Saturday, January 31, 2009

On being a token

As any good WOC feminist, I am quite familiar with being a token.

In grade school I was the token:
  • On sports teams because I pushed & shoved my way there;
  • In the gifted program for my grade because I guess I was the only gifted girl & person of color;
In high school I was the token:
  • Poor chick in class - while some of my fellow C'villers made it into the honors and AP classes, I don't recall many of my other C'ville chicks making it there despite I knew quite a few of them were pretty smart. There was also a dilution factor that kept many of us apart;
  • Poor chick in my group of friends - this came about due to the above factor. You start to socialize with the peeps in your class;
  • Latina in my class - Again, not too many Latinas in the honors classes & it didn't hit me until in my later years. Honestly I didn't mind so much. There is a bit of glory in being the token...or so I thought.
But not every instance of being a token is laden with guilt or tokenness...Monday I'll be speaking that the Feminism 2.0 conference in DC. I got a very late call to be on the plenary Monday morning - This after I've already organized a panel on feminists & the media and was asked to sit on the "Breaking the Waves" panel. The organizer was quite honest with me in that she had a few last minute cancellations and that by including me she got not just ethnic diversity, but also age. I also trust her enough thru our past communications that she's not tokenizing me. My only response to her was "People are going to get tired of seeing me!" and "I'm so going to get a reputation about this," of course meaing people are going to think me a bit of a spotlight hog.

Of course there is still some issues us feministas need to deal with when it comes to conferences. How many other Latinas will be present? Will our numbers be decreased due to lack of travel funds, child care or even knowledge of the conference? I guess we'll see.

But participation hopefully will be increased by the plans to stream the plenaries and maybe the panels. I'll be bringing my laptop & webcam to help out with that. There should also be people liveblogging, so be on the look out for links popping up on the Feminism 2.0 website Monday. If you have a chance, I hope that you'll join us live. If not, I'm sure there will be videos, pics & blogs posted later on to continue the conversation.

And now off to pack!

Dave Winer's Virtual Hug Delivered Daily on Twitter

Dave Winer pioneered the development of weblogs, syndication (RSS), and and is called "the protoblogger" by the NY Times.

A week or so ago, Mr. Winer started spreading a little bit of happiness on Twitter by delivering a daily "virtual hug":

Dave Winer
davewiner Almost got through the whole day without a virtual hug. So today's virtual hug goes to


Dave Winer
davewiner Steve Jobs. Thanks for the Macintosh, after all these years, there's no doubt who got it together and who kept it together.


Dave Winer
davewiner It's a great computer, and it's stood the test of time. 25 years. Man that's something! And so you're health is not so great, me too, but


Dave Winer
davewiner We keep on truckin, one day at a time, make the best of it. Thanks Steve, and here's your {**hug**}



Steve Jobs Speech at the 2005 Stanford Graduation Ceremony: “This is the closest I’ve ever gotten to a college graduation.”

Steve Jobs tells 3 stories from his life:
- Connecting the dots
- Love and loss
- About death

His final advice to the graduating students: "Stay hungry, stay foolish."

References:
Steve Jobs Speech at Stanford Graduation Ceremony
Video: Highlights of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Interview
“And one more thing” about Steve Jobs’ battle with cancer - Science-Based Medicine, 2011.

If you are included in this post but would like to have your tweet removed for any reason, please email me and will comply with your request the same day.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • 75 percent of inpatients were unable to name a single doctor assigned to their care http://is.gd/hIPA

  • Low-fat, vegetarian diet slows PSA doubling time in prostate cancer http://is.gd/hL9M

  • U.S. researchers reversed multiple sclerosis symptoms in early stage patients by using bone marrow stem cell transplants http://is.gd/hLar

  • Intranasal steroids (INS) downregulate increased epithelial expression of COX-1 in nasal polyps http://is.gd/hJjk

  • Children born by caesarean section have a higher risk of asthma than those born by vaginal delivery http://is.gd/hJib

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Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Presidential sleeping habits (CNN video)


Presidential sleeping habits, 2:35 min.

CNN's Jason Carroll looks at the hours worked by past presidents and the lessons President Obama could learn.

Related reading:

Do U.S. presidents age faster in office? Possibly, but 70% actually lived longer than expected. LA Times, 2011.
The Presidents Club | Photos: Oval Office Secrets from Truman to Obama | TIME, 2012.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Androgen exposure: Stock traders with the longest ring fingers made more money, linked to aggression, quick reactions

Reuters reports on a University of Cambridge study:

- Stock traders with the longest ring fingers made more than 3 times money as did their colleagues with the shortest fingers

- Length of ring finger relative to the index finger may be a measure of prenatal exposure to androgens

- Previous research linked ring finger length to aggression, sporting ability, increased confidence and quick reaction times

References:
Size matters for financial trading success: study. Reuters.
Image source: An x-ray showing the bones of the human hand, Wikipedia, GNU Free Documentation License.

