Patient Confidentiality: A Cornerstone of Public Health Practice
When we think about holding things in confidence- several relationships come to mind that have a long history built on trust and the sharing of deeply private information. Most of us can name these relationships with ease… husband and wife… lawyer and client… health care providers, public health officials and patients. These relationships exist for a reason. To share one’s [...]
Forging a New Trauma Tool
Kudos to our EMS and Trauma System team for forging some new tools to improve trauma care in AZ. Our Data and Quality Assurance team developed an innovative benchmarking tool that’s shared with each of AZ’s trauma centers. The tool shows each facility their injury specific survival rates and compares those rates to the (blinded) other centers. The report provides a [...]
Home Birth Protest
Those of you that were working at our downtown campus last Wednesday afternoon may have seen the 100 or so folks carrying placards in front of our 150 Building. They were asking us to make it easier to have a home-birth in AZ. How can we do that, you ask? Many of you probably didn’t know that we license the [...]
A Virus is Born
The CDC confirmed the birth of a new influenza virus in this week’s MMWR Weekly Report. The newborn is named “Swine-origin Triple Reassortant Influenza A (H3N2) (S-OtrH3N2)”. The hybrid virus was found in a handful of school-age kids in Iowa recently- and luckily the kids recovered and none were hospitalized. Nobody outside the initial cluster has been infected (a good thing) meaning it [...]
Arizona Health Disparities Connection & Maternal and Child Health Newsletters
Check out the latest issue of AHDConnection – Arizona’s Leading Health Disparities Resource on our Minority Health webpage and our brand new Maternal & Child Health Newsletter. Both have great info.
HIV Becomes a Chronic Disease
Chronic disease often calls up bad images for people because it means living with the disease for a long time. But… there was a time when cancer wasn’t chronic disease because people got sick and died pretty quickly. The same goes for HIV. When it was first discovered in the early 80s people quickly transitioned to AIDS and died shortly [...]







