WHO Finds Potential Link Between COVID-19 Vaccine and Hearing Issues April 5, 2022 The World Health Organization is investigating hearing loss and ringing in the ears as potential rare side effects of the COVID-19 vaccines. The WHO's work is "overdue" but "helpful," according to Shaowen Bao, PhD, an assistant professor of physiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson, who is studying the COVID-19 vaccine and tinnitus. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Experience, Passion Inspire Nurse Anesthesia Leader April 4, 2022 Working in a combat hospital in the Middle East and trauma centers in rural America prepared Kristie Hoch to train future CRNAs to provide anesthesia care for patients. Read more Image
US Colleges That Once Championed Surveillance Virus Testing Are Backing Away April 4, 2022 U.S. colleges and universities have relaxed campus requirements for coronavirus testing of vaccinated people in recent weeks, chipping away at some of the last widespread surveillance testing programs and dismaying public health experts, who say that robust sources of transmission data will be lost. Saskia Popescu, PhD, infectious disease epidemiologist and infection prevention expert at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, is quoted. The New York Times
Ranking Arizona: Top 10 Hospitals for 2022 April 4, 2022 Banner – University Medical Center Phoenix ranked No. 1 in a list of the Top 10 hospitals in Arizona, as featured in the 2022 edition of Ranking Arizona. The institution, which has trained thousands of doctors over decades as a teaching hospital, is the academic medical center for the College of Medicine – Phoenix. AZ Big Media
Intuition: When Is it Right to Trust Your Gut Instincts? April 4, 2022 By learning to increase our Emotional Intelligence (EI), we may strengthen our intuitive decision-making. Anna Alkozei, PhD, a visiting scholar in the department of psychiatry at the College of Medicine – Tucson, led a study providing evidence that ability EI can be improved through an online training program. BBC
Arizona Universities Push for Long COVID Answers as Symptoms Persist in Millions April 4, 2022 As the number of COVID hospitalizations reach record lows, doctors are shifting their focus to long COVID, including two UArizona Health Sciences-led studies focused on the topic. Kristen Pogreba-Brown, PhD, MPH, assistant professor and epidemiologist at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, is quoted. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
We Cannot ‘Boost Our Way Out’ of the Covid Pandemic, Experts Warn April 4, 2022 Experts question whether regular boosting is a sustainable strategy to manage the coronavirus long-term. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, professor of immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson, is quoted. Forbes
On Daylight Saving, There Are More Options Than You Might Think April 3, 2022 The U.S. could soon be living with daylight saving time year-round. Sleep experts say there are drawbacks to that plan and the alternatives. Denise Rodriguez Esquivel, PhD, an assistant professor of psychiatry at the College of Medicine – Tucson who specializes in the treatment of insomnia and circadian-rhythm disorders, is quoted. The New York Times