Thursday, March 19, 2026

 

Researcher to examine complex condition affecting many South Carolinians during pregnancy





Arnold School of Public Health





Health promotion, education, and behavior assistant professor Leila Larson conducts her nutrition-focused maternal and child health research all over the world, and South Carolinians will soon benefit from her expertise. With funding from the USC Collaborative for Health Equity Research (CHEER), an equity-driven pilot project program recently established by the USC Office of the Provost, Larson has launched a new study focused on pica (i.e., the craving and consumption of non-food items, like ice, and sometimes earth, like clay or soil).

“Pica impacts pregnant women across the globe, including women in the U.S.  – particularly those in African American, Hispanic and rural populations,” says Larson. “Complications of prenatal pica include anemia, abnormal gestational weight gain, high blood pressure, negative birth outcomes, and other adverse effects, but despite these serious consequences, pica continues to be undiagnosed and underreported.” 

Though understudied and extremely complex, scientists and clinicians suspect that one of the primary causes of pica is the deficiency of certain micronutrients, such as iron. Ironically, individuals with pica experience an urge to consume non-food items (e.g., soil, clay, baking powder, soap, cornstarch, chalk, paper products), which often fail to fill the nutrient gaps while also worsening the deficiencies by reducing absorption of nutrients and exacerbating unwanted health outcomes by potentially introducing toxins, heavy metals, parasites, and other dangerous substances to both mother and fetus.

In many parts of the world, pica is common and expected as it has long been seen as a normal part of pregnancy. In other areas, however, women hesitate to report their pica cravings and behaviors due to feelings of shame and fear of being stigmatized.

Only two studies have examined pica in populations in the U.S. in the last 25 years. In California, researchers found that 51% of Hispanic women had the condition. North Carolina scientists discovered that 38% of rural women had pica during pregnancy, yet 75% of the participants had no documentation of the condition in their medical records.

“Pica is viewed as a cultural practice, as well as a biological response to nutritional deficiencies, infection or stress,” Larson says. “But with so little research on the topic, we just don’t know enough about its prevalence, causes or impacts on pregnant women and their babies.”

Building on her pica research in Malawi, which showed a reduction in consumption of earth when iron supplementation was provided, Larson’s new study will shed light on which South Carolinians are most impacted by pica, what primarily causes pica in these populations, and how pregnant people experience pica in their everyday lives. By understanding their behaviors, perspectives, and experiences, the research team’s long-term goal is to develop culturally relevant screening and treatment protocols that can be used by health care providers in the Palmetto state and beyond. 

Larson’s study brings together a team of clinical, community, and research experts to explore this ubiquitous yet poorly understood condition. Consistent engagement with the study’s Community Advisory Board will provide a much-needed perspective on the project’s research approaches, study materials, dissemination, and much more.

“The cultural roots and high prevalence of prenatal anemia in the Southern United States makes pica a critical public health issue for this region,” Larson says. “With this initial pilot project, we hope to lay the groundwork for a longer, more extensive study aimed at understanding the risk factors, behaviors, and clinical impacts associated with this condition, and how we might improve it using community-engaged research approaches.”

 

New study moves beyond food security to advance nutrition security by bolstering SNAP incentive programs




Arnold School of Public Health





Exercise science assistant professor Elizabeth Adams is using her expertise in healthy dietary patterns among children and families to lead a five-year study focused on improving nutrition through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). With support from a $3.2 million National Institutes of Health grant, Adams is working to increase SNAP recipients’ use of fruit and vegetable incentive programs to improve long-term wellness and reduce health care costs.

Across the United States, more than 34 million individuals (nine million of them children) experience food insecurity, which is strongly linked to suboptimal diet quality and its increased risk of chronic diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, cancer, obesity, and heart disease. Families with food insecurity incur 20% higher health care spending – contributing to the estimated $1.1 trillion in annual costs to the U.S. economy derived from suboptimal dietary patterns.

As the largest federal nutrition assistance program, SNAP provides monthly benefits for purchasing eligible food items to over 40 million Americans, approximately half of whom are food insecure. Though intended to help low-income individuals and families afford a nutritionally adequate diet, previous research has shown that SNAP recipients have lower fruit and vegetable intake compared to both income-eligible non-participants and higher-income families. The high cost of fruits and vegetables is often cited as a barrier to its procurement and consumption, which has led to incentive programs aimed at reducing this expense.

“There are several policies and programs designed to reduce food insecurity, but for greater impact, we need to simultaneously work towards nutrition security,” Adams says. “This means increasing equitable access to nutrient-rich foods like fruits and vegetables over calorie-dense foods like sugary beverages and ultra processed snacks, which may provide sufficient calories but very little nutritional value.”

