 22,572 patients with diabetes treated with insulin, there were 167 cases of CRC. Another 22,572 matched patients treated with GLP-1 RAs saw 94 cases of CRC. Those treated with GLP-1 RAs had a 44% reduction in incidence of CRC.

    In a similar comparison of 18,518 patients with diabetes treated with Metformin, compared to 18,518 patients with diabetes treated with GLP-1 RAs, had a 25% reduction in CRC.

    “The research is critically important for reducing incidence of CRC in patients with diabetes, with or without overweight and obesity,” Berger said.

     

                                                                ***

    (Initial data for this manuscript was developed last summer by Lindsey Wang and William Wang, Orange High School students whose work was sponsored by the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center and National Cancer Institute-funded Scientific Enrichment Opportunity/Youth Engaged in Science Program. Lindsey Wang is now a first-year undergraduate at Case Western Reserve in the pre-professional scholars program, planning to enroll at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.)

    ###

    Case Western Reserve University is one of the country’s leading private research institutions. Located in Cleveland, we offer a unique combination of forward-thinking educational opportunities in an inspiring cultural setting. Our leading-edge faculty engage in teaching and research in a collaborative, hands-on environment. Our nationally recognized programs include arts and sciences, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing and social work. About 6,200 undergraduate and 6,100 graduate students comprise our student body. Visit case.edu to see how Case Western Reserve thinks beyond the possible.

     

    Case Western Reserve University

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  • Case Western Reserve School of Medicine postdoctoral fellow Marissa Scavuzzo wins coveted 2023 Eppendorf & Science Prize for Neurobiology for glial cell research

    Case Western Reserve School of Medicine postdoctoral fellow Marissa Scavuzzo wins coveted 2023 Eppendorf & Science Prize for Neurobiology for glial cell research

    Newswise — CLEVELAND—Marissa Scavuzzo, a postdoctoral fellow at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, has won the 2023 Eppendorf & Science Prize for Neurobiology for research in how glial cells in the intestine’s nervous system operate.

    Glial cells are considered support cells in the brain and help control and safeguard neurons. It is unclear what they do in the gut.

    The goal of Scavuzzo’s research is to understand the role of enteric glia in a healthy gut and how they respond to dietary, environmental or genetic changes. Her research could lead to the development of novel and efficient medicines that may benefit millions of people with gastrointestinal illnesses.

    “It’s still surreal,” Scavuzzo, the HHMI Hanna H. Gray Fellow in the School of Medicine’s Department of Genetics and Genome Sciences, said of the coveted award. “I am grateful to Eppendorf and Science for their recognition of my work, and will be forever grateful to my postdoctoral mentor, Dr. Paul Tesar, who played a crucial role in fostering my research in his lab. My long-term research goal is to understand the molecular underpinnings of enteric glia’s functional states in both health and disease.”

    “Marissa is a superstar,” said Tesar, professor of genetics and genome sciences and the Donald and Ruth Weber Goodman Professor of Innovative Therapeutics at School of Medicine. “I am so proud of her for receiving this prestigious award that recognizes her groundbreaking science.”

    Since 2002, the annual Eppendorf & Science Prize for Neurobiology has honored early-career scientists for groundbreaking research. Scavuzzo is the 22nd recipient of this international prize, which is awarded jointly by the journal Science  and Eppendorf SE, a leading Germany-based life-science company that develops, makes and sells systems for use in laboratories worldwide..

    Researchers age 35 and younger who have made outstanding contributions to neurobiological research based on methods of molecular and cell biology are invited to apply. The winner is awarded $25,000 and is able to publish an essay published in Science.

    “Eppendorf and the journal Science have awarded this prestigious prize for over 20 years. Many awardees have gone on to become leading scientists in their field,” said Alex Jahns, Eppendorf’s vice president of corporate citizenship and governmental affairs. “Congratulations to Marissa on her amazing achievement in winning this year’s award.”

    “The support from the School of Medicine has been critical to the success of my research,” Scavuzzo said, “and continued collaborations with colleagues will help advance my work towards my goal in the future.”

    ###

    Case Western Reserve University is one of the country’s leading private research institutions. Located in Cleveland, we offer a unique combination of forward-thinking educational opportunities in an inspiring cultural setting. Our leading-edge faculty engage in teaching and research in a collaborative, hands-on environment. Our nationally recognized programs include arts and sciences, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing and social work. About 6,000 undergraduate and 6,300 graduate students comprise our student body. Visit case.edu to see how Case Western Reserve thinks beyond the possible.

