ADHS News

ADHS News2024-08-19T13:53:42-07:00

The 2016 ADVICE Collaborative is Coming Soon

In 2013, our Licensing and Infectious Disease Services teams partnered with the Healthcare Associated Infections Advisory Committee to develop a day-long ADVICE Collaborative conference aimed at improving infection control practices. The ADVICE Collaborative brings together licensed dialysis providers, the dialysis network, federal partners and public health professionals to find new ways to promote infection control, build relationships, and identify how public health can assist [...]

By |April 25th, 2016|Licensing, Preparedness|Comments Off on The 2016 ADVICE Collaborative is Coming Soon

Expanding the Use of Data to Improve Health

Recently our informatics staff in the Office of Infectious Disease Services partnered with hospital IT staff to add two more hospitals to BioSense, the national syndromic surveillance system. We now have 26 hospitals sharing information about all their emergency department visits, including the chief complaint, diagnoses, and patient demographics. We use BioSense to understand what hospitals are seeing for syndromes [...]

By |April 22nd, 2016|Preparedness|Comments Off on Expanding the Use of Data to Improve Health

Governor Doug Ducey Appoints Three New ABRC Commissioners

Governor Doug Ducey has named three new Commissioners to the Arizona Biomedical Research Commission. The new Commissioners are: John Cover, who will represent the medical community; Howard Eng, who will represent the scientific community; and Cosmo Magliozzi who will serve as a public member. The Commissioners guide the work of ABRC by establishing research priorities and identifying key challenges and potential [...]

By |April 21st, 2016|General|Comments Off on Governor Doug Ducey Appoints Three New ABRC Commissioners

Arizona’s First Rabid Domestic Animal in Seven Years

This week, Arizona confirmed a case of rabies in a horse from Santa Cruz County . This is the first case of rabies in a domestic animal in Arizona since 2009. The horse became sick and was eventually euthanized. Public health is assessing the risk of exposure for all people involved in caring for and handling the horse. There have [...]

By |April 20th, 2016|Preparedness|Comments Off on Arizona’s First Rabid Domestic Animal in Seven Years

Inaugural Arizona Cord Blood Conference held in Phoenix

On April 7, the Arizona Biomedical Research Commission and University of Arizona College of Medicine in Phoenix held the inaugural 2016 Arizona Cord Blood Conference: Lifeline to the Future. The conference brought together policy makers, patients and their families, researchers, and clinicians together to build awareness of collecting umbilical cord blood and create a cohesive network supporting the Arizona Public Cord Blood Program. The Arizona [...]

By |April 19th, 2016|General|Comments Off on Inaugural Arizona Cord Blood Conference held in Phoenix

National Infant Immunization Week

We’re kicking of National Infant Immunization Week this week and are excited to recognize the healthcare providers, public health workers, and parents who protect our babies and communities from preventable diseases through vaccination. Without these immunization champions, our Arizona communities would be at a much greater risk of infectious disease outbreaks. Last week, we celebrated our own Arizona immunization champion, [...]

By |April 18th, 2016|Preparedness|1 Comment
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