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Enid Schatz

Nov. 2, 2021

Thank you, Dr. Schatz!

Enid Schatz will step down as chair of the Department of Public Health in Summer 2022 in order to focus on research. School of Health Professions Dean Kristofer Hagglund will initiate a national search for a new department chair before the end of this year. “I’m grateful for all of the work Dr. Schatz has done to grow our Public Health degree programs and increase the visibility of Public Health at Mizzou,” Dean Hagglund said. “The Department of Public Health has a very bright future.” Dr. Schatz is a professor of Public Health and core faculty in the Department of…

Besnike Kashtanjeva

Nov. 1, 2021

Sonographer grateful for MHS program

Nov. 1, 2021 Besnike Kashtanjeva is a first-year student in our new MHS in CDS program. Kashtanjeva wrote: “The university’s motto reading ‘Let the welfare of the people be the supreme law’ speaks to my immigrant roots and the struggles of my parents, myself and those of our nation currently. As I mature in my field, I will also be pursuing education in the form of teaching at, hopefully, the university level for the transfer of experience & knowledge to prepare generations of vascular sonographers to come.”…

Nov. 1, 2021

Cheak-Zamora leads American Public Health Association’s Maternal and Child Health Section

Nov. 1, 2021 Nancy Cheak-Zamora, associate professor of Health Sciences, is serving as the chair of the American Public Health Association’s Maternal and Child Health Section. In honor of the section’s 100th year, APHA talked to Dr. Cheak-Zamora about how the section’s advocacy efforts have evolved and what’s ahead. “It’s really important to develop our future practitioners and make sure we’re there to support them,” Dr. Cheak-Zamora said.

Oct. 29, 2021

Credit Card Debt Is Bad for More Than Just Your Finances (The New York Times)

Carrying credit card debt isn’t just bad for your budget. It may also affect your health. The stress of carrying card debt through adulthood is linked to poor health, including joint pain or stiffness that interferes with daily activities, a recent study from the University of Missouri found. Beyond the worries about repaying debt, one reason for poor health may be that people with high debt have little money left to pay for resources that protect their health, the study said.

Oct. 26, 2021

Health Sciences students twirl for Mizzou

Oct. 26, 2021 When freshman Ella Earnest was applying to colleges, she knew she wanted to twirl at an SEC university. After competing in national championships and earning a spot as one of the best baton twirlers in the country, she was looking for a place to take her tosses to the next level. Florida is a long way from Faurot Field. But when Earnest, an Orlando native and health sciences major with an emphasis in rehabilitation sciences, visited campus, she knew the University of Missouri was right for her. “When I woke up Sunday morning in Columbia after being…

Oct. 12, 2021

Multidisciplinary team receives poster award

Oct. 12, 2021 At the Boston University Speech Motor Control Symposium, Mili Kuruvilla-Dugdale, Speech, Language & Hearing Sciences associate professor (pictured); Katie Threlkeld, Health & Rehabilitation Science PhD student; and Mojgan Golzy, School of Medicine; received an award for their dysarthric speech research poster. The $250 prize will be donated to the SLHS student travel fund.  …

2021 Homecoming Queen and King

Oct. 10, 2021

Health Sciences student crowned Homecoming King

Oct. 10, 2021 Congratulations to Dylan Hood, who was crowned 2021 Homecoming king! Dylan is a Health Science major, Health Professions ambassador, Bryant Scholar, and Theta Chi fraternity member from Wardsville, Missouri. He was crowned by the 2020 Homecoming king, Omobude Eke, BHS ’21. From left: Dylan Hood and his supervisor Cheri Ghan, and fellow SHP ambassadors Hunter Puckett and Jason Nayar.  …

Lise Saffran

Oct. 6, 2021

How storytelling can help public health officials combat distrust, skepticism

October 6, 2021 Contact: Brian Consiglio, 573-882-9144, consigliob@missouri.edu Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, public health experts and scientists have struggled to get some segments of the public to heed their warnings about the importance of following public health measures aimed at controlling the spread of the virus. Lise Saffran, an associate teaching professor at the MU School of Health Professions, studies public health and earned a master’s degree in fine arts and creative writing from the University of Iowa Writer’s Workshop. In a recently published commentary titled, “Public health storytelling practice,” she explains how storytelling can help public health…

Sep. 30, 2021

Painful Debt: How Credit Card Bills Can Hurt Your Health (Forbes)

It’s easy to quantify the pain that high levels of debt can cause to one’s finances by either looking at the opportunity cost or the squeeze on the ability to pay day-to-day expenses. But causing pain to the actual body? According to new research, the ache you may feel or the stiffness after work may also relate to the amount of debt you have. Researchers evaluated Baby Boomers as they aged, starting from 28-to-40 and then checking them again at 50 years old. They separated the group into…

Jamie Hall

Sep. 17, 2021

Telehealth services provide quality pediatric care, MU survey finds

An MU survey finds that telehealth services are able to provide quality pediatric care, and bridge the gap for rural families