A clinical trial at the University of Kansas Medical Center is testing whether a wearable device that stimulates the brain and spinal cord with electromagnetic energy might one day help decrease disability after a stroke.
We hope to see you at Turner School District's Back to School Bash! This event will take place at Turner High School on Wednesday, July 27th from 2:00p - 5:30p.
"Sports play an important role in health and human flourishing. This is one of many reasons we enthusiastically support the World Cup coming to Kansas City in 2026."
More than halfway through his summer journey of 5,300+ miles across the United States, bicyclist Glenn Frommer caught his breath in Kansas City, Kansas, and met some of the researchers at the University of Kansas Medical Center working to cure his kidney disease.
KCKCC's 100 Stories (Originally published in Blue Devil Revel alumni newsletter Spring 2022): Jason Miles is a KCKCC/AVTS alum, graduating from the welding program in 1992.
Every year, one in five adults admitted to U.S. hospitals develop acute kidney injury (AKI), a serious condition in which the kidneys lose their ability to filter waste products from the blood.