Colleges of Medicine Take Lead on ‘Anti-Racism in Medicine’ Feb. 1, 2022 Solutions require complex, sustained effort to move the mountain of historical racism in medicine and the systemic ways it may exhibit itself today. Read more Image
Doctor Shortages in the US After COVID Are Creating a Looming Healthcare Crisis Feb. 1, 2022 The U.S. healthcare industry is poised to grow tremendously over the next decade, but that doesn't mean its workers will reap the benefits. Not even doctors are safe from the crushing weight of debt anymore. Daniel Derksen, MD, a professor of public health at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, said he's seen doctors in his state flock in greater numbers to places like Phoenix and Tucson, where the pay is greater. The Daily Best
How Healthy Is Your Liver? At UArizona You Can Get a Free Sonogram Feb. 1, 2022 This free service is part of a research project on fatty liver, particularly non-alcoholic, at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman Arizona College of Public Health, which seeks to estimate the presence of scarring and fat in the liver of Hispanic inhabitants of Southern Arizona. La Estrella De Tucsón
Study Questions Sterility of Snake and Spider Venoms Jan. 31, 2022 Researchers have been looking to animal venoms for the next generation of antibiotics. Leslie Boyer, MD, associate professor at the College of Medicine – Tucson and medical director of the Arizona Poison Drug Information Center, who was not involved in the work, says the authors present convincing evidence for venom-dwelling microbes. But as a physician, she is skeptical that the microbes described in the paper have immediate clinical relevance. The Scientist
UArizona Health Expert Says Masks Continue to Be an Important Mitigation Method Jan. 31, 2022 The former director of the FDA suggests starting to lift pandemic-related restrictions, including mask wearing. Shad Marvasti, MD, associate professor of family and community medicine at the College of Medicine in Phoenix – disagrees. Dr. Marvasti says the lifting of mask requirements is one of the reasons why that approach led to Arizona being the second highest in deaths per capita nationally. KJZZ-FM (Phoenix, AZ)
Kids' Mask Use Linked With Fewer Childcare Closings Jan. 31, 2022 Mask-wearing in childcare programs is linked with fewer COVID-19-related program closures, new data released suggest. Paloma Beamer, PhD, a professor in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, has a 3-year-old son who wears masks at daycare and works closely with his school to train kids how to wear their masks. Medscape
OPINION | We were warned Jan. 30, 2022 Journalist Mike Masterson writes an op-ed that includes a section on COVID-19 variants and vaccines. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, a professor and immunologist at the College of Medicine – Tucson, is quoted. Arkansas Democrat Gazette
The Most Useful Star Wars Invention Reveals a Real Medical Problem Jan. 29, 2022 Mohab Ibrahim, MD, PhD, medical director of the UArizona Comprehensive Pain and Addiction Center, explains how different topical pain medications like lidocaine work. Inverse
New UArizona Health Sciences Study to Focus on Link Between Knee Aging and Osteoarthritis Jan. 28, 2022 A $2.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health will allow University of Arizona Health Sciences researchers to study the links between knee structure changes and clinical outcomes in people with osteoarthritis. PharmaLive