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Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds (not all of them medical) that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • Thunderstorm asthma? Association of thunderstorms with increased asthmatic attacks http://www.erj.ersjournals....

  • Zoloft and Lexapro are the most effective and well-tolerated antidepressants among a group of 12 new drugs" http://is.gd/hCXy

  • St. Louis displaced Knoxville as nation's 'asthma capital' http://is.gd/hBmc

  • Kidney donation appears safe in long term http://is.gd/hCXZ

  • Kidney donors can expect to live just as long as non-donors do and to experience no significant decline in kidney function http://is.gd/hCXZ

  • Adolescents whose parents smoke are more likely to pick up the habit themselves http://is.gd/hCYi

  • Influenza may trigger Guillain-Barre syndrome http://is.gd/hCYy

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Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Selection of My Twitter Favorites, Edition 36

Twitter is a microblogging service where people answer the question "What are you doing?" via 140-character messages from their cellphone, laptop or desktop. You can select the messages you find useful, amusing, or both. Here is the 36th edition of My Twitter Favorites (the oldest post is at the bottom, the newest at the top):

Aaron Logan
pyknosis I love when transcriptionists make up words: Immunoglycoside. Heh.

txmed
txmed @goldenskye "I had absolutely no idea there were so many social media experts out there." It is a self declared area of 'expertise'.

Fred Wilson
fredwilson I'm back in NYC. Flight back was equally great. Wifi internet on planes makes 5 hours feel like 5 mins. Huge game changer for me

Ed Bennett
EdBennett Getting ready to prune my follow list - self-described social media "experts", gurus, visionaries, thought leaders get close look.

Ed Bennett
EdBennett Old news, but worth repeating: EVERYTHING you tweet, can be found by ANYONE, FOREVER - http://tr.im/c594

Robert Prejs
sunlogrobert Intel has recorded loss first time in 22 yrs of its history. Users need less power & more energy efficient processors. Network PC era is on.

Paul Kedrosky
pkedrosky people who explain complex things using the word "basically" are usually lying or bluffing.

Kevin Rose
kevinrose my secret time saving email tip: change your desktop email signature to "Sent from iPhone" - then write 1 sentence replies! sshhh

Biz Stone
biz Oh boy, Twittering during surgery—I haven't seen that before http://twitpic.com/12u12

Fred Wilson
fredwilson online for the cross country flight to SFO. this is going to cause me to switch loyalties from United to American. internet beats miles.

Howard Luks
hjluks Had a twitter patient this morning. Went from twitter to my site to here. Interesting.

Biz Stone
biz Zillow keeps emailing to let me know the value of my house is decreasing—um, thanks for the updates... I guess

Robert Prejs
sunlogrobert People in America are saying Good Morning. In Australia are going to bed. And here in Europe I call it a day at my work. Global village. :-)

Dave Winer
davewiner Someday you'll tell a child that news used to be printed once a day on paper, and they won't understand what you mean. http://bit.ly/15eFE

sandnsurf
sandnsurf Enjoying http://keyboardr.com/ as a great visual interface for search

Dean Giustini
giustini Question from LIS student "Why is social media important?" cause managing info in times of overload is a huge challenge; cannot do it alone

Laika (Jacqueline)
laikas My boss wrote an interview w/me without interviewing me.

Zappos.com CEO -Tony
zappos http://twitpic.com/15h52 - 3 birds are hopping & flying around inside JetBlue terminal! I think they want to be planes when they grow up


Micro-blogging on Twitter is easy, fun and can be very useful and educational if you follow/subscribe to interesting people.

You can read more here: A Doctor's Opinion: Why I Started Microblogging on Twitter and
visit my account at Twitter/AllergyNotes.

If you are included in this post but would like to have your tweet removed for any reason, please email me and will comply with your request the same day.

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds (not all of them medical) that produce about 2,500 items per day.


Do you like this post? Subscribe and have articles delivered to your RSS reader or email (see the right sidebar) immediately after they are published. The subscription is powered by Google and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Distinguished British doctor admits 34 years later: BMJ case report of 'cello scrotum' was a hoax

A distinguished doctor, now a member of Britain's House of Lords, invented the fake disease "cello scrotum" 34 years ago and published a single paragraph case report in the BMJ.