     

    Case Western Reserve University

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  • Making sense of life’s random rhythms

    Making sense of life’s random rhythms

    Newswise — CLEVELAND–Life’s random rhythms surround us–from the hypnotic, synchronized blinking of fireflies…to the back-and-forth motion of a child’s swing… to slight variations in the otherwise steady lub-dub of the human heart.

    But truly understanding those rhythms—called stochastic, or random, oscillations—has eluded scientists. While researchers and clinicians have some success in parsing brain waves and heartbeats, they’ve been unable to compare or catalogue an untold number of variations and sources.

    Gaining such insight into the underlying source of oscillations “could lead to advances in neural science, cardiac science and any number of different fields,” said Peter Thomas, a professor of applied mathematics at Case Western Reserve University.

    Thomas is part of an international team that says it has developed a novel, universal framework for comparing and contrasting oscillations–regardless of their different underlying mechanisms—which could become a critical step toward someday fully understanding them.

    Their findings were recently published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    “We turned the problem of comparing oscillators into a linear algebra problem,” Thomas said. “What we have done is vastly more precise than what was available before. It’s a major conceptual advance.”

    The researchers say others can now compare, better understand—and even manipulate—oscillators previously considered to have completely different properties.

    “If your heart cells aren’t synchronized, you die of atrial fibrillation,” Thomas said. “But if your brain cells synchronize too much, you have Parkinson’s disease, or epilepsy, depending on which part of the brain the synchronization occurs in. By using our new framework, that heart or brain scientist may be able to better understand what the oscillations could mean and how the heart or brain is working or changing over time.”

    Swaying skyscrapers and brain waves

    Thomas said the researchers—who included collaborators from universities in France, Germany and Spain—found a new way to use complex numbers to describe the timing of oscillators and how “noisy,” or imprecisely timed, they are.

    Most oscillations are irregular to some extent, Thomas said. For example, a heart rhythm is not 100% regular. A natural variation of 5-10% in the heartbeat is considered healthy. 

    Thomas said the problem with comparing oscillators can be illustrated by considering two markedly different examples: brain rhythms and swaying skyscrapers.

    “In San Francisco, modern skyscrapers sway in the wind, buffeted by randomly shifting air currents—they’re pushed slightly out of their vertical posture, but the mechanical properties of the structure pull them back,” he said. “This combination of flexibility and resilience helps high-rise buildings survive shaking during earthquakes. You wouldn’t think this process could be compared with brain waves, but our new formalism lets you compare them.”

    How their findings might help either discipline—mechanical engineering and neuroscience—may be unknown right now, Thomas said, comparing the conceptual advance to when Galileo discovered Jupiter’s orbiting moons.

    “What Galileo realized was a new point of view, and while our discovery is not as far-reaching as Galileo’s, it is similarly a change in perspective,” he said. “What we report in our paper is an entirely new point of view on stochastic oscillators.”

     

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    Case Western Reserve University is one of the country’s leading private research institutions. Located in Cleveland, we offer a unique combination of forward-thinking educational opportunities in an inspiring cultural setting. Our leading-edge faculty engage in teaching and research in a collaborative, hands-on environment. Our nationally recognized programs include arts and sciences, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing and social work. About 6,000 undergraduate and 6,300 graduate students comprise our student body. Visit case.edu to see how Case Western Reserve thinks beyond the possible.

     

     

     

    Case Western Reserve University

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  • ‘Making things that matter…but making them smarter and greener;”

    ‘Making things that matter…but making them smarter and greener;”

    Case Western Reserve University-led group wins federal grant to accelerate sustainable manufacturing in the region and beyond

    Newswise — CLEVELAND–A regional collaboration led by Case Western Reserve University has won a $1 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) to plan economic, environmental and manufacturing growth across the 18-county Northeast Ohio region.

    The award will support efforts to develop a robust and dynamic ecosystem for sustainable manufacturing and permit the team to compete for as much as $160 million from the NSF to be awarded in 2025—if the group can prove it has the ideas, relationships, track record and commitment to advance innovation and equitably benefit the regional economy.

    The group is one among 44 teams in the country–and the only one in Ohio– to receive a two-year grant to develop an “engine” in response to NSF’s new and innovative program.

