Will Humble

About Will Humble

Will Humble, M.P.H. Director Arizona Department of Health Services

Public Health & the Panama Canal

By |2017-02-10T09:49:31-07:00August 25th, 2014|General|

The Panama Canal celebrates its 100th anniversary this week.  Hailed as both a Wonder of the Modern World and a Monument of the Millennium, the Panama Canal has public health, engineering, and laborers to thank for its completion.  You may remember from history class that the construction of the Canal took decades longer than anticipated.  [...]

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Smokeless Tobacco Causes Cancer Too

By |2017-02-10T09:49:31-07:00August 22nd, 2014|Prevention|

Smokeless tobacco has made recent headlines with former MLB players citing their habitual use for their cancer diagnosis, including Tony Gwynn, who recently died after battling salivary gland cancer, and this week, Curt Schilling, who publicly announced his diagnosis of squamous cell carcinoma (cancer of the mouth).  Both attributed their cancer to their 30+ years of chewing. The percentage of adults [...]

Healthy Aging Brief

By |2017-02-10T09:49:31-07:00August 21st, 2014|General|

The Association of State and Territorial Health Officials recently investigated ways in which public health can support healthy aging. The results are now available in an issue brief that outlines key recommendations to help state health agencies support healthy aging, identify collaborative opportunities, and integrate public health and healthy aging.

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Updated Infection Control Prevention Guidelines

By |2017-02-10T09:49:31-07:00August 19th, 2014|Prevention|

The Society for Hospital Epidemiology of America and the Infectious Diseases Society of America partnered with several healthcare organizations to publish evidence-based and best practice recommendations for preventing healthcare-associated infections in acute care hospitals.  Referred to as the “SHEA Compendium”, these recommendations have served as a cornerstone of infection control and prevention since their publication [...]

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Association v. Causation

By |2017-02-10T09:49:31-07:00August 18th, 2014|General|

One of the key objectives of public health is to assess the cause of disease or bad outcomes so we can design interventions.  In order to do that, we need to be able to tell the difference between when something is actually “causing” an outcome and when the exposure or condition is simply “associated” or [...]

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Life Coach Tips for College Freshmen

By |2017-02-10T09:49:31-07:00August 15th, 2014|Prevention|

Going to college is fun and exciting.  As is the case with all life transitions, getting some helpful hints in advance can smooth out the adjustment time and help create a better and healthier outcome.  Make it a point to review the following “life coach tips” with your young adult (like I’ve been doing with my [...]

The 5th “Vital Sign” & the Painkiller Epidemic (Part III of V)

By |2017-02-10T09:49:33-07:00August 14th, 2014|General|

In Part I and Part II of this series we’ve introduced the idea that contemporary pain management strategies have resulted in an epidemic of painkiller misuse and abuse that’s killing large numbers of people.  In fact, misuse and abuse of opiate prescription painkillers takes out more people every year than car crashes.  The run-up to the [...]

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Stories to Make You Smile

By |2017-02-10T09:49:33-07:00August 13th, 2014|General|

In 2012 the Arizona Developmental Disabilities Planning Council (the DDPC works out of the 4th floor of our 1740 building) partnered with the Southwest Autism Research and Resource Center (SARRC) to develop new self-employment opportunities.  The Home Baked and Confectionary Goods law was used as the foundation for the project due to potential ease of [...]

Suicide & Depression: A Critical Arizona Winnable Battle

By |2017-02-10T09:49:33-07:00August 12th, 2014|General|

Depression strikes more people than you might think.  Some 300,000 people in Arizona live with major depression.  It may take years from when symptoms first emerge and to when people finally get help.  Less than one-third of adults with a diagnosed mental illness receive treatment.  Often, it’s the friends and family of a person living [...]

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