Monday, November 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:

Higher ARB doses work better in CHF than lower ARB doses - up-titrating reduced the rate of death or admission http://bit.ly/6uNiZh

Number of Americans with diabetes will double over the next 25 years, spending on the disease will triple http://bit.ly/4HiRZ9

Hand sanitizer: How it protects you - CNN http://bit.ly/66tVMc

As of 2010, the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) will no longer offer open access http://bit.ly/78joCV - Letter from the Publisher: No longer free for all.

Dirty pigs are healthy pigs - Study finds link between outdoor living and immune health http://bit.ly/8FtuQI

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

Is the H1N1 Swine Flu Vaccine Safe? - Diagram by Information Is Beautiful http://bit.ly/8dvPHk

Micro-blogging vs Mega-blogging - by Matt Mullenweg, founder of WordPress. "New forms of social media, including micro-blogging, are complementary to blogging." http://bit.ly/5nkN5q

"A single negative review or comment on Twitter, Facebook or Youtube can lose companies as many as 30 customers" http://bit.ly/8APXVC

"The oldest continuous medical blog - 10 years is forever in the world of blogs" http://bit.ly/7r6QpR and http://bit.ly/7Zpjvu

How Does Twitter Grader Calculate Twitter Rankings? http://bit.ly/1mwrw2 - check your score here: http://bit.ly/MPGmY -- Blog Grader http://bit.ly/m3hLy and Twitter Grader http://bit.ly/MPGmY

Twitter Hospital Lists by State http://bit.ly/8WNupA

Newsweek: Cleveland Clinic is both highly effective and fiercely efficient http://bit.ly/5WUGP4

@paulocoelho: Cloning Confucius: The funniest people are the saddest ones.

Kindle, Nook and the other ebook readers may be the new "iPod" in terms of popularity and use in education http://bit.ly/81KocI

Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

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:

Extended-release niacin causes a regression of carotid intima–media thickness when combined with a statin http://bit.ly/4F97eT

Novel Antibody Against PBP Peptide Was Associated with 94% of Patients with Autoimmune Pancreatitis http://bit.ly/6mh6mp

Can we prevent diabetes type 1? Rituximab partially preserved beta-cell function in type 1 diabetes mellitus http://bit.ly/5KTcYl

New supersensitive troponin T correlated with risk of cardiovascular death and heart failure but not with MI http://bit.ly/7TmykR

Walking away or letting things pass may be an unhealthy way to deal with unfair treatment on the job, research shows. Men who used "covert" coping strategies were more than twice as likely to have a heart attack or die from heart disease http://bit.ly/5CfW22

Exercise simultaneously makes people hungrier, yet more readily satisfied by a meal http://bit.ly/6Nkzmo

An internist in Miami pays $50k a year more for liability insurance than an internist in Minnesota. A general surgeon in FL pays $180K more for liability insurance than one in MN http://bit.ly/4WFsSy - That's one internist's salary...

Physicians with names unique to medicine have a good sense of humor about the whole thing http://bit.ly/5XmdWA

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Google Voice: Usage Statistics and My Experience



From Google Operating System:

Google Voice, which provides people with a single phone number that can be used to reach them on their work, home, or cell phones, has 1.419 million users.

Google Voice charges only for outbound calls to international locations; at present, fewer than 4% of all Google Voice users place outbound international calls.

Google emphasizes that Google Voice is not a phone service, it's a Web-based software application.

I have used Google Voice for about 2-3 years, when it was still a service called Grand Central, and my experience has been positive. You can embed a Google Voice widget in your blog sidebar which lets the website visitors call you without revealing your or their phone number. Google Voice automatically transcribes the voicemail as text and emails you a copy.

One of my colleagues was wondering if Google Voice can transcribe his dictations but this practice would not be HIPAA-compliant and may be against the terms of use of the service.


Nexus One - Google Voice

Updated: 01/18/2010

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Fat Bitch

I promise a much better review when I get time to write it up, but for Chicagoans, TONIGHT is the last night to catch Erica Watson and you had better not miss her. 

