| CIGH Human and Planetary Health Newsletter

HPH News: Fall courses, events, and more

| CIGH Human and Planetary Health Newsletter

HPH News: New faces & sustainable health care

  • Reminder about new human & planetary health faces on campus this fall – …

| CIGH Human and Planetary Health Newsletter

HPH News: Will the rest of the world listen in time?

  • Woods announces 2022 Environmental Venture Projects & Realizing Environmental Innovation Program Grant recipients.
  • "The…

| CIGH Human and Planetary Health Newsletter

HPH News: Conservation & health win-wins

  • New article in Lancet co-authored by Stanford's Giulio De Leo, Lisa Mandle, Isabel Jones, Laura Kwong, Chris LeBoa,…

| CIGH Human and Planetary Health Newsletter

HPH News: Climate financing, infectious disease, food systems

  • Stanford's Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR) releases policy brief that calls for climate financing…

| CIGH Human and Planetary Health Newsletter

HPH News: Seed grant awardees, heat, and the climate emergency and Climate pledge, NIH opportunity, new reports

  • CIGH announces 2022 seed grant awardees – including some human & planetary health-related…

| Stanford Center for Innovation in Global Health

8th Annual Stanford Global Health Research Convening moved to April 18, 2022

The 8th Annual Stanford Global Health Research Convening will be held in-person on Monday, April 18, 2022 from 9:00 AM – 2:00 PM PT at the Arrillaga Alumni Center on Stanford University campus. The Convening is a…

| Stanford Center for Innovation in Global Health

Planetary Health Postdoctoral Fellowship

Executive Summary

Launched in 2020, the Stanford University Center for Innovation in Global Health and Woods Institute for the Environment and the…

| California Academy of Sciences

Protected by Prawns

Restoring native crustaceans along West Africa’s Senegal River may be a critical step in controlling one of the world’s deadliest tropical diseases. Our research is featured in this new video by California Academy of Sciences.

| Stanford News

Reducing tapeworm infection could improve academic performance, reduce poverty, Stanford research suggests

A Stanford-led study in China has revealed for the first time high levels of a potentially fatal tapeworm infection, Taenia solium, among school-age children. This study, led by Stanford's John Openshaw, was recently published in