School is Cool photos: CSU community delivers in helping PSD students
Nearly 200 volunteers took part in CSU’s signature outreach effort to provide backpacks filled with school supplies to Poudre School District students.
Nearly 200 volunteers took part in CSU’s signature outreach effort to provide backpacks filled with school supplies to Poudre School District students.
The video captured student reactions when they first learned they had received scholarships. "Oh my god, I thought I was in trouble .. thank you so much!" said scholarship recipient Erin Sunshine through happy tears.
VIDEO: Dr. Amy MacNeill sat down with 9News reporter Jennifer Meckles to explain what she knows about monkeypox from studying past outbreaks, and its effect on animal species.
“I hope to contribute to a culture that is a rewarding, exciting, and fun place to work and learn, where we advance critical knowledge contributing to the health of animals, people and the environment,” Dr. VandeWoude said in a statement.
The custom-built, high-intensity flow-through photochemical reactor is being integrated into the university’s wider coronavirus and other research efforts, as it can be used to inactivate many types of viruses and pathogens.
The State Veterinarian’s office has been collaborating with the CSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital and Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, the Colorado Horse Park, and private practicing veterinarians involved in the case.
Officials with the CSU Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory confirmed one case on July 23, after a beef producer in Sedgwick County reported a string of seven acute deaths in the herd they managed.
LISTEN: July saw a jump in monkeypox cases in Colorado. The World Health Organization has declared its spread a global emergency. Dr. Amy MacNeill studies pox viruses from a veterinary perspective, given that rodents so often spread the disease to people.
The CSU Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory confirmed the case last week. A second positive case was confirmed positive in a nearby beef herd Tuesday.
Radiation oncologist and associate professor Dr. Keara Boss is committed to finding a cure for head and neck cancers in both pets and people and maintaining her strong connection to family.