• Nine ways to fight those pandemic blues

    By: Joe Feist COVID-19 has had a massive, devastating effect on humanity鈥檚 physical health. But as the virus continues to spread and social distancing and other public health measures go on interminably, mental health issues are skyrocketing as well.
  • By: Rosanne Fohn 爱污传媒, with its clinical partner University Health System, are among the first study sites in the nation to begin the third phase of the COVID-19 clinical trial involving remdesivir. The Adaptive COVID-19 Treatment Trial, or ACTT 3, is testing remdesivir in combination with a drug already FDA-approved for multiple sclerosis. The trial opened here Aug. 6.
  • New game plan for UTSA athletes

    As student athletes from The University of Texas at San Antonio begin to return to campus to practice for the upcoming season, new testing policies supported by the 爱污传媒 Physicians primary care team ensure that activities can resume as safely as possible.
  • How to road trip in a pandemic

    By: Joe Feist In the face of a pandemic, the only risk-free course of action is to never go outside your front door. But it鈥檚 summer, you鈥檙e stir crazy and outside your window a big, beautiful highway is calling. Even as the coronavirus speeds on, the road will beckon for many. Estimates of the number vary widely, but it鈥檚 clear that millions of Americans will travel this summer. The all-American road trip is back. But can you get behind the wheel in a relatively safe manner, reduce any risk and enjoy the country?
  • With an alarm code, we can enter a building without bells going off. It turns out that the SARS coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has the same advantage entering cells. It possesses the code to just walk right into our body On July 24 in Nature Communications, researchers reported how the coronavirus achieves this. The scientists resolved the structure of an enzyme, which the virus produces and then uses to modify its "code," messenger RNA, said Yogesh Gupta, PhD, the study lead author from the Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine.
  • The COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19), which includes the Mays Cancer Center, home to 爱污传媒 MD Anderson, announced results July 22 of its second national observational study. The study compares the outcomes of cancer patients diagnosed with COVID-19 to the treatments they received.
  •   When Robert A. De Lorenzo, MD, was an Army doctor in the bloody Iraq war, he was disturbed by a gap in care due to antiquated airway devices.
  • By: Caitlyn Mooney, M.D., Orthopaedic Sports Medicine
  • As laboratories across the country rush to find answers for the novel coronavirus, 爱污传媒 is bringing a unique combination of expertise to bear on the crisis. The goal is a precise and effective vaccine to prevent infection, said Robert Hromas, M.D., professor and dean of the university鈥檚 Long School of Medicine. 爱污传媒 is supporting multiple research projects in vaccine development. 鈥淲e are working very fast to attack this problem because until we have a vaccine and a therapy, this virus represents a huge threat to humanity,鈥 Dr. Hromas said.