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- Questions About Raises, Shuttle Fees Top Administrators Forum
A UAMS Update article about Meet Your Administrator”
- Gruenwald Is New U.S. Citizen
Michael Gruenwald becomes U.S. citizen
- Gruenwald Is New U.S. Citizen
Michael Gruenwald becomes U.S. citizen
- Doughnut Sale to Help UAMS Psychiatry Youth Program
A UAMS Update article about a bake sale
- Call-in Announcements, Forums Will Give Employees More Information
A UAMS Update article about plans to improve communication between administration and employees of UAMS Medical Center
- IT Help Desk 400,000th Call Sweepstakes
IT Help Desk 400,000th Call Sweepstates
- The UAMS Help Desk Today - Ten Years Later
The UAMS Help Desk Today - Ten Years Later
- Free Tickets for UAMS Nights at Ray Winder Field
A UAMS Update article about UAMS Night with the Travelers
- ARIA Training Sessions May 19 - June 27 at UAMS
A UAMS Update article about May 19 - June 27 training sessions
- Human Research Forum Is May 21
A UAMS Update article about human research Q & A
- Accolades, May 2003
Accolades to UAMS faculty and staff
- GCRC Deadline Changed to July 1 for Grant Proposals
A UAMS Update article about GCRC pilot grants
- History of the Help Desk
- Watch, Look & Listen: Preview of New UAMS Public Service Campaign
- Forum to Discuss Impact of HIPAA on Research
Update article about HIPAA and research at UAMS
- Human Research Q and A Forum June 27
A UAMS Update article about the human research forum
- Emailed Version of UAMS Notice of Privacy Practices
UAMS Notice of Privacy Practices
- Free UAF Symposium Aug. 14-15 on Evolution of Human Diet
A UAMS Update article about a diet symposium at UAF
- Tom Butler is Arkansas Administrator of the Year
Tom Butler of UAMS Is Arkansas Administrator of the Year
- Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.*
Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.
- Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.*
Join the Prostate Cancer Race Walk. Click Here for Registration Form.
- Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
- Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
Defense Department Funds Possible Therapeutic Vaccine for Ovarian Cancer at UAMS
- Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure®!
Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure!
- Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure®!
Join UAMS/ACRC Team in Race for the Cure!
- UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
- UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
UAMS Scientist Receives $272,000 Grant for Tailoring Cancer Treatments with Laser Test
- Photo Album: Stephens Institute Was a Highlight of Medicine Alumni Reunion
Photo Album: Stephens Institute Was a Highlight of Medicine Alumni Reunion
- Kids First in Fort Smith Celebrated Fourth in Style
Kids First in Fort Smith Celebrated Fourth in Style
- Class of 1948 Dedicates Endowment to Excellence in Education
Class of 1948 Dedicates Endowment to Excellence in Education
- Pharmacy Professor Elected to American College of Clinical Pharmacy
Pharmacy Professor Elected to American College of Clinical Pharmacy
- Pharmaceutical Scientists, Graduate Students Meet at UAMS
Pharmaceutical Scientists, Graduate Students Meet at UAMS
- Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., Is Interim Dean of College of Pharmacy
Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., Is Interim Dean of College of Pharmacy
- Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
- Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
Free “Matters of the Heart” Seminar Aug. 23
- UAMS Program on Childhood Body Mass Index Feb. 17
UAMS Program on Childhood Body Mass Index Feb. 17
- UAMS Program on Childhood Body Mass Index Feb. 17
UAMS Program on Childhood Body Mass Index Feb. 17
- College of Public Health Holds First Class
First classes begin for new UAMS College of Public Health
- College of Public Health Holds First Class
First classes begin for new UAMS College of Public Health
- Boozman To Address ACHI Forum: "The State of Public Health"
Boozman Lecture To Assess "State of Public Health"
- Boozman To Address ACHI Forum: "The State of Public Health"
Boozman Lecture To Assess "State of Public Health"
- Boozman To Address ACHI Forum: "The State of Public Health"
Boozman Lecture To Assess "State of Public Health"
- UAMS Dedicates College of Public Health
APRIL 9, 2004 | Governor Mike Huckabee praised “the most broad-based coalition I’ve ever seen” for creation of the College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) at the dedication of the college today.