Last night I got to watch an amazing show. Watson is genius at critiquing our weight & beauty-obsessed society (as she says, ugly fat bitches who lose weight just turn into ugly skinny bitches) as well as patriarchy. OK, she doesn't use the word patriarchy and that is where her genius lies. 

Watson is able to do what PhD students do in an entire thesis, but she makes you laugh the entire time and without academic speak. For someone who flunked out of UIUC with Ds and Fs, she should type up that routine and get handed the PhD. Dr. Fat Bitch!

And her use of the word bitch is partially empowering, partially not so much. But it's used well. 

While the audience was overwhelmingly African-American, us lighter skinned peeps were laughing just as loud with the jokes. She critiques race issues without resorting to stereotypes like other comics. 

TONIGHT's show has many specials attached:

1. Two for one tickets at the box office. That's two people for $15. Can't beat that deal in Chicago!
2. There will be a raffle for a pair of Bulls tickets versus the Charlotte Bobcats - 6 tickets for $5 was last night's prices. 
3. The after-party is at Funky Buddha!

Seriously, if you can make this show, do it. 

I got to see if on a media pass after Watson's agent contacted me after a friend in NYC sent her to me. But if I didn't almost pee my pants from laughing so hard, I would NOT tell you to go. 

I do have to warn you that the Chicago Center for the Performing Arts had some major heating problems last night. Wear an extra sweater if you want to take off your coat. It was COLD in there last night.

Erica Watson's Fat Bitch is playing at: 
Chicago Center for the Performing Arts, 777 N. Green St., Chicago (handicapped access)
Some street parking one block west of Halsted (off Chicago Ave.)
$8 parking lot directly across Green Street next to Thalia restaurant
CTA Buses - #66 Chicago and #8 Halsted. CTA El - Red Line Chicago/State; Brown Line
Chicago/Franklin; Blue Line Chicago/Milwaukee/Ogden

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

Teaching With Twitter: Not for the Faint of Heart http://bit.ly/4DuguL and http://bit.ly/x1q5G

Google Reader adds favicon support for RSS subscriptions http://bit.ly/8X1KLo - It looks good, give it a try.

Amazon announces firmware upgrade with better battery life and native PDF support for Kindle2 http://bit.ly/8qrmiL and http://bit.ly/12a7Jw -- Kindle support for PDF and screen rotation work very well - you can carry a full course/subject review with 100-200 presentations or more.

Are you a natural-born blogger? http://bit.ly/8RMpkv

Starting early: Discussing Blog Design in 5th Grade http://bit.ly/57Unf7)

For most blogs, the label "Classic Post" is really a misnomer... :)

@paulocoelho: "Difficulty" is the name of an ancient tool created to define who we are.

@TheTeacherPage: "If you think education is expensive, try ignorance." Attributed to both Andy McIntyre and Derek Bok

Recipe correction: http://bit.ly/4XcaGK

Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

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:

Cigarettes are "widely contaminated" with hundreds of different types of bacteria - as many as there are chemicals http://bit.ly/5ITL1p

Urinary adiponectin is a novel marker for vasculopathy in DM2 http://bit.ly/50gyUT

Confirmed: High salt intake is associated with increased risk of stroke and total cardiovascular disease. http://bit.ly/9267Ev -- The case for population-wide salt reduction to prevent cardiovascular disease gets stronger http://bit.ly/6sBdsw

The Cost of Obesity in the United States (Graphic) http://bit.ly/6xlaxM

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Michael Jordan: I’ve failed over and over again. And that’s why I succeed



Video: Michael Jordan "Failure" Nike Commercial. "I’ve missed 9000 shots. I’ve lost 399 games. I’ve failed over and over again. And that’s why I succeed".

Related:
"The ultimate competitor will never stop competing even though he won the fight long ago" http://goo.gl/SVLZ

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Oh WaPo, you got me good.

Yes, I entered the Washington Post's Next Great Pundit contest. I cobbled together a piece about adoption, abortion, feminism and my undying love for Dawn Friedman. Then Latinos in America was on and I sent in an entry about how much I did not appreciate that series. I knew it was a publicity sontest for WaPo, but the fact that they excluded already published op-ed'ers made me believe I had a decent shot.

