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May 21, 2013
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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 27 for ua institute of the environment. Subscribe to this search

  1. article What's Up UA? - Young Artist Devotes 12 Years to UA Program

    Thursday, April 25, 2013 1:30 pm

    In the history of the University of Arizona Wildcat School of Art, only one other student has achieved what Brody Loeffler has: successfully completed 12 years in the arts education program.

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  2. article What's Up UA? - UA Med Students to Meet Their 'Match'

    Friday, March 15, 2013 11:24 am

    For four years, students at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson and Phoenix have worked toward "Match Day" – the day they learn where they will spend the next several years as resident-physicians, a major step in building a medical career.

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  3. article What's Up UA? - Study Sheds Light on Role of Climate in Flu Transmission

    Thursday, March 14, 2013 8:43 am

    Two types of environmental conditions – cold-dry and humid-rainy – are associated with seasonal influenza epidemics, according to an epidemiological study led by researchers at the National Institutes of Health's Fogarty International Center and involving the University of Arizona.

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  4. article What's Up UA? - The Power of Positive Communication

    Friday, March 1, 2013 4:22 pm

    Instead of being attentive to what is right, some people tend to overemphasize what is wrong: why relationships do not work out, why diets fail, why personal finances are out of order, why bad luck always seems to arrive.

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  5. article UA Ranked Top in Nation for Environmental Research

    Saturday, February 9, 2013 4:00 pm

    The University of Arizona has been ranked as the top environmental university in the U.S. based on several measures of productivity for research publications in environmental science. The UA also is the second-ranked environmental university in the world in environmental science publications, according to a report published in the Journal Science of the Total Environment.

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  6. article What's Up UA? - UA Institute to Explore Link Between Physical Environment, Health

    Saturday, February 2, 2013 1:20 pm

    A new interdisciplinary institute in development at the University of Arizona will explore the connection between human health and well-being and the physical environment.

    The Institute for Place and Wellbeing – a joint venture of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine in the UA College of Medicine; the UA College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture; and the UA Institute of the Environment – will engage in research to measure the effects of the built and green environment on human health, emotions and spirituality, while training professionals in the health-care and architecture fields to consider the place and well-being connection in their work.

    The institute will be led by Dr. Esther Sternberg, who joined the UA in the fall as director of research for the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine, and Eve Edelstein, a neuroscientist and architect who has joined the UA College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture as an associate professor.

    Edelstein is teaching a new course at the UA this semester, "Neuro-Architecture: Brains, Bodies and the Biosphere," designed to introduce students from all majors and professional backgrounds to the type of work the institute will do.

    Quantifying human responses to environment

    Ample evidence exists to suggest that one's physical environment can impact his or her health and well-being. The connection has been studied seriously for more than 20 years, since landmark research in 1984 found that patients recovering from gall bladder surgery healed on average one day sooner when their hospital rooms had a view of a grove of trees as opposed to a view of a brick wall.

    Studies have since examined how physical space and building design elements – like windows, lighting and navigability – can impact people's stress levels and health.

    Most of the data is qualitative, based on feelings reported by individuals, and much of the work has focused on hospital settings, where health of the building's residents is the primary concern.

    The Institute for Place and Wellbeing will focus on getting more quantitative measures of human responses to environment – collecting data using tools like heart rate monitors, EEG, biosensors and virtual reality models – and applying that data in a variety of design settings, such as offices, schools and residential buildings, in addition to hospitals.

    The institute's research plan grows out of Sternberg's previously published quantitative research on the effects of office space on the brain's stress response.

    "The concept is to develop a toolbox of noninvasive, sensitive, quantitative methods to measure people's emotional, physiological, immune behavioral and health responses to the physical environment, whether it’s the green environment or the built environment," said Sternberg, who is world-renowned for her discoveries in the science of mind-body interaction. "In order to understand how the physical environment affects health, you also have to understand how the physical environment affects emotions, which in turn affect health."

