I don’t have live access to current updates in this chat, so I can’t pull the very latest news directly right now. If you’d like, I can summarize recent public information about the University of Arizona Hepatology/ liver program and point you to where to find the newest updates.
What I can share now
- The UA Health Sciences and College of Medicine–Tucson have historically highlighted hepatology-related programs within their gastroenterology/hepatology divisions, including liver transplant activity and clinical research, but specific “latest news” items require a current feed or press releases. If you’d like, I can guide you to the exact pages to check for breaking updates.
- Related Arizona liver/hepatology activity in the public sphere often includes: new hepatology faculty hires or leadership changes, expansion of liver transplant programs, and enrollment in hepatitis C or other liver-disease studies at UA-affiliated centers. For example, Arizona Liver Health and related clinical trials groups in the region frequently publish study opportunities and program announcements.
How you can get the latest
- University of Arizona News sites: check the College of Medicine – Tucson news page and the Health Sciences news portal for hepatology-specific releases.
- Department of Medicine or Gastroenterology/Hepatology pages within the UA College of Medicine–Tucson site often post clinic news, faculty appointments, and research updates.
- Local Arizona liver-health providers (e.g., Arizona Liver Health and Arizona Clinical Trials) may publish announcements about leadership, new studies, and transplant program milestones.
- For immediate updates, set alerts or follow the UA Health Sciences and UA College of Medicine social channels.
Would you like me to fetch current sources if you permit, or I can provide direct search tips and a checklist to verify the latest UA Hepatology news from official UA domains? If you want, tell me your preference for depth (brief overview vs. in-depth with recent press releases). I can also help draft a quick lookup plan tailored to London, in case you’re coordinating with researchers or clinicians there.