    “This is an unprecedented opportunity for regional industries, small businesses, community groups, state and local governments and universities to come together and transform, lift up and lead sustainable manufacturing in America,” said Michael Oakes, the project director and senior vice president for research and technology management at Case Western Reserve.

    ‘Making things that matter…smarter and greener’

    The 11 initial planning partners are: Case Western Reserve, the Greater Cleveland Partnership (GCP), the City of Cleveland, TeamNEO, Cuyahoga County, MAGNET, JumpStart, Cleveland State University, the Cleveland Water Alliance, The Urban League of Greater Cleveland and the Northeast Ohio Hispanic Center for Economic Development (NEOHCED).

    Their efforts will focus on four areas: technology innovation, technology adoption, workforce and talent development, and leadership and governance.

    To become a more sustainable region, group members say, more industries from Cleveland to Youngstown will have to embrace emerging technologies with unprecedented enthusiasm.

    Among the priority areas are energy science; electrochemistry; “green” steel and microchip production; carbon capture, storage and sequestration; and production of alternatives to petroleum-based plastics and biodegradable byproducts. Talent pipelines and inclusive growth are fundamental to success.

    Individual companies and entire industrial sectors will have to optimize or reduce energy use, water consumption and greenhouse-gas emissions. The Cleveland Water Alliance will guide the environmental innovation and impact efforts for the planning effort.

    GCP President and CEO Baiju R. Shah said the motivation for those big environment-related changes is rooted in a shared economic strategy.

    “Greater Cleveland is well known as a region where we make things that matter—this is about making things that matter, but making them smarter and greener,” Shah said. “Our leading companies are committed to sustainability for business growth as they see a strategic opportunity and they’re doing it together, not going it alone. Together, we can meet market needs and lead the world in sustainability.”

    The Urban League and NEOHCED will lead efforts to attain excellence in inclusion and environmental equity. They will seek to develop inclusive pathways in sustainable manufacturing—including careers in factories and universities—and build entrepreneurial capacity in underrepresented communities across the region.

    Ongoing efforts toward sustainability

    The broader pitch to become an NSF Center coincides with related efforts at Case Western Reserve and among the partners:

    • In March 2022, CWRU and partners launched a newS. Department of Energy-funded center focused on helping small- and medium-sized manufacturers adopt “smart manufacturing” technologies.
    • In June 2022, the university announced it would also lead an effort to integrate artificial intelligence and sensing to improve materials and processing in manufacturing—part of a long-term, federally funded strategy to strengthen U.S. innovation and industrial productivity.
    • In January 2023, CWRU’s Oakes committed $1 million to foster sustainable manufacturing as a primary focus and accelerate faculty research.
    • Also in January 2023, the GCP hosted its inaugural “Sustainability Summit” for more than 300 business leaders and stakeholders at the Huntington Convention Center. Conference participants discussed the importance of being “All In” on sustainability for business growth and regional impact—and steps and resources to get there.

    “Ultimately, this is about demonstrating that we have a working regional innovation

    ecosystem here for sustainable manufacturing,” said Nick Barendt, executive director of the Institute for Smart, Secure and Connected Systems at Case Western Reserve and co-leader of the Engines planning project. “We’re excited to be working with our partners to make this happen.”

    Federal Engines Program

    The Engines program was authorized by the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. Awardees span a broad range of states and regions, reaching geographic areas that have not fully benefited from the technology boom of the past decades.

    “These NSF Engines Development Awards lay the foundation for emerging hubs of innovation and potential future NSF Engines,” said NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan. “These awardees are part of the fabric of NSF’s vision to create opportunities everywhere and enable innovation anywhere.”

    More information can be found on the NSF Engines program website.

    View a map of the NSF Engines Development Awards.

     

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    Case Western Reserve University is one of the country’s leading private research institutions. Located in Cleveland, we offer a unique combination of forward-thinking educational opportunities in an inspiring cultural setting. Our leading-edge faculty engage in teaching and research in a collaborative, hands-on environment. Our nationally recognized programs include arts and sciences, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing and social work. About 5,800 undergraduate and 6,300 graduate students comprise our student body. Visit case.edu to see how Case Western Reserve thinks beyond the possible.

     

    Case Western Reserve University

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  • A Lesson for Colleges on Student Mental Health: Try New Things on a Small Scale

    A Lesson for Colleges on Student Mental Health: Try New Things on a Small Scale

    Everyone is worried about students’ mental health. What can colleges actually do to help?

