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Courtney Michelle Schoner | News, Sports, Jobs

Courtney Michelle Schoner | News, Sports, Jobs
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PHOTOS: Check out this skyscraper office kitted out with pandemic tech like ultraviolet lasers and cleansing torpedoes

PHOTOS: Check out this skyscraper office kitted out with pandemic tech like ultraviolet lasers and cleansing torpedoes Stephen Jones Some companies are going the extra mile to reassure workers that their offices are hygienic. Mitie, a UK outsourcer, equipped its headquarters with ultraviolet light sprays, stickers, and flippable coasters. Scroll on to take a tour. The battle over the office return is not only about remote work. Living through a pandemic has fundamentally changed how many see health and safety in the workplace. According to a Glassdoor-commissioned poll of 1,042 US workers in July 2021, 89% of respondents said they had concerns about returning to the office. Many of their worries centered on commuting and a lack of privacy, but 35% of these were directly concerned that they’d catch COVID-19 from their colleagues.

VCU technology could upend DNA sequencing for diagnosing certain DNA mutations

 E-Mail IMAGE: From left, postdoctoral scholar Andrey Mikheykin, Ph.D., Jason Reed, Ph.D., and postdoctoral fellow Sean Koebley, Ph.D., worked together on the study. view more  Credit: John Wallace, VCU Massey Cancer Center Doctors are increasingly using genetic signatures to diagnose diseases and determine the best course of care, but using DNA sequencing and other techniques to detect genomic rearrangements remains costly or limited in capabilities. However, an innovative breakthrough developed by researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center and the VCU Department of Physics promises to diagnose DNA rearrangement mutations at a fraction of the cost with improved accuracy.

VCU technology can turn DNA sequencing on its head for diagnosing certain DNA mutations

VCU technology can turn DNA sequencing on its head for diagnosing certain DNA mutations News Highlights: VCU technology can turn DNA sequencing on its head for diagnosing certain DNA mutations PICTURE: From left to right, postdoctoral researcher Andrey Mikheykin, Ph.D., Jason Reed, Ph.D., and postdoctoral fellow Sean Koebley, Ph.D., collaborated on the study. view more Credit: John Wallace, VCU Massey Cancer Center Physicians are increasingly using genetic signatures to diagnose diseases and determine the best care, but the use of DNA sequencing and other techniques to detect genomic rearrangements remains expensive or limited in scope. However, an innovative breakthrough developed by researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center and the VCU Department of Physics promises to diagnose DNA rearrangement mutations at a fraction of the cost with improved accuracy.

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