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New Work Design for Health framework offers viable directions for improving employee health, well-being

The "Work Design for Health" framework developed by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and MIT Sloan School of Management researchers maps how to create work environments that foster worker health and well-being.

Work Design for Health framework and toolkit developed by researchers at Harvard Chan School and MIT Sloan School of Management offers employers effective alternative to employee wellness programs | News

Work Design for Health framework and toolkit developed by researchers at Harvard Chan School and MIT Sloan School of Management offers employers effective alternative to employee wellness programs | News
harvard.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from harvard.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Harvard s climate action plan

neutral by 2026 By 2026 we will prioritize aggressive reductions of our campus energy use and strive to offset or neutralize any remaining greenhouse gas emissions by investing in off-campus projects such as renewable energy. Harvard will engage its researchers and industry climate leaders to identify and, where feasible, invest in projects that credibly reduce emissions while providing other positive benefits for human health, social equity, and ecosystem health. As part of our climate strategy, our facilities leaders and building managers aggressively pursue energy efficiency. Explore our progress How are we addressing Scope 3 emissions? We are continuing our work to track and quantify the fossil fuel emissions associated with our supply chain for purchased goods or services that support campus operations. Once the magnitude of these so-called Scope 3 emissions are better known for areas such as food, air travel, and commuting, the University will set targets fo

Challenging the lateral-to-sagittal shift in mammalian locomotion

Challenging the lateral-to-sagittal shift in mammalian locomotion Just because they kind of look like reptiles, does that mean they moved like reptiles? For a long time scientists thought so. Nonmammalian synapsids, the extinct forerunners to mammals, like living reptiles, had limbs splayed out to the side instead of beneath like today’s mammals. So scientists believed that they must have also moved in similar ways, with spines more suited to the side-to-side flexing of a sashaying lizard instead of the up-and-down bending typical of a mammal in motion. It was thought that, over time, and in response to selective pressures, the mammal spine must have evolved to its present state. The transition is known as the lateral-to-sagittal paradigm.

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