    During a Friday session at the American Council on Education’s annual meeting, three researchers offered lessons learned from new research focused on eight colleges. Their core message was that administrators should start small, experiment with interventions, frequently assess how students feel about the interventions, and change course as needed.

    Students don’t view their campus experience as a collection of offices and departments, like administrators often do, said Jennifer Maltby, director of data, analytics, and planning at the Rochester Institute of Technology. That should inform colleges’ approach to troubleshooting students’ mental-health challenges, Maltby said.

    Improving student mental health is as complex as raising a child, said Allison Smith, director of health strategy and outcomes at New York University, and both tasks require constant adaptation to fit shifting needs.

    Two other key findings were that colleges should pinpoint which student demographic groups are disproportionately failing to thrive, and that institutions should tailor their goals to improve the experiences of specific student populations, rather than attempting to create a blanket solution that will work for every student.

    “For a trans student, that means being called the right name and right pronouns in class,” Smith said. “For a student of faith, that means being able to observe their religious holidays without getting penalized.”

    Researchers also discovered that having a “core team” of four to eight individuals working to change an institution’s systems was an ideal management structure.

    It’s impossible for one administrator, such as a vice president for student well-being, to reach every student and make the necessary changes that can improve students’ mental health, Smith said.

    Inside the Research

    The research followed Case Western Reserve University, New York University, Cornell University, the Rochester Institute of Technology, Texas A&M University, Stanford University, the University at Albany in the State University of New York system, and the University of California at Los Angeles.

    The study examined whether a concept known as “Triple Aim” — the idea that, simultaneously, a population can become healthier, health-care costs can decrease, and the quality of care can improve — could apply to student well-being. Smith is a co-founder of the Action Network for Equitable Wellbeing, a new collaborative of organizations dedicated to improving students’ mental health that aims to expand the effort to more colleges.

    The colleges involved in the study frequently collected data through a survey called the Wellbeing Improvement Survey for Higher Education Settings, allowing researchers to get a clear picture of what was working.

    Maltby said one intervention at RIT focused on professors and students. Three professors were encouraged to include statements on their syllabi saying they cared about mental health and knew college was challenging.

    Feedback from students was initially positive, and the initiative grew. But when the statement was included in the syllabi of 30 professors, the results changed. Students didn’t always feel that professors who included the statement on their syllabus acted in a way that showed they genuinely cared, ultimately causing more harm for students than good. Maltby’s team later discovered that marginalized students were disproportionately experiencing this harm.

    “We were able to really pull back and say we’re not going to try and implement this statement universitywide because we understand that there are potential impacts on that for our students that are going to be negative,” Maltby said.

    While it might seem resource-intensive to talk individually with students to get a better understanding of their lives and to collect data so frequently, Maltby believes the study’s approach could work for a range of colleges.

    “Oftentimes folks will say it’s not possible or we can’t do it that way, and I think one of the things we’ve learned, especially through Covid, is that we can do lots of things that we previously thought were impossible when we have the will and interest to do that.” Maltby said.

    Kate Marijolovic

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  • Everybody loves Pi: @CWRU math chair explains the why behind the 3.14 obsession

    Everybody loves Pi: @CWRU math chair explains the why behind the 3.14 obsession

    BYLINE: Michael Scott

    Newswise — “A lot of people know pi through their geometry classes in school, but that’s really it—they’re not sure why it’s important,” said Weihong Guo, chair of mathematics in the College of Arts and Sciences at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. “In reality, pi is really the most useful number human beings have to use for so many things in the real world.”

    Those real-world examples range from calculating the surface area of a soda can (“How much material do you need to make this thing? Make a million of them?” Guo said) to sizing age-appropriate soccer balls to using a ‘Bell Curve’ to predict the odds of winning the lottery.

    Guo said pi also “gave rise to many important insights in our physical world. It’s been used to help calculate the orbit of planets in the solar system and examine how ripples in rivers carry energy.”

    Weihong Guo’s other research interests include Mathematical Image Analysis and Processing, Inverse Problems, Scientific Computing and Computer Vision–but like all of us, she also loves Pi

    She is available by request through Pi Day on Tuesday.

    Case Western Reserve University

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  • New study reveals ketamine could be effective treatment for cocaine-use disorders

    New study reveals ketamine could be effective treatment for cocaine-use disorders

    Newswise — CLEVELAND—As cocaine use continues to climb across the United States, scientists have struggled to develop an effective pharmacological approach to treat the devastating disorder.

