HHS News

Featured Stories & News

Featured Stories

  • Professor’s Mural Affirms Humanity of Black Boys, Men

    Professor’s Mural Affirms Humanity of Black Boys, Men

    Dr. Jocelyn Smith Lee in Human Development and Family Studies and her team have launched their narrative change campaign, In All Ways Human, in Baltimore, Maryland. The results of their work bring hope in the aftermath of Covid, skyrocketing gun violence, and the visible loss of Black lives to police violence.


  • Exercise May be Key to Cancer Therapy

    Exercise May be Key to Cancer Therapy

    A dozen mice keeping pace on a half-pint treadmill could be a key to prolonging the lives of cancer patients and others with chronic diseases.


  • Kinesiology Alumna Shows Others the Magic of Gate City

    Kinesiology Alumna Shows Others the Magic of Gate City

    When you crisscross the country, you make a lot of connections. April Albritton ’06 traveled to Seattle and back to Greensboro as she explored the connection between sports and business.


  • Kinesiology Alumna Focuses on Patient’s Journey

    Kinesiology Alumna Focuses on Patient’s Journey

    Part of the job of a physical therapist is asking patients about their goals. “I can’t arbitrarily make up goals if that’s not what is important to them,” says Dr. Kelly Oschwald ’12. “I’m focusing the treatment on what’s important to the patient.”


  • Program engages bilingual kids in science

    Program engages bilingual kids in science

    Sitting criss-cross in a circle, five preschoolers reach out to touch pieces of fabric their teacher spreads in front of them. As the children pat the leather, denim, and cotton, she starts a conversation about which they like best. “Do you wear clothes that feel like these fabrics?” she asks.


  • Peace and Conflict Professor Delivers Ambedkar Memorial Lecture at Tata Institute for Social Sciences in Mumbai

    Peace and Conflict Professor Delivers Ambedkar Memorial Lecture at Tata Institute for Social Sciences in Mumbai

    Peace and Conflict Studies Associate Professor Dr. Jeremy A. Rinker, who recently received a Fulbright-Nehru Scholar Program Award, spent the spring semester 2023 teaching and researching on caste conflict in Pune city, Maharashtra State, India.


  • Public Health Education Major Begins New Tradition

    Public Health Education Major Begins New Tradition

    “Everyday there’s something going on in our world that will need attention from public health workers. I want to be a part of helping,” says Jasmine Riddle, who will receive her bachelor of science in community health education this May.


  • GCSTOP Saves Lives While Teaching Students Lessons

    GCSTOP Saves Lives While Teaching Students Lessons

    GCSTOP is a partnership program between UNC Greensboro and Guilford County that began in 2018, and is focused on harm reduction. This includes supplying participants with naloxone to reverse an opioid overdose, providing clean syringes, the distribution of safe supplies for injections, handing out condoms, and distributing food and clothing.


  • HHS Remembers Trailblazer Jo Safrit

    HHS Remembers Trailblazer Jo Safrit

    Margaret JoAnne “Jo” Safrit was known for her intelligence, loyalty, and kindness. She was also known for her longtime love of UNCG. Safrit was a pioneer and an expert in the profession, writing two books on quantitative measurement that have been used for decades.


  • Nutrition Department Research Yields Clues in COVID Severity

    Nutrition Department Research Yields Clues in COVID Severity

    The baffling discrepancies in severity of COVID-19 infections just caught a break thanks to two UNCG researcher-led studies published this winter. Though separate in scope and methods, each came to a conclusion that supports the other’s work: the level of dietary selenium intake is directly related to immune response to COVID.


  • HDFS Program Inspired Perry to Become a Child Developmental Scientist

    HDFS Program Inspired Perry to Become a Child Developmental Scientist

    “The greatest job to me is to be able to be curious about something and to pursue it,” says Dr. Nicole Perry ’13, ’16. That curiosity is what led her to research children’s emotional control. It’s what attracted her to the work that UNC Greensboro’s research professors were doing in Human Development and Family Studies…


  • Believe in the G 2023!

    Believe in the G 2023!

    The School of Health & Human Sciences offers unique learning experiences to a diverse group of students. You can lend a helping hand by supporting HHS with a gift of any size, posting on social media, competing in the challenges, getting friends involved, and wearing blue and gold. #BelieveInTheG.


  • Social Work Student Passes Along Life Lessons to Help Peers

    Social Work Student Passes Along Life Lessons to Help Peers

    Rajendra Roopchan says finding someone to talk to is more important to a college student than finding someone who has all the answers. “Having a person or a community to suggest, ‘You can do this’ or ‘These are your options’ is a phenomenal resource to have.”


  • Gerontology Hallway Exemplifies Creativity in Older Adults

    Gerontology Hallway Exemplifies Creativity in Older Adults

    The hallway on the second floor of the Ferguson Building is no longer a drab entrance with old posters. Assistant Professor Dr. Elise Eifert created a new way to draw attention to how engaged senior citizens can be while adding color to the building.


