‘I Didn’t Know What Was Going On’: Woman Moves to Arizona, Contracts Valley Fever Meningitis Nov. 15, 2021 Continuing coverage: At the UArizona Valley Fever Center for Excellence, researchers had a breakthrough for a vaccine that can be used to prevent Valley fever in dogs – with the hope it can be used for people one day. "It would be useful to prevent valley fever in dogs, but if we showed that, it would indicate this vaccine would give us lots of information suggesting it should go forward in clinical trials in humans as well," said John Galgiani, MD, professor of medicine at the College of Medicine – Tucson. KSAZ-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Arizona Health Care Workers Exhausted as COVID-19 Hospitalizations Start Climbing Again Nov. 15, 2021 Joe Gerald, MD, PhD, an assistant professor at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, has been modeling the pandemic for Arizona for the past year and a half. In his weekly report, Dr. Gerald noted how case rates have risen 62% over the past three weeks as well. "For most counties, current rates exceed those observed at the height of the summer 2020 wave." KPNX-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Nontraditional Treatments for a Cold: Do They Work? Nov. 15, 2021 Lise Alschuler, ND, FABNO, associate director of the Fellowship in Integrative Medicine at the UArizona Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine, has seen some benefits with zinc. "Zinc supplementation has been shown in many clinical trials to shorten the duration of the common cold.” Next Avenue
Pima County Urges Booster Shots for All ‘As Soon As Possible’ as COVID-19 Cases Spike Again Nov. 15, 2021 COVID-19 cases in Arizona show signs of "exponential" growth, according to a new report published by the Arizona Public Health Association, based on analysis by Joe Gerald, MD, PhD, associate professor and director of the public health policy and management program at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, who noted an "abrupt increase in transmission levels among all age groups starting in early October." Tucson Sentinel
Exercise, Vaccines Make for Happy Thanksgiving Nov. 14, 2021 It is true that excess weight around the waist and deep in the abdomen near organs is associated with higher hospitalization and death rates with COVID. “People who think only obese people are in the hospital should come to Banner and see, like I do every day, that not everyone who dies is obese. The main issue is that COVID is unpredictable,” said Elizabeth Connick, MD, chief of infectious diseases at the College of Medicine – Tucson and Banner-University Medical Center. Arizona Daily Star
Pima County Health Director Named UArizona College of Medicine – Tucson Alumni of Year Nov. 12, 2021 Theresa Cullen, MD, also with 27 years at the Indian Health Service, VA and U.S. Public Health Service, hopes to inspire others to a “life of service.” Read more Image
Nurses Don’t Want to Be Hailed as ‘Heroes’ During a Pandemic – They Want More Resources and Support Nov. 12, 2021 UArizona College of Nursing researchers Jessica Rainbow, PhD, RN, and Claire Bethel, PhD, RN, have been studying nurse well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Conversation
mRNA Vaccine Studied Like No Other Nov. 12, 2021 Shad Marvasti, MD, MPH, associate professor and director of public health, prevention and population health curriculum at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, considers the COVID-19 response a near miracle. “I don’t think we have ever had a vaccine examined to such level of detail by so many scientists around the world to really prioritize this above any research endeavor,” he said. Payson Roundup
Scientists ID Clue in Effort to Contain Herpes Virus Nov. 12, 2021 An inflammatory protein may play a part against the spread of sexually transmitted genital herpes virus in the nervous system, a new study says. MedicineNet
A Vaccine Against Valley Fever Finally Works-for Dogs Nov. 11, 2021 An experimental vaccine that could protect millions of people living in the American Southwest from valley fever has passed its first test of efficacy and is moving toward federal approval, possibly within two years. The vaccine candidate, was developed by the Valley Fever Center for Excellence at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, was tested in, and will be developed for, dogs. WIRED Magazine