- UAMS Dedicates College of Public Health
APRIL 9, 2004 | Governor Mike Huckabee praised “the most broad-based coalition I’ve ever seen” for creation of the College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) at the dedication of the college today.
- UAMS Dedicates College of Public Health
APRIL 9, 2004 | Governor Mike Huckabee praised “the most broad-based coalition I’ve ever seen” for creation of the College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) at the dedication of the college today.
- Many Helped Build College of Public Health
A UAMS News article about supporters of the UAMS College of Public Health
- UAMS Receives Grant to Track Arkansas Childhood Obesity Levels
UAMS Receives Grant to Track Arkansas Childhood Obesity Levels
- UAMS Survey Shows Percentages of Unhealthy Snacks In Arkansas School Vending Machines Surpass National Rates
UAMS Survey Shows Percentages of Unhealthy Snacks In Arkansas School Vending Machines Surpass National Rates
- UAMS Survey Shows Percentages of Unhealthy Snacks In Arkansas School Vending Machines Surpass National Rates
UAMS Survey Shows Percentages of Unhealthy Snacks In Arkansas School Vending Machines Surpass National Rates
- Here’s to Your Health: Public Health
HTYH radio program series about: UAMS College of Public Health [interview with Dean Pro Tem, Thomas A. Bruce, M.D.]
- Here’s to Your Health: Public Health
HTYH radio program series about: UAMS College of Public Health [interview with Dean Pro Tem, Thomas A. Bruce, M.D.]
- Here’s to Your Health: Public Health
HTYH radio program series about: UAMS College of Public Health [interview with Dean Pro Tem, Thomas A. Bruce, M.D.]
- Here’s to Your Health: Public Health
HTYH radio program series about: UAMS College of Public Health [interview with Dean Pro Tem, Thomas A. Bruce, M.D.]
- Health Conference for Educators and Healthcare Professionals Set for August 10-11 at Statehouse Convention Center
A statewide conference to address obesity, physical activity and improving Arkansans’ health is set for Aug. 10-11, at the Statehouse Convention Center in downtown Little Rock.
- Health Conference for Educators and Healthcare Professionals Set for August 10-11 at Statehouse Convention Center
A statewide conference to address obesity, physical activity and improving Arkansans’ health is set for Aug. 10-11, at the Statehouse Convention Center in downtown Little Rock.
- Driven By Rising Costs, Managed Care Plans Dust Off Practices That Triggered 1990s Backlash, Health Affairs Article Says
Driven By Rising Costs, Managed Care Plans Dust Off Practices That Triggered 1990s Backlash, Health Affairs Article Says
- Driven By Rising Costs, Managed Care Plans Dust Off Practices That Triggered 1990s Backlash, Health Affairs Article Says
Driven By Rising Costs, Managed Care Plans Dust Off Practices That Triggered 1990s Backlash, Health Affairs Article Says
- State Okays Two Public Health Programs in New College
The state of Arkansas has approved the first two programs in the new College of Public Health at UAMS.
- State Okays Two Public Health Programs in New College
The state of Arkansas has approved the first two programs in the new College of Public Health at UAMS.
- State Okays Two Public Health Programs in New College
The state of Arkansas has approved the first two programs in the new College of Public Health at UAMS.
- UAMS Briefs Emergency Personnel on Bioterrorism Responses
Emergency and environmental health personnel received a briefing at UAMS on immediate responses to bioterrorism.
- UAMS Briefs Emergency Personnel on Bioterrorism Responses
Emergency and environmental health personnel received a briefing at UAMS on immediate responses to bioterrorism.
- UAMS Briefs Emergency Personnel on Bioterrorism Responses
Emergency and environmental health personnel received a briefing at UAMS on immediate responses to bioterrorism.
- UAMS Briefs Emergency Personnel on Bioterrorism Responses
Emergency and environmental health personnel received a briefing at UAMS on immediate responses to bioterrorism.
