Students, Community Benefit from Medical Interpreter Course Oct. 10, 2022 A service-learning course provides bilingual Spanish-speaking students clinical experience as medical interpreters and a pathway to a career in medicine. Read more Image
Everything you need to know about tanning injections Oct. 10, 2022 A story about tanning injections mentions that synthetic melanotan was created by the UArizona Cancer Center in the 1980s. Denttooth
Ricardo Correa: Endocrinologist and infection control leader for the Latino community Oct. 7, 2022 A profile on Ricardo Correa, MD, director of the Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism Fellowship Program in the College of Medicine – Phoenix. Hispanic Business TV
UArizona great Hunley helps in UArizona Arthritis Center passing $2 Million raised Oct. 7, 2022 The UArizona Arthritis Center once again teamed up with the UArizona Department of Intercollegiate Athletics to present the 2022 UArizona Arthritis Center ‘Bear Down Celebration.' KVOA-TV (Tucson, AZ)
UNR researcher leads team to track chemicals through food web, mitigate impacts in Alaska Oct. 7, 2022 A research team is studying the potential for human exposure to toxic substances that may persist in the environment from hundreds of formerly used defense sites in Alaska. KTVN-TV (Reno, NV)
Eegee's and Tryst Cafe raise money for cancer research with pink drinks this October Oct. 7, 2022 Tucson sandwich chain eegee's has created a pink lemonade flavor of its famous frozen drinks, which raises money for the UArizona Cancer Center. Phoenix New Times
Chemical Age: How war tools became pesticides Oct. 6, 2022 Frank A. von Hippel, PhD, professor in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and lead of the UArizona Health Sciences One Health Research Initiative, discussed his book “The Chemical Age: How Chemists Fought Famine and Disease, Killed Millions, and Changed Our Relationship with the Earth.” The Joe Gardener Show
Covid death rates are higher among Republicans than Democrats. The reason is up for debate. Oct. 6, 2022 Lower vaccination rates among Republicans could explain the partisan gap for COVID-19 death rates, but some researchers say mask use and social distancing were bigger factors. NBC News