Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Calculate Your Life Expectancy

Three scientists from the University of Pennsylvania created a mortality calculator.

Answer some questions about your lifestyle, PMH and FMH, and the calculator gives you an estimate of how long you will live.

The calculator is based on "pure" statistics but you can still get an idea what you should change in your life to live healthier.

The three authors who made the program are Dean P. Foster, Lyle Ungar and Choong Tze Chua, they work at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania.

See the Forbes magazine list of The Worst Things You Can Do To Your Body as a slide show.

References:
How Long Will you Live? - UPenn.edu (via Digg)
Life Expectancy Calculator on MSN Money
Fitness Rules: Getting Back Into Shape - Forbes
For Centenarians, It All Begins at Birth - NYT 11/05.
The Living to 100 Life Expectancy Calculator
Image source: pixelperfectdigital.com

Monday, August 29, 2005

Who Are the Medical Bloggers and Where to Find Them?

Where to Find Medical Blogs?

This is the short list for starters:

- Medlogs.com is an aggregator of about 100 medical blogs

- Grand Rounds feature the weekly best of the medical blogosphere. Pre-Rounds is an article series about the hosts of Grand Rounds on Medscape.com

- Technorati (tag: medicine, for example)

The other option is just to check the blogroll of any medical blogger. The links to other bloggers are there.

Who Are the Medical Bloggers?

SoundPractice features interviews with several medical bloggers. You can listen to the interviews online or download the MP3 files (around 20 MB each).

- MedPundit is a PCP from Ohio who writes about the medical news of the day and does not want to reveal her identity, although as I wrote before, Google can discover anything in today's online world. Download the interview.

- Robert Centor of DB's Medical Rants is an academic internist who works at the VA and is very active at the SGIM and ACGIM. DB stands for Doctor Bob, I guess. Dr. Centor is professor of internal medicine at the University of Alabama School of Medicine, and recently wrote an Op-Ed for USA Today. Download the interview.

- Kevin Pho is a PCP with entrepreneurial interests who maintains not one but two medical blogs - Kevin, M.D. and StraightFromTheDoc. Download the interview.

- Joe Stirt from BookOfJoe is an anesthesiologist who does not watch TV, does not read blogs and rarely writes about medicine but gets 5,000 visitors daily. Even Steve Wozniak came by to leave a comment. Hey, I got a visit by Mark Jen (former Googler, current Plaxo) but I guess, this is not in the same league... Dr. Stirt who did not have a computer until 2001, gets ideas for his blog from 5 major newspapers (print editions). Download the interview.

- Psychiatrist-blogger Shrinkette. Download the interview.

- ER physician Allen Roberts blogs on GruntDoc.com. Download the interview.

- Psychiatry resident Maria of intueri.org. Download the interview.

- Medical student. Download the interview.

- Medblogger as patient - interview with Elisa Camahort of HealthyConcerns.com. Download the interview.

- Interview with the founder of Grand Rounds, Nick Genes of Blogborygmi. Download the interview. Nick is a resident in emergency medicine.


Doctor Anonymous discusses Medgadget Blog Awards with Dr. Nick Genes.

- Interview with the internist Chris Rangel of RangelMD.com. Download the interview.

- Interview with Rita Schwab, a medical credentials specialist at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation and founder of MSSP Nexus Blog. Download the interview.

- Interview with R.W. Donnell of Notes from Dr. RW medical blog, a hospitalist in Northwest Arkansas. Download the interview.

References:
Basic Blogging: An Introduction to Medical Blogs for the Renal Community - iKidney.com.
Finding Recommendations for Medical Blogs & News - KidneyNotes.blogspot
Dr. Charles' Select Links
Blogs Offer a Look At Medicine's Front Lines - The Wall Street Journal
Images source: Pixelperfectdigital.com

Updated: 01/12/2008

Sunday, August 28, 2005

What Is "Heart Failure"? BMJ Proposes a New Name For This Classic Disease

How do you define heart failure? Is it systolic dysfunction with EF of less than 40%? Or diastolicImage Hosted by ImageShack.us dysfunction? How about right-sided failure? Do you use BNP in the definition?

It looks like we put a lot of different conditions under the broad umbrella of heart failure.

"When a label confuses doctors and impairs communication with patients, it is time to change the label". BMJ proposes a new term - just call it cardiac impairment. And don't forget to check BNP, this single blood test is a better prognostic marker than even systolic ejection fraction.