- UAMS Physicians Develop Course to Train Physicians, Nurses to Treat Pediatric Overweight – Resource One of First of Its Kind in the Nation
Jan. 12, 2005 | Taking the next step in Arkansas’ battle against childhood obesity, a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians has developed a continuing education course to equip the state’s physicians and nurses for treating pediatric weight problems.
- UAMS Physicians Develop Course to Train Physicians, Nurses to Treat Pediatric Overweight – Resource One of First of Its Kind in the Nation
Jan. 12, 2005 | Taking the next step in Arkansas’ battle against childhood obesity, a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians has developed a continuing education course to equip the state’s physicians and nurses for treating pediatric weight problems.
- UAMS Physicians Develop Course to Train Physicians, Nurses to Treat Pediatric Overweight – Resource One of First of Its Kind in the Nation
Jan. 12, 2005 | Taking the next step in Arkansas’ battle against childhood obesity, a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians has developed a continuing education course to equip the state’s physicians and nurses for treating pediatric weight problems.
- UAMS Physicians Develop Course to Train Physicians, Nurses to Treat Pediatric Overweight – Resource One of First of Its Kind in the Nation
Jan. 12, 2005 | Taking the next step in Arkansas’ battle against childhood obesity, a group of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) physicians has developed a continuing education course to equip the state’s physicians and nurses for treating pediatric weight problems.
- Less Than 10 percent of Schools Offer Low-Fat Snacks, Says UAMS Report Designed to Track Childhood Obesity Law
LITTLE ROCK – Less than 10 percent of Arkansas schools offer low-fat snacks, according to a report by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) delivered to state legislators today.
- Less Than 10 percent of Schools Offer Low-Fat Snacks, Says UAMS Report Designed to Track Childhood Obesity Law
LITTLE ROCK – Less than 10 percent of Arkansas schools offer low-fat snacks, according to a report by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) delivered to state legislators today.
- UAMS Professor Recognized as a National Healthy School Hero
LITTLE ROCK – Carole Garner, assistant professor in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, was recently recognized by the nonprofit organization Action for Healthy Kids as one of 31 “Healthy School Heroes” across the nation who are improving children’s nutrition, physical activity and readiness to learn.
- UAMS Professor Recognized as a National Healthy School Hero
LITTLE ROCK – Carole Garner, assistant professor in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, was recently recognized by the nonprofit organization Action for Healthy Kids as one of 31 “Healthy School Heroes” across the nation who are improving children’s nutrition, physical activity and readiness to learn.
- Arkansas Public Health Week Recognized April 4-8
April 4, 2005 | “Empowering Arkansans to Live Stronger, Longer,” is the theme of this year’s Public Health Week, April 4-10.
- Arkansas Public Health Week Recognized April 4-8
April 4, 2005 | “Empowering Arkansans to Live Stronger, Longer,” is the theme of this year’s Public Health Week, April 4-10.
- Arkansas Public Health Week Recognized April 4-8
April 4, 2005 | “Empowering Arkansans to Live Stronger, Longer,” is the theme of this year’s Public Health Week, April 4-10.
- Paul Halverson Appointed Interim Director of State Health Department
MAY 5, 2005 | Gov. Mike Huckabee has named Paul Halverson, Dr. P.H., professor and chairman of the Department of Health Policy and Management
in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, as interim director of the state Department of Health.
- Paul Halverson Appointed Interim Director of State Health Department
MAY 5, 2005 | Gov. Mike Huckabee has named Paul Halverson, Dr. P.H., professor and chairman of the Department of Health Policy and Management
in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, as interim director of the state Department of Health.
- Paul Halverson Appointed Interim Director of State Health Department
MAY 5, 2005 | Gov. Mike Huckabee has named Paul Halverson, Dr. P.H., professor and chairman of the Department of Health Policy and Management
in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, as interim director of the state Department of Health.
- Paul Halverson Appointed Interim Director of State Health Department
MAY 5, 2005 | Gov. Mike Huckabee has named Paul Halverson, Dr. P.H., professor and chairman of the Department of Health Policy and Management
in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, as interim director of the state Department of Health.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS’ Hakkak Named Distinguished Graduate of UA
MAY 19, 2005 | A nutritionist at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was recently named a distinguished graduate of the animal science program in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville.
