Ene. 29, 2021
Newsletter: Recapping Two Years of Research
Whole Communities–Whole Health hosts its first ever research showcase, highlighting the important work we've been doing the last two years.
kids
Sept. 30, 2020
U.S. Kids Struggle to Keep Moving
To protect ourselves and others during the COVID-19 pandemic, most of us have had to shift our everyday lives to our homes. This has led to a steep drop in the amount of physical activity our kids are getting. 
Stairs with direction arrow
Sept. 30, 2020
Forging Ahead While Tackling a Pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic has introduced obstacles to all aspects of life. Whole Communities–Whole Health it sprinting toward the launch of its 5-year cohort study. However, our teams have met the challenges of our changing world by engaging in research that will directly effect people amid the pandemic. 
Henry Rossiter
Ago. 26, 2020
New App Will Assist Students’ Safe Return to Campus this Fall
The Protect Texas Together app will allow people to track their COVID-19 symptoms, record test results, get connected to medical resources and — potentially, in the future — even assist in contact tracing.
smart home beacon
Mayo 10, 2020
Real Health in Real Time
This story highlights how we’re committed to developing technology that puts information about indoor air quality into the hands of the people who can use it most.
street art
Oct. 3, 2019
A Year in Pursuit of a Grand Challenge
David Schnyer is the inaugural faculty chair of Whole Communities –Whole Health. The team is partnering with families, schools, and community organizations in Central Texas to build a more complete picture of health. A year into the quest, Schnyer reflects on the team’s progress and looks to the road ahead.
people holding hands
Sept. 17, 2019
The Heart of the Matter: Why Relationships Belong in Research
For scientists, building relationships means getting out of our heads and into our hearts. It means bringing our full self to the way we go about our quest to understand the world.
student lunch meal
Nov. 27, 2018
Children Are Researchers, Too
Children have a remarkable understanding of the things around them that affect their health and their community’s wellbeing. Although they may not have the language to describe it, young children and adolescents feel and experience injustice and inequity; however, their voices are often silenced or dismissed as juvenile.
garden
Oct. 18, 2018
Making Research Useful in Real-Time
Sharing data in real time to research project participants makes it easier to see how a research project could actually contribute to improving people’s health.
kid
Oct. 16, 2018
Giving You the Whole Picture
All scientists want to better the human condition, and they struggle with how to share research findings in ways that help people make changes quickly. It’s hard to take complicated ideas and make them easier to understand, but that’s exactly what we have to do.