Yearly Archives: 2011

Pharmacy Vaccines

By |2011-05-24T09:20:04-07:00May 24th, 2011|Preparedness|

I left out one new law in my post a couple of weeks ago on the New Laws Related to Our Mission.  SB 1298 allows a licensed pharmacist to give a flu vaccine to kids between 6 and 18 years old without a prescription.  The new law also lets pharmacists administer other vaccines in a [...]

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Dr. Nelson Leading the Way for Positive Change

By |2017-02-10T09:51:46-07:00May 23rd, 2011|Behavioral Health, General|

Our own Laura Nelson M.D. was honored by the Phoenix Business Journal Thursday night for being one of the 25 Most Admired CEOs in the Valley's business community. The awardees were selected for their outstanding leadership, with a focus on their achievements over the past year. It's no surprise that Dr. Nelson was honored this [...]

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Master the Art of the Elevator Speech

By |2011-05-20T11:32:57-07:00May 20th, 2011|General|

Early in my career, I learned the importance of have a few random minutes with someone that I had little access to… someone you bump into in an elevator, sidewalk, or whatever.  Someone that can help you with your mission.  It could be someone in a key position from a Stakeholder group, your boss's boss's [...]

Summer Reading for Public Health Geeks

By |2011-05-19T08:31:03-07:00May 19th, 2011|General|

Do you like a good mystery or are you a budding public health geek looking for some summer reading?   Look no further than Medical Detectives by Berton Roueche.  It’s a book with dozens of real-life public health short stories and mysteries (they all get solved).   The stories include fascinating cases of cyanosis traced to a [...]

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ADHS to Win Copper Quills

By |2017-02-10T09:51:46-07:00May 18th, 2011|Prevention|

Our Tobacco and Chronic Disease program will win 4 of the coveted International Association of Business Communicators Phoenix Copper Quill Awards this week.  The awards are given annually to outstanding marketing and communications efforts, as judged by communications professionals around the US and Internationally. This year we’ll be getting awards for: Our Venomocity website and social media [...]

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Who Is Ed Jenner?

By |2017-02-10T09:51:46-07:00May 17th, 2011|Preparedness, Prevention|

He’s a guy that may have saved more lives than any other single person in history. In the 1790's, he noticed that “milkmaids” seldom came down with smallpox.  He developed a theory that the blisters which “milkmaids” commonly had as part of their work (from a disease called cowpox) somehow protected them from smallpox. In [...]

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AZ “Putting Prevention to Work”

By |2017-02-10T09:51:47-07:00May 16th, 2011|Prevention|

Last year we received funding from CDC to implement the Communities Putting Prevention to Work, which aims to achieve broad reaching, highly impactful, and sustainable change to reduce chronic disease burden associated with obesity and tobacco. This week CDC notified us that Arizona is a “high performing” state. What does this mean? CDC will soon be [...]

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Healthy Athletes

By |2011-05-12T08:47:00-07:00May 12th, 2011|Prevention|

Did you know that Special Olympics’ Healthy Athletes Program is the largest health care provider for people with intellectual disabilities in the world? Although “health” and “athletics” tend to be two topics that are believed to go hand in hand—that is not always the case, as Special Olympics leaders became aware of over the years.  [...]

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Fairy Tale Conveys Anti-smoking Message to Kids

By |2017-02-10T09:51:47-07:00May 11th, 2011|Preparedness, Prevention|

Guest blog by:  Karen Lewis, M.D., Medical Director of the Immunization Program Office of the Arizona Department of Health Services. Tobacco use is the world's leading single preventable cause of death. Every year, tobacco-related illnesses cause about 500,000 deaths in the United States.  Children start smoking early. Every year, there are about 400,000 new daily [...]

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