- UAMS Opens Center for Addiction Research
LITTLE ROCK – Research studies are underway in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research, a collaborative effort between the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health to further the understanding of the addiction process and find ways to break the cycle.
- UAMS Opens Center for Addiction Research
LITTLE ROCK – Research studies are underway in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research, a collaborative effort between the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health to further the understanding of the addiction process and find ways to break the cycle.
- UAMS Opens Center for Addiction Research
LITTLE ROCK – Research studies are underway in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences’ (UAMS) new Center for Addiction Research, a collaborative effort between the Colleges of Medicine and Public Health to further the understanding of the addiction process and find ways to break the cycle.
- Boozman Was 'Tenacious' in Fight for College of Public Health
Gov. Mike Huckabee said he was a skeptic when Fay W. Boozman, M.D., came to him in 1999 asking that a school of public health be built using the state's share of a tobacco industry legal settlement. But Boozman, then director of the Arkansas Department of Health, convinced him. That's why the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) four-year-old College of Public Health was rightfully named in Boozman's honor and memory, Huckabee said at the Aug. 10 naming ceremony.
- Boozman Was 'Tenacious' in Fight for College of Public Health
Gov. Mike Huckabee said he was a skeptic when Fay W. Boozman, M.D., came to him in 1999 asking that a school of public health be built using the state's share of a tobacco industry legal settlement. But Boozman, then director of the Arkansas Department of Health, convinced him. That's why the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) four-year-old College of Public Health was rightfully named in Boozman's honor and memory, Huckabee said at the Aug. 10 naming ceremony.
- College of Public Health Forges Partnership With Schools to Fight Obesity
OCT. 18, 2005 | Hit singles, not homeruns. That was one of the messages to Arkansas public school leaders at a recent childhood obesity conference sponsored by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health.
- College of Public Health Forges Partnership With Schools to Fight Obesity
OCT. 18, 2005 | Hit singles, not homeruns. That was one of the messages to Arkansas public school leaders at a recent childhood obesity conference sponsored by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health.
- College of Public Health Forges Partnership With Schools to Fight Obesity
OCT. 18, 2005 | Hit singles, not homeruns. That was one of the messages to Arkansas public school leaders at a recent childhood obesity conference sponsored by the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health.
- College of Public Health Tobacco Programs Off to Fast Start
OCT. 20, 2005 | The SOSQuitline for tobacco users was up only a couple of months at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) when a poetic letter arrived for one of the counselors.
- College of Public Health Tobacco Programs Off to Fast Start
OCT. 20, 2005 | The SOSQuitline for tobacco users was up only a couple of months at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) when a poetic letter arrived for one of the counselors.
- College of Public Health Tobacco Programs Off to Fast Start
OCT. 20, 2005 | The SOSQuitline for tobacco users was up only a couple of months at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) when a poetic letter arrived for one of the counselors.
- Obesity Prevention Professorship Endowed on Behalf of Former Gov. McMath, Father of Modern-Day UAMS
LITTLE ROCK – Former Arkansas Gov. Sid McMath, who pushed for statewide public health improvements a half-century ago, was honored posthumously today with the endowment of a new professorship at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health.
- Obesity Prevention Professorship Endowed on Behalf of Former Gov. McMath, Father of Modern-Day UAMS
LITTLE ROCK – Former Arkansas Gov. Sid McMath, who pushed for statewide public health improvements a half-century ago, was honored posthumously today with the endowment of a new professorship at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health.
- Obesity Researcher Kim Joins UAMS College of Public Health
LITTLE ROCK – Obesity researcher Karen Hye-cheon Kim, Ph.D., has joined the faculty of the Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- Obesity Researcher Kim Joins UAMS College of Public Health
LITTLE ROCK – Obesity researcher Karen Hye-cheon Kim, Ph.D., has joined the faculty of the Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- Lawmakers ‘Impressed’ with UAMS Tobacco Efforts
DEC. 5, 2005 | Arkansas lawmakers seeking information about the state’s tobacco cessation program said they were pleased during a recent visit to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- Lawmakers ‘Impressed’ with UAMS Tobacco Efforts
DEC. 5, 2005 | Arkansas lawmakers seeking information about the state’s tobacco cessation program said they were pleased during a recent visit to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- Lawmakers ‘Impressed’ with UAMS Tobacco Efforts
DEC. 5, 2005 | Arkansas lawmakers seeking information about the state’s tobacco cessation program said they were pleased during a recent visit to the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS).