    But by seamlessly combining artificial intelligence (AI), human intelligence, clinical testing and computer analysis, researchers at Case Western Reserve University have unearthed an existing option that appears to hold promise.

    “Ketamine, a small synthetic organic molecule used clinically as an anesthetic and a depression treatment, was found to be associated with significant improvement in remission among people with cocaine-use disorders,” said the study’s corresponding author Rong Xu, professor of biomedical informatics and founding director of the Center for AI in Drug Discovery at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine.

    “This study is a great example of addressing an intractable problem by the creative use of AI using different sources of data,” said study coauthor Pamela Davis, the Arline and Curtis Garvin Research Professor at the School of Medicine. “It is our hope that this approach will suggest therapeutic approaches for other difficult problems.”

    The study, funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse Clinical Trial Network, was published online today in the journal Addiction.

    More than 2 million people in the U.S. regularly use cocaine, more than three times the number who take methamphetamine. Roughly one of every five drug overdose deaths in this country involves cocaine, and its consistent use contributes to an array of serious health issues—including heart attack and stroke. However, there is no U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved treatment for cocaine-use disorders.

    Decades of research have found that existing medications such as antidepressants or stumulants have no meaningful effect, while others involve such small patient samples as to be years away from certain conclusions. Therapeutic interventions have yielded positive outcomes, but barriers such as cost, staffing and stigma significantly limit widespread adoption.

    By developing novel AI-based drug discovery algorithms to identify promising candidates from all FDA-approved drugs, reviewing top drug candidates by expert panels of  addiction experts such as the University of Cincinnati’s T. John Winhusen, Xu and her colleagues deterimined ketamine held the greatest potential to yield useful insights.

    They evaluated the potential clinical effectiveness of ketamine on improving remission rates among patients with cocaine-use disorders by analyzing tens of millions of electronical health records. They found that cocaine-use disorder patients administered ketamine for pain or depression experienced two to four times higher remission rates.

    While a few previous studies have found increased efficacy of ketamine in treating cocaine use disorder, the groups involved were largely homogenous. The Case Western Reserve study not only included greater diversity of participants by race and gender, but also those suffering from additional medical and psychiatric conditions.

    While this study substantially strengthens the argument for the use of ketamine in treating cocaine-use disorder, the researchers emphasized that additonal clinical trials are required to assess ketamine’s potential impact more thoroughly.

    The work was conducted at the Center for AI in Drug Discovery by research associate ZhenXiang Gao and medical school student Maria Goreflo, in collaboration with Davis, Winhusen, David Kaelber from MetroHealth and Case Western Reserve and Udi Ghitza from the National Institute on Drug Abuse Clinical Trial Network

    The Center for AI in Drug Discovery’s goal is to develop an integrated drug-discovery pipeline driven by advanced AI technologies, preclinical testing in collaboration with biomedical researchers and clinical studies using patient electronic health records.

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    Case Western Reserve University is one of the country’s leading private research institutions. Located in Cleveland, we offer a unique combination of forward-thinking educational opportunities in an inspiring cultural setting. Our leading-edge faculty engage in teaching and research in a collaborative, hands-on environment. Our nationally recognized programs include arts and sciences, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing and social work. About 5,800 undergraduate and 6,300 graduate students comprise our student body. Visit case.edu to see how Case Western Reserve thinks beyond the possible.

     

    Case Western Reserve University

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  • Will Nasal COVID Vaccines Save Us?

    Will Nasal COVID Vaccines Save Us?

    Since the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, a niche subset of experimental vaccines has offered the world a tantalizing promise: a sustained slowdown in the spread of disease. Formulated to spritz protection into the body via the nose or the mouth—the same portals of entry most accessible to the virus itself—mucosal vaccines could head SARS-CoV-2 off at the pass, stamping out infection to a degree that their injectable counterparts might never hope to achieve.

    Now, nearly three years into the pandemic, mucosal vaccines are popping up all over the map. In September, India authorized one delivered as drops into the nostrils; around the same time, mainland China green-lit an inhalable immunization, and later on, a nasal-spray vaccine, now both being rolled out amid a massive case wave. Two more mucosal recipes have been quietly bopping around in Russia and Iran for many months. Some of the world’s largest and most populous countries now have access to the technology—and yet it isn’t clear how well that’s working out. “Nothing has been published; no data has been made available,” says Mike Diamond, an immunologist at Washington University in St. Louis, whose own approach to mucosal vaccines has been licensed for use in India via a company called Bharat. If mucosal vaccines are delivering on their promise, we don’t know it yet; we don’t know if they will ever deliver.