    Sternberg, whose work has resulted in several publications, including the book "Healing Spaces: The Science of Place and Wellbeing," and a PBS special, "The Science of Healing: Understanding the Mind Body Connection," hopes to see her research taken to the next level at the UA.

    "We need the evidence. We need the ammunition to show that, in fact, changes in the built environment do reduce stress and improve health and healing and emotional well-being as well," she said.

    "This is a natural next step for the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine," said Dr. Victoria Maizes, executive director of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine. "We have long taught that environment matters to health. This ranges from the invisible environmental chemicals we are exposed to from building materials to the beautiful vistas of the mountains we glimpse from our windows. We are delighted to collaborate with the College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture to create this new institute in which we will explore the mechanisms by which health is impacted."

    Advancing the design professions

    Research by the Institute for Place and Wellbeing has the potential to transform the fields of architecture, landscape architecture and urban planning, said Jan Cervelli, dean of the UA College of Architecture, Planning, and Landscape Architecture, or CAPLA.

    The one-credit neuro-architecture course offered by CAPLA this semester is just the tip of the iceberg of the college’s planned curriculum around place and well-being, which is expected to eventually include a certificate, master's degree and even a doctoral program, Cervelli said.

    "One of the objectives of the certificate program will be to recruit not just design professionals, but health professionals," she said. "If we can transform the thinking of CEOs of hospital corporations and presidents of hospitals and show them that this is important for their operations and success, it can serve both fields."

    Designing spaces with human responses in mind is not only a healthy decision, but a financially sound one, Cervelli said. Anecdotal evidence suggests, for example, that employees who work in offices with ample windows and natural light are more productive and take fewer sick days, thus saving the company money.

    The institute’s research will make it easier to quantify return on investment, Cervelli said.

    "It's transformational to the professions. In today's world of built environment, being able to have value added to your professions and being able to bring something that’s this transformative to the environment is huge," she said.

    Edelstein, who has for years worked with Sternberg through the Academy of Neuroscience for Architecture, said that as design students learn about the connection between place and well-being, they eventually will be able to test their own design concepts in the UA's AZ-LIVE virtual reality lab, where they can isolate distinct design elements and human responses to them.

    "Using technology, we can start to pull apart the elements of the built environment and correlate them with elements of human responses, and we've not been able to do that before," she said. "With AZ-LIVE, we can mock up and model different environments before the first brick is laid."

    Edelstein and Sternberg said the goal is for the Institute for Place and Wellbeing to serve as a resource for researchers and design practitioners across campus, across institutions and across the globe.

    "This is unique, to create an institute with the goal to educate, inform, develop curricula on place and well-being and at the same time to do research and gather the data that’s needed to implement these principles into practice," Sternberg said. "It's unique, and it’s very exciting."

     

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  7. article New Voices. New Stories. New Focus. The new AZ Illustrated debuts February 4th at 6:30 p.m. on PBS 6

    Tuesday, January 29, 2013 9:34 am

    Arizona Illustrated, Southern Arizona’s week-night news magazine series for over 30 years, and the flagship local TV production for Arizona Public Media (AZPM,) has undergone a make-over. The new AZ Illustrated (pronounced A-Z-Illustrated) debuts in its regular week-night time slot at 6:30 p.m. on Monday, February 4, 2013. The new AZ Illustrated features different hosts and topics each night – Metro, Science, Nature, Arts and Politics – offering insight and discussion relevant to Southern Arizona audiences. Tapping into the wealth of talent and experience of AZPM’s award-winning producers, reporters, and production team, while introducing new specialists from the community, the series will feature new voices, new stories and a new focus.

  8. article UA Awarded More Than $3M to Track Mosquito-Borne Illnesses

    Sunday, January 27, 2013 12:49 pm

    Kacey Ernst, an assistant professor of epidemiology in the University of Arizona Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, has been awarded a $376,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health to develop community-based solutions to improve malaria prevention and control efforts in Kenya. This is the third NIH grant – totaling more than $3 million – awarded to Ernst in 2012 for research related to the prevention of mosquito-borne diseases.

