Study Finds Link Between Long-term Arsenic Exposure and Type 2 Diabetes Sept. 21, 2021 Research led by the University of Arizona College of Pharmacy shows how chronic arsenic exposure disrupts the body’s natural antioxidant defenses, which may contribute to the development of diseases such as Type 2 diabetes. Read more Image
Delta’s Winter is Coming Sept. 21, 2021 “This winter might mark a different turning point,” said Saskia Popescu, an epidemiologist and adjunct professor at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. Instead of the end of the pandemic and the start of an endemic, this winter might introduce us to a different, and unsettling, stage. One where we are no longer in lockdown but learning to treat a deadly virus as a normal part of our lives. Politico
UofA Medical Students Working in Tonto Basin Sept. 21, 2021 Over a dozen College of Medicine – Phoenix students are going to be taking a very close two-year look at community needs in Tonto Basin. Judith Hunt, MD, site director for the College of Medicine – Phoenix program in Rim Country, has been practicing medicine and training medical students and residents in the rural community of Payson, Arizona, for nearly 22 years. Her classroom is 100 miles north of the downtown Phoenix. “The best part of rural medicine is the care of the community. There is nothing that I would trade for being able to see a baby that I helped care for throughout the years, now married with their own children. It’s just amazing to be a part of that young person’s life all the way through.” Payson Roundup
The Wellness Design Benefits of Grounding Sept. 21, 2021 Health professionals say our indoor-dominant lives are costing us, and are prescribing time in contact with natural elements to offset this deficit. “The power of nature is being used widely in the integrative medicine community both through activity, diet, surroundings as well as herbal medicine,” said Ann Marie Chiasson, MD, MPH, CCFP, associate professor of clinical medicine at the College of Medicine – Tucson and fellowship director with the Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine. Forbes
Summit Convenes UArizona Health Sciences and Industry Leaders to Spark New Medical Advances Sept. 20, 2021 The third annual Drug Discovery and Development Summit aims to foster private-public collaboration and commercialization of new discoveries against diseases most burdensome to Arizonans. Read more Image
Bridging the Gap Between Patients and Their Doctors: 3 Key Takeaways From a Cholangiocarcinoma Physician Roundtable Discussion Sept. 20, 2021 Rachna Shroff, MD, chief of the section of GI medical oncology at the University of Arizona Cancer Center, joins a roundtable of healthcare providers to discuss the current unmet clinical needs in cholangiocarcinoma (CCA), a rare and aggressive bile duct cancer. LinkedIn
Arizona Adjusts Approach Towards Unvaccinated Population Sept. 20, 2021 University Arizona Distinguished Professor of Public Health Dr. Richard Carmona, the 17th Surgeon General of the United States, is interviewed about his role as Gov. Doug Ducey's senior advisor on public health emergency preparedness. KVOA-TV (Tucson, AZ)
CBD 101: What You Need To Know About Cannabidiol Sept. 20, 2021 Experts weigh in on THC vs. CBD Read more Image
Overall Survival Benefit of Pembrolizumab Regimen ‘Great News’ for Women With Recurrent Cervical Cancer Sept. 18, 2021 The addition of pembrolizumab to chemotherapy, with or without bevacizumab, significantly improved PFS and OS among women with persistent, recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer, results of the randomized phase 3 KEYNOTE-826 study showed. Bradley J. Monk, MD, FACS, FACOG, a professor at the College of Medicine – Phoenix and director of gynecologic oncology research at US Oncology Network, said KEYNOTE-826 will rapidly launch pembrolizumab as the global standard of care in first-line metastatic cervical cancer. Healio
University of Arizona Health Experts Study Transmission of COVID-19 by Vaccinated People Sept. 17, 2021 A clinical study at the University of Arizona is underway, working to understand COVID-19 infection and the transmission of the virus among vaccinated people. Elizabeth Connick, MD, chief of infectious diseases and professor of medicine and immunobiology at the College of Medicine – Tucson, said their goal is to answer the question of whether or not vaccinated people who are exposed to COVID-19 still shed the virus from their nose and mouth and infect others. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ)