Could Green Light Therapy Prevent Migraines? Oct. 5, 2020 In a small preliminary study, researchers affiliated with the University of Arizona Health Sciences Comprehensive Pain and Addiction Center exposed 29 people—all of whom experience episodic or chronic migraine and failed multiple traditional therapies, such as oral medications and Botox injections— to white and green light. Florence Health
The Dirt on Laundry and How to Reduce Your Risk of Getting Sick Oct. 4, 2020 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. AZ Big Media
UArizona Health Sciences Researchers Identify New Target for Developing Flavivirus Vaccines Oct. 2, 2020 Antibodies normally fight viruses, but in the case of flaviviruses, they can make infections worse. UArizona Health Sciences immunologists figured out why. Read more Thumbnail
UArizona Health Sciences Researchers Identify New Target for Developing Flavivirus Vaccines Oct. 2, 2020 Antibodies normally fight viruses, but in the case of flaviviruses, they can make infections worse. Researchers took a closer look at antibody production to figure out why. Read more Image
A Whole New Type of Medical School Oct. 2, 2020 Payson now has a state-of-the-art, high-tech telemedicine clinic, with the opening of the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Phoenix Rural Health Clinic. The clinic will train medical students and also offer treatment for everyone regardless of medical insurance status, taking advantage of the latest technology to run tests, talk to specialists and manage the care of complex medical issues. Payson Roundup
Pandemic Provides New Target for Pain Relief Research Oct. 1, 2020 An unexpected finding gives researchers in the UArizona Health Sciences Comprehensive Pain and Addiction Center a novel target for non-opioid pain therapeutics. Read more Thumbnail
Pain Relief Caused by SARS-CoV-2 Infection May Help Explain COVID-19 Spread Oct. 1, 2020 Research shows SARS-CoV-2 promotes pain relief through the receptor neuropilin-1, which gives scientists a new target for non-opioid pain therapeutics and offers one possible explanation for the unrelenting spread of COVID-19. Read more Image
White House Coronavirus Task Force Leader Visits UArizona Labs Oct. 1, 2020 White House Coronavirus Task Force Coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx tours labs to learn about Health Sciences’ antibody and antigen testing. Read more Image
With Students — and Covid-19 — on Campuses, College Towns Look on Warily Oct. 1, 2020 Joe Gerald, a researcher at the University of Arizona Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health who tracks the coronavirus in Arizona, said it is too early to detect spread from campus outbreaks in the state, but it may be that the overlap between students and locals is minimal enough to prevent that. Washington Post
Children Can Contract COVID-19 Oct. 1, 2020 Dr. Lisa Grimaldi, an associate professor in the Division of Cardiovascular ICU at the University of Arizona College of Medicine Phoenix, said most children who have tested positive for COVID-19 do not have symptoms or have only a very mild disease. Grimaldi also is pediatric critical care physician at Phoenix Children’s Hospital. She said there are reports out of New York and Europe that children are being hospitalized with a new disease that appears to be tied to Coronavirus. Called multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C). North Central News