Baroness Elaine Murphy, a former Professor of Psychiatry at Guy's Hospital, has confessed to manufacturing a medical condition which only existed in her imagination.

In 1974, the young Dr Murphy claimed to have discovered "cello scrotum", a painful affliction which only affected male players of the instrument.

The spoof letter was written in response to an earlier one about "guitar nipple" from a Dr P Curtis, which the young Dr Murphy thought likely also to be a spoof.

See the original BMJ case report of 'cello scrotum' from 1974: a scanned PDF file.

The Murphy family sent a card to Dr Curtis addressed to "The inventor of guitar nipple from the discoverers of cello scrotum."

Medscape listed both "cello scrotum" and "guitar nipple" in the review of Maladies in Musicians.

References:
Letter: Cello scrotum. J M Murphy. Br Med J. 1974 May 11; 2(5914): 335.
Exposed: the myth of cello scrotum. The Independent.
Cello scrotum? It’s a load of . . . nonsense, admits Baroness Murphy. The Times.
Exposed: The medical myth of 'cello scrotum' The Daily Mail.
Image source: Wikipedia, public domain.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

The Ms. Obama cover

And of course I mean the Ms. magazine cover with President Obama on it.

I had the privilege of interviewing Ms. Executive Editor Katherine Spillar this morning about the controversy and thought behind the Obama cover. You can read Eleanor Smeal's rationale for the cover online and in the issue, but I wanted to dig a bit deeper.

Of course the morning had already started on a bit of Obama news that leaked out late the night before about the President asking that family planning money come out of the economic stimulus package. Long time readers may recall that my stance on reproductive justice keeps evolving more and more to be centered on economic justice. A woman can't afford her birth control method without economic justice and thus can't plan her pregnancies to allow for economic justice. Essentially, many college women can't get thru college in 4 years without a little help from the birth control pill. I know it helped me! Thus I couldn't understand why a man who claims to be a feminist would actively throw women under the bus like this.

I asked Spillar if she thought, with and without the recent news, if Obama had gotten off to a good start or had cemented his feminist credentials with the amazing first week of his administration. Spillar commented that it was a good start, but reminded me that in Smeal's letter, Ms. warns that we must remain vigilant as we have a strong and large opposition. This time it is not the White House but rather organizations like the Chamber of Commerce who is opposed to paid sick days and paid family leave. We must remember we have a friend in the White House who went up to Smeal in 2007 in DC and offered up, "You know, I'm a feminist too." I find it curious that he will offer this up, but Michelle wavers...but that's another post.

Spillar and I discussed how we, feminists, can keep from feeling betrayed again. Of course, that conversation happened about 24 hours too late, because many of us felt betrayed by the family planning deal. BUT...Spillar says Ms. and Feminist Majority is not happy about what happened with the family planning deal either. They worked hard to keep it in, but we will be disappointed many times during this administration.

But why the cover? Spillar said that they wanted to try to capture the emotions and mood of the country. That while we, as feminists, may not want to believe in the superhero rescue storyline, many others in this country are in fact hoping that he saves us from two wars, the economic crisis and our horrible image abroad. It was played up on a comment Obama made at a luncheon about not being born in a manger, but rather on Krypton. She admits that the cover was also intended to grab people's attention. Spillar points out that the issue holds many important stories on how we can and must regain ground after 8 years of the Bush administration. I'm going refrain from content review in this post to focus on the controversy.

I asked Spillar if by putting Obama on the cover of Ms. that Ms. was saying that he met their feminist litmus test. She responded with a resounding YES.

I then asked her if they considered Michelle for the cover instead, given that she's a woman and that many women are not satisfied with how the big feminist orgs have come (or not) to her defense since Hillary's candidacy ended. Spillar replied that Feminist Majority had come to her defense, especially after the Baby Mama incident. While they may still put the First Lady on the cover, Ms. wanted to mark the historic moment and the hopes we have of the President.

Now for the illustrator himself...I wanted to know why the leading feminist magazine would turn to a man for their cover. Spillar was unapologetic with her support of the man who did the artwork. She felt his work best represented how they wanted to portray the President. I joked that we could call this issue the Men issue of Ms. As Spillar said, Ms. is an all-woman run magazine and decided to give a man an opportunity.

We discussed the high standard feminists have for Ms. That they are often looked to as a standard bearer and if they welcomed that burden. Spillar said that they proudly carry that burden.

She also mentioned that one-third of men in the USA self-identify as feminists and Obama is one of them. Yes, we will have disappointments, but we are at a point where we, as feminists especially, have an opportunity to move the country forward. We must seize this moment.

This reminds me that sometime over the summer my family & I hit the Maxwell Street Market for something my husband was looking for. It's usually a trip where we buy small things for cheap, grab some freshly made Mexican food and just have a nice time. That time I was floored at how many Obama things were out. Obama shirts, hats, caps, if you could put his name or face on it, it was there. I turned to my husband and said, "Obama is MONEY!" And he is. He's on almost every magazine out there. I'm still waiting for him to be in the hidden pictures section of Highlights.

The placement of Obama on the cover of Ms. was both calculated to grab our attention and to mark this moment in history. Ms. still does not take corporate advertising, thus needs readers to pick up and buy an issue or subscribe to continue to cover many of the issues we care about. Do I blame them for jumping on the Obama money wagon? No. It's pretty darn smart and I'm happy they are open about it.

Now do I personally like the cover?

Hell yes.

Two summers ago I was standing in a buffet line at a conference with my boss who LOVES Obama. She lives in Hyde Park and has hosted fund raisers for him in the past. We were standing next to Eleanor Smeal. I said hi to Ellie, as she is often called, and introduced my boss. When Ellie found out that we were from Chicago, she asked us which Chicagoan we were backing - The native Chicagoan who now lives in NY or the adopted Chicagoan. I got to listen in on a die-hard Hillary supporter (Ellie) debate a die-hard Obama supporter. It was FREAKING BRILLIANT. It was like watching a Navratilova-Evert tennis match. Ellie lives and dies feminism...I may not always agree with everything she says or does, but I know for a fact that Ellie isn't a sell-out. So...to see Obama on the cover of Ms. was kinda like a peace offering from one of Hillary's most ardent supporters and a nudge to all of us to recognize that yes we do have a feminist First Family.

We do have a lot of work to do and this is politics. Deals are made and far too often women, especially poor women & women of color are left out in those deals. We have to stay strong, vigilant and united. He's going to screw up. Hillary would have screwed us a few times too. Remember her stance on welfare peeps.

And honestly, I do hope that Obama saves us...By inspiring & showing us that we can work together, as a community, to clean out the shit that's been piling up for the past eight years. We need to move forward, but we can't get there without each other.

Medical Geek Humor on Twitter

Twitter is a microblogging service where people answer the question "What are you doing?" via 140-character messages from their cellphone, laptop or desktop. You can select the messages (called "tweets") that you find useful, amusing, or both.

The tweets below are part of the series Medical Geek Humor on Twitter:

Ed Bennett
EdBennett Between being offsite all morning and then the emergency dentist visit, I was offline for 6 hours. It felt like 60


Ed Bennett
EdBennett My day so far: up at 5am, do off-site presentation, eat lunch, break molar in half, spend 90 minutes with dentist. How's your day so far?


Laika (Jacqueline)
laikas @EdBennett My day: photo session, search, 2 great meetings, opening exhibition, biking home & get wet, dinner, help kid w/homework, computer


Ed Bennett
EdBennett @laikas Do you want to trade days :)


What happened next?

Read here: Small Mammals and My Dentist.

If you are included in this post but would like to have your tweet removed for any reason, please email me and will comply with your request the same day.

Updated: 02/08/2009

Health News of the Day

Health News of the Day is a daily summary made from the selected links I post on Twitter. It is in a bullet points format with links to the original sources which include 350 RSS feeds (not all of them medical) that produce about 2,500 items per day.

  • MRI Scan That Didn’t Scan -- not all MRIs and radiologists are the same http://tinyurl.com/bkoevk?_r=1

  • At MGH, “musculoskeletal M.R.I.’s are read by someone who does musculoskeletal imaging every day” http://is.gd/h9Ub

  • Before you recommend wine for CV risk reduction: One in five men at risk of drinking problem during their lifetimes http://is.gd/hdzc

  • BBC video series of "real life" medical procedures: angioplasty http://is.gd/helS

  • ADHD drugs can cause hallucinations in some children http://is.gd/hgED

  • U.S. school children need less work, more play: study http://is.gd/hgKZ

  • Today many children get less free time and fewer physical outlets at school http://is.gd/hgKZ

  • Rates of SIDS from suffocation or strangulation quadrupled in past 20 years, due to parents sleeping with their babies http://is.gd/hhtv

  • SIDS: Most of the deaths caused by "overlay" -- the parent rolling over onto the child http://is.gd/hhtv

  • NYT on the hygiene hypothesis: "Babies Know: A Little Dirt Is Good for You" http://is.gd/hk2C

  • Cutting calories by 30% for 3 months boosted memory and reduced insulin concentrations in healthy elderly people http://is.gd/hk8m

  • "Less-draconian measures also effective - it doesn't take very much weight loss to get significantly healthier" http://is.gd/hk8m

  • Surrounded by friends? Your genes (and the evolution) determine your behavior. http://is.gd/hka2

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Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Good to know: Medical items required by the FAA to be stocked on commercial flights

Sanjay Gupta in TIME: "As a physician who travels quite a bit, I spend a lot of time on planes listening for that dreaded "Is there a doctor onboard?" announcement. I wondered what I would do if confronted with a real midair medical emergency--without access to a hospital staff and the usual emergency equipment."

