With the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympic Games rapidly approaching, athletes around the world are preparing for their moment in the spotlight. Years of practice, hard work and dedication come together as competitors earn the international […]
With the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympic Games rapidly approaching, athletes around the world are preparing for their moment in the spotlight. Years of practice, hard work and dedication come together as competitors earn the international […]
As the college’s growing landscape creates more varied clinical opportunities for students, this expansion presents a challenge: how do you ensure students have vital mental health resources when they’re many miles away from campus?
André Kurmann, PhD, professor of Economics in Drexel University’s LeBow College of Business, spoke with The Drexel News Blog about what people can expect from the U.S. economy this year and what economic issues he’s keeping an eye on.
Having control over your own health through access to medical appointments, healthy foods, clean air and water, among other resources indeed fosters better health. It’s equally understandable that when an individual doesn’t have these, they are at risk for worse health. But simply believing that you don’t have control over your health could actually compound these problems, according to a recently published study from Drexel University researchers in the journal Psychology, Health & Medicine.