The access to online BMJ was free for years but starting from last week most of the content is behind a subscription wall.

References:
Let's call it cardiac impairment - BMJ 8/05
Essentials of the Diagnosis of Heart Failure - AFP 3/00
Heart failure - The Cleveland Clinic
Image source: Wikipedia 1

Saturday, August 27, 2005

Interesting Links

Company Names. How Did Apple Get Its Name?
Explains how some of the biggest IT companies got their names (via Digg).

Track visitors to your website using Google Maps
You have to copy and paste a single line of JavaScript in the site template but the tracker looks good.

Flash Earth
Which is better - Google Maps or MSN Virtual Earth? This website blends the two rivals into one and the results are very interesting.

Windows Key Shortcuts
A collection of very useful keyboard shortcuts (via Digg)

Del.icio.us for programs
Check out the programs other people are using, rated by popularity (via Digg).

Essential freeware for the PC user (and Mac)
Try out these must-have free programs on your machine (via Digg).

Update 09/09/2007:
40+ Free Windows Apps For You. Technology Bites, 2007.
The ones that I am trying now are Freemind, a free mind-mapping software, and Truecrypt, a free open-source disk encryption software for my external hard drive.

How To Build A Computer - a WikiBook

Audio of Top 100 speeches in U.S. History

Libraries offering audiobook downloads - USA Today

BBC TV channels to be put on net - BBC

Deep Ocean Photography Gallery

The biggest freshwater fish ever recorded - NYTimes

The Louvre museum 360 degrees panoramic view (via Digg)
Press 'Shift' to zoom in, 'Ctrl' to zoom out.

Updated: 09/09/2007

Friday, August 26, 2005

Physician as a Patient

Dr. Charles writes how he felt being a patient. This is an experience often uncomfortable for physicians but full of insights of what it is being on the other side of the stethoscope.

Dr. Charles is a talented physician writer who is self-publishing his first book after one year of blogging.

Read more about patients' experiences in the NYT series BEING A PATIENT.

References:
Gray Boxer-Briefs - DrCharles.blogspot
Legends of the Examining Room, a collection of the best writing of Dr. Charles

Update 11/6/2006:

Dr. Charles self-published his second book, entitled trinities.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

Google Sidebar Has It All - RSS, Email, Fast Start Programs, News, Weather, Pictures...

Google Desktop and Sidebar

Read more about it in the NYT article 'Google Gets Better. What's Up With That?'. An audio slide show is available.

Don't forget to choose the Auto-hide option, this way the sidebar will be out of your way when you don't need it.


Google Talk

The new IM/VOIP client, Google Talk, can easily be embedded in the sidebar by using the Add/Remove option. Google Talk already has a Wikipedia page.

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Flavor of Flavanol - It's Delicious and It Could Be Good for You

It looks like flavanols are the new black. They are in cocoa beans, dark chocolate, red wine and green tea. Finally you can eat something that it is delicious and it can be good for you. It is not like the negative calories of a celery stick (it takes more calories to eat a piece of celery than the celery has in it to begin with)... :-)

Mars Inc. developed CocoaVia granola bars, and they market it almost as a pill. One bar of CocoaVia delivers 100 mg of cocoa flavanols. Mars is in talks with pharmaceutical companies to license drugs based on synthesized flavanol molecules.

The research showing the cardiovascular benefits of flavanols is still in early stages, so do not jump to conclusions.

Update 4/2007:
Dark Chocolate and Other Cocoa-Rich Foods May Lower Blood Pressure. WebMD.
Dark chocolate almost as effective at lowering blood pressure as Atenolol. NYTimes.

References:
Research promising for chocolate lovers - CNN
In Search of the Healing Power of Chocolate - NPR 12/05
Mediterranean diet, cocoa and cardiovascular disease: a sweeter life, a longer life, or both? - Journal of Hypertension 12/03
Tea flavonoids and cardiovascular health - Q J Med 2001
Dark Chocolate Improves Coronary Vasomotion and Reduces Platelet Reactivity. Circulation. 2007;116:2376-2382.
Chocolate from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Image source: Wikipedia

Updated: 11/21/2007

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Clinical Cases from the American College of Rheumatology

These 32 cases are an excellent free resource for rheumatology review. Our small contribution can be found here.

