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Each year at rodeo time, UA doctors and medical students trade their scrubs for levis and cowboy hats and take care of the bronc and bull riders who get on the wrong side of an animal.
Researchers at the University of Arizona are turning to optics technology used in telescopes to develop refractive surgery methods that could improve vision beyond the standard 20/20.
Two University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center doctors are taking part in a nationwide study that will use implantable devices to treat patients with chronic heart failure.
Co-sponsored by the Arizona Arthritis Center and Arizona Arthritis Center Friends, the seminar Living Health with Arthritis is open to individuals with arthritis, their family and friends.
University Medical Center has been identified has one of the top 100 hospitals for intensive care in the United States, according to a benchmark study by the Solucient Leadership Institute, a health care information company.
The Program in Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson has accepted three physicians to its integrative medicine fellowship, the first of its kind in the nation.
Relief may only be a paragraph away. According to a recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, writing about stressful experiences or events reduces the symptoms of people suffering from rheumatoid arthritis.
Yvette Roubideaux, M.D., MPH, clinical assistant professor in public health and medicine at the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, recently was appointed to the new U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Advisory Committee on Minority Health.
Pediatric otolaryngolgist (ears, nose and throat specialist) Dr. Glenn Green, who recently joined the faculty as assistant professor in pediatrics, surgery, and speech and hearing sciences at the University of Arizona, performs cochlear implant surgery at University Medical Center. Dr. Green can discuss the benefits and limitations of the cochlear implant.
A neurosurgeon at the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center is using a new high-tech device he helped to develop called the perivascular flow probe that increases the safety, accuracy and efficiency of neurosurgical operations, such as aneurysm surgery.