Katie Hinde

Did you know mother's milk was older than dinosaurs? Or that the "biological recipe" of mother's milk can differ for sons and daughters? Did you know that milk doesn't just provide the building blocks for infant development, but fuels infant behavior too? Hinde investigates the food, medicine, and signal of mother's milk. In addition to dozens of peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters, Hinde co-edited “Building Babies: Primate Developmental Trajectories in Proximate and Ultimate Perspective” released by Springer in 2013. Hinde is an associate editor and writer for SPLASH! Milk Science Update, executive council member for the International Society for Research in Human Milk and Lactation, and showcases research on mother’s milk, breastfeeding, and lactation for the general public, clinicians, and researchers at her blog “Mammals Suck… Milk!”

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Evolutionary Medicine: Microbes, Medicine, and Humanity's Quest for Survival (edX) EdX
Arizona State University,ASUx

Evolutionary Medicine: Microbes, Medicine, and Humanity's Quest for Survival (edX)

Explore the intricate connections between humans, microbes, and our evolutionary history in 'Evolutionary Medicine'. This groundbreaking course delves into how our ancient past shapes our present-day health issues, offering insights into diseases like cancer, flu, and allergies. Join us to understand why we get sick and how medicine can leverage this knowledge for better healthcare.

This course is archived
4 Weeks
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