Improving Life for an Aging Population Nov. 2, 2021 Researchers across the university are collaborating to enhance the lives of older adults through integration, partnerships, research and education. Read more Thumbnail
UArizona Health Sciences Immunologist Named Gerontologist of the Year Nov. 2, 2021 The Arizona Geriatrics Society honored Janko Nikolich-Žugich, MD, PhD, as the 2021 Gerontologist of the Year at its Annual Fall Symposium. Read more Image
HealthTech Connect Advancing Health Technology Development in Arizona Nov. 2, 2021 HealthTech Connect is designed to generate new partnerships to advance health technology in Arizona. Read more Image
Immune System: How Aging Can Affect It Nov. 1, 2021 COVID-19 has added another health hazard for older adults. Once infected with the virus, people in their 60s, 70s, 80s and above are at increasingly higher risk of experiencing severe COVID-19 illness, hospitalization and death. Although its difficult to precisely measure the impact of immune-system aging, "We know that it adds a massive risk. Those over 80 are 260-fold more likely to die from COVID-19 than those between 18 and 39," says Janko Nikolich-Žugich, MD, PhD, department head and professor of immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson. U.S. News & World Report
Workplace Turns Habitat Nov. 1, 2021 Allan J. Hamilton, MD, a professor of neurosurgery at the College of Medicine – Tucson, discusses how the human brain handles stress and the relationship between workplace design and employee well-being. "We get thrown into imbalance, and when we lose that connection with nature, we become perpetually anxious and stressed. Being more inclusive, more diverse and looking at group identity tends to end up being a better equation both for architecture and for the peace of mind of the human brain," Dr. Hamilton said. Canadian Interiors
Most Parents of Children Between 5-11 Years Old Reluctant to Get Kids Vaccinated, Survey Says Nov. 1, 2021 Many parents of kids in the 5-11 age group are signaling reluctance to get their youngsters inoculated against the virus, according to national polling from the Kaiser Family Foundation. Natasha Bhuyan, MD, a clinical assistant professor in the Department of Family, Community and Preventative Medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, tweeted Sunday that hundreds of children have died from the virus, making it vitally important for youths to get the shot. “Let’s change the narrative that the COVID vaccine in children is to protect adults – the vaccine is intended to protect *children themselves* from a preventable illness," Dr. Bhuyan tweeted. The Boston Globe
New UArizona Med Students Use Food to Fight Illness in Cancer Patients Nov. 1, 2021 Changing the way we think about food, not just as fuel but to fight illness and disease, is the focus of a growing culinary medicine program at the University of Arizona, where doctors are being trained to prescribe the right meals as medicine. "Food really is medicine and good food can really heal us, treat, prevent and reverse the diseases of our time," says Farshad Fani Marvasti, MD, MPH, associate professor and director of Public Health, Prevention and Health Promotion Curriculum at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Universal Helmet Laws May Help Save Young Motorcyclists Oct. 31, 2021 A new study suggests that state laws requiring "universal" motorcycle helmet use – instead of helmet laws just for certain ages – may lower the rates of traumatic brain injuries in young riders. Traumatic brain injuries are "the biggest burden in trauma care, so we wanted to see whether having universal helmet laws versus age-specific helmet laws really made a difference in the younger population," said study co-author Bellal Joseph, MD, a trauma surgeon and associate professor of surgery at the College of Medicine – Tucson. MedicineNet
COVID-19 Vaccines Provide Stronger Immunity Than Past Infection, CDC Study Finds Oct. 29, 2021 Vaccination against COVID-19 provides stronger protection than immunity from a previous infection with the coronavirus, according to a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published Friday. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, a professor of immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson, cautioned that it can be very difficult to compare vaccine-induced immunity to infection-induced immunity. “What I would say is that these are maybe not the right terms of the debate,” he said. “The reason to prefer vaccine-induced immunity is that infections can make you really sick, not that they don’t leave you immune,” Dr. Bhattacharya said. NBC News