When I saw that the ten finalists were 5 men and 5 women, I was fairly happy. Four of the dudes appeared to be white. Strike. The women seemed fairly diverse in ethnicity as well as kinda age. Althou someone on one of the many listservs I'm on said they felt the candidates skewed young. Point taken.

Then the final two came down to a white dude, Kevin, and a woman of color, Zeba. I guess I thought the feminist media community would throw it's weight behind Zeba - She worked on Obama's campaign and while her pieces weren't screaming feminism, she fit what I thought we'd want to see in a new op-ed voice. I admit that before the final two, I tweeted the contest without backing anyone. I was leaning towards Zeba, but also thought that having Courtney win would be fine too. Honestly I didn't have a horse in this race, but did think that if we could will it, a woman of color should win. Once it was a two person race, I tweeted my support for Zeba. Alas Kevin won. Zeba came up 600 votes short.

If Zeba had been a contributor at Feministing or Feministe would she had kicked ass in the final vote? Did we get tired of all the voting? On the last day? She was disconnected, from my POV, from the feminist media community despite having gone thru the Op-Ed Project and thus we didn't rally for her. Perhaps many of us were just disappointed that Courtney had been eliminated.

I am eagerly awaiting Courtney's reflection post on the whole process. She was called perky and I believe I read some comments about her voice. All things that are rarely, if ever, mentioned about a man.

As I said, I know that this whole thing wasn't set out to find that hidden jewel of punditry, but to jack up the hits at the WaPo. But they did have a golden moment when it had the opportunity to anoint Zeba or Courtney (the second runner up) as the next great pundit. A lot has been said about the contest and the quality of the finalists, but I still held out hope that the result would be different.

Or maybe America really does just want to hear from white dudes...But I highly doubt it.

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

People aren't buying $300 netbook computers with the expectation of running Photoshop (which costs $700) on them http://bit.ly/7UNnf6

"Top 40 Creative Ads Made to Stop You Smoking" http://bit.ly/80gz4W

Scoble: "Twitter has changed and has become a very powerful RSS reader, full-text isn’t as important" http://bit.ly/5rWdyd -- I don't think so. Full text is what you need to make a rational conclusion.

Volunteers Log Off as Wikipedia Ages - WSJ.com http://bit.ly/5Slt4y -- "Wikipedia volunteers dropping like flies: the site lost 49,000 editors during the first 3 months of the year" http://bit.ly/5f2uZ6 -- @LanceUlanoff " http://bit.ly/5rwlhK Without updates Wikipedia is like my old Britannica, without the accuracy."

Nephrologist Joel Topf: The complete Fluid, Electrolyte and Acid-Base e-Book Available for Free http://bit.ly/5jz0qO

Depressed Woman Loses Health Benefits for Happy Pics on Facebook http://bit.ly/5q2SBU

"New" trend among people on Twitter: repost the same update several times during the day or week to make sure it's read in several time zones. I don't think this is a good idea from my limited perspective as a reader.

3 Steps to Joining or Leading a Twitter Chat by Social Media University, Global http://bit.ly/4oCW6N

From Australia: @
BiteTheDust: "It's getting to be the season. Don't forget to check your shoes for spiders and scorpions befoe you put them on. Found one of each today."

Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

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:

"Bacteria Key to Healthy Skin" http://bit.ly/8ylDMF

Study: 1 in 4 teen girls has a sexually transmitted infection (STI) http://bit.ly/6027wa

Stifled Anger at Work May Double Men's Risk for Heart Attack http://bit.ly/6AIBk9

Studies of mice show that only 4% of lean animals infected with the flu virus die compared to 40-60% for obese mice. The Flu Fighters - in Your Food: Contradictory Advice http://bit.ly/7ZMVor -- What is tougher - diet or exercise? Lolcats version: http://bit.ly/7FdGYs

David Beckham has had asthma since he was a child http://bit.ly/61Vfwd and http://bit.ly/7kDm96. This information is important to prove that asthma does not prevent one to excel in sports. http://is.gd/52zq7

CNN: A car crash victim who was misdiagnosed as being in a coma for 23 years was conscious the whole time http://j.mp/5mL71A