While SNAP is a national-level initiative, the various incentive programs aimed at redirecting food selections to healthier options are funded by federal grants, state, local and tribal governments as well as private retailers, both for- and non-profit organizations. Prior research has shown that the programs do increase fruit and vegetable consumption, and simulation studies show the potential to save billions in health care costs.

In South Carolina, the SNAP Healthy Bucks program offers fruits and vegetables at half price or less at partnering locations (e.g., farmers markets, community food organizations). For example, at FoodShare, SNAP recipients can use their EBT card to purchase 15-18lb boxes of fruits and vegetables for only $5 (normally $20) or 18-22lb boxes for $10 (usually $25). Though this program addresses the high-cost barrier of purchasing fruits and vegetables, many SNAP recipients do not take advantage of it. Adams’ initial pilot study, funded by the USC Prisma Health Seed Grant Program, revealed that fewer than 25% of eligible families knew about the SNAP Healthy Bucks program.

To address this knowledge gap, Adams and her team at the Research Center for Child Well-Being and Arnold Healthy Kids Initiative are partnering with pediatric clinics who serve large patient populations to increase awareness of the SNAP Healthy Bucks program among families who are receiving SNAP benefits and who experience food insecurity. As trusted sources of health information who already conduct social determinants of health screenings and make referrals to programs like SNAP, pediatricians are perfectly positioned yet underutilized partners for promoting fruit and vegetable incentive programs.

Adams’ team will train pediatricians to educate eligible patients about the SNAP Healthy Bucks program. Each family will then be randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1) those who receive education as well as vouchers for a free trial of the program and 8 months of free home delivery on all fruit and vegetable boxes ordered and 2) those who receive only education but still have access to the incentive program.

By collecting follow-up information with these families, the researchers will determine whether the free trial and free home delivery improves parent and child dietary quality and household nutrition security. They will also assess the intervention’s effectiveness in increasing participation in the SNAP Healthy Bucks program and barriers and facilitators to its implementation and sustainability.

“Interventions like these can improve nutrition for children and families – making their SNAP benefits go further while improving health,” Adams says. “The concept of nutrition security serves as a promising framework to reduce food insecurity and health care costs, while improving diet quality and promoting health equity.”

 

UBC study links artificial turf fields to lethal chemical threat for salmon





University of British Columbia
Katie Moloney, PhD student at UBC 

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Katie Moloney, PhD student at UBC

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Credit: Lou Bosshart/UBC





new study from the University of British Columbia has found that artificial turf fields across Metro Vancouver leach 6PPD-quinone, a chemical known to kill coho salmon, into municipal stormwater systems—and the contamination persists long after the fields are installed.

Researchers traced the pollution to crumb rubber infill made from recycled tires, a material widely used on synthetic turf fields. The team found it consistently released 6PPD-quinone and other contaminants across fields of different ages.

“An average turf field contains about 125 tonnes of crumb rubber, roughly 20,000 tires,” said Katie Moloney, a PhD student in environmental engineering in UBC’s Scholes Lab. “With fields typically lasting a decade or more, they can become long-term sources of tire-derived pollution entering stormwater pipes, and ultimately fish-bearing waterways—frequently without treatment.”

The project began after streamkeepers in North Vancouver contacted the researchers in late 2023, reporting that crumb rubber was washing off a nearby turf field. Dead coho had also been found in an adjacent stream.

“We already knew this chemical washes off tire debris on roads and can kill salmon,” Moloney said. “It made sense to ask whether fields using the same material might be doing something similar.”

Supervised by civil engineering assistant professor Dr. Rachel Scholes, the team collected infill samples from 12 turf fields—nine containing crumb rubber and three using alternative materials—and analyzed which chemicals leached into water. They also collected drainage during three rainstorms from an operating field.

Toxic releases throughout a field’s life

Drainage from one monitored field showed 6PPD-quinone concentrations exceeding levels lethal to juvenile coho salmon, even though the field’s infill was more than six years old. While runoff is often diluted before reaching streams, researchers say the greatest risk is likely in smaller watersheds or where multiple fields drain into the same outfall.

Tests also identified numerous compounds not listed in regulatory inventories of tire ingredients, possibly due to chemicals transferred by field users and weather-driven changes in the rubber over time. Heavy metals such as zinc and copper—both harmful to aquatic life—were detected consistently.

“Every time it rains, these fields release a mix of chemicals into the drainage system,” Moloney said. “That needs to be taken seriously.”

Potential treatments and trade-offs

Because turf fields drain through fixed pipe networks, the researchers say stormwater treatment is feasible. A 2023 study from the same UBC group showed that passing stormwater through a planted soil filter can reduce 6PPD-quinone concentrations by roughly 10-fold.

