Covid-19 Disrupts Years of Health Progress in U.S. May 20, 2021 Population health researchers say that they still expect the national death rate to return to more normal-looking levels as Covid-19 deaths recede. But that doesn’t mean the pandemic’s impact will disappear. “What the challenge will be is being able to quantify those lingering effects. They won’t be as dramatic, but that doesn’t make them any less real,” said Dr. Heidi Brown, an associate professor at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. The Wall Street Journal
UArizona Medical Staff Member Wins Pay It Forward Award for Testing Site May 20, 2021 Jeffery Hanna, a clinical research coordinator at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, is a recipient of the Arizona Family’s Pay It Forward award. Hanna has spent the last year doing nasal swab and saliva testing, and helped organize many pop-up vaccine clinics. Arizona's Family (3TV/CBS 5) Phoenix, AZ
Southern Arizona COVID-19 Vaccination Clinics Go Mobile May 19, 2021 Mobile health unit vaccination efforts are expanding through the Mobile Outreach Vaccination and Education for Underserved Populations (MOVE UP) program. Read more Image
COVID-19 Vaccine Mobile Outreach Expands in Rural Arizona May 19, 2021 A new mobile health unit initiative is getting more vaccines in the arms of rural, Hispanic and other hard-to-reach populations in southern Arizona. Read more Image
Dual Pharmacy-Nursing Degree Targets Gaps in Care May 18, 2021 Next-generation education at the Colleges of Nursing and Pharmacy aims to fill care gaps as the U.S. physician shortage worsens. Read more Image
How Contagious is the Coronavirus Variant From India? What the Science Shows May 18, 2021 Because of two concerning mutations, the B.1.617 variant discovered in India has been given a scary nickname “double mutant,” an incorrect term that is “completely unhelpful,” said Dr. Deepta Bhattacharya, an associate professor of immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson. NBC News
Rural Covid-19 Vaccination Rates Lag Behind Urban Areas as Access, Hesitancy Remain Barriers May 18, 2021 A new study found that vaccination rates in rural America lagged urban counties during the first four months of the nation's concerted immunization push. "The counties that have lower uptake in the vaccines are also the ones who have been disproportionately hit by all those negative outcomes related to the COVID-19 pandemic," said Dr. Daniel Derksen, director of the Center for Rural Health. USA Today
Estrogen-Modulating Therapy May Reduce Risk for Alzheimer’s Disease May 18, 2021 Tamoxifen and steroidal aromatase inhibitor use among women with breast cancer was associated with a significantly lower risk for Alzheimer’s disease, a retrospective cohort study showed. “Our lab has helped to develop a link between the decrease in estrogen status seen in women during menopause to the increased risk for Alzheimer’s disease in women overall in this age group,” said Gregory L. Branigan, an MD‐PhD at the UArizona Center for Innovation in Brain Science. Healio
Deadly Fungi Are the Newest Emerging Microbe Threat All Over the World May 18, 2021 Dr. John Galgiani, a professor and director of the Valley Fever Center for Excellence at the College of Medicine – Tucson, and a group of researchers are working on a new valley fever vaccine formula for dogs that uses a live version of the fungus. Testing is not complete, but it could reach the market for use in dogs as early as next year. Scientific American