Skip to content

News archive

  • Elderly people with few antibodies may need an extra dose of vaccine

    The new mRNA vaccines have just as good a protective effect against COVID-19 for the very oldest as for younger people. This is evident in a study at Umeå University, where researchers have followed individuals in special housing around Sweden. However, the study shows that elderly people with a low antibody response after vaccination were at increased risk of dying in the omicron variants of the

  • © Emma AdBåge, from her picture book Såret [The Wound]

    Bildmuseet: Swedish Picture Book of the Year / The Wound

    Emma AdBåges’s Såret [The Wound] has been awarded the Snöbollen [Snowball] prize for Swedish Picture Book of the Year. Bildmuseet’s exhibition of original illustrations from the winning book will open on Friday 26 May, and journalists are welcome to contact us for a preview and presentation.

  • Anders Sunna, Torne STYX (detail), 2021. Courtesy of Angelika Knäpper Gallery. © Anders Sunna / Bildupphovsrätt 2023.

    Bildmuseet: Down North / Contemporary Art in the Arctic

    On 26 May, Bildmuseet in Sweden opens an exhibition with works by thirty contemporary artists from the Arctic regions of the world, a collaboration with art museums in Island and USA. As a journalist, you are welcome to contact us for a press preview of the exhibition.

  • The master's degree show from Umeå Academy of Fine Arts will run at Bildmuseet from 26 May – 20 August, 2023.

    Bildmuseet: I Cut across the Stream / Umeå Academy of Fine Arts

    I Cut across the Stream is the title of this year’s master's degree show from Umeå Academy of Fine Arts, Sweden. It will open at Bildmuseet on 26 May with an Art Friday event. Welcome to the press preview on Wednesday, 24 May from 10:00–11:00 (R.S.V.P). The artists will be there to present their works.

  • Björn Schröder, researcher at Department of Molecular Microbiology, affiliated to Molecular Infection Medicine Sweden, and Fabiola Puertolas Balint, doctoral student at Department of Molecular Microbiology. Image: Mattias Pettersson.

    Diet has a bigger say on gut microbes than the intestinal defence molecules

    Researchers at Umeå University, Sweden, have found that among the many factors that shape the intestinal microbiota composition, diet has a much stronger impact than defensins, which are intestinal defence molecules produced by the body. Instead, they identified a possible role for these molecules in preventing increased blood glucose levels after consumption of high-caloric “Western-style diet”.

  • Photo: Fredrik Larsson / Visit Umeå

    The design world turns its gaze towards Umeå

    Umeå Institute of Design’s popular graduation event at the end of May is paired this year with Sweden's largest design competition – Design S - Swedish Design Awards – as it travels to Umeå. For the first time in 40 years, the prestigious event is venturing beyond the nation’s capital.

  • Different cell types in the brain are affected by tick infection

    Different cell types in the brain are affected by tick infection

    The dreaded tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) virus infects different types of brain cells in different parts of the brain, depending on whether the affected person's immune system is activated or not. This is shown in a new study at Umeå University, Sweden.

  • Severe obesity riskier for Swedish than American men

    Severe obesity riskier for Swedish than American men

    The fact that obesity is a major risk factor for disease and death is well known, as is that obesity is more common in the United States than in Europe. On the other hand, a new thesis at Umeå University shows that obese Swedish men are at greater risk of dying prematurely than equally obese American men. For women, however, the risk picture of obesity is similar in the countries.

  •   Professor Felipe Cava and doktoral student Michael Gilmore, Department of Molecular Biology. Image: Mattias Pettersson.

    New transporter for recycling of bacterial cell wall found

    A transporter which some bacteria use to recycle fragments of their cell wall has been discovered by researchers at Umeå university, Sweden. They found that the transporter controls resistance to certain kinds of cell-wall targeting antibiotics.

Show more