The team also found that non-rubber infills released fewer contaminants, but tend to be more expensive. Some natural materials, such as cork, can freeze in winter, limiting year-round play. Phasing out crumb rubber also raises questions about how to manage the millions of tires currently recycled into turf production.

Tire pollution under growing scrutiny

The findings arrive as governments increase scrutiny of tire-derived pollution. The European Union has already banned the sale of crumb rubber under broader microplastics regulations, setting a phaseout in motion.

“Our research shows a clear need to address contaminant release from turf fields,” said Dr. Scholes. “These data can help guide decisions on field design and stormwater treatment to protect aquatic ecosystems.”

The research was supported by the BC Salmon Restoration and Innovation Fund.

Interview language(s): English (Moloney, Scholes)


Researchers examined leaching from crumb rubber infill

Credit

Lou Bosshart/UBC

 

New method improves how scientists measure water behavior in biochar-amended soils




Biochar Editorial Office, Shenyang Agricultural University
Dynamic contact angle as a new metric for the water repellency evaluation of biochar-amended soil 

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Dynamic contact angle as a new metric for the water repellency evaluation of biochar-amended soil

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Credit: Wei Jing, Mingjie Su, Kai Yang, Qilin Kang, Yaoming Li, Wei Li, Kun Zhang & Jiefei Mao





A new study has introduced a more accurate way to evaluate how biochar interacts with water, offering important insights for agriculture, soil management, and environmental sustainability.

Biochar, a carbon-rich material produced from biomass, is widely used to improve soil quality and water retention. However, understanding how biochar affects soil water behavior has long been challenging due to limitations in existing measurement methods.

Researchers have now developed a new approach called the dynamic contact angle method, which provides a more realistic assessment of how water interacts with biochar and biochar-amended soils over time. The findings were recently published in Biochar.

“Traditional methods only capture a snapshot of water behavior, but water interactions with biochar are dynamic,” said one of the study’s corresponding authors. “Our method allows us to observe how these interactions evolve, which leads to a more accurate understanding of soil water processes.”

Conventional techniques typically rely on two indicators: contact angle and water droplet penetration time. While contact angle measures how water initially sits on a surface, penetration time reflects how long it takes for water to be absorbed. These two methods often produce conflicting results, making it difficult to determine whether a material is truly water-repellent.

To resolve this issue, the research team tracked how the contact angle changes over time as a water droplet spreads and diffuses. By monitoring this process over 90 seconds, they introduced a new classification system for material behavior, including a newly defined category called “pseudo-hydrophobicity.”

This category describes materials that initially appear water-repellent but gradually become wettable as water spreads across their surface. According to the study, failing to account for this transition can lead to overestimating hydrophobicity.

“Our findings show that some materials previously classified as hydrophobic are actually only temporarily resistant to water,” the authors explained. “Recognizing pseudo-hydrophobicity helps reconcile inconsistencies between existing measurement methods.”

The researchers tested their approach on a wide range of materials, including 17 standard substances and 18 different types of biochar produced from agricultural residues, forestry byproducts, and household waste. The results demonstrated that the dynamic method consistently provided a more reliable evaluation of water behavior.

The study also explored how biochar affects soil over time. In controlled experiments lasting 90 days, most biochar types increased soil water repellency immediately after application. However, this effect tended to decrease with time, likely due to aging processes, microbial activity, and chemical changes on the biochar surface.

Importantly, the results showed that both the type of biochar and its application rate influence soil water behavior. Higher application rates generally led to stronger water repellency, while biochar produced at lower temperatures tended to be more hydrophobic due to its surface chemistry.

The researchers emphasize that understanding these dynamics is crucial for optimizing biochar use in agriculture, particularly in dry and semi-arid regions where water management is critical.

“This work provides a new tool for predicting how biochar will perform in real-world conditions,” the authors said. “It can help guide the design of biochar materials and improve strategies for soil water management.”

By offering a clearer and more comprehensive way to evaluate water interactions, the dynamic contact angle method could support the development of more effective soil amendments and sustainable agricultural practices.

 

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Journal Reference: Jing, W., Su, M., Yang, K. et al. Dynamic contact angle as a new metric for the water repellency evaluation of biochar-amended soil. Biochar 8, 38 (2026). 

https://doi.org/10.1007/s42773-025-00555-y  

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About Biochar

Biochar (e-ISSN: 2524-7867) is the first journal dedicated exclusively to biochar research, spanning agronomy, environmental science, and materials science. It publishes original studies on biochar production, processing, and applications—such as bioenergy, environmental remediation, soil enhancement, climate mitigation, water treatment, and sustainability analysis. The journal serves as an innovative and professional platform for global researchers to share advances in this rapidly expanding field. 

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