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Natalie Nabaty receives her white coat from Susan Kaib, MD, FAAFP, at the class of 2025 University of Arizona College of Medicine – Phoenix white coat ceremony.

COM-P White Coat Ceremony Welcomes Class of 2025

July 30, 2021
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The Arizona Monsoon, Lightning and Your Health

July 30, 2021

Monsoon in Arizona comprises the wettest and most lightning-prone months of the year. Learn how to avoid being struck and what to do if you are.

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Summer Oncology Internship Strives to Diversify Workforce

July 29, 2021

Seven second-year College of Medicine – Tucson students from populations underrepresented in medicine gain hands-on experience during a four-week summer oncology internship.

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A new program jointly run by the College of Nursing and College of Medicine – Tucson will train psychiatric nurse practitioner doctoral students together with psychology doctoral interns to prepare them to provide integrated health care in rural and medically underserved areas.

$1.9M Grant to Boost Behavioral Health Care Providers in Rural, Medically Underserved Communities

July 29, 2021

A new program will train psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner students and psychology interns in real-world integrated health care settings.

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Fact Check: Springfield Councilwoman’s Statements on COVID-19, Vaccine, Masks and Experts

July 29, 2021

Delivery of the J&J vaccine was paused earlier this year because six people developed blood clots after its use. The vaccine was later found to be safe. A person is “17 times more likely to get a blood clot from COVID-19 than from the Johnson & Johnson vaccine,” according to Ricardo Correa, MD, associate professor at the College of Medicine – Phoenix.

Springfield News-Leader (Springfield, MO)

Masks Are Effective Against Valley Fever, Experts Say

July 29, 2021

Arizona has recorded more than 6,800 cases of valley fever so far this year, according to July data from the Arizona Department of Health Services. Valley fever is a lung disease caused by the inhalation of Coccidioides,​​ a fungus common in the alkaline soil of the Sonoran Desert. The Valley Fever Center for Excellence at the University of Arizona has a list of valley fever specialists.

Cronkite News
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Southern Arizona Research, Science and Engineering Foundation (SARSEF) campers practice a procedure on Hal, the pediatric patient simulator, as explained to them by ASTEC’s Rochelle Marshall. The girls, all part of the Applied Career Exploration in Science (ACES) camp were, from left, Jeanette Mendoza, Ayleen Cruz and Victoria Vigbedorh.

SARSEF Girls’ Campers Wowed by HSIB Field Trip Experience

July 28, 2021
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UA Medical Expert Sees Updated CDC Guidelines As Sign of Regression In Tackling COVID-19 Spread

July 28, 2021

The new CDC guidelines recommend a return to indoor masking — this time for vaccinated people as well as the unvaccinated. Saskia Popescu, PhD, MPH, MA, an infectious disease epidemiologist and adjunct professor at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, discusses the updated guidelines and whether this is an indication of a step backward in terms of curbing the spread of COVID-19.

KJZZ-FM (NPR) Phoenix, AZ

Your Immune System Responds Very Differently to a ‘Breakthrough’ COVID-19 Infection

July 28, 2021

According to Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, an immunologist at the College of Medicine – Tucson, the virus must overcome "backup layer after backup layer" of defenses. So even if a virus continues to spread through a person's body, "each stage it has to get past takes a bigger chunk" out of it, Bhattacharya said.

Advisory Board

OUR VIEW: Let’s Be Clear – COVID Vaccines Are Working

July 28, 2021

It’s true that some people have tested positive for the coronavirus even after getting a vaccine, but that is no indication the vaccines don’t work. On the contrary, public health experts say the evidence is overwhelming that the shots dramatically reduce your chances of severe illness and death. “I lose infinitely more sleep over the fact that we have such large numbers of unvaccinated people who are at a tremendous risk of developing severe disease,” Janko Nikolich-Žugich, MD, PhD, an immunologist and professor of medicine at the College of Medicine – Tucson, told NBC News. “We shouldn’t be complacent or cavalier about it, but it pales in comparison to the question of how we get as many people as possible vaccinated.”

The News and Tribune (Jeffersonville, IN)

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