You need to download and install a somewhat unusual player from Macromedia, Authorware Web Player, to explore the ACR cases.

Friday, August 19, 2005

Create Medical Content for the Web and PDAs With These Free Tools

Create Flash Training Videos

Wink is a free program that makes Flash videos. It grabs screenshots with cursor movement, and you can add textboxes and titles. Wink is used by the Opera browser team for online tutorials.

Your software training video can be ready in no time. Suddenly, you can teach anybody how to use that complicated electronic medical records program... PowerPoint presentations can also be posted online as Flash movies. If you want to add audio, you can try another freeware program - CamStudio, which creates .avi files.

Check out these free videos explaining what a blog is, and how to create one (QuickTime, Learning Blogger with Molly Holzschlag)

References:
Learning Blogger with free video tutorials - Blogger.com and Learning Blogger
with Molly E. Holzschlag

Screen Capture Utilities - PC Mag
CamStudio is video capture sweetness
(via Download Squad.com)


Searching for a Hormone - in Flash

Do you know what phosphatonin is? If not, you are not alone. There are only 530 hits on Google for phosphatonin and the first one is a Flash animation created by Dr. Ott, Associate Professor at the University of Washington (UW).


Every Teacher Creates a Web Page

What is remarkable is that the UW actually encourages teachers to create web pages for their students. They have guidelines on creating a course home page with detailed instructions starting from HTML basics to PHP Hypertext Preprocessor...


From Web Page to Web Platform

Giving the power to create content back to the user is an excellent idea. Especially today when we have such easy to use platforms like Blogger, which you can use to publish directly from MS Word to the web. May be we do not need that PHP Hypertext..., after all.

References:
Osteoporosis and Bone Physiology - Department of Medicine, University of Washington
PHEX regulation of phosphate transport and vitamin D metabolism in the proximal tubule - Images from Clinical Medicine
From Web page to Web platform - CNet


Create eBooks for Free with ReaderWorks

Microsoft Reader makes reading on a mobile device very easy. ReaderWorks is a free program that creates Reader-compatible .lit files for Pocket PCs.

(via Download Squad.com)
Image sources: sxc.hu, morguefile.com

Thursday, August 18, 2005

Blog for Hope on Yahoo

"Celebrities share stories of how cancer has affected their lives." Tom Green, Hillary Clinton, Sam Donaldson and Deepak Chopra are among the celebrities who share their personal stories. These are brand new blogs with 2-3 postings only but with a great public response. Senator Clinton's single entry has gotten 343 comments so far.

After seeing Mrs. Clinton blogging and President Bush making podcasts, anything seems possible. The blogs, RSS and podcasting are mainstream now.

Related:
Doctors from the Top Medical University are Blogging on Yahoo

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Blogger for Word - Publish to the Web from Word - As Simple As Google

Now you can use Blogger from within MS Word.

The Google/Blogger team got the idea after they "visited the Democratic National Convention to see political bloggers in action. Many were using Microsoft Word to post their reports. It was a multi-step process that didn't look like fun, but for citizen journalists, punctuation, spelling and grammar are important. That got the Blogger team thinking about how to help Word users to become bloggers."

And this is how the Blogger plug-in for Word was born. Good thinking. It simplifies blogging by bringing it to what the people are used to - their word processor.

Evan Williams, the Blogger founder, writes "to my great surprise and delight, a product that I first thought about five years ago has seen the light of day!

MS Word is a highly sophisticated writing environment, and if I have to write a multi-page document, I still fire it up. What doesn't make sense is that, if you want your words to wind up on the web, you have to trade this writing environment, and the tools you're comfortable with, for a flaky text area.

Blogger for Word is a Microsoft Word plug-in that lets you publish to the web from Word. Not only does it export your text, it actually round-trips, letting you publish to the web, edit, and publish again."

Update 5/14/06:
MS Word 2007 will include blogging tools.
Source: Wikinews; Joe Friend, Blogging from Word 2007.

References:
Word Up - BloggerBuzz.
Blogger for Word! - Evhead.com.
This was posted from Microsoft Word - Google Blog.

Further reading:
The accidental innovator. The Economist, 12/2007.

Updated: 12/23/2007

Sunday, August 14, 2005

The Space Shuttle is Flying Home Piggyback

Discovery landed in California and a huge Boeing 747 was sent to carry it back to Florida. This $ 1 million one-way trip is illustrated with beautiful photos on the NASA website.

