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Staying Safe on the Utah s ski slopes in the time of COVID

Citizenship tasks tax women physicians

 E-Mail IMAGE: Multidisciplinary journal dedicated to the diseases and conditions that hold greater risk for or are more prevalent among women, as well as diseases that present differently in women. view more  Credit: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers New Rochelle, NY, January 6, 2021 Women physicians feel pressured to spend more time in work-related citizenship tasks, based largely on their age and race. Nearly half of women perceived that they spent more time on citizenship tasks than their male colleagues, according to a study in Journal of Women s Health. Click here to read the article now. When compared to their younger counterpart, women physicians older than 49 years stated to feel obligated to volunteer for these tasks because of their age, state Priscila Armijo, MD, University of Nebraska Medical Center, and coauthors. We also found that a higher proportion of women of color physicians perceived race as a factor in feeling obligated to volunteer for work

Exclusive: Utah leaders went rogue in early coronavirus response, emails from health experts show

Exclusive: Utah leaders went rogue in early coronavirus response, emails from health experts show Documents reveal a power struggle between state budget managers and public health officials. (Scott Sommerdorf | Tribune file photo) Kristen Cox, Executive Director of the Utah Office of Management and Budget, turns to answer a question about the Governor s budget during Utah Governor Gary Herbert s visit with The Salt Lake Tribune editorial board Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2017. Cox has since left state office but email correspondence shows her department was heavily in Utah’s early coronavirus response. | Updated: Jan. 4, 2021, 2:39 p.m. The powerful state budget managers who controlled key parts of Utah’s initial coronavirus response were skeptical about the value of medical expertise in handling the crisis and made repeated attempts to resist or subvert health officials, according to records obtained by The Salt Lake Tribune.

Utah starting to speed up vaccinations after slow start

Utah starting to speed up vaccinations after slow start Lisa Riley Roche © Kristin Murphy, Deseret News Shixian Wang, a pharmacist with Red Rock Pharmacy, fills a syringe with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at The Ridge Foothill senior living facility in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Dec. 29, 2020. SALT LAKE CITY Less than a quarter of the 127,375 doses of the COVID-19 vaccines reported received in Utah have been used to vaccinate health care providers and long-term care facility residents and staff as of the end of the year. “The initial rollout of the vaccine has been slow, slower than anticipated, slower than we wanted,” said Rich Lakin, immunization program director with the Utah Department of Health. “We hope to be at a much faster pace in the next 15 days.”

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