Announcements
Field experiences help WVU’s newest alumni connect their passions to career goals
For students enrolled in the West Virginia University School of Public Health, the final semester of their undergraduate program includes an applied field placement experience where they can put their classroom lessons to work. This semester’s students contributed to and learned from 11 community partners, and one soon-to-be graduate even received a full-time job offer.
Varied interests lead to new-found purpose for Public Health graduate
Women’s studies, humanities, languages, political science and art history were all on Visakha Turner’s list of interests when she attended New Student Orientation before the start of her freshman year at West Virginia University. During her first semester, she took a myriad of courses trying to find her purpose.
WV DHHR: COVID-19 Daily Update 12-18-2020
WV DHHR: COVID-19 Daily Update 12-18-2020
Gee: WVU must ‘differentiate and lead’ during ‘perilous times’ in higher ed
West Virginia University President Gordon Gee called for transformation during Friday’s (Dec. 18) Board of Governors meeting, warning that across the country there is a loss of public trust and the perceived value of higher education has diminished.
Dec. 18, 2020 - WVU in the News: Coronavirus
WVU coronavirus (COVID-19) news for Dec. 18, 2020.
WV DHHR: COVID-19 Daily Update 12-17-2020
WV DHHR: COVID-19 Daily Update 12-17-2020
Dec. 17, 2020 - WVU in the News: Coronavirus
WVU coronavirus (COVID-19) news for Dec. 17, 2020.
WVU in the News: When a West Virginia county eliminated its needle exchange, experts forewarned of an HIV crisis. Now it’s here.
On a Wednesday evening in mid-October, people gathered in a parking lot off of Kanawha Boulevard in Charleston. A man played guitar; a woman talked about the perils of virtual schooling during the pandemic. Blue and green canopy tents covered folding tables that were set up with snacks and bags of fluffy sandwich rolls.
‘No such thing as a little bit of pain:’ More cancer patients could benefit from rehabilitation, WVU researcher says
Cancer treatment isn’t just a matter of shrinking or removing a tumor. It also involves preserving or improving the patient’s quality of life. Rehabilitation services—such as behavioral therapies to alleviate pain and exercise to reduce fatigue—are a valuable way to do that. But they often aren’t included in cancer patients’ plans of care.
Dec. 16, 2020 - WVU in the News: Coronavirus
WVU coronavirus (COVID-19) news for Dec. 16, 2020.