Health Sciences In The Media First Lady Jill Biden Promotes Cancer Moonshot in Visit to Southern Arizona March 8, 2022 Continuing coverage: First lady met health care professionals at San Xavier Health Center, where the University of Arizona Cancer Center has been working to expand colorectal cancer prevention and early-detection strategies. The Health Sciences Office of Communications assisted with this story. Arizona Public Media The Role of Small Airway Dysfunction in Asthma Control and Exacerbations March 7, 2022 Researchers from the UArizona Asthma and Airways Disease Research Center, including Monica Kraft, PhD, Brian Hallmark, PhD, and Dean Billheimer, co-author this article discussing their longitudinal and observational analysis of the role of small airway dysfunction in asthma control and exacerbations. Physician's Weekly In First Day of Arizona Visit, Jill Biden Highlights Community College Program and Praises the President March 6, 2022 First lady Jill Biden's visit to Arizona began Monday in Chandler with a message: workforce development programs and investments in industries of the future are key to building a stronger country. On Tuesday afternoon, Biden will tour the San Xavier Health Center, with a focus on the Tohono O’odham Nation’s cancer services, including a partnership with the University of Arizona Cancer Center. The Arizona Republic Two-Year Coronavirus Anniversary Marks Strides, Losses - and Appreciating Life March 6, 2022 Despite all of the suspicion of vaccines, treatments and government proclamations about the disease, many physicians say in the two years since the pandemic began, science has performed admirably and accomplished remarkable work through the pandemic. Janko Nikolich-Zugich, MD, PhD, professor and head of the Department of Immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson, is quoted. Santa Fe New Mexican National Nutrition Month Highlights How Diet Is Linked to Major Diseases March 5, 2022 Shad Marvasti, MD, associate professor of family and community medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, says diet links directly to some of the major diseases of our time like cancer, diabetes, low blood sugar, and heart disease. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ) Arizona on the Cutting Edge of Innovative Research Programs March 4, 2022 The University of Arizona Health Sciences has been awarded a $2.1 million grant by the National Institutes of Health to fund a three-year study examining the link between normal knee aging and osteoarthritis. C. Kent Kwoh, MD, director of the UArizona Arthritis Center and chief of the Division of Rheumatology in the UArizona College of Medicine – Tucson, will lead the study. Phoenix Magazine Researchers Find COVID-19 Can Infect Inner Ear, Links to Hearing Issues March 4, 2022 A team of researchers say they better understand why some people with COVID-19 also experience dizziness, ringing in the ears or other hearing issues. At the College of Medicine – Tucson, Shaowen Bao, PhD, an assistant professor of physiology, is currently working on a research survey of people who reported tinnitus after receiving the vaccine. He hopes to publish his findings in a scientific journal later this year. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ) Tezepelumab Significantly Reduced Exacerbations in Patients with Severe Asthma, Respiratory Comorbidities March 3, 2022 In a presentation at the annual American Academy of Asthma, Allergy and Immunology meeting, Tara Carr, MD, an associate professor in the College of Medicine – Tucson, presented results of a post hoc analysis that assessed the efficacy of tezepelumab in a broad population of patients with severe, uncontrolled asthma and common respiratory comorbidities. Patient Care Understanding Aphasia Is the Most Important Part of Recovery March 3, 2022 Aphasia – a difficulty in producing or understanding words and language, both written and spoken – often results following a stroke that damages parts of the brain that produce and decode language. "When patients who have experienced a left-brain stroke suddenly find out they can no longer speak, or speak only haltingly, it's a dramatic situation," said Steven Z. Rapcsak, MD, a professor of neurology in the College of Medicine – Tucson. "In many cases, they have the thoughts and know what they're trying to express, but they just don't have the words." Brain & Life Ways to Help the Health Worker Shortage in Northern Arizona March 3, 2022 Statistics from a 2019 report by the UArizona Center for Rural Health are cited in an opinion column about the health care worker shortage in northern Arizona. Flagstaff Business News Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
First Lady Jill Biden Promotes Cancer Moonshot in Visit to Southern Arizona March 8, 2022 Continuing coverage: First lady met health care professionals at San Xavier Health Center, where the University of Arizona Cancer Center has been working to expand colorectal cancer prevention and early-detection strategies. The Health Sciences Office of Communications assisted with this story. Arizona Public Media
The Role of Small Airway Dysfunction in Asthma Control and Exacerbations March 7, 2022 Researchers from the UArizona Asthma and Airways Disease Research Center, including Monica Kraft, PhD, Brian Hallmark, PhD, and Dean Billheimer, co-author this article discussing their longitudinal and observational analysis of the role of small airway dysfunction in asthma control and exacerbations. Physician's Weekly
In First Day of Arizona Visit, Jill Biden Highlights Community College Program and Praises the President March 6, 2022 First lady Jill Biden's visit to Arizona began Monday in Chandler with a message: workforce development programs and investments in industries of the future are key to building a stronger country. On Tuesday afternoon, Biden will tour the San Xavier Health Center, with a focus on the Tohono O’odham Nation’s cancer services, including a partnership with the University of Arizona Cancer Center. The Arizona Republic
Two-Year Coronavirus Anniversary Marks Strides, Losses - and Appreciating Life March 6, 2022 Despite all of the suspicion of vaccines, treatments and government proclamations about the disease, many physicians say in the two years since the pandemic began, science has performed admirably and accomplished remarkable work through the pandemic. Janko Nikolich-Zugich, MD, PhD, professor and head of the Department of Immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson, is quoted. Santa Fe New Mexican
National Nutrition Month Highlights How Diet Is Linked to Major Diseases March 5, 2022 Shad Marvasti, MD, associate professor of family and community medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, says diet links directly to some of the major diseases of our time like cancer, diabetes, low blood sugar, and heart disease. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Arizona on the Cutting Edge of Innovative Research Programs March 4, 2022 The University of Arizona Health Sciences has been awarded a $2.1 million grant by the National Institutes of Health to fund a three-year study examining the link between normal knee aging and osteoarthritis. C. Kent Kwoh, MD, director of the UArizona Arthritis Center and chief of the Division of Rheumatology in the UArizona College of Medicine – Tucson, will lead the study. Phoenix Magazine
Researchers Find COVID-19 Can Infect Inner Ear, Links to Hearing Issues March 4, 2022 A team of researchers say they better understand why some people with COVID-19 also experience dizziness, ringing in the ears or other hearing issues. At the College of Medicine – Tucson, Shaowen Bao, PhD, an assistant professor of physiology, is currently working on a research survey of people who reported tinnitus after receiving the vaccine. He hopes to publish his findings in a scientific journal later this year. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Tezepelumab Significantly Reduced Exacerbations in Patients with Severe Asthma, Respiratory Comorbidities March 3, 2022 In a presentation at the annual American Academy of Asthma, Allergy and Immunology meeting, Tara Carr, MD, an associate professor in the College of Medicine – Tucson, presented results of a post hoc analysis that assessed the efficacy of tezepelumab in a broad population of patients with severe, uncontrolled asthma and common respiratory comorbidities. Patient Care
Understanding Aphasia Is the Most Important Part of Recovery March 3, 2022 Aphasia – a difficulty in producing or understanding words and language, both written and spoken – often results following a stroke that damages parts of the brain that produce and decode language. "When patients who have experienced a left-brain stroke suddenly find out they can no longer speak, or speak only haltingly, it's a dramatic situation," said Steven Z. Rapcsak, MD, a professor of neurology in the College of Medicine – Tucson. "In many cases, they have the thoughts and know what they're trying to express, but they just don't have the words." Brain & Life
Ways to Help the Health Worker Shortage in Northern Arizona March 3, 2022 Statistics from a 2019 report by the UArizona Center for Rural Health are cited in an opinion column about the health care worker shortage in northern Arizona. Flagstaff Business News