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  3. Virus Actually May Boost Not Weaken Our Immune System
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As vaccinations begin for front-line health care workers, experts field questions about the vaccine.

What You Need to Know About a COVID-19 Vaccine

Jan. 5, 2021

UArizona Health Sciences immunobiologist Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, says the COVID-19 vaccine is safe, and he will take it when it becomes available.

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UArizona Treatment of Parkinson's Disease With Ketamine Licensed

Jan. 5, 2021

Scott Sherman, MD, PhD, and Torsten Falk, PhD, both associate professors in the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, have developed a method of using ketamine in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. The university has entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with Pharmather Inc., a subsidiary of Newscope Capital Corporation, for the development and commercialization of the method.

Arizona Jewish Post

Fact vs Fiction: Dispelling Myths About COVID Vaccines

Jan. 5, 2021

Mind controlling microchips and permanently altered DNA are two widely shared conspiracy theories about what the COVID-19 vaccine might do to anyone who takes it. Dr. Elizabeth Connick, an infectious disease expert at the University of Arizona says neither one of those things are true. She's so confident, in fact, that she already took the first dose of Pfizer's vaccine.

KGUN-TV (ABC) Tucson

Coronavirus: 13 Experts Gave Us Their 2021 Predictions

Jan. 5, 2021

As each month passes amid this ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the daily number of infections has continued to march in one direction only—steadily upward. Dr. Joe K. Gerald, associate professor of Public Health Policy and Management at the University of Arizona, said, “For most states, (the data indicate) that viral transmission is broadly increasing. Reporting national estimates only has limited utility because each state is fighting its own COVID-19 battle. The U.S. figures then reflect in a rough sense the average win/loss ratio among the fifty states weighted by population."

The National Interest

Los Angeles Is Running Out of Oxygen For Patients as Covid Hospitalizations Hit Record Highs Nationwide

Jan. 5, 2021

Los Angeles County has been so overwhelmed it is running out of oxygen, with ambulance crews instructed to use oxygen only for their worst-case patients. Arizona, once heralded for turning the corner after a summer surge, now has 69 of every 100,000 residents hospitalized with the virus — the highest rate in the country. "The virus is just basically transmitting almost uninhibited through our population,” said Dr. Joe Gerald, who has been tracking the spread of the virus and was among those urging a shelter-in-place order.

The Washington Post
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UArizona staff and students learn about the Feldenkrais Method, which uses movement to increase self-awareness and improve function. The method will be taught during the “Aging and the Arts” series.

Health and Humanities Launches with ‘Aging and the Arts’

Jan. 4, 2021

Interactive program promotes healthy aging by improving physical and mental well-being.

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The New Year symbolizes transition, and for many people it’s also motivation to make healthy changes.

Your Roadmap to Making Changes in the New Year

Jan. 4, 2021

Anyone making a New Year’s resolution can set themselves up for success by understanding how people can effectively make changes in their lives.

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Arizona has the Highest Rate of New COVID-19 Cases in the US, CDC Says

Jan. 4, 2021

Arizona has the highest rate of new COVID-19 cases in the United States, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. Arizona's rate of positive new coronavirus cases over the past seven days was 121.8 cases per 100,000 people, which was higher than any other state in the country. "We have now all but locked in a major humanitarian crisis during the Christmas–New Year holiday with hundreds of preventable deaths per week," Dr. Joe Gerald, of the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, wrote in a Dec. 18 report.

The Arizona Republic

Health Experts Look to ’90s Anti-Smoking Campaign as Way to Warn About COVID-19 Dangers

Jan. 4, 2021

Health experts say the number of COVID-19 cases is just going to rise as the weeks progress, due to holiday gatherings and travel. Beth Smith, senior director of marketing and communications at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, says in order to save lives, they need to change the perception that COVID-19 isn't that deadly. Other health officials in the Valley agree.

Arizona's Family (3TV/CBS 5) Phoenix

Record Number of Med School Applicants Because of 'Fauci effect'

Jan. 4, 2021

Continuing coverage: Ask anyone in medicine and they'll tell you, the COVID-19 pandemic was the answer to their calling. "It's reminding us why we got into this field in the first place, said Aaron Cedric Llanes, UArizona medical student. So many have heard the call in fact, 7000 applied to the University of Arizona's College of Medicine in 2020, the most ever. "Less than 2% will get an offer," said Dr. Glen Fogerty.

KGUN-TV (ABC) Tucson

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