"The SCA (shuttle carrier aircraft) has additional rear stabilizers to minimize turbulence caused by the shuttle on top" (via Digg). The shuttle rode a jumbo jet for the first time in 1977.

References:
Discovery makes pit stop in Oklahoma on its way home - USA Today
NASAexplores.com
Image source: NASA

Saturday, August 13, 2005

In the Medical Journals

Image Hosted by ImageShack.usPeritoneal dialysis better than HD in ESRD?

Mortality in people with ESRD was dependent on the method of dialysis in this study. Read more in Short cuts - What's new in the other general journals by BMJ.

Source:
Comparing the Risk for Death with Peritoneal Dialysis and Hemodialysis in a National Cohort of Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease - Annals of Int Med


Medical Residents are Having Trouble Reading EKGs

MDRedux has an interesting comment on this study. Our small contribution to educating the residents is the mnemonic A RARE PQRST --> DR. IIEE. It can be used to remember the systematic approach when reading an EKG.

Source:
Competency in electrocardiogram interpretation among internal medicine and emergency medicine residents - AM J of Med


Interview Advice from BMJ Careers 8/05

Image source: sxc.hu

Friday, August 12, 2005

Make Your Own Web and Save It - Social Bookmarking and More

Digg That Story

Digg is a website that combines social bookmarking (think del.icio.us), blogging and RSS. And then adds "non-hierarchical editorial control". Users submit stories for review, and decide which stories go on the homepage. They have a funny podcast, which is very popular on iTunes.


Save the Web to Yahoo MyWeb

This is very useful, actually. You can either bookmark or save pages to the Yahoo servers, and access them later. Even if the page is changed or completely taken down, you will still have your cached copy to refer to. Never loose another interesting website again because you forgot the URL address, or how you found it on Google.

There is no need to install anything, just drop the Yahoo MyWeb bookmarklet in the bookmarks menu. Then, when you see an interesting page, just click on "Save to MyWeb" from the bookmarks menu. You have to log-in (once), and select if you want to share your saved page or not.

This "user-selected" web, made possible by del.icio.us, Digg, and Yahoo is becoming more and more interesting. Google is lagging far behind...


Bloglines as the Best RSS Reader

Bloglines is the winner so far. It is even better than a RSS reader installed on your computer. The mobile version works seamlessly on wireless PDAs. "I am exposed to 100x as much information and I spend far less time looking for it", writes Mike Torres.

You can save the interesting feed stories as "clippings" or post them to your own Bloglines blog, with just two clicks. Can it get easier than that?


Other Interesting Links

NewsMap
Check out the Google News, presented in a more visually compelling way.

Compare the Search Engines on Dogpile.com
This is a nice flash-based comparison. You can clearly see how the big three differ in their results.

How to set up a blog at MSN Spaces - Tony Northrup
MSN spaces is emerging as the new blogosphere leader with 19 million blogs, more than the spam-infested Blogger/Blogspot. They just added a slew of new features. Yahoo doubled the size of Google's index. Hey guys, give "poor" Google a break... :-)

One of the very useful blogs is Torres Talking, written by Mike Torres, a MSN Spaces developer. His blog is so good, he will almost convince you to switch your blogging platform to Spaces in no time. Mike is still using the Google Translate feature in his sidebar though...


References:
Microsoft Revamps MSN Blogs - PC World
Still digging Bloglines - Torres Talking
Save your personal web with Slogger - Lifehacker.com
Jots - Another Social Bookmarking Site - Micro Persuasion
Image source: sxc.hu

Thursday, August 11, 2005

President Bush Creating Podcasts

Podcasting must be really becoming mainstream if President Bush is offering his radio addresses as MP3 files via RSS.

A team of a dozen White House staffers is busy selecting Bush speeches for podcasts, available on iTunes.

It is about a year since Adam Curry gave a name to the underground movement, and now all the major news organizations have podcasts.

The skeptics say that podcasting is nothing new, just downloadable MP3 files, but Evhead links to the perfect reply here.

References:
The Paradox of Podcasting - WaPo
But it's not NEW! - Evhead
Image source: sxc.hu

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

Perioperative Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery

AHA/ACC Guidelines

The most authoritative guidelines are from the AHA/ACC and they have a very useful website aimed at educating physicians. Check out the following features:

- The guidelines are available online or as a PDF file

- Teaching slides - you can view them online or download the PowerPoint file

- Download the Pocket PC version

You can check out the other guidelines available from AHA/ACC here. All files are free downloads.


