Health Sciences In The Media First Case of Highly Transmissible Delta Variant Reaches Tucson Area June 17, 2021 Scientists have found Pima County’s first case of the Delta variant, a new, highly transmissible variant of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. “At this point I’m still not alarmed that the Delta variant is going to have a major impact here in Arizona,” said Dr. Joe Gerald, an associate professor and director of the public health policy and management program at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. Arizona Daily Star Minding Melanoma: Research and Therapies June 16, 2021 Researchers at the University of Arizona Cancer Center's Skin Cancer Institute are spending countless hours researching new medicines to battle melanoma. “Ultimately the things I’m doing are experimental. I'm the guy who tries to come up with novel weapons on a molecular basis,” said Georg Wondrak, a professor at the College of Pharmacy and a research member at the UArizona Cancer Center. KGUN-TV (Tucson, AZ) UArizona Offers New Health Science Undergraduate Degree June 16, 2021 The College of Medicine – Tucson is offering a new Bachelor of Science in Medicine degree. "My overall hope is that we provide something that students really, really like. We want to give something that will be another option for students to say 'hey I want to try some of this or look at it.' I hope that it helps with student's decisions as far as career," said Todd Vanderah, PhD, head of the Department of Pharmacology. KVOA-TV (Tucson, AZ) Teen Vaping Dropped During the Pandemic-Will It Last? June 15, 2021 New studies suggest that teens and preteens may be cooling on vapes. Ivo Abraham, a professor at the College of Pharmacy, sees “some signals of growing awareness that this is not healthy.” Fortune Episode 86: Chemicals and Toxic Materials: Environmental Effects of What We Use June 14, 2021 Frank A. von Hippel, a professor of environmental health sciences in the Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, and Joe Schwarcz of McGill University’s Office for Science and Society, discuss the unknown environmental and health ramifications from harmful chemicals. Healthy Living Healthy Planet Radio FACT FINDERS: How Novavax Differs From Other COVID-19 Vaccines June 14, 2021 The Novavax vaccine differs from other Covid-19 vaccines because it already has the spike protein of the virus but it cannot cause the actual disease. ”I would love to see that vaccine here, it’s much more easily stored and transported, it would make it a lot easier to get that type of vaccine out to the rest of the world as well,” said Deepta Bhattacharya, an immunobiologist at the College of Medicine – Tucson. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ) Minding Melanoma: Prevention and Disparities Among People of Color June 14, 2021 While Caucasions are 20 times more likely to develop melanoma than people of color, the reality is when it's diagnosed in people of color it’s typically in the deadliest of stages. "The rate for melanoma is now 30 per 100,000 in Arizona compared to 22.7 per 100,000 in the United States as a whole," said Robin Harris, a professor at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and co-director of the Skin Cancer Institute at the UArizona Cancer Center. KGUN-TV (Tucson, AZ) The Surprising Good News on How Menopause Changes Your Brain June 14, 2021 Menopause’s effects on the brain are often temporary, according to a new study. But there’s a caution for women at risk of Alzheimer’s. The Wall Street Journal Sleep Duration Increases, Particularly Among Young Adults, During COVID-19 Pandemic June 14, 2021 Mean sleep duration increased in 2020 by 5 to 11 minutes in nearly all groups studied, according to an analysis of Fitbit data from more than 163,000 users in six major U.S. cities "particularly hard hit" by the COVID-19 pandemic. “It was also interesting to see that the degree of change in sleep was correlated with the degree of improvement in resting heart rate," said Michael Grandner, PhD, director of the Sleep and Health Research Program and associate professor at the College of Medicine – Tucson. Healio Stem Cell Studies Take Time, But Arizona Researchers Say the Wait is Safer for Patients June 13, 2021 David Harris, professor of immunobiology and executive director of the UArizona Biorepository in the College of Medicine – Tucson, believes that stem cell clinics marketing unproven treatments could hurt researchers who are doing things the correct way. "If it appears that medical professionals are doing this just to make money, it will spur a lot of distrust, not only in the doctors, but also in in this field," said Harris. The Arizona Republic Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