- UAMS Program Helps Arkansans Quit Using Tobacco
LITTLE ROCK – Arkansans who want to stop using tobacco can get intensive treatment at no cost through the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, the UAMS Area Health Education Centers and affiliated hospitals.
- UAMS Program Helps Arkansans Quit Using Tobacco
LITTLE ROCK – Arkansans who want to stop using tobacco can get intensive treatment at no cost through the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) College of Public Health, the UAMS Area Health Education Centers and affiliated hospitals.
- UAMS Participating in Regional Study Focused on Family Planning Clinics’ Referral Services
LITTLE ROCK – Evaluating how well family planning providers assist low-income women in obtaining primary and specialty health care services is the aim of a new study led by the College of Public Health at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in Little Rock and the School of Public Health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
- Bookstore Offers 40 Percent Discount on Russell Jerzee Apparel
Bookstore Offers 40 Percent Discount on Russell Jerzee Apparel
- Bookstore Offers 40 Percent Discount on Russell Jerzee Apparel
Bookstore Offers 40 Percent Discount on Russell Jerzee Apparel
- UAMS Opens Code Moo Frozen Yogurt Shop
UAMS Opens Code Moo Frozen Yogurt Shop
- UAMS Opens Code Moo Frozen Yogurt Shop
UAMS Opens Code Moo Frozen Yogurt Shop
- UAMS Hosts Blood Drives in COPH, Freeway Medical
UAMS Hosts Blood Drives in COPH, Freeway Medical
- UAMS Hosts Blood Drives in COPH, Freeway Medical
UAMS Hosts Blood Drives in COPH, Freeway Medical
- TIAA-CREF on Campus in February and March
TIAA-CREF on Campus in February and March
- TIAA-CREF on Campus in February and March
TIAA-CREF on Campus in February and March
- Human Resources Hosts 'HR Connects!' Feb. 16
Human Resources Hosts 'HR Connects!' Feb. 16
- Human Resources Hosts 'HR Connects!' Feb. 16
Human Resources Hosts 'HR Connects!' Feb. 16
- Arm protection System (APS) for robotic surgery: A surgical device to position the arms of surgical patients during prolonged robotic surgical procedures. (11-04)
A device to secure and position the arms of patients during prolonged surgical procedures to protect against nerve damage and assist the anesthesiologist access to IV sites.
- Arm protection System (APS) for robotic surgery: A surgical device to position the arms of surgical patients during prolonged robotic surgical procedures. (11-04)
A device to secure and position the arms of patients during prolonged surgical procedures to protect against nerve damage and assist the anesthesiologist access to IV sites.
- Novel plasma biomarker and marker profiles for analysis of metastatic disease: A unique fragment of parathyroid hormone related protein predicts breast metastasis to bone (11-09)
Novel biomarker profile for the management of metastisis to bone of patients with breast cancer.
- Novel plasma biomarker and marker profiles for analysis of metastatic disease: A unique fragment of parathyroid hormone related protein predicts breast metastasis to bone (11-09)
Novel biomarker profile for the management of metastisis to bone of patients with breast cancer.
- Novel plasma biomarker and marker profiles for analysis of metastatic disease: A unique fragment of parathyroid hormone related protein predicts breast metastasis to bone (11-09)
Novel biomarker profile for the management of metastisis to bone of patients with breast cancer.
- Gray’s Anomaly: A Source of Empowerment
Feb. 8, 2012 | “I’ll trim it so it’s not so bulky,” James Y. Suen, M.D., said as he folded, then snipped a tiny edge of gauze off before he placed it on his patient’s right jaw. He has cared for 23-year-old Jasmine Gray ever since she was 11 when she traveled from Memphis, Tenn. to see him after first being misdiagnosed.
- Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
- Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
Need Something Sweet for Your Valentine?