Perioperative Guidelines for PDA

You have to download the Pocket PC (or Palm) version from Skyscape. The downloaded file is the standard installer, used by the other Skyscape applications, like Archimedes.

The universal algorithm makes the preoperative evaluation a breeze. It guides you step-by-step, using a simple question and answer approach, simplifying the process. You can bookmark the most commonly used parts of the guidelines like:

- conditions-predictors of cardiovascular risk in different patients - high, intermediate and low risk

- calculating the METs (metabolic equivalents, i.e. energy requirement for various activities)

- levels of risks for different surgical procedures - high, intermediate and low

- the main step-by-step algorithm


"PASS" the Preoperative Evaluation

There are 4 variables in the preoperative evaluation, remembered by the mnemonic PASS:

Patient risk
Activity level - measured in METs
Surgical risk
Select the tests to perform

1. Patient risk - a patient with CAD S/P CABG with CHF is clearly at a higher risk than a patient who has only HTN.

2. How well is the patient prepared for surgery? What is his activity level (measured in METs)? The most useful question is "do you have stairs in your house?". If yes, "can you climb a flight of stairs without SOB or CP?" Going up and down stairs will give the patient a MET of 4, which is the dividing point in the algorithm to consider cardiac testing. Just remember "stairs = MET 4".

3. Surgical risk - a high risk procedure, like AAA repair vs. a low risk procedure, like breast biopsy.

4. Select the tests to perform. EKG is almost always indicated. Follow the algorithm to decide which patient needs a stress test.

After you look into these 4 variables (PASS), you have to follow the AHA/ACC algorithm. Of course, there are many other things to address, like when to stop and restart certain medications, etc. This is the basic approach which is the backbone of the perioperative evaluation.


Three Stress Tests

Choose one of the 3 stress test modalities. The mnemonic is EDD:

- Exercise stress testing - without imaging or pharmacologic induction (both are used in the other 2 stress tests below)
- Dipyridamole-thallium imaging (DTI)
- Dobutamine stress echo (DSE)

Exercise stress testing limitations:
- OA patient who is unable to exercise
- Resting EKG abnormalities

DTI prognostic accuracy is 81%.

DSE has the additional advantage of showing the systolic function, the accuracy is similar to DTI.


Cut-off Numbers in the Algorithm

Remember the cut-off numbers 2-4-5 in the algorithm:
- 2 years of the last catheterization or a stress test - safe to proceed with surgery, if no symptoms
- 4 METs
- 5 years of the last coronary revascularization - safe to proceed with surgery, if no symptoms


Take the "HIP" Shortcut

The majority of patients have intermediate or minor clinical predictors, and you can use the following shortcut to determine who needs a stress test.

The shortcut to noninvasive testing is remembered by the mnemonic HIP:

- High risk surgery - vascular surgery
- Intermediate clinical predictors - old MI, DM 2
- Poor functional class

If a patient has 2 out of 3 of the above variables, he or she will need a stress test before the surgery.

Note: The "HIP" shortcut is valid for patients who are scheduled to have high risk or intermediate risk surgery. Patients scheduled for low risk surgery can usually proceed with the operation without the need to have a stress test first.


The Cleveland Clinic Perioperaive Medicine Summit

The summit, conducted on September 22-23, 2005 included more than 200 physicians, and was a resounding success.

Summit directors were Dr. Jaffer and Dr. Michota. Several members of the hospitalist team presented lectures and case discussions during the two-day event.

Lectures will be published in a special supplement of the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine.

Reference:
AHA/ACC Clinical Statements/Guidelines
Online Calculator - MedCalc: Perioperative Cardiac Evaluation
Patient Education: PreOp.com
Preoperative evaluation - 2010 National Guideline Clearinghouse.
Image source: Wikipedia, CCF (used with permission)

Monday, August 8, 2005

30,000 Medical Images, Tables and Figures from Leading Textbooks are Online

This web site, with the goofy name FleshAndBones.com, is an Elsevier Ltd. property (the publishers of the Lancet). It features more than 30,000 clinical images from all areas of medicine.