First Case of Highly Transmissible Delta Variant Reaches Tucson Area June 17, 2021 Scientists have found Pima County’s first case of the Delta variant, a new, highly transmissible variant of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. “At this point I’m still not alarmed that the Delta variant is going to have a major impact here in Arizona,” said Dr. Joe Gerald, an associate professor and director of the public health policy and management program at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. Arizona Daily Star
Minding Melanoma: Research and Therapies June 16, 2021 Researchers at the University of Arizona Cancer Center's Skin Cancer Institute are spending countless hours researching new medicines to battle melanoma. “Ultimately the things I’m doing are experimental. I'm the guy who tries to come up with novel weapons on a molecular basis,” said Georg Wondrak, a professor at the College of Pharmacy and a research member at the UArizona Cancer Center. KGUN-TV (Tucson, AZ)
UArizona Offers New Health Science Undergraduate Degree June 16, 2021 The College of Medicine – Tucson is offering a new Bachelor of Science in Medicine degree. "My overall hope is that we provide something that students really, really like. We want to give something that will be another option for students to say 'hey I want to try some of this or look at it.' I hope that it helps with student's decisions as far as career," said Todd Vanderah, PhD, head of the Department of Pharmacology. KVOA-TV (Tucson, AZ)
Teen Vaping Dropped During the Pandemic-Will It Last? June 15, 2021 New studies suggest that teens and preteens may be cooling on vapes. Ivo Abraham, a professor at the College of Pharmacy, sees “some signals of growing awareness that this is not healthy.” Fortune
Episode 86: Chemicals and Toxic Materials: Environmental Effects of What We Use June 14, 2021 Frank A. von Hippel, a professor of environmental health sciences in the Mel & Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, and Joe Schwarcz of McGill University’s Office for Science and Society, discuss the unknown environmental and health ramifications from harmful chemicals. Healthy Living Healthy Planet Radio
FACT FINDERS: How Novavax Differs From Other COVID-19 Vaccines June 14, 2021 The Novavax vaccine differs from other Covid-19 vaccines because it already has the spike protein of the virus but it cannot cause the actual disease. ”I would love to see that vaccine here, it’s much more easily stored and transported, it would make it a lot easier to get that type of vaccine out to the rest of the world as well,” said Deepta Bhattacharya, an immunobiologist at the College of Medicine – Tucson. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ)
Minding Melanoma: Prevention and Disparities Among People of Color June 14, 2021 While Caucasions are 20 times more likely to develop melanoma than people of color, the reality is when it's diagnosed in people of color it’s typically in the deadliest of stages. "The rate for melanoma is now 30 per 100,000 in Arizona compared to 22.7 per 100,000 in the United States as a whole," said Robin Harris, a professor at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and co-director of the Skin Cancer Institute at the UArizona Cancer Center. KGUN-TV (Tucson, AZ)
The Surprising Good News on How Menopause Changes Your Brain June 14, 2021 Menopause’s effects on the brain are often temporary, according to a new study. But there’s a caution for women at risk of Alzheimer’s. The Wall Street Journal
Sleep Duration Increases, Particularly Among Young Adults, During COVID-19 Pandemic June 14, 2021 Mean sleep duration increased in 2020 by 5 to 11 minutes in nearly all groups studied, according to an analysis of Fitbit data from more than 163,000 users in six major U.S. cities "particularly hard hit" by the COVID-19 pandemic. “It was also interesting to see that the degree of change in sleep was correlated with the degree of improvement in resting heart rate," said Michael Grandner, PhD, director of the Sleep and Health Research Program and associate professor at the College of Medicine – Tucson. Healio
Stem Cell Studies Take Time, But Arizona Researchers Say the Wait is Safer for Patients June 13, 2021 David Harris, professor of immunobiology and executive director of the UArizona Biorepository in the College of Medicine – Tucson, believes that stem cell clinics marketing unproven treatments could hurt researchers who are doing things the correct way. "If it appears that medical professionals are doing this just to make money, it will spur a lot of distrust, not only in the doctors, but also in in this field," said Harris. The Arizona Republic