  • CTR Alum Returns to Greensboro to Make an Impact

    CTR Alum Returns to Greensboro to Make an Impact

    “Greensboro feels like home,” says alumnus Phil Fleischmann ’05 MS, who recently returned to Greensboro in his new role as the City of Greensboro Parks and Recreation Director. “I’ve spent most of my adult life here, and I value the diversity of our city and the variety of available opportunities.”


News

  • Kinesiology Professor Shares Benefits of Sports on Kids

    Kinesiology Professor Shares Benefits of Sports on Kids

    Activity like riding a bike “triggers hormonal releases, including endorphins that promote our brain health ― reducing stress and improving sleep ― and cognitive function, enhancing the ability to think,” Alan Chu, certified mental performance consultant and associate professor of applied sport psychology at the University of North Carolina at…


  • Happy first week of Classes!

    Happy first week of Classes!

    Welcome to UNCG and the School of Health and Human Sciences! We’re happy to have you here. Please find below a list of useful links to campus resources that you may need throughout the semester.


  • Former Nutrition professor shares memories of Liberia

    Former Nutrition professor shares memories of Liberia

    Former UNCG alumna and Department of Nutrition Professor Burgin Ross served in Liberia with the Peace Corps, and learned a lot while there.


  • Communication Sciences & Disorders Alumna Debuts Movie on Understudied Brain Disorder

    Communication Sciences & Disorders Alumna Debuts Movie on Understudied Brain Disorder

    CSD alumna (’14) Dr. Jamilia Mijnga, Ph.D, CCC-SLP, knew that her debut documentary about the understudied communication disorder that can follow after right hemisphere brain damage, or RHD, was bound to stimulate everyone’s tear ducts.


  • Kinesiology Alumna Named N.C. Athletic Director of the Year

    Kinesiology Alumna Named N.C. Athletic Director of the Year

    “My job is to support our student-athletes and our coaches,” said Stephanie Wilkerson, athletic director at Olympic High School in Charlotte. “I won’t get it right every time. I’m still learning. I don’t think I’ll ever feel that I’ve ‘arrived.’”


  • GCSTOP Director Discusses New Overdose Concern

    GCSTOP Director Discusses New Overdose Concern

    Michael Thull, who has seen an increase in xylazine in Greensboro, said the usage of the drug restricts the blood vessels and circulation, which causes wounds that can takes months to heal.


  • Social Work Alumna recognized as 2023 Outstanding Americans by Choice Recipient

    Social Work Alumna recognized as 2023 Outstanding Americans by Choice Recipient

    Liana Adrong recently received the 2023 Outstanding Americans by Choice award from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for her work. One of nine children who came to the U.S. from Vietnam, she is passionate about her Montagnard-Ede heritage.


  • Dr. Hunter Given Leader in Diversity Award

    Dr. Hunter Given Leader in Diversity Award

    Human Development and Family Studies Professor Dr. Andrea Hunter is one of 15 people selected by the Triad Business Journal as a 2023 Leader in Diversity.


  • Kinesiology Professor Receives Award from National Organization

    Kinesiology Professor Receives Award from National Organization

    Dr. Jaclyn Maher is the 2023 recipient of the Early Career Distinguished Scholar Award by the North American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity.


  • Dr. Perrin Sees Hope with Lab-Grown Milk

    Dr. Perrin Sees Hope with Lab-Grown Milk

    Dr. Maryanne Perrin was recently interviewed for CNBC’s story “Lab-grown breast milk startup Biomilq aims to change infant nutrition — if it can release a product”. Scientists have recreated the sugar and protein found in human breast milk, which could positively change how infants are fed. “The technology has the…


  • GCSTOP Director Thull discusses need of program in Triad

    GCSTOP Director Thull discusses need of program in Triad

    Guilford County Solution to the Opioid Problem, or GCSTOP, is a partnership between Guilford County Emergency Services and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro that provides education and outreach about the opioid epidemic.


  • Office of Research Assistant Dean Receives UNCG Award

    Office of Research Assistant Dean Receives UNCG Award

    UNC Greensboro is excited to announce this year’s winners of the 2023 Gladys Strawn Bullard Award. The Bullard Award is given in recognition of those students, faculty, and staff members who have shown commendable initiative and perseverance in their leadership and/or service roles at the University.


  • Nutrition Professor Becomes UNCG’s First RTI University Scholar

    Nutrition Professor Becomes UNCG’s First RTI University Scholar

    Congratulations to Dr. Jigna Dharod for becoming UNCG’s FIRST RTI University Scholar! Dr. Dharod will focus her research to better understand how food insecurity affects infant feeding practices.


  • Professor Smith Lee weighs in on recent mass shootings

    Professor Smith Lee weighs in on recent mass shootings

    “A quarter of Americans actually changed their life because of mass shootings,” Dr. Lee said. “They don’t go to malls anymore; They don’t go on trips. This fear has fundamentally changed a lot of people’s lives.”


  • Winners of the 2023 staff and faculty awards!