The images are from leading medical textbooks like:

Clinical Medicine, Kumar and Clark
Forbes Color Atlas and Text of Clinical Medicine
Davidson's Principles and Practice of Medicine
Hutchinson's Clinical Methods
Atlas of Diseases of the Kidney. Robert W. Schrier (not part of the series)

The illustrations have background watermarks but are sill readable, and can be very useful when reviewing for ABIM or USMLE. See our tips on how to pass the boards here.

There are also several books with completely free images (no watermarks), which are available for download, after a registration.

MerkMedicus.com features the Braunwald's Atlas of Clinical Medicine, which is free online, if you are a U.S. health care professional.

Further reading:
How to Do Well on the Boards?
Medical Image Databases on the Internet - UTHSCSA
Atlas of Diseases of the Kidney. Robert W. Schrier.
Netter's Illustrated Human Pathology: A Searchable Collection of Images.
Image source: Wikipedia

Updated: 01/22/2008

Saturday, August 6, 2005

The Critical Care Podcast is Featured on the Official SCCM Website

As I wrote before, this is the first podcast by a national medical society. It is now featured on the official web site of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Please update your RSS feed.

Congratulations to Dr. Savel who worked hard to make all this possible.

References:
How a Critical Care Podcast Was Born
Image source: sxc.hu

Friday, August 5, 2005

"Google, M.D." at the Clinic

Kevin, M.D. shares his experience using Google during a typical work day at the outpatient clinic.

It is fascinating to see how incorporated in our daily life Google has become (for some people at least). Can you imagine the day before the search engines? If you had a medical question, you'd had to go to the library, and start flipping through those dust-covered journals from the previous years... What will happen if Google and Yahoo go down for a day?

Talking about Linux, Andy McCaskey from SDR said "we all using Linux every day but we just don't know it. It's called Google". All Google servers (tens of thousands of PCs) are Linux-based.

Read more about doctors and patients using Google in the previous posts on this website.

Update 3/28/2007:

Adam Bosworth, Vice President of Engineering at Google Inc. covers similar topics in: How do you know you're getting the best care possible?

References:
Who's your patient's best friend? Google!
How Doctors Use Google
How Do Doctors Use Google - Blogosphere Impact
How to Search the Invisible Web - Lifehacker.com
Image source: Doctors Using Google by Philipp Lenssen, used with permission

Thursday, August 4, 2005

Today's Interesting Links

Medical Links

The Importance of a MET


MET is the abbreviation for metabolic equivalent and it measures the exercise capacity of a person. Women whose exercise capacity is less than 85 % of normal, are twice as likely to die within 8 years. The results were reported in the NEJM.

Source: Study Shows Value of Women's Fitness - NYT


Modafinil (Provigil) for Sleepiness due to Shift-Work Sleep Disorder

"Having prescribed Provigil (Modafinil) and having taken it once myself after a 12 hour flight, I'm very impressed: it works extremely well", writes KidneyNotes. Almost every medical resident has fallen asleep at the wheel at least once when post-call. The study shows a significant reduction in accidents while commuting home but the solution is shorter working hours and more rest, not pills.

Source: Modafinil for Excessive Sleepiness Associated with Shift-Work Sleep Disorder - NEJM


IT Links

Search for Podcasts and Music on Yahoo


Yahoo is becoming one cool search engine, and it is out-innovating Google for now. Google interface is still much cleaner and easier to use, but nobody can deny that Yahoo has been launching some interesting services recently. Their best step might have been purchasing Flickr. Next.Yahoo, which is a website listing beta services, is the equivalent of Google Labs.

References:
Yahoo Introduces Search Service for Music - NYT
Yahoo Audio Search - Google Blogoscoped


Keyboard Shortcuts for the 3 Main Browsers

Mozilla Foundation lists the most common keyboard shortcuts in Firefox, and the equivalents in Internet Explorer and Opera. Print it and put it on the wall, you can save yourself some clicking. Often the best way to learn how a program works is to print the keyboard shortcuts, and practice with them. The most common functions will be there anyway.

Source:
Browser tip of the day: Keyboard and Mouse Shortcuts Galore! - Download Squad

Medical Algorithms Project

Medal.org includes more than 7000 algorithms, organized according to the body system involved.

Some algorithms can be used online. After a free registration, all of them can be downloaded freely as standard Excel spreadsheets to a desktop PC or PDA.

