Mays Cancer Center offers a survivorship program to patients to prevent cancer from reoccurring through interventions and surveillance to help them live well after treatment.
Joint call to action urges individuals, providers and insurers to increase access to and utilization of low-dose CT screening for those at high risk for lung cancer Contact: Eileen Teves, 210-450-7239, tevese@uthscsa.edu SAN ANTONIO (Nov. 1, 2022) – Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the United States, accounting for almost 25% of […]
A first-year medical student had an unusual class assignment. He pretended to be a 13-year-old girl begging a pawn shop owner for a few dollars to help feed hungry siblings. The unorthodox exercise was part of a poverty simulation that more than 200 Joe R. and Teresa Lozano Long School of Medicine students participated in […]
Alan Peterson, Psychiatry, is quoted in this story and the STRONG STAR consortium is referenced. Read More
Ronald Stewart, MD, chairman of Surgery and faculty in Emergency and Trauma Surgery, is quoted in this story. Read More
William L. Henrich, MD, MACP, president of UT Health San Antonio, is quoted in this story. Read More
Lauren Mills, CGC, Mays Cancer Center, was interviewed for this segment. Read More
UT Health San Antonio is mentioned in this article. Read More
Virginia Kaklamani, MD, Mays Cancer Center/Medicine-Hematology-Oncology, is quoted in this story. Read More
Deborah Mueller, MD, Surgery, and Minnie Chen Morales, MSN, APRN, PMHNP-BC, School of Nursing alumna, are featured in this segment. Read More