Meet Dr. Latrina Lemon: UR’s medical director for the Student Health Center
When life gives you lemons, you hire Dr. Latrina Lemon as the medical director for the University of Richmond Student Health Center.
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When life gives you lemons, you hire Dr. Latrina Lemon as the medical director for the University of Richmond Student Health Center.
Students received the first communication from the administration regarding monkeypox 11 days before the first day of the fall semester, but some say there has not been much talk of the virus on campus.
The University of Richmond Student Health Center brought back its free sexually transmitted infection testing clinic, which did not run last year as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Two University of Richmond students have been isolated with symptoms of the mumps, Dr. Lynne P. Deane of the Student Health Center said. Although the two cases are being treated for the mumps, neither has been confirmed as having the virus.
Open liquor bottles. Condoms. Richmond students as far as the eye can see. Is this a raucous lodge? A raging apartment party? Not quite. It was the second annual Pleasurefest, and it was not held in a fraternity lodge, but rather in the Gottwald Science Center the afternoon of March 25.
Many students in the United States, including the University of Richmond, go at a pace that rarely allows them time to relax.
The mumps count has climbed to 20 confirmed cases at Richmond, and the Virginia Department of Health (VDH) is investigating suspected cases that have popped up outside of campus, said Dr. Lynne Deane, director of the Student Health Center.
With the goal of promoting healthy habits on campus, the Wellness Education Bandits hosted Pleasurefest 2013 in the University Forum on March 28.
As of Tuesday, 15 cases of mumps have been confirmed on campus, said Dr. Lynne Deane, the director of the Student Health Center. Tests administered to other students are still being processed, she said.
Between 2010 and 2012, the number of cases of chlamydia documented by the University of Richmond Student Health Center staff increased from three to 21.
The flu virus is not as prevalent on the Richmond campus as in the rest of the country, said Sarah Fisher, nurse supervisor at the Student Health Center.
With a national outbreak of meningitis and the recent presence of chickenpox on campus, the Student Health Center has been on high alert.
The Student Health Center will be offering flu shots from Oct. 26-28 in the Westhampton Hanging Lounge in the Commons.
Washing your hands and getting a flu shot could save your life.