9% of Surgeons Have Made ‘Major’ Errors Recently - WSJ. Surgeons' survey: 40% of responders were “burned out” and 30% showed symptoms of depression http://bit.ly/6qhyC8

Genetic Testing Reveals Devastating Illness: Huntington's disease - NPR http://bit.ly/4uaVw1

Comparison of Caffeine Content of Coffee, Tea, Coca Cola/Pepsi, and Dark Chocolate http://bit.ly/07NBx3X

"Flying with the flu? Some may be tempted" - CNN http://bit.ly/4LtNQD

Road deaths are 3 times higher in poorer European countries - BMJ http://bit.ly/5s0K2l

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Risk of HIV transmission with different modes of exposure

Occupational Exposure

The rate of HIV transmission through percutaneous inoculation (i.e., a needle or other instrument that pierces the skin) is 0.3%.

Splashes of infectious material to mucous membranes (e.g., conjunctivae or oral mucosa) or broken skin may transmit HIV infection in 0.09% of the cases.

Nonoccupational Exposure

The per-contact risk of HIV transmission from sexual exposure varies according to the nature of the exposure:

- 1-30% with receptive anal intercourse
- 0.1-10.0% with insertive anal intercourse and receptive vaginal intercourse
- 0.1-1.0% with insertive vaginal intercourse

Oral intercourse is considered to pose a lower risk of HIV transmission but there are case reports of HIV infections in persons in whom the only reported risk factor was oral intercourse.

The risk of transmission associated with sharing needles for injection-drug use is 0.67% per needle-sharing contact.

References:
Postexposure Prophylaxis for HIV Infection. Raphael J. Landovitz, M.D., and Judith S. Currier, M.D. NEJM, Volume 361:1768-1775 October 29, 2009 Number 18.
Image source: Diagram of HIV. Image source: Wikipedia.

Monday, November 23, 2009

Sponsor a Child this Holiday Season!


Mujeres Latinas en Acción provides a variety of structured activities during non-school hours for children and teens and we need your help to make this holiday season special by supporting our Annual Holiday Party for kids.

The Annual Holiday Party provides the children in our Youth Programs with holiday gifts of winter clothing and accessories, games, sports equipment and books. Many of the children in our programs only receive gifts from Mujeres during this holiday season. The youth and children served in our programs are 100% low income and live in the Pilsen/Little Village area. The majority attends public schools and qualifies for free or reduced meals.

Mujeres' Holiday Party

Gifts for the participants of our Youth Programs will provide resources so that families can take part in a cultural tradition with laughter, fun and memories.  Parents will appreciate that they have been able to access resources that provide gifts for their children.  Further, the festive celebration will be a moment of immense excitement for all.  Children and youth will enjoy receiving gifts as recognition of their hard work in the program.

How can you help?

Sponsor a child in the Peace or Proyecto Juventud program for the holiday season!

• Purchase a gift(s) by requesting a child's wish list;

• Provide a donation to
Mujeres Latinas en Acción towards the purchase of gifts and holiday treats;

• Distribute this information to others! Encourage your friends, family and coworkers to sponsor a child this holiday season or make a donation to
Mujeres Latinas en Acción.

For more information on how to sponsor a child or make a donation, please contact Alba Gómez at alba@mujereslat.org or 773/890-7664, or Linda Tortolero at tortolero@mujereslat.org or 773/890-7663.


**************
My family has received our wish list and the deadline for delivering gifts is December 11, 2009. So hurry up and drop Alba or Linda a line and make a kid's holiday. And for the Humbugs out there, the boy's wish list we received had items like gloves, sweaters and a coat on it. Nothing outrageous like a DS...Not that there's anything wrong with kid's wanting that. 

Social Media Related Tweets and Insights

From my Twitter account:

"Clinical judgment is the foundation of good medical decision-making. But you won’t find it on the Internet." http://bit.ly/4xLs4Y

China has leaped to second spot worldwide in academic science, as measured by papers produced http://bit.ly/5hAnsb

Video: How to get people to chose the stairs instead of the escalator: Happy people on piano stairs http://bit.ly/DNg5U

In-Tweet advertising thoughts from Scoble http://bit.ly/8LSe11 and NYT http://bit.ly/5Dh3uQ

Google Suggestions for the search query "Doctors are..." http://bit.ly/4KQtlI - Unbelievable.

Is this real? Laptop Steering Wheel Desk http://bit.ly/5vr0HL - GruntDoc's comment of choice: http://bit.ly/6zJV3z - others are similar

Nephrology Oral History Project http://bit.ly/90FFsn and http://bit.ly/6VShnL

Gmail Creator Thinks Email Will Last Forever. And Hasn’t Tried Google Wave http://bit.ly/5RahKt - I have. Does anybody use it in real life?

Tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Erectile Dysfunction Treatment: Alternatives to Pills

From the NYTimes:

30 million men in U.S. experience erectile dysfunction (ED), 30% of men in their 50s, more than 50% of those in their 60s.

One Viagra pill, the most common way to treat erection problems, costs about $15. Viagra, Cialis and Levitra do not work for about half of the men with ED.

After 2 years of significant lifestyle changes (and no meds), 58% of the men with ED had normal erectile function.

Self-administered injections of alprostadil for ED cost $35; a "cocktail" of alprostadil, papaverine, phentolamine.

References:

For Common Male Problem, Hope Beyond a Pill. NYTimes.
Extracorporeal Shock Wave Therapy - New Treatment for Erectile Dysfunction Poorly Responsive to PDE5 Inhibitors http://goo.gl/h7SOh
Erectile Dysfunction Medications Related to Transient Amnesia, FDA Warns
Men who use ED drugs have higher rates of STDs, particularly HIV infection - Ann Intern Med http://goo.gl/UH78
ED, Depression, Heart Disease: Does the Existence of One Component of This Triad Necessitate Inquiring the Other Two? http://goo.gl/EKvKl
Image source: Viagra (sildenafil), Wikipedia, GNU Free Documentation License.

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:

Photo of a Loved One Reduces Pain - a Pain Relief Technique That Doesn't Require Drugs http://bit.ly/4rOo0t

Green Tea May Prevent Kidney Stones, nephrolithiasis affects 5% of the world population http://bit.ly/5neqOp

Eating fruits and vegetables, and drinking tea and red wine may offer some protection from colon cancer http://bit.ly/8i2GKX

Seasonal Flu Vaccine May Cut Swine Flu Risk by 45% For Some People http://bit.ly/6CuBlL

Using Cell Phones, Internet to Battle Eating Disorders: Online/text messages may be more helpful than therapy for some -- 0.6% of adults develop anorexia nervosa in their lives, and 1% develop bulimia nervosa, binge-eating affects 3% http://bit.ly/6hjvJs

Deadliest drugs - visualization of real-life data vs. news reports http://bit.ly/LFMBm

Formaldehyde May Endanger Funeral Workers: Leukemia risk may increase with longer exposure to embalming fluids http://bit.ly/5N7Hvs

The Henry Ford of Heart Surgery: In India, a Factory Model for Hospitals Is Cutting Costs and Yielding Profits - WSJ http://bit.ly/6fNSOq

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Why This Writer Thanks Stephenie Meyer


As a self-professed Twilight Mom, I joined the throngs of screaming teenage girls who converged on my neighborhood multiplex last night for the long-awaited second film in the Twilight Saga, New Moon.

My five buddies and I weren’t the only over-30 faces in the crowd – there were plenty of excited mothers with their girlfriends and daughters. My friend, Amy, 34, a communications manager, described the excitement of the moment on her Facebook Wall as she typed in her iPhone, “Watching Twilight New Moon with three hundred of my closest screaming teenage girlfriends! Fun!” My other friend Cindy, a life coach, returning from the concession stand with a tub of popcorn, overhearing one teen talking about how she was here with five of her best friends, confessed, “Well, I’m here with five of my 40-year-old friends.”

The undercurrent of excitement and excited chatter continued through the previews, until the film’s opening scene (appropriately a yellow moon) was greeted with screams from the teenage Twi-hards. My friends and I just smiled…it’s all part of the Twilight phenomenon – and it took us back to earlier, more carefree times.

So, what is it about this vampire-human love story that has transfixed a