Image used with permission: medal.org

Tuesday, August 2, 2005

Today's Interesting Links

Interesting-ness on Flickr
Some of those photos are amazing and nothing short of pure work of art. Definitely worth checking out. Flickr, along with Yahoo News Photos, is an interesting part of the visual load of your day. The website adds about 250,000 photos daily.

Reference:
Browsing for Photos With 'Interestingness' - WaPo 8/05


Test how well your read human faces
See which smile is genuine, and which is fake, on the BBC Psychology web site.

Reference:
How to Detect Lies - Blifaloo.com (via Digg)

Monday, August 1, 2005

Simply Fired - How NOT to Blog About Your Job. Especially If You Are a Doctor

This website is about people/bloggers who got fired when blogging about their job (the site called SimplyFired.com now redirects to the job search engine SimplyHired.com). It should be a must-read for all aspiring bloggers all over the world. Be careful what you write. Now, with the search engines cache and the WayBackMachine, even if you remove the post, it can still be recovered and used against you.

When you blog, think as if your boss is reading it. If you feel uncomfortable about it, just don't post it. Blogging is a public activity, every single word can be potentially scrutinized and inspected for adverse meaning.

Some Good Advice

Mark Jen became the prototype of the fired blogger in 2005 (the original blog has been deleted, the reference link was provided by CNet. Google "kicked him out" after he had posted repeatedly about the company products and future plans on what (he thought) was his private blog. There is no such thing as truly "private" blog on the Internet. Pretty much everything is public and monitored by millions of eyes. The fact that you type your posts from the comfort of your home, does not make your work private. Once you hit the "publish" button, anybody can (and will) read it.

Mark Jen himself gave some good advice after he got fired (Robert Scoble also added a few suggestions):

- Do not start blogging right away after you join a company. Check the corporate culture. See if blogging will fit in the current work environment.

- Enquire if there are any blogging guidelines. If there are, comply with them strictly. If there are no guidelines, try to establish them.

- Let your boss know that you are planning to blog about your job. Ask him/her to check you blog to make sure that it is OK.

Corporate Blogging Guidelines

If it is done right, blogging can be a positive thing for a company. It gives a human face to the corporation. Robert Scoble was a good example how a blogger can improve the public image of a company like Microsoft, which has not been getting much of a good press for a long time (since 2005, Scoble has left Microsoft and now works for Rackspace, a hosting company).

It comes as no surprise that some companies hastily created blogging guidelines, describing what can and what cannot be posted online by its employees/bloggers. Check out the rules published by IBM, Yahoo, Sun, Opera and Plaxo.

Any Guidelines for Medical Bloggers?

Most of the 100 or so doctors (in year 2005) who blog use pseudonyms like "Red State Moron" or "GruntDoc". Unfortunately, you cannot stay anonymous. If somebody tries really hard, they will discover your identity. The best solution is not to post anything that can embarrass you, or your patients. If you are blogging about your patients, make sure that you comply with the HIPAA rules.

To stay out of trouble, always ask yourself: What if my patients are reading this? What if my colleagues are reading it?

Be honest and respectful to others. And once again, remember the HIPAA rules.

A question for the medical bloggers: Should we try to establish guidelines for medical blogging?

Now with Medlogs.com and the Grand Rounds, the movement is becoming more or less organized. Everybody values their freedom of expression and that is understandable. But should we try to construct a crude framework of what is OK and what is not? It could be helpful to the new medical bloggers who are joining the field almost on a daily basis.

And the final words of wisdom are from a famous proverb, cited by Mark Jen: “See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil!”


References:
Case Reports and HIPAA Rules
Google Blogoscoped
If you’ve got a story to share, check out SimplyFired.com - Mark Jen on Plaxoed.com
A little more on Mark Jen's story - Scoble
Write All About It (at Your Own Risk) - NYTimes
Writing the codes on blogs. Companies figure out what's OK, what's not in online realm - SF Gate
Compare corporate blogging guidelines on CorporateBlogging.info
Hospital Blogging Policies? The Krafty Librarian
Who’s afraid of the big, bad blog? - FT.com
Does Your Company Belong in the Blogosphere? - Harvard Business School.
Image sources: sxc.hu, See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil! - Blog.Plaxoed.com (used with permission)

Related:
When Blogging Gets You Fired. David Bradley, 2009.
On blogging. DB’s Medical Rants, 2009.
Doctors in Social Media Shouldn't Be Anonymous. 33 Charts, 2009.

Updated: 11/30/2009