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Cybersecurity and Your Images: Taking Safety Beyond Passwords and Home-Grown Protections

Oct. 12, 2020

As the price tag of cyberattacks on healthcare continues to rise, radiology looks to bolster its defenses. “Not a week goes by that you don’t hear about a hospital system that’s been impacted by a malicious software attack,” said James Whitfill, M.D., chief transformation officer and vice president of Honor Health and clinical associate professor of internal medicine and bioinformatics at the University of Arizona College of Medicine. “Our radiology departments and practices, in general, need to have a heightened sense of awareness.”

Diagnostic Imaging

How to Have Safe Laundry During COVID-19 Pandemic and Flu Season

Oct. 11, 2020

Continuing coverage: Q&A with Environmental microbiologists and public health researchers at the University of Arizona: Kelly Reynolds, professor and chair of the Community, Environment and Policy Department at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and Charles Gerba, an environmental microbiologist from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

Knowridge Science Report

Pima County Makes Inroads Against COVID-19, but Health Official Warns Against Complacency

Oct. 10, 2020

The number of new COVID-19 cases in Pima County has fallen in recent weeks from a high in mid-September. “Things aren’t too bad,” said Dr. Joe Gerald, an associate professor with the University of Arizona’s Zuckerman College of Public Health. “Our hospitals aren’t overwhelmed. Case counts are kind of low. It’s this very weird place where complacency is our biggest enemy right now. While we’re doing well in the moment, we’re not that far away from being back in some of those situations that we faced back in June.”

Arizona Daily Star

More Scottsdale Clubs Reopen After Being Shut Down for Violating Guidelines

Oct. 10, 2020

More nightclubs in Scottsdale reopened this weekend after being shut down for reportedly violating COVID-19 guidelines. Dr. Shad Marvasti, director of public health, prevention and health promotion with the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Phoenix, said regulation will be crucial. Even with guidelines in place, he said it is important to know the risks. "Any event that you do, with or without the mask, if you do something indoors versus outdoors, there is six times the increased likelihood of spreading it or getting it," Marvasti said.

KTVK-TV (3TV/CBS 5) Phoenix

COVID Is Strengthening the Push for Indigenous Data Control

Oct. 10, 2020

Through a National Institutes of Health program called “All of Us,” tribal nations across Indian Country are pushing federal scientists to conduct disease research that serves Indigenous peoples in a meaningful way. “We’re concerned about access to data as well as release of data without tribal permission,” said Stephanie Russo Carroll, a professor in the University of Arizona's Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. “What the pandemic has shed a light on is the need for tribes to have access to external data.”

WIRED

Cancer and COVID-19: How the Novel Coronavirus Is Affecting Screening and Treatment

Oct. 9, 2020

As more than 200,000 Americans have died from COVID-19, cancer patients – who are often immunocompromised and depend on regular treatments to prevent the progression of the disease – are particularly at risk for dying by the potentially deadly virus. "Most cancers themselves put patients into immune-compromised states. That state is profoundly reinforced and worsened by the treatments that we give," said Dr. Julie Bauman, deputy director of the University of Arizona Cancer Center.

Inside Tucson Business

MedShape Receives $2.6M DOD Development Grant for Novel NiTiNOL Dynamic Compression Devices

Oct. 9, 2020

Daniel Latt, MD/PhD, associate professor and orthopaedic surgeon at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson and Naohiro Shibuya, DPM, from Texas A&M College of Medicine, are working with MedShape Inc. on research and development of a compression fusion device using superelastic nickel-titanium (NiTiNOL) for use in diabetic foot limb salvage surgery. The study is funded by a Technology/Therapeutic Development Award from the U.S. Department of Defense Peer-Reviewed Medical Research Program.

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New sections offer more ways to stay connected across the University of Arizona Health Sciences.

Welcome to the Future of Health Sciences Connect

Oct. 8, 2020

Calendar, Announcements, college-specific pages are among the new features in this one-stop shop for Health Sciences news and information.

Read more

U of a Researchers Say COVID-19 Can Give a False Sense of Pain Relief

Oct. 8, 2020

The University of Arizona researchers have discovered that COVID-19 can give a false sense of pain relief. Many people with COVID-19 don’t show symptoms right away or are asymptomatic entirely, which sparked the interest of researchers at the U of A.

KOLD-TV (CBS) Tucson

Talk 980 (KMBZ): Migraines and Green Light Therapy

Oct. 8, 2020

Research from the University of Arizona Health Sciences found that people who suffer from migraines may benefit from something called green light therapy which is exactly what it sounds like. Listeners call in to the live Dana & Parks Show and share their experience living with migraines.

KMBZ-AM (Kansas City, MO)

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We respectfully acknowledge the University of Arizona is on the land and territories of Indigenous peoples. Today, Arizona is home to 22 federally recognized tribes, with Tucson being home to the O’odham and the Yaqui. The University strives to build sustainable relationships with sovereign Native Nations and Indigenous communities through education offerings, partnerships, and community service.


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