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Student Health Care Center

Free flu shots for UF faculty, staff and students — needle much smaller than usual
Get a free flu shot if you are a UF faculty or staff member or student. Drop in during regular business hours at the Student Health Care Center main-campus location in the Infirmary Building, 1 Fletcher Drive; or the Health Science Center location on the second floor of the Dental Tower, Room D2-49.

The flu shot is being given via new method, which uses a much shorter needle than usual and delivers the vaccine into the skin rather than into muscle. That potentially means less discomfort as well as less vaccine used to provide the same level of protection against the flu as a traditional injection. The new vaccination system, called Fluzone Intradermal, was licensed earlier this year by the Food and Drug Administration for use in adults ages 18 to 64.

For more about the seasonal flu vaccine and campus clinic hours and locations visit the UF Student Health Care Center  website. To see a news article, video and slide show about the new flu vaccine visit the UF Health Science Center News & Communications website.

The EAP is ready to help you fulfill your New Year's resolutions
The Employee Assistance Program (EAP) wants to help you start the New Year right by assisting those who want to quit smoking or using other tobacco products. The EAP offers Smoking Cessation Groups beginning January 2012 at 8 a.m., 12 noon, and 4 p.m. to provide greater access for those who want to participate. Groups will run for six consecutive weeks—January 12 through February 16, 2012. Individual coaching session will continue to be offered those who cannot make scheduled group times. Call (352) 392-5787 or visit the web site to register.

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December 2011  

Pay attention to chest pain — get it checked out at the new Chest Pain E.R. at Shands at UF

Coach Urban Meyer helped open new facility

bathroom scaleHe woke up at 4 a.m., his hand clasped to his chest. He tried to stand and tumbled to the floor.

Shelley Meyer’s voice quickens as she recalls that moment in December 2009, when she dialed 9-1-1 fearing something was seriously wrong with her husband, Urban Meyer, then coach of the University of Florida football team. Meyer was rushed to Shands at UF.

“I was really scared it might be his heart,” Shelley Meyer said, speaking to a crowd gathered at Shands at UF Wednesday to celebrate the grand opening of the new Chest Pain E.R. “I’m really happy to hear that if we had come here tomorrow, he would be taken to the exact right place … and that, as a wife of a patient, is very comforting to know.”

Meyer, whose health issues have received much publicity, did not suffer a heart attack in 2009 when he came to Shands. He said he remembers being both relieved when doctors told him it was not a heart attack, and also frustrated by not knowing what was causing the intense chest pain he felt. He would later learn the problem was esophageal spasms.

“I was a guy who always tried to take care of myself; I was in control,” Meyer said. “I lost that control one day when I was lying on a gurney here at Shands. That is a very vulnerable state to be in, one you would not wish on your worst enemy, even if he is a Georgia Bulldog.”

Meyer also took the opportunity to thank physicians and Shands staff for helping not only him, but all patients who find themselves on a gurney, scared and in need of care.

“God bless you people. You do a lot for a lot of people.”

Located in the Shands Critical Care Center, the new Chest Pain E.R. houses eight beds dedicated to treating patients with chest pain and other symptoms of a heart condition. Last year, 9,000 patients were seen for chest pain at Shands at UF, representing about 13 percent of emergency department cases, said David S. Guzick, M.D., Ph.D., senior vice president for health affairs and president of the UF&Shands health system.

“Our goal is to do what is best for each of these patients and their families each time,” Guzick said. “Chest pain is frightening for the person experiencing it and for the family.”

The goal in the new Chest Pain E.R. is to evaluate patients within 10 minutes of their arrival, said Preeti Jois, M.D., an assistant professor of emergency medicine and the Chest Pain E.R. medical director. An interdisciplinary team of emergency medicine specialists and cardiologists will quickly make a diagnosis and deliver appropriate treatment.

Two UF emergency medicine attending physicians and five emergency and cardiac-trained mid-level practitioners, including Shands advanced registered nurse practitioners and UF physician assistants, are dedicated to the unit. A nurse and an emergency physician trained in cardiovascular care will always be available.

“A system of care integrating the emergency physicians and cardiovascular physicians is essential to improving cardiac care in the nation’s emergency departments and hospitals,” Jois said. “The Chest Pain E.R. in Shands creates such an opportunity for Gainesville and the surrounding communities.”

To learn more, visit the Shands Chest Pain E.R. website.

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