Search Results for "mental health"

How Well Can Your Community Respond to Climate Change?


Heavy rain in neighborhood.

Climate change threatens communities by worsening air quality and increasing chronic disease risk and intensifying deadly storms, droughts, and heat waves. Certain communities – low-income neighborhoods and overlooked people – often suffer most because they suffer from health gaps, are more exposed to climate risks, and have a lower ability to prepare, adapt, and recover from their effects. How vulnerable is your community to climate change? The new U.S. Climate Vulnerability Index (CVI), a mapping tool, uses environmental, social, economic, and infrastructure data to help you understand your community’s ability to respond and adapt to climate change. “Better understanding of the intersection of vulnerability and climate change risks is key to effectively building ...

Read More

State of Latino Obesity


Portrait of a latin beautiful woman smiling while coming to the doctor's office for a medical check-up

Obesity is one of the biggest modifiable risk factors for cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and sleep apnea.  It’s also plaguing the health of Americans, especially people living in rural or overlooked communities, such as Latinos. Latinos continue to be affected by obesity with a prevalence of 35% or higher in Latino adults living in 34 US states and territories, according to updated data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).  Let’s dive into the new statistics on adult obesity in the US, what’s driving it, and what interventions can help address it.   Adult Obesity  All states and territories in the US had an obesity prevalence higher than 20% in 2023, which is the equivalent of 1 in 5 US adults, according to the CDC.  The highest obesity ...

Read More

Experts to Address Cholangiocarcinoma, a Rare Cancer


Nurse Comforting Patient Receiving Chemotherapy Treatment

In a lifetime, four in 10 US adults will be diagnosed with cancer, according to WebMD. Most of these cancers will be found in the breast, prostate, lung, colon, bladder, kidney, skin, and pancreas. Meanwhile, others may receive a rare cancer diagnosis, such as cholangiocarcinoma, which is a rare form of cancer that affects the bile duct. Due to their low incidence, less is known about these rare cancers and there are fewer opportunities available to change that. To learn more about cholangiocarcinoma, the Cholangiocarcinoma Foundation is partnering with the MD Anderson Cancer Center to put on the 2024 Houston Cholangiocarcinoma Symposium: A Gathering of Knowledge, Support, and Hope on Dec. 13, 2024. Cholangiocarcinoma Symposium The 2024 Houston Cholangiocarcinoma Symposium ...

Read More

Helping Latino Cancer Survivors (and Caregivers) Be More Active


Helping Latino Cancer Survivors and Caregivers Be More Active - exercise 1

Physical activity can have many benefits for cancer survivors, from improving their quality of life to potentially making it less likely that their disease will come back. Yet studies have shown that many cancer survivors struggle to get the recommended levels of physical activity, particularly those affected by health differences. Now, according to the results of a new study, a program in Texas has shown it can get these cancer survivors moving more by supporting them in the communities where they live, and by getting their caregivers to become more active as well. The cancer survivors and caregivers, who were mostly Latino, were participants in a 12-week program called Active Living After Cancer. After completing the program, the percentage of survivors getting recommended ...

Read More

Dr. Amelie Ramirez Helps Revolutionize Cancer Care for South Texans


Amelie Ramirez of UT Health San Antonio health equity Systemic and Behavioral Change

Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez, leader of Salud America!, joined a KSAT News town hall on Oct. 8, 2024, to share insights on a growing effort to address cancer in majority-Latino South Texas. The event, “Revolutionizing Cancer Care for South Texans: A New Era of Treatment,” was hosted by KSAT anchor Stephania Jimenez. It featured Ramirez, Dr. Mark Bonnen, chief medical officer at the Mays Cancer Center at UT Health San Antonio, and Jeff Flowers, chief executive officer at the UT Health San Antonio Multispecialty & Research Hospital. Ramirez shared about the state of cancer and the need to address the non-medical drivers of health in South Texas. She also urged cancer survivors to join the Avanzando Caminos study. The study aims to enroll 1,500 Latino cancer survivors in South ...

Read More

18 Bilingual Videos about Latino Cancer and Clinical Trials!



In 2024, an estimated 195,300 cancer cases will be diagnosed in U.S. Latinos, according to Cancer Facts & Figures for Hispanic/Latino People 2024-2026. This makes it important that cancer treatments work for Latinos. Clinical trials – studies with volunteers that explore ways to find, prevent, and treat diseases, like cancer – are a treatment option that could help people. With clinical trial participation in mind, Dr. Eneida Nemecek and her team at the Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) Knight Cancer Institute created Proyecto Mi Opción, a series of Spanish-language videos that tackle different cancer-related topics. Watch the videos! The Lack of Latinos in Clinical Trial Research Latinos face several challenges when it comes to cancer including access to ...

Read More

National Hispanic/Latino Family Cancer Awareness Week


Happy Hispanic family outdoors in country

Cancer continues as a top cause of death for Latinos.   In 2021, cancer caused the deaths of 23,800 Latino men and 22,700 Latinas, according to the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA).   Cases of Latino cancer are expected to rise by 142% in the coming years.  That is why FDA is raising cancer awareness and promoting Latino clinical trial participation by holding its first-ever National Hispanic/Latino Family Cancer Awareness Week during Hispanic Heritage Month.  What is National Hispanic/Latino Family Cancer Awareness Week?  The week of Sept. 20-26, 2024, will serve as the inaugural National Hispanic/Latino Family Cancer Awareness Week.  The new observance, led by the FDA’s Oncology Center of Excellence Project Community,  focuses on engaging community-based ...

Read More

Dr. Derek Rodriguez: Using a Personal Cancer Journey to Inspire Others to Share Theirs



From a young age, Dr. Derek Rodriguez had his heart set on attending medical school.  Everything changed when he was diagnosed with a rare form of childhood cancer at the tender age of 8. “[Medical school] was the end-all, be-all thought back in the day,” Rodriguez said. “But when I was 8 years old, I was diagnosed with Rhabdomyosarcoma. This ultimately, I felt like, set the precedent for the path in which I would pursue cancer research.”  Rodriguez’s experience with cancer would eventually lead him to a research position at UT Health San Antonio’s Institute for Health Promotion Research (IHPR), which is directed by Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez, who also leads Salud America!  Now he’s putting his dream into practice as a research scientist for the IHPR’s Avanzando ...

Read More

Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez Featured in Webinar: Addressing Cancer Through Research, Outreach, and Training


Amelie Ramirez - UT Health San Antonio 1

Dr. Amelie G. Ramirez, leader of Salud America! at UT Health San Antonio, shared insight on cancer on a webinar from the National Cancer Institute. The webinar was set for Oct. 2, 2024. Ramirez's presentation focused on reducing US cancer for all people, including Latinos, through research, outreach, and training. Dr. Ramirez & Her Health Promotion Research Ramirez is an internationally recognized health researcher at UT Health San Antonio. Here, she is professor and chair of the Department of Population Health Sciences and director of the Institute for Health Promotion Research at UT Health San Antonio. She also is associate director of cancer outreach and engagement at the Mays Cancer Center. She directs the Salud America! national multimedia health program. The ...

Read More