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e-hälsolösningar för effektivare behandling av tuberkulos

Forskare har utvärderat effektiviteten av e-hälsolösningar för ökad följsamhet till behandling av tuberkulos och dess effekt på behandlingsresultaten. Bakom studien står bland andra epidemiolog Degu Jerene, som ingår i forskningsprogrammet eChildHealth och är knuten till forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa vid Lunds universitet. Framgångsrik behandling av tuberkulos är till stor del beroende

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet/230512 - 2025-12-13

På besök från University of Iceland

Gudrún Kristjánsdóttir och Runar Vilhjalmsson, professorer vid University of Iceland, Reykjavik, har delat med sig av sin expertis i forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa. Gudrún Kristjánsdóttir är professor i pediatrisk omvårdnad och Runar Vilhjalmsson professor i medicinsk sociologi. Från 21 april till 20 maj var de på plats i forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa vid Institutionen för häl

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet/230602 - 2025-12-13

Presenterar forskning om e-hälsa

Den 21-23 juni presenterade Inger Kristensson Hallström forskning om e-hälsa vid ”16th International Family Nursing Conference” i Dublin, Irland. Inger Kristensson Hallström är professor i pediatrisk omvårdnad vid Lunds universitet och forskargruppschef för forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa. Hon leder också forskningsprogrammet eChildHealth som handlar om att främja och bistå egenvård för b

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet/230714 - 2025-12-13

Presenterar forskningsresultat från eChildHealth

Forskare från eChildHealth, Mia Hylén och Pernilla Stenström har presenterat en studie vid Kirurgveckan i Örebro den 21-25 augusti. I studien har de tillsammans med forskarkollegor undersökt hur en e-hälsoapp i en e-platta kan underlätta kommunikationen mellan vårdpersonal och familj när barn med långvarig sjukdom lämnar sjukhuset. Studien visade att föräldrar som erhållit stöd från en e-platta, e

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet230915 - 2025-12-13

På besök från Arba Minch

Under fyra veckor i höst har Abayneh Tunje Tanga, från Arba Minch i Etiopien, varit på plats i forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa på Forum Medicum. Den 28 augusti presenterade han sin forskning vid U21 Doctoral Student Forum i Lund. Abayneh Tunje Tanga är doktorand i forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa under handledning av professor Inger Kristensson Hallström och epidemiolog Degu Jeren

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet231005 - 2025-12-13

Startskott för vårdutbildning i digital behandling av patienter

Innan sommaren tilldelades projektet Nordic Digital Health & Education (NorDigHE) miljonanslag från EU för att kompetensutveckla kliniker i digital behandling av patienter. NorDigHE ska använda sig av erfarenheter från eChildHealth som under de senaste åren utvecklat och testat nya så kallade Hospital-at-Home-modeller med särskilt lovande resultat. – Det är alltid roligt att få stora forskningsans

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet231013 - 2025-12-13

Utbyter idéer och erfarenheter

I oktober samlades forskare från forskningsprogrammet eChildHealth och forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa för att utbyta idéer och erfarenheter och diskutera vägen framåt. Forskargruppen Barns och familjers hälsa bedriver forskning inom pediatrisk vård och omsorg och e-hälsa. Fokus för forskning och utbildning är hur vård och omsorg för barn och unga vuxna med långvarig sjukdom och deras fam

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet231110 - 2025-12-13

Kommunikation viktig för implementering av e-hälsa i pediatrisk vård

Hur upplever hälso- och sjukvårdspersonal implementering av e-hälsa i pediatrisk vård? Det har forskare från forskningsprogrammet eChildHealth undersökt i en ny studie. Charlotte Castor är barnsjuksköterska och en av forskarna bakom studien. Hur genomförde ni studien?Vi genomförde intervjuer med medarbetare inom olika delar av barnsjukvården på Skånes universitetssjukhus, såväl chefer som kliniskt

https://www.barnfamiljhalsa.lu.se/nyhet - 2025-12-13

Rare pattern observed in migrating common swifts

Compared with other migratory birds, the common swift follows a very unusual pattern when it migrates from the breeding areas in Europe to its wintering locations south of the Sahara. This is what researchers have observed in a major eleven-year international study of the birds. “Our study is very significant for understanding how organisms, in this case the common swift, can migrate from one part

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/rare-pattern-observed-migrating-common-swifts - 2025-12-13

