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                                    13 | Page January 3 1 I ssue%u2022 Literature Revie Examining the Key Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence in Public Health and Health Care%u2022 Policy Analysis: City-Level Artificial Intelligence Policies and Guidelines%u2022 Policy Analysis: State-Level Artificial Intelligence Policies and ProvisionsThis work is supported by funds made available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), National Center for STLT Public Health Infrastructure and Workforce, through OE22-2203: Strengthening U.S. Public Health Infrastructure, Workforce, and Data Systems grant. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement by, CDC/HHS or the U.S. Government.New Year, New Vision for Transforming Public HealthIn June 2023, the Kansas Health Institute (KHI) launched a blog, Transforming Public Health for the 21st Century, with the goal of creating a space to share transformative ideas for public health and to bridge proven concepts from other disciplines that could support this journey. As the blog has grown, we%u2019ve refined our thinking about its mission. While we still want it to serve as a space for transformation in public health, we recognize that meaningful change doesn%u2019t happen in silos. Transformation emerges when diverse perspectives intersect, build upon one another and spark new ideas that challenge existing paradigms.In this edition of Transforming Public Health for the 21st Century, blog author Kevin Kovach invites other public health professionals to join him in shaping the conversation around public health transformation. In 2025, he is inviting public health thought leaders, innovators and change makers to contribute to the blog to help build a collaborative vision for public health transformation.Read the entire blogKDWP Proposes Moving Three Species From Threatened to Species in Need of Conservation Status (PUBLIC NOTICE: January 15, 2025)The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks (KDWP) administers the Kansas Nongame and Endangered Species Conservation Act, K.S.A. 32-957 et seq. Pursuant to the Act, KDWP must review every five years which species are Endangered, Threatened, or Species in Need of Conservation in the state. Revisions to the list were last completed in 2019, and since then, new information is available regarding the abundance, distribution, and imperilment status of rare species in Kansas.
                                
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