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Alma Daneshi: Three-Time Cancer Survivor Brings Message of Hope, Prevention


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Alma Daneshi cried as she sat in her San Diego-area oncologist’s office, traumatized by past-and-present health battles that continued to endanger her life. She had been through a brain aneurism and open-brain surgery. Then breast cancer. Then breast cancer again, followed by cervical cancer. She had lost her job managing a TGI Fridays restaurant while recovering from the aneurism and taking time off for cancer treatment. She got evicted and worried how she would care for herself and her then 12-year-old daughter. Then she learned she contracted viral meningitis during treatment. Daneshi, sitting beside her oncologist, broke down and wept. But then she got some life-changing advice. “My oncologist let me cry for a bit before she said, ‘Instead of crying, put ...

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Local Researcher Wins ‘Making a Different World’ Award


amelie ramirez

Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez, director of the Institute for Health Promotion Research at UT Health San Antonio, has received the first-ever “Making a Different World” award from Latinas Contra Cancer for her dedication to improving health outcomes around cancer. Ramirez received the honor at the organization's 4th biennial cancer summit July 20-22, 2014, in San Francisco. “I am honored by this tremendous distinction from some of the key leaders in our nation’s growing effort to reduce cancer,” Dr. Ramirez said. “We are truly working hard to show how communities can reduce their risk for cancer, how to help patients navigate the health care system, and how to help cancer survivors.” Dr. Ramirez & Her Health Promotion Research Ramirez is an internationally recognized ...

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San Antonio Researcher to Create New Tool to Promote Screening for Colorectal Cancer


Colorectal Colon cancer awareness ribbon for men's health care Dr. colorectal cancer screening

Some men are less likely to get screened for colorectal cancer and more likely to be diagnosed at harder-to-treat stages. That’s why Dr. Cynthia Mojica, a researcher at the Institute for Health Promotion Research at UT Health San Antonio, is creating tailored and language-relevant print-based tool to persuade men to get colorectal cancer screening. Mojica’s efforts are fueled by a new grant from the Health Science Center’s Mentored Research Career Development (KL2) Program in Clinical and Translational Science. “The grant award will give me training, mentorship and research support to help me bring the community into the research process to help create a tool that can change their behavior and lead them to get screened,” Mojica said. As part of the award, Mojica ...

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Jennifer Garcia-Davalos: Aspiring Doctor Works to Improve Population Health


Jennifer Garcia-Davalos cancer physician researcher

Laredo native Jennifer Garcia-Davalos grew up on the Texas-Mexico border, where the population suffers high rates of obesity, diabetes, and certain cancers. She has always wanted to help reduce those health issues. That’s why Garcia-Davalos, an aspiring physician and a master’s-degree student in public health at The UT School of Public Health, interned at the Institute for Health Promotion Research (IHPR) at UT Health San Antonio. Over the past year, she helped the IHPR conduct research, mobilize community outreach, and inform, educate, and health in South Texas communities. “My internship at the IHPR gave me tools needed to succeed in my graduate studies and my future plans in the health and medical fields,” Garcia-Davalos said. “As a future physician, I want to ...

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Webinar 7/10/14: How to Help People Avoid Potentially Deadly Delays in Breast Cancer Care


cancer screening breast

Imagine that a woman's mammogram turns up an abnormality that is classified as "probably benign." Even though the chance of breast cancer is only 2-4%, a doctor typically would ask the woman to return for another screening within six months, just to be sure. However, some women experience delays, and appointments may be missed and they may skip subsequent screenings altogether. This can set the stage for confirmatory diagnoses at more advanced stages of cancer with lower survival probability. How can that be avoided? You're invited to a webinar that explores how patient navigators—trained healthcare workers who support patients and help them overcome barriers related to transportation, child care, insurance coverage, language, etc.—were able to reduce those potentially ...

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Photovoice & Partnerships Bring PE to Students in New Britain, Conn.


photovoice community health

Counselors at New Britain High School were concerned about the future of teens who were not passing PE and risked not graduating. Fortunately, a local nonprofit taught a group of teens how to take photos and use them to inspire action—a technique called photovoice. Their efforts helped unite the nonprofit, the New Britain YWCA, and New Britain High School, who together pushed to establish an after-school PE credit recovery program. Now, girls are getting the physical education they need to lead a healthy lifestyle, and the ongoing collaboration between community organizations has led to the development of a new hub for health called The House of Teens (HOT). Examining the Health of the Local Community Awareness/Learn: The 37% Latino town of New Britain, Conn., was struggling ...

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Resident Brings Healthier Vending Machines to Schools in San Antonio, Texas



When Cecil Whisenton of San Antonio, Texas, transitioned his career from the restaurant industry to the installation of healthy vending machines, he learned of the tremendous burden of obesity across the country. So, in his work with HUMAN Healthy Vending—a Los-Angeles-based company that has franchisees working to place healthy vending machines across the country—Whisenton brought the machines to local YMCAs and a San Antonio high school. He hopes to bring the healthy vending machines to more schools in the future to give kids healthier snack and drink options earlier in life. He believes schools facing the pending changes under the USDA’s Smart Snacks standards can turn to companies like Human Vending to redesign the snacking for students. The Problem of Unhealthy School ...

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School Garden Provides Healthy Snacks and Lessons for Students in Austin, TX



Lonnie Sclerandi, a Spanish teacher and soccer coach at Austin Independent School District, downsized his home a few years ago and no longer had land for a garden for fresh produce. He asked his school principal if he could plant a small garden outside the portable building where he taught. The principal said, "Yes." Sclerandi then researched online about what produce would be seasonal for central Texas, and how to cultivate a garden in the area. He bought gardening tools and seeds with his own money, and got started. He tended the garden for a year. Then his students started to ask him what he was doing—which eventually grew a cool new healthy change. How the Garden Started Food service leaders at Austin Independent School District (AISD), which is about 60% ...

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Arely Perez: Steps Outside Her Comfort Zone to Help Others


Arely Perez

Arely Perez loves to step outside her comfort zone. In college, she studied and enjoyed kinesiology—the study of human movement—but wasn’t as familiar with how it translated to the health of the community. So, as a graduate student at UT San Antonio, she got jobs in the labs of Drs. Meizi He and Zenong Yin, where she learned all about public health and coordinated studies of local programs to improve nutrition and reduce obesity in child care centers. “I became passionate about improving people’s health, thanks to both Drs. He and Yin, who gave me great opportunities to expand my knowledge and skills,” Perez said. Today Perez is applying her passion for health as a researcher at the Institute for Health Promotion Research at UT Health San Antonio. She also ...

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