    Ernst already is leading a UA team to track populations of the mosquito that carry the virus that causes dengue in Mexico and Southern Arizona. She also is principal investigator of a study collecting data on the mosquito in Key West, Fla., a hard-hit area. That data will be compared to data collected in Tucson.

    Ernst has a personal connection to the cause of preventing malaria and dengue viruses because of her ties to Kenya, a place she has been traveling for 15 years since completing her master’s research in the country.

    "I've always been interested in the links between environments and how humans can modify their environment to change their risk of disease," said Ernst.

    The focus of her research is the epidemiology of infectious diseases and the ties between environment and vector-borne diseases. Her doctoral dissertation research focused on malaria in the highlands of western Kenya, where she lived and worked for more than two years designing and administering a case-control study that examined environmental, behavioral and socioeconomic determinants of malaria.

    Malaria kills about 1 million people each year and is a leading cause of death in children younger than five in Kenya. The use of bed nets treated with insecticide is one of the most common malaria-prevention methods. Yet, many people are still reluctant to use them.

    The malaria-prevention study will utilize focus groups and cross-sectional surveys to examine why or why not at-risk citizens are using bed nets. The goal of the study is to use existing knowledge from those who do use bed nets and spread this wisdom throughout Kenya.

    The reasons why people are reluctant to use bed nets are varied, said Ernst: "Some people don't like the feeling of being closed in. Nets are difficult to hang, they may not have a standard bed, or they don’t have access to bed nets."
     
    Ernst said another contributing factor is that malaria has become so common in Kenya that people accept it as normal. "In a place where malaria is so rampant, people don't fear the disease and see it as inevitable. So they don't think it's necessary to attempt to prevent it."
     
    The study also will consider the effectiveness of a program to distribute bed nets. In the past, there have been issues with the equitable distribution of free bed nets. One solution has been to require village elders to collect Kenyan IDs from those acquiring bed nets and return the ID with a bed net, allowing for fairness and accountability from both the recipient and the village. The study will examine if this method was successful in advancing the amount of people utilizing bed nets and will determine which factors need to be improved.

    Ernst will collaborate with researchers in Kenya to compare and contrast the use of bed nets in two different sites, with different transmission levels, to determine the best methods to put in place for malaria prevention.

    At the same time, Ernst is working on two dengue-prevention studies. She said the mosquito-borne dengue virus continues to be a risk in the Southwest and is on the rise in both intensity and geographic spread. "There are not as many vector-control strategies in place in the U.S. for dengue virus as there is for malaria in Kenya," said Ernst.
     
    One of the studies involves tracking populations of the mosquito Aedes aegypti, a dangerous carrier of the virus that causes dengue, along a geographic line from Guaymas in southern Sonora, Mexico to Tucson with a $2.3 million grant from the NIH. The other involves collecting data on the mosquito that carries dengue in Key West, an area that has had an outbreak. Ernst then will compare it to Tucson, an area with the mosquito established but no recorded transmission. This study is funded by$400,000 NIH grant.
     
    Said Ernst: "Disease transmission by mosquitoes is influenced by many factors. Learning about how changes in climate and control implementation impact these diseases will allow us to prepare for and refine methods to reduce their impact on human health."

     

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  9. article What's Up UA? - UA Takes No. 2 Spot for Fulbright Scholars

    Thursday, December 27, 2012 11:14 am

     

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  10. article What's up UA - Earth Day coming

    Thursday, April 19, 2012 9:50 am

    Several Events Mark Earth Day Celebration

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  11. article Meet Oro Valley Candidates

    Wednesday, February 15, 2012 4:00 am

    Brendan Burns, 33

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  12. article UA presidential candidate named

    Tuesday, February 7, 2012 9:08 pm

    ABOR Names Ann Weaver Hart as UA Presidential Candidate After an extensive nationwide search, the Arizona Board of Regents today announced Ann Weaver Hart as the candidate for the president of the University of Arizona. Hart is currently the president of Temple University and has served as president of the University of New Hampshire and provost and vice president for academic affairs at Claremont Graduate University. Her prior appointments also include professor of educational leadership, dean of the Graduate School and special assistant to the president at the University of Utah.