It turns out quite a few items are available at a physician's disposal in case of emergency. See the list of medical items required by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to be stocked on commercial flights:

  • aspirin
  • diphenhydramine tablets
  • IV diphenhydramine
  • atropine
  • IV dextrose
  • IV normal saline
  • AED
  • oropharyngeal airways
  • IM epinephrine (1:1000)
  • IV epinephrine (1:10000)
  • inhaled bronchodilator
  • lidocaine
  • nitroglycerine tablets
  • nonnarcotic analgesic
  • instructions for medication administration
  • sphygmomanometer
  • stethoscope
  • latex gloves
  • syringes
  • needles
  • IV catheters with tubing and connectors
  • AMBU bag
  • CPR masks

References:
Of the following items, which are not mandated by the FAA to be stocked in the medical kits on US commerical flights? My Emergency Medicine Blog.
Prout, M. MD and Pine, J. MD. "Management of inflight medical emergencies on commercial airlines." Up to Date. Oct 2008.
Federal Aviation Administration, from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Image source: Wikipedia, public domain.
Is There a Doctor Onboard? TIME, 2002.
Despite doctors' help, airlines are often unappreciative. The National Review of Medicine, 2007.

Selection of My Twitter Favorites, Edition 35

Twitter is a microblogging service where people answer the question "What are you doing?" via 140-character messages from their cellphone, laptop or desktop. You can select the messages you find useful, amusing, or both. Here is the 35th edition of My Twitter Favorites (the oldest post is at the bottom, the newest at the top):

Robbo
BiteTheDust living out bush has advantages. Where else, in taking a mouthful of coffee would you get a complimentary grasshopper. And I am inside!

DrGourmet.com
DrGourmet I love how it's a "severe weather alert" here in New Orleans when the temperature is below 32 F.

Loic Le Meur
loic @om it is a friendly fight, it is good practice and entertaining my friend. In France arguing is a discipline you know.

Aaron Logan
pyknosis After a day caring for ppl who can't eat b/c they're getting highly emetogenic chemo or have gut GVHD, I felt privileged to savor my supper.

Dr. Dro
azrael @chrisseper I've found the power of twitter lies right there. unlocking and finding people you've never met. it's why it's better than fbook

Vijay
scanman To all new real followers: I apologize for not following back. I'll see all @replies & I will reply. I don't want to drown in twitter noise.

Paul Stamatiou
Stammy i bet there would be an industry for paid tweets. ie, pay @kevinrose @garyvee or other twitter celebs to tweet ur link.. $ dep # followers

Bertalan Meskó
Berci Head-mounted camera with eye-tracking system lets us see and record what the dentist sees. Guess which country developes it! #mmvr17

Bertalan Meskó
Berci I'm the only one twitting from a conference focusing on medical innovation. Funny, right? I'm not laughing... I feel lonely. #mmvr17

Howard Luks
hjluks @AllergyNotes We will need to excel in quality since we can not excel in price

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes "Will medical tourism drive domestic doctors out of business?" http://tinyurl.com/9t5b8q

Robert Prejs
sunlogrobert My dentist as usuall has anesthetized 1/4 of my face. I don't even know which teeth she was fixing. I'll have to deduct it from my bill.

Ves Dimov, M.D.
AllergyNotes "Twitter will replace blogs when movie previews replace movies as the preferred form of entertainment" http://tinyurl.com/7z6aeh

Robert Scoble
Scobleizer I've analyzed the 600 people who unfollowed yesterday and the IQ of my followers just went up 217%! Now we can get back to being smart. :-)

Loic Le Meur
loic the word "conversation" was "live together", "live with one another" when it was first used until the 17th century when its meaning changed

Loic Le Meur
loic learning from a Seesmic video (in french) that the roots of the word "conversation" is not to discuss/argue but "to live together"


Micro-blogging on Twitter is easy, fun and can be very useful and educational if you follow/subscribe to interesting people.

You can read more here: A Doctor's Opinion: Why I Started Microblogging on Twitter and
visit my account at Twitter/AllergyNotes.

If you are included in this post but would like to have your tweet removed for any reason, please email me and will comply with your request the same day.