Space mission to investigate drug treatment for age-related muscle loss
University of Florida researchers will send a tissue-chip experiment to the International Space Station on Nov. 21 to investigate whether a drug compound made鈥�

Director of Communications, College of Pharmacy
University of Florida researchers will send a tissue-chip experiment to the International Space Station on Nov. 21 to investigate whether a drug compound made鈥�
Pancreatic cancer often lurks as a silent disease. With no known symptoms, it can progress undetected and spread to other organs. According to the National鈥�
Peter Swaan, Ph.D., M.Pharm., a distinguished university professor and internationally recognized researcher in the pharmaceutical sciences, has been named the鈥�
More than 900 million women and their partners worldwide use contraceptive products to prevent pregnancies. However, many contraceptive users may not realize鈥�
Lisa Miller, Pharm.D., M.A., a licensed pharmacist with nearly two decades of experience working in academic pharmacy, has been appointed as a clinical鈥�
The University of Florida College of Pharmacy moved up two places to No. 3 in the nation for total research funding in the latest American Association of鈥�
The University of Florida College of Pharmacy and the American Pharmacists Association, or APhA, announced a new partnership today that will allow pharmacists鈥�
In a review of more than 3 million pregnancies, University of Florida researchers found 1 in 16 women were exposed to harmful teratogenic drugs 鈥� medications鈥�
University of Florida researchers have developed a new genomics-based score to deliver more personalized and effective chemotherapy treatments to pediatric鈥�
University of Florida researchers have developed a new compound that simultaneously attacks two key proteins critical for a cancer cell鈥檚 survival, a discovery鈥�
A University of Florida-led study of nearly 2 million Americans found that one in three individuals lack proper blood pressure control, with health disparities鈥�
University of Florida researchers are developing a new artificial intelligence tool that will help clinicians identify patients at high risk for opioid use鈥