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  13. article UA faculty concert focuses on the bass

    Wednesday, October 12, 2011 3:00 am

    The University of Arizona School of Music will present “Bassiquity: Deep Chamber Music” this Monday in Crowder Hall.

  14. article The guide

    Wednesday, June 29, 2011 3:00 am

    MOVIES

  15. article The guide

    Wednesday, May 4, 2011 3:00 am

    MOVIES

  16. article Classes and workshops and lessons, oh my!

    Wednesday, April 13, 2011 3:00 am

    Youth summer programs are offered by some Tucson schools, businesses and institutions. Check websites for more information, or call for programs and schedules offered.

  17. article The guide

    Wednesday, March 2, 2011 6:00 am

    MOVIES

  18. article Letters

    Tuesday, October 26, 2010 11:00 pm

    Where would MUSD spend bond money?

  19. article Government calendar

    Tuesday, October 19, 2010 11:00 pm

    Thursday, Oct. 21

  20. article The Guide

    Tuesday, April 27, 2010 11:00 pm

    THEATER

  21. article The Guide

    Tuesday, March 23, 2010 11:00 pm

    MOVIES

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  22. article Town reaps 3 'common ground' awards from alliance

    Sunday, October 25, 2009 11:00 pm

    The Town of Marana won three Common Ground Awards on Oct. 16, when the Metropolitan Pima Alliance announced projects that demonstrated community collaboration.

  23. article The guide

    Tuesday, August 25, 2009 11:00 pm

    MOVIES

    3 images

  24. article UA taps top researcher Martinez to lead BIO5 institute

    Wednesday, February 4, 2009 12:00 am

    One of the world’s top researchers of childhood lung diseases will become the interim director of the BIO5 Institute at the University of Arizona, starting next week.

  25. article High school's new direction: Smaller learning communities taking shape in Marana

    Tuesday, May 31, 2005 11:00 pm

    May 25, 2005 - When the clock strikes 2:17 p.m. and the bell rings to conclude another day at Marana High School, spotting 17-year-old Jesus Leon in a crowd of more than 1,600 students can be a formidable challenge. So, it's no wonder students sometimes feel lost among the masses.

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Sunshine School 9000 N. Oracle Road Tucson, AZ 85704, Suite 204 (520)742-6874 www.sunshineschooltucson.org/

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Baby in stroller Falls Into Train Tracks Mom Jumps In Before Train Barrels In Caught On Camera. A stroller carrying a 14-month-old girl rolled off a slanted train station platform and fell onto the tracks Wednesday, but the girl's mother leaped onto the tracks to rescue her with the help other passengers, transit officials said."What it looks like to us is that the mother became distracted by something, didn't apply the brake on the stroller and the stroller was able to move off the platform and onto the tracks," said Scott Sauer, director of system safety for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority. The accident happened Wednesday afternoon at the 56th Street station of the Market-Frankford Line in west Philadelphia. The platform at the station is slanted slightly for drainage purposes, Sauer said.Surveillance video shows a woman on the eastbound platform with the girl in a jogging stroller, which slowly rolls forward and topples over onto the tracks about 5 feet below. What initially appears to be the girl flying out of the stroller apparently was just a towel or a bag. The stroller comes to rest on the outer rail, which carries no charge. The woman is seen jumping down and lifting the girl to a man waiting on the platform. Other passengers ran to help, and one used an emergency call box to alert SEPTA police, who held an incoming train at the preceding stop.The infant was taken to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for treatment of a cut on her forehead. Sauer said during a news conference that watching the video was "gut-wrenching.""With the stroller moving at such a slow rate of speed, you know, you want to call out to someone, `Hey, the stroller's moving! Somebody grab the stroller,'" Sauer said. He said the line is one of SEPTA's busiest, with trains running every six to 10 minutes. SEPTA police said no charges will be filed but the accident serves as a reminder for other riders to lock stroller brakes when waiting on platforms.

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