News
The UA Department of Emergency Medicine will be live blogging and posting pictures of the ACEP conference taking place in Seattle from October 14-17. The DEM is also hosting an Alumni Social on Monday, Oct. 14 from 7–10 p.m. in the Musicquarium Lounge at The Triple Door (216 Union Street, Seattle, WA).
Dr. Frank Walter has received the 2014 Public Health Service Award, Arizona's highest award for public health service to the people of Arizona...
The Department of Emergency Medicine is honored to count on the experience and expertise of the father of emergency medicine, Peter Rosen, MD. He routinely shares his knowledge with residents and faculty as a visiting professor at the UA and as a professor of emergency medicine working at Beth-Israel Deaconess Medical Center at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts.
Dr. Kenneth V. Iserson, DEM professor emeritus, writes about his experiences as lead physician for the U.S. Antarctic Program at McMurdo Station in Antarctica.
Peter Rosen, MD is the distinguished recipient of the first-ever Lifetime Achievement Award from the Association of Academic Chairs of Emergency Medicine (AACEM). The AACEM, comprised of full, acting, interim, and emeritus chairs and directors of departments of emergency medicine at various levels of membership and involvement, works to improve and support academic departments of EM in the advancement of health care through high-quality education and research.
Michael Ori, MD is our newest Medical Toxicology Fellow for the Class of 2017.
New nationwide report quantifies value of poison centers
PHOENIX - A recent nationwide report finds that the 57 poison centers in the United States save citizens more than $1.8 billion annually in medical costs. Examination of additional data collected in Arizona shows that the state’s two centers save residents of the Grand Canyon State nearly $45.5 million every year.
After two U.S. health care workers have been diagnosed with Ebola, national nurses' groups are speaking out, saying their hospitals and staff are not properly prepared to handle Ebola patients.