SEK 22,9 million for holistic approach on migratory birds

Professor Anders Hedenström receives SEK 22,9 million from Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. Together with his colleagues Susanne Åkesson and Christoffer Johansson he will take a holistic approach to the factors that affect migratory birds and their flight from one part of the world to another. The project runs over a 5-year period. For birds, flying takes a lot of energy. Therefore, it is ext

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/sek-229-million-holistic-approach-migratory-birds - 2025-12-13

High temperatures threaten the survival of insects

Insects have difficulties handling the higher temperatures brought on by climate change, and might risk overheating. The ability to reproduce is also strongly affected by rising temperatures, even in northern areas of the world, according to a new study from Lund University in Sweden. Insects cannot regulate their own body temperature, which is instead strongly influenced by the temperature in the

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/high-temperatures-threaten-survival-insects - 2025-12-13

Johannes is one of the most cited researchers in the world

Together with almost 6400 other researchers around the globe Johannes Rousk has been selected as Highly cited researcher 2020 by The Web of Science Group. Only about one per cent of the researchers within a scientific field are appointed. Johannes Rousk is proud. To be appointed is proof that your research is important and has reached out to peers who have found it useful and frequently cited you.

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/johannes-one-most-cited-researchers-world - 2025-12-13

Christmas goodies for birds

A lot of people feed birds in the winter, but what is good for them and what is not? Andreas Nord, bird researcher at the Department of Biology in Lund knows the answer. “Fat is a lot better than crumbs from bread, pastry and buns. Fat is energy, bread is empty calories,” he says.Saffron is a popular “Christmas spice” for baking. For quite some time there have been warnings on social media about f

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/christmas-goodies-birds - 2025-12-13

Butterfly wing clap explains mystery of flight

The fluttery flight of butterflies has so far been somewhat of a mystery to researchers, given their unusually large and broad wings relative to their body size. Now researchers at Lund University in Sweden have studied the aerodynamics of butterflies in a wind tunnel. The results suggest that butterflies use a highly effective clap technique, therefore making use of their unique wings. This helps

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/butterfly-wing-clap-explains-mystery-flight - 2025-12-13

Soldiers, snakes and marathon runners in the hidden world of fungi

Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have discovered the individual traits of fungi, and how their hyphae – that is, the fungal threads that grow in soil - behave very differently as they navigate through the earth’s microscopic labyrinths. The study was performed in a lab environment, and the underground system constructed synthetically from silicone. Using a microscope, researchers were able

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/soldiers-snakes-and-marathon-runners-hidden-world-fungi - 2025-12-13

Ostriches challenged by temperature fluctuations

The world's largest bird, the ostrich, has problems reproducing when the temperature deviates by 5 degrees or more from the ideal temperature of 20 °C. The research, from Lund University in Sweden, is published in Nature Communications. The results show that the females lay up to 40 per cent fewer eggs if the temperature has fluctuated in the days before laying eggs. Both male and female productio

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/ostriches-challenged-temperature-fluctuations - 2025-12-13

Why overfishing leads to smaller cod

Overfishing, hunting and intensive agriculture and forestry can sometimes contribute to plants and animals becoming endangered. New research from Lund University in Sweden and University of Toronto can now show why this leads to entire populations becoming smaller in size, as well as reproducing earlier. The study is published in the journal PNAS. Researchers from Lund and Toronto are behind the s

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/why-overfishing-leads-smaller-cod - 2025-12-13

Breakthrough in the fight against spruce bark beetles

For the first time, a research team led by Lund University in Sweden has mapped out exactly what happens when spruce bark beetles use their sense of smell to find trees and partners to reproduce with. The hope is that the results will lead to better pest control and protection of the forest in the future. The Eurasian spruce bark beetle uses its sense of smell to locate trees and partners. The odo

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/breakthrough-fight-against-spruce-bark-beetles - 2025-12-13

Bird parents that receive help live longer

Long life is common among bird parents that get help with childcare. This finding comes from researchers at the universities of Lund and Oxford who reviewed data from more than 9,000 studies. Being a parent can be tough. In general, animals that care for many offspring die young, at least in species where parents are not helped by others. However, in some species things are different and parents r

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/bird-parents-receive-help-live-longer - 2025-12-13

A warmer climate is making the world’s most common bumblebee even more common

Many species of bee are threatened by global warming, but not all. The buff-tailed bumblebee is the world’s most common bee and will likely remain that way, as researchers from Lund University have discovered that this species benefits from a warmer climate. Through research into buff-tailed bumblebees collected by amateurs and researchers over a period of 150 years, biologists and climate researc

https://www.biology.lu.se/article/warmer-climate-making-worlds-most-common-bumblebee-even-more-common - 2025-12-13