Book Club at the Center-All In by Billie Jean King
|Join the Office of Access and Compliance for a discussion of All In by Billie Jean King.
Join the Office of Access and Compliance for a discussion of All In by Billie Jean King.
Representatives from both carriers will present the different products and services that are offered.
Attendees will get a historical overview of women’s treatment in healthcare as well as experiences in healthcare education and as providers, followed by a participatory discussion of these topics. Boxed lunch will be provided for the first 50 attendees.
Come Volunteer with your fellow UTHSC friends at the Midsouth Food Bank on two more dates, including April 17th and April 24th. We will be volunteering from 1:00pm-3:00pm and transportation will be provided. Follow the link below to register today. Volunteers will work in our Volunteer HUB on different tasks, as needed. Our most common task will be sorting through donated food, checking for package quality, and ensuring the product is “in date”. Volunteers will then sort the product into different categories, then box and pallet those categories. https://uthsc.givepulse.com/event/432747-midsouth-foodbank-volunteer-opportunity
Are you a healthy adult male or female, African American or Caucasian, between the ages 18-65 who has normal blood sugars and no personal or family history of diabetes.
The Center for Youth Advocacy and Well-Being will host zoom sessions through Project ECHO to bring awareness to Youth Mental Health once a month on the first Wednesday of each month from 12 – 1 pm. The first session begins on Wednesday April 3, 2024, at 12 pm.
Over their 99 combined years of practice, Van Swaim, DPh, and his son Mike Swaim, DPh, built something of a pharmacy empire in Tennessee. Both graduates of the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy, the father and son have been business partners for over three decades, currently operating Van’s Institutional Pharmacy in… Read More
Workplace negativity if left unaddressed, can cause burnout, disengagement, and poor mental health.