Health Sciences In The Media Meet Candice Mason | Cancer Researcher & Cancer Entrepreneur July 11, 2021 Q&A with Candice Mason, a cancer researcher at the UArizona Cancer Center and skin cancer survivor. She started her own brand of apparel and accessories with UPF 50+ protection, the maximum sun protective rating for fabrics. Shoutout Arizona Optimism and Caution Lead the Way in Stem Cell Therapy Research for COPD July 9, 2021 Given the chronic and incurable nature of COPD and the limited impact of available therapies, it is understandable why the lure of a promising new treatment approach would be appealing to individuals living with COPD. Unfortunately, these factors also render patients with COPD vulnerable to exploitation by companies offering false hope for novel remedies, explained Marilyn K. Glassberg, MD, of the Division of Pulmonology, Critical Care, and Sleep at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, and colleagues, in a recent review in Chest. Pulmonology Advisor Dementia Experts on Why the FDA Approval of Aducanumab for Alzheimer's Gets Mixed Grades July 8, 2021 The FDA approval of the monoclonal antibody aducanumab for Alzheimer's disease has elicited a decidedly mixed response from neurologists who treat dementia. “The FDA had to do a lot of analyses and make a very complicated judgement. I can't join the skeptics who say ‘just say no.’ There are a lot of unanswered questions. It is a tough call," said Pierre Tariot, MD, director of the Banner Alzheimer's Institute and a research professor at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. Neurology Today Health Insider Weighs In on Vaccine Protection Against Delta Variant July 8, 2021 As the more contagious Delta variant spreads rapidly, health experts are worried vaccines won't be as effective in preventing the spread of COVID-19. "It's quite reasonable, especially in indoor crowded spaces, even for vaccinated people to wear a mask because the risk of getting sick is higher now than it ever has been before for people who are fully vaccinated," said Shad Marvasti, MD, director of public health, prevention and health promotion at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ) Coronavirus Cases in California Rise for First Time in Months as Delta Variant Spreads July 8, 2021 There is widespread scientific consensus that fully vaccinated people have an excellent chance of being protected from severe illness or death from any coronavirus strain, including delta. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, an immunobiologist at the College of Medicine – Tucson, wrote in a tweet: “Please, no more cries of wolf on variants/vaccine efficacy. The vaccines still work fine in the real world." Los Angeles Times New Cancer Treatments May Be on the Horizon Thanks to mRNA Vaccines July 8, 2021 The COVID-19 pandemic brought mRNA vaccines into the limelight. But the technology may also prove to be a powerful weapon against hard-to-treat cancers. A head and neck cancer patient who was treated in a personalized cancer vaccine clinical trial offered at the University of Arizona Cancer Center is featured. National Geographic Tips on Getting the Most Out of Sunscreen July 8, 2021 With summer in full force, it’s more important than ever to wear sunscreen when outside. Arizonans are at a particular risk for sun-related skin damage, according to experts at the University of Arizona Cancer Center's Skin Cancer Institute. Cronkite News Some in US Pushing for More COVID Restrictions, Masking, as Delta Variant Spreads July 7, 2021 Shad Marvasti, MD, director of public health, prevention and health promotion at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, says it would be a good idea to bring back mask mandates. "We don’t want to wait until after the fact and get caught with this thing already ahead of us when we know that masks work," Marvasti said. Fox News Arizona’s Ban on Mask Mandates in Schools Criticized July 7, 2021 Health experts are concerned that Arizona’s recently approved budget, which bans public schools and universities from enforcing mask mandates and COVID-19 testing for unvaccinated students, is endangering public health across the state. “Banning schools from adopting a simple, cost-effective and scientifically proven safety measure like mask wearing while we are still in the midst of a pandemic makes absolutely no scientific or public health sense," said Elizabeth Jacobs, PhD, a professor and epidemiologist at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. Cronkite News Vaccine for Valley Fever Could Soon be Available for Pets July 6, 2021 Lisa Shubitz, DVM, a research scientist at the University of Arizona Valley Fever Center for Excellence, and her research team found a mutated gene of valley fever in a pathogen of corn. That became the first component of a potential canine vaccine for valley fever. KFOX-TV (El Paso, TX) Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
Meet Candice Mason | Cancer Researcher & Cancer Entrepreneur July 11, 2021 Q&A with Candice Mason, a cancer researcher at the UArizona Cancer Center and skin cancer survivor. She started her own brand of apparel and accessories with UPF 50+ protection, the maximum sun protective rating for fabrics. Shoutout Arizona
Optimism and Caution Lead the Way in Stem Cell Therapy Research for COPD July 9, 2021 Given the chronic and incurable nature of COPD and the limited impact of available therapies, it is understandable why the lure of a promising new treatment approach would be appealing to individuals living with COPD. Unfortunately, these factors also render patients with COPD vulnerable to exploitation by companies offering false hope for novel remedies, explained Marilyn K. Glassberg, MD, of the Division of Pulmonology, Critical Care, and Sleep at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, and colleagues, in a recent review in Chest. Pulmonology Advisor
Dementia Experts on Why the FDA Approval of Aducanumab for Alzheimer's Gets Mixed Grades July 8, 2021 The FDA approval of the monoclonal antibody aducanumab for Alzheimer's disease has elicited a decidedly mixed response from neurologists who treat dementia. “The FDA had to do a lot of analyses and make a very complicated judgement. I can't join the skeptics who say ‘just say no.’ There are a lot of unanswered questions. It is a tough call," said Pierre Tariot, MD, director of the Banner Alzheimer's Institute and a research professor at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. Neurology Today
Health Insider Weighs In on Vaccine Protection Against Delta Variant July 8, 2021 As the more contagious Delta variant spreads rapidly, health experts are worried vaccines won't be as effective in preventing the spread of COVID-19. "It's quite reasonable, especially in indoor crowded spaces, even for vaccinated people to wear a mask because the risk of getting sick is higher now than it ever has been before for people who are fully vaccinated," said Shad Marvasti, MD, director of public health, prevention and health promotion at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. KNXV-TV (Phoenix, AZ)
Coronavirus Cases in California Rise for First Time in Months as Delta Variant Spreads July 8, 2021 There is widespread scientific consensus that fully vaccinated people have an excellent chance of being protected from severe illness or death from any coronavirus strain, including delta. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, an immunobiologist at the College of Medicine – Tucson, wrote in a tweet: “Please, no more cries of wolf on variants/vaccine efficacy. The vaccines still work fine in the real world." Los Angeles Times
New Cancer Treatments May Be on the Horizon Thanks to mRNA Vaccines July 8, 2021 The COVID-19 pandemic brought mRNA vaccines into the limelight. But the technology may also prove to be a powerful weapon against hard-to-treat cancers. A head and neck cancer patient who was treated in a personalized cancer vaccine clinical trial offered at the University of Arizona Cancer Center is featured. National Geographic
Tips on Getting the Most Out of Sunscreen July 8, 2021 With summer in full force, it’s more important than ever to wear sunscreen when outside. Arizonans are at a particular risk for sun-related skin damage, according to experts at the University of Arizona Cancer Center's Skin Cancer Institute. Cronkite News
Some in US Pushing for More COVID Restrictions, Masking, as Delta Variant Spreads July 7, 2021 Shad Marvasti, MD, director of public health, prevention and health promotion at the College of Medicine – Phoenix, says it would be a good idea to bring back mask mandates. "We don’t want to wait until after the fact and get caught with this thing already ahead of us when we know that masks work," Marvasti said. Fox News
Arizona’s Ban on Mask Mandates in Schools Criticized July 7, 2021 Health experts are concerned that Arizona’s recently approved budget, which bans public schools and universities from enforcing mask mandates and COVID-19 testing for unvaccinated students, is endangering public health across the state. “Banning schools from adopting a simple, cost-effective and scientifically proven safety measure like mask wearing while we are still in the midst of a pandemic makes absolutely no scientific or public health sense," said Elizabeth Jacobs, PhD, a professor and epidemiologist at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. Cronkite News
Vaccine for Valley Fever Could Soon be Available for Pets July 6, 2021 Lisa Shubitz, DVM, a research scientist at the University of Arizona Valley Fever Center for Excellence, and her research team found a mutated gene of valley fever in a pathogen of corn. That became the first component of a potential canine vaccine for valley fever. KFOX-TV (El Paso, TX)