BioSTL names new leader for BioGenerator Ventures, its investment arm
In the News

BioSTL names new leader for BioGenerator Ventures, its investment arm

BioSTL, the biosciences economic development organization, has named a new leader for its investment arm. The organization said this week that Dr. James McCarter, a Washington University-trained physician and biologist, has been named a senior vice president of BioSTL and senior managing director of BioGenerator Ventures.

WashU professor on the importance of breast cancer screenings
In the News

WashU professor on the importance of breast cancer screenings

Dr. Katherine Weilbaecher was concerned about the trends. As an oncologist at WashU Medicine specializing in metastatic breast cancer, she noticed Black patients from North County were coming to her office with more advanced cancers. She recently created a mammography clinic targeted to the high-risk population to find those cancers earlier and ensure patients receive follow-up care.

Indian Americans aren’t a monolithic voting bloc in St. Louis. Here’s why
In the News

Indian Americans aren’t a monolithic voting bloc in St. Louis. Here’s why

Although Vice President Kamala Harris is the first-ever Indian American candidate to win a major party’s nomination for the U.S. presidency, it would be wrong to assume she has “the Indian American vote” among St. Louisans — or anywhere else in the country — locked in. Harris’ historic candidacy has, however, ignited conversations about Indian Americans and voting. This is especially important in St. Louis because U.S. Census data show Indians make up the fastest-growing immigrant population in the St. Louis region, and second in the nation overall. Three Indian Americans in St. Louis including Jacob Chacko, executive director of Washington University’s Center of Diversity & Inclusion, spoke with St. Louis on the Air about their lives in the Midwest and how politics have played a role.

Washington U: Salary, career growth vital to keep grads in St. Louis
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Washington U: Salary, career growth vital to keep grads in St. Louis

Washington University in St. Louis is releasing a report on retaining college graduates in the city. Salary is the main determinant of whether graduates stay or leave, according to a study by WashU’s Center for Analytics and Business Insights. Social connections and career advancement opportunities are the next two most important factors.

Washington University exceeds $1B in annual external research funding
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Washington University exceeds $1B in annual external research funding

External research funding at Washington University has nearly doubled in 10 years, from $532 million in fiscal 2014 to more than $1 billion now, the first time annual funding from federal agencies, foundations, donors and other external sources has reached into 10 digits.

One year in, Olin Dean notes growth in WashU’s flexible, executive MBA programs
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One year in, Olin Dean notes growth in WashU’s flexible, executive MBA programs

In just over a year as dean of Washington University’s Olin Business School officially, Mike Mazzeo has presided over the creation of a new flexible master’s in business administration program that has seen 25% growth over the part-time programs it replaced and 20% growth in the school’s executive MBA program. The results, he said, fit into Olin’s strategic strengths: education contoured to the local business community’s needs, including the two part-time, non-traditional MBA programs.

Prep Work
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Prep Work

With Top Tutors For Us, founder and WashU alum Angelica Harris is helping Black high school students build academic skills and improve college admissions test scores in St. Louis and across the U.S.

St. Louis Children’s Hospital offers free lockboxes to curb rising overdoses, suicides
In the News

St. Louis Children’s Hospital offers free lockboxes to curb rising overdoses, suicides

St. Louis Children’s Hospital will provide 1,000 free lockboxes over the next year to patients at risk of suicide or poisonings, both of which are increasingly taking the lives of Missouri children. “A locked box can be crucial to protecting older children, who may impulsively take medications as a form of self-harm or by accident,” said Dr. Lindsay Clukies, a Washington University emergency medicine physician at St. Louis Children’s Hospital.

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