    The allure of a mucosal vaccine is all about geography. Injectable shots are great at coaxing out immune defenses in the blood, where they’re able to cut down on the risk of severe disease and death. But they aren’t as good at marshaling a protective response in the upper airway, leaving an opening for the virus to still infect and transmit. When viral invaders throng the nose, blood-borne defenses have to scamper to the site of infection at a bit of a delay—it’s like stationing guards next to a bank’s central vault, only to have them rush to the entrance every time a robber trips an external alarm. Mucosal vaccines, meanwhile, would presumably be working at the door.

    That same logic drives the effectiveness of the powerful oral polio vaccine, which bolsters defenses in its target virus’s preferred environment—the gut. Just one mucosal vaccine exists to combat a pathogen that enters through the nose: a nasal spray made up of weakened flu viruses, a version of which is branded as FluMist. The up-the-nose spritz is reasonably protective in kids, in some cases even outperforming its injected counterparts (though not always). But FluMist is much less potent for adults: The immunity they accumulate from a lifetime of influenza infections can wipe out the vaccine before it has time to lay down new protection. When it comes to cooking up a mucosal vaccine for a respiratory virus, “we don’t have a great template to follow,” says Deepta Bhattacharya, an immunologist at the University of Arizona.

    To circumvent the FluMist problem, some researchers have instead concocted viral-vector-based vaccines—the same group of immunizations to which the Johnson & Johnson and AstraZeneca COVID shots belong. China’s two mucosal vaccines fall into this category; so does India’s nose-drop concoction, as well as a nasal version of Russia’s Sputnik V shot. Other researchers are cooking up vaccines that contain ready-made molecules of the coronavirus’s spike protein, more akin to the shot from Novavax. Among them are Iran’s mucosal COVID vaccine and a newer, still-in-development candidate from the immunologist Akiko Iwasaki and her colleagues at Yale. The Yale group is also testing an mRNA-based nasal recipe. And the company Vaxart has been tinkering with a COVID-vaccine pill that could be swallowed to provoke immune cells in the gut, which would then deploy fighters throughout the body’s mucosal surfaces, up through the nose.

    Early data in animals have spurred some optimism. Trial versions of Diamond’s vaccine guarded mice, hamsters, and monkeys from the virus, in some cases seeming to stave off infection entirely; a miniaturized version of Vaxart’s oral vaccine was able to keep infected hamsters from spreading the coronavirus through the air. Iwasaki is pursuing an approach that deploys mucosal vaccines exclusively as boosters to injected shots, in the hopes that the initial jab can lay down bodywide immunity, a subset of which can then be tugged into a specialized compartment in the nose. Her nasal-protein recipe seems to trim transmission rates among rodents that have first received an in-the-muscle shot.

    But attempts to re-create these results in people yielded mixed results. After an intranasal version of the AstraZeneca vaccine roused great defenses in animals, a team at Oxford moved the immunization into a small human trial—and last month, published results showing that it hardly triggered any immune response, even as a booster to an in-the-arm shot. Adam Ritchie, one of the Oxford immunologists behind the study, told me the results don’t necessarily spell disaster for other mucosal attempts, and that with more finagling, AstraZeneca’s vaccine might someday do better up the nose. Still, the results “definitely put a damper on the excitement around intranasal vaccines,” says Stephanie Langel, an immunologist at Case Western Reserve University, who’s partnering with Vaxart to develop a COVID-vaccine pill.

    The mucosal COVID vaccines in India and China, at least, have reportedly shown a bit more promise in small, early human trials. Bharat’s info sheet on its nasal-drop vaccine—the Indian riff on Diamond’s recipe—says it bested another locally made vaccine, Covaxin, at tickling out antibodies, while provoking fewer side effects. China’s inhaled vaccine, too, seems to do reasonably well on the human-antibody front. But antibodies aren’t the same as true effectiveness: Vaccine makers and local health ministries, experts told me, have yet to release large-scale, real-world data showing that the vaccines substantially cut down on transmission or infection. And although some studies have hinted that nasal protection can stick around in animals for many, many months, there’s no guarantee the same will be true in humans, in whom mucosal antibodies, in particular, “are kind of known to wane pretty quickly,” Langel told me.

    SARS-CoV-2 infections have offered sobering lessons of their own. The nasal immune response to the virus itself is neither impenetrable nor particularly long-lived, says David Martinez, a viral immunologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Even people who have been both vaccinated and infected can still get infected again, he told me, and it would be difficult for a nasal vaccine to do much better. “I don’t think mucosal vaccines are going to be the deus ex machina that some people think they’re going to be.”

    Mucosal vaccines don’t need to provide a perfect blockade against infection to prove valuable. Packaged into sprays, drops, or pills, immunizations tailor-made for the mouth or the nose might make COVID vaccines easier to ship, store, and distribute en masse. “They often don’t require specialized training,” says Gregory Poland, a vaccinologist at the Mayo Clinic—a major advantage for rural or low-resource areas. The immunizing experience could also be easier for kids or anyone else who’d rather not endure a needle. Should something like Vaxart’s encapsulated vaccine work out, Langel told me, COVID vaccines could even one day be shipped via mail, in a form safe and easy enough to swallow with a glass of water at home. Some formulations may also come with far fewer side effects than, say, the mRNA-based shots, which “really kick my ass,” Bhattacharya told me. Even if mucosal vaccines weren’t a transmission-blocking knockout, “if it meant I didn’t have to get the mRNA vaccine, I would consider it.”

    But the longer that countries such as the U.S. have gone without mucosal COVID vaccines, the harder it’s gotten to get one across the finish line. Transmission, in particular, is tough to study, and Langel pointed out that any new immunizations will likely have to prove that they can outperform our current crop of injected shots to secure funding, possibly even FDA approval. “It’s an uphill battle,” she told me.

    Top White House advisers remain resolute that transmission-reducing tech has to be part of the next generation of COVID vaccines. Ideally, those advancements would be paired with ingredients that enhance the life span of immune responses and combat a wider swath of variants; skimp on any of them, and the U.S. might remain in repeat-vaccination purgatory for a while yet. “We need to do better on all three fronts,” Anthony Fauci, the outgoing director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told me. But packaging all that together will require another major financial investment. “We need Warp Speed 2.0,” says Shankar Musunuri, the CEO of Ocugen, the American company that has licensed Diamond’s recipe. “And so far, there is no action.” When I asked Fauci about this, he didn’t seem optimistic that this would change. “I think that they’ve reached the point where they feel, ‘We’ve given enough money to it,’” he told me. In the absence of dedicated government funds, some scientists, Iwasaki among them, have decided to spin off companies of their own. But without more public urgency and cash flow, “it could be years to decades to market,” Iwasaki told me. “And that’s if everything goes well.”

    Then there’s the issue of uptake. Musunuri told me that he’s confident that the introduction of mucosal COVID vaccines in the U.S.—however long it takes to happen—will “attract all populations, including kids … people like new things.” But Rupali Limaye, a behavioral scientist at Johns Hopkins University, worries that for some, novelty will drive the exact opposite effect. The “newness” of COVID vaccines, she told me, is exactly what has prompted many to adopt an attitude of “wait and see” or even “that’s not for me.” An even newer one that jets ingredients up into the head might be met with additional reproach.

    Vaccine fatigue has also set in for much of the public. In the United States, hospitalizations are once again rising, and yet less than 15 percent of people eligible for bivalent shots have gotten them. That sort of uptake is at odds with the dream of a mucosal vaccine that can drive down transmission. “It would have to be a lot of people getting vaccinated in order to have that public-health population impact,” says Ben Cowling, an epidemiologist at the University of Hong Kong. And there’s no guarantee that even a widely administered mucosal vaccine would be the population’s final dose. The pace at which we’re doling out shots is driven in part by “the virus changing so quickly,” says Ali Ellebedy, an immunologist at Washington University in St. Louis. Even a sustained encampment of antibodies in the nose could end up being a poor match for the next variant that comes along, necessitating yet another update.

    The experts I spoke with worried that some members of the scientific community—even some members of the public—have begun to pin all their hopes about stopping the spread of SARS-CoV-2 on mucosal vaccines. It’s a recipe for disappointment. “People love the idea of a magic pill,” Langel told me. “But it’s just not reality.” The virus is here to stay; the goal continues to be to make that reality more survivable. “We’re trying to reduce infection and transmission, not eliminate it; that would be almost impossible,” Iwasaki told me. That’s true for any vaccine, no matter how, or where, the body first encounters it.

    Katherine J. Wu

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