- Code Moo Now Open
Code Moo Now Open
- Code Moo Now Open
Code Moo Now Open
- Sign Up for the UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
- Sign Up for the UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
UAMS House of Delegates Relay for Life Team
- Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
- Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
Overwhelming Response to SmartCare
- Celebrating African American Women Firsts
Celebrating African American Women Firsts
- Celebrating African American Women Firsts
Celebrating African American Women Firsts
- Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
- Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
Nutrition Department Hosts Food Drive
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. 11-11
Treatment of cardiovascular diseases, heart attack and stroke remain leading causes of death in the world, affecting close to 15 million individuals per year. Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. 11-11
Treatment of cardiovascular diseases, heart attack and stroke remain leading causes of death in the world, affecting close to 15 million individuals per year. Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. 11-11
Treatment of cardiovascular diseases, heart attack and stroke remain leading causes of death in the world, affecting close to 15 million individuals per year. Among various risk factors, circulating clots (termed also thrombi) may cause unexpected death or stoke. At present no clinically relevant method has been developed for early detection of circulating clots despite their clinical significance as prognostic markers for preventing stroke and heart attacks.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
- In vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. (11-11)
The present invention is a method of in vivo flow cytometry with negative photo acoustic contrast for noninvasive, continuous, real−time detection of circulating clots. The Photo Acoustic technique based on detection of laser−induced acoustic waves provides greater sensitivity and spatial resolution in deeper tissue compared to the other optical modalities. In vivo multicolor flow cytometry, negative and positive PA contrasts integrated with focused ultrasound has potential for dynamic study of various clots directly in the bloodstream of superficial microvessels associated with different diseases (e.g., cardiovascular disorder, cancer metastasis, or infection) and their treatment (e.g., stents, implants, drugs) which otherwise could not be detected with existing techniques.
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Jan. 21, 2005 | An article on insurance companies’ efforts to control rising health care costs co-authored by an associate professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was among the 10 most read online in 2004 by readers of the health policy journal Health Affairs.
Glen P. Mays, Ph.D., M.P.H., associate professor and director of research for the Department of Health Policy and Management in the UAMS College of Public Health, was the lead author of “Managed Care Rebound? Recent Changes in Health Plans’ Cost Containment Strategies,” the tenth most frequently-viewed article as ranked by Health Affairs magazine in its 25 Most-Read Articles of 2004. The article attracted 14,691 page views since it was posted as a Web exclusive on Aug. 11, according to the journal.
Mays and two colleagues analyzed interviews conducted through the Community Tracking Study (CTS) site visits, which monitor health care markets in 12 representative metropolitan areas across the country every two years. The Little Rock metropolitan area was one of the 12 areas.
Based on interviews with providers, insurers, employers, and others in the health care markets, Mays and his colleagues found that health insurance plans are more often requiring preauthorization for outpatient services and specialist referrals. They also found that plans are reviewing inpatient services while patients are in the hospital in an effort to shorten hospitalizations, and they are reviewing claims to profile providers based on health care use and quality.
Many of these techniques were criticized during the managed care backlash of the 1990s and had been removed from plans as insurers responded to pressure from enrollees and employers. But with premiums rising at double-digit rates, some plans have now begun reintroducing the cost-control measures, though few of the respondents in the study believed these strategies alone would greatly reduce health care costs.
The trend should continue as health care costs increase, Mays said recently. Though instead of another backlash against managed care, consumers now more sensitized to cost issues could accept them.
“One possible scenario is that consumers could be more accepting of cost containment strategies if they are effective in holding down health care costs,” Mays said.
Mays’ coauthors were Gary Claxton, vice president of the Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation, and Justin White, a research assistant at Mathematica Policy Research. Their research was conducted at the Center for Studying Health System Change and supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
In its year-end review of most-read articles from Jan. 1 to Dec. 21, 2004, Health Affairs noted that its Web readership quadrupled to 8 million page views. It is the one of the most widely read health policy journals.
Links on This Page Health Affairs journal: http://www.healthaffairs.org/
UAMS College of Public Health: http://www.uams.edu/coph/
Managed Care Rebound? Recent Changes in Health Plans’ Cost Containment Strategies: http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/hlthaff.w4.427/DC1?ck=nck
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