Health Sciences In The Media COVID-19 is Spreading Fastest in Smaller and More Rural Arizona Counties Nov. 12, 2020 The spread of COVID-19 in Arizona is behaving differently than it did in the summer, with spikes happening in rural areas such as Graham and Gila counties that had far fewer cases during the state's first surge. Rural counties such as Gila, Graham, Greenlee and Coconino are leading the statewide resurgence in terms of new case rates, according to Joe Gerald, an associate professor at University of Arizona's Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health who has been tracking the pandemic’s spread in Arizona for months. Arizona Republic UArizona Expert: COVID Conditions Entering a 'Crisis' Nov. 12, 2020 Dr. Joe Gerald, an associate professor in the University of Arizona Zuckerman College of Public Health, provides and update in his weekly COVID-19 report. KNXV-TV (ABC) Phoenix Personalized Cancer Vaccine Clinical Trial Shows Early Promise Nov. 12, 2020 Continued coverage: Promising results have come out of a new clinical trial at the University of Arizona Health Sciences investigating a personalized cancer vaccine for people with head and neck cancer. The researchers note that it's a very small study and still preliminary work, but their early results are looking good. IFL Science New Calls for Measures as State COVID Cases Exceed 250,000 Nov. 11, 2020 Dan Derksen, associate vice president for health equity, outreach and interprofessional activities at the University of Arizona Health Sciences, said the state might have to consider measures such as the stay-at-home orders imposed this summer to protect the availability of hospital beds. Arizona Daily Sun (Flagstaff, AZ) Dr. Ali Baaj to Build UArizona-Banner Spine Program from Scratch in New Role Nov. 11, 2020 Spine surgeon Ali Baaj, MD, is the inaugural chief of spine surgery at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix and Banner-University Medical Center Phoenix. As spine surgery chief, Dr. Baaj will build a new academic spine program at UArizona-Banner. Becker's Spine Review The Swinging Pendulum of PSA Screening Nov. 11, 2020 The debate continues over the practice of mass screening of healthy men with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood tests for the early detection of prostate cancer. The article cites Richard Ablin, PhD, of the University of Arizona College of Medicine, who discovered PSA in 1970. He stressed that PSA testing was not intended for use for mass screening but rather to follow men with advanced disease. MedPage Today COVID-19: Vaccines Continue to Progress as More Proof of Long-Lasting Immunity Emerges Nov. 11, 2020 Researchers at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson have found that people who have had COVID-19 develop long-lasting immunity. Their study appears in the journal Immunity. Medical News Today Moderna’s Personalized Cancer Vaccine Shows Promise Nov. 11, 2020 A clinical trial at the University of Arizona Health Sciences designed to study the safety and effectiveness of a personalized cancer vaccine in combination with the immunotherapy drug Pembrolizumab will expand its cohort after promising preliminary data was presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Immunotherapy of Cancer. PharmaLive CDC Confirms That Your Cloth Mask May Protect You, Not Just Others Nov. 11, 2020 The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says wearing cloth masks not only keeps people from unknowingly transmitting the virus, it keeps people from inhaling the virus from the air. Saskia Popescu, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of Arizona, tweeted, "We know that even fabric masks offer some variable protection for the wearer, but I think the bigger issue is that the CDC has to reiterate this to get people to wear a mask." The Boston Globe COVID-19 Study Suggests 20% Capacity for Restaurants, Which Could Hurt Arizona Economy Nov. 11, 2020 A study published in the journal "Nature" suggests reducing restaurant capacity even further to slow down the spread of COVID-19. Dr. Shad Marvasti, with the University of Arizona's College of Medicine, says he is not surprised the study identified restaurants as high risk when they are operating at normal conditions. But he says Arizona leaders should take drastic action to stop the current spike in cases. Arizona's Family (3TV/CBS 5) Phoenix Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
COVID-19 is Spreading Fastest in Smaller and More Rural Arizona Counties Nov. 12, 2020 The spread of COVID-19 in Arizona is behaving differently than it did in the summer, with spikes happening in rural areas such as Graham and Gila counties that had far fewer cases during the state's first surge. Rural counties such as Gila, Graham, Greenlee and Coconino are leading the statewide resurgence in terms of new case rates, according to Joe Gerald, an associate professor at University of Arizona's Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health who has been tracking the pandemic’s spread in Arizona for months. Arizona Republic
UArizona Expert: COVID Conditions Entering a 'Crisis' Nov. 12, 2020 Dr. Joe Gerald, an associate professor in the University of Arizona Zuckerman College of Public Health, provides and update in his weekly COVID-19 report. KNXV-TV (ABC) Phoenix
Personalized Cancer Vaccine Clinical Trial Shows Early Promise Nov. 12, 2020 Continued coverage: Promising results have come out of a new clinical trial at the University of Arizona Health Sciences investigating a personalized cancer vaccine for people with head and neck cancer. The researchers note that it's a very small study and still preliminary work, but their early results are looking good. IFL Science
New Calls for Measures as State COVID Cases Exceed 250,000 Nov. 11, 2020 Dan Derksen, associate vice president for health equity, outreach and interprofessional activities at the University of Arizona Health Sciences, said the state might have to consider measures such as the stay-at-home orders imposed this summer to protect the availability of hospital beds. Arizona Daily Sun (Flagstaff, AZ)
Dr. Ali Baaj to Build UArizona-Banner Spine Program from Scratch in New Role Nov. 11, 2020 Spine surgeon Ali Baaj, MD, is the inaugural chief of spine surgery at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix and Banner-University Medical Center Phoenix. As spine surgery chief, Dr. Baaj will build a new academic spine program at UArizona-Banner. Becker's Spine Review
The Swinging Pendulum of PSA Screening Nov. 11, 2020 The debate continues over the practice of mass screening of healthy men with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood tests for the early detection of prostate cancer. The article cites Richard Ablin, PhD, of the University of Arizona College of Medicine, who discovered PSA in 1970. He stressed that PSA testing was not intended for use for mass screening but rather to follow men with advanced disease. MedPage Today
COVID-19: Vaccines Continue to Progress as More Proof of Long-Lasting Immunity Emerges Nov. 11, 2020 Researchers at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson have found that people who have had COVID-19 develop long-lasting immunity. Their study appears in the journal Immunity. Medical News Today
Moderna’s Personalized Cancer Vaccine Shows Promise Nov. 11, 2020 A clinical trial at the University of Arizona Health Sciences designed to study the safety and effectiveness of a personalized cancer vaccine in combination with the immunotherapy drug Pembrolizumab will expand its cohort after promising preliminary data was presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Immunotherapy of Cancer. PharmaLive
CDC Confirms That Your Cloth Mask May Protect You, Not Just Others Nov. 11, 2020 The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says wearing cloth masks not only keeps people from unknowingly transmitting the virus, it keeps people from inhaling the virus from the air. Saskia Popescu, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of Arizona, tweeted, "We know that even fabric masks offer some variable protection for the wearer, but I think the bigger issue is that the CDC has to reiterate this to get people to wear a mask." The Boston Globe
COVID-19 Study Suggests 20% Capacity for Restaurants, Which Could Hurt Arizona Economy Nov. 11, 2020 A study published in the journal "Nature" suggests reducing restaurant capacity even further to slow down the spread of COVID-19. Dr. Shad Marvasti, with the University of Arizona's College of Medicine, says he is not surprised the study identified restaurants as high risk when they are operating at normal conditions. But he says Arizona leaders should take drastic action to stop the current spike in cases. Arizona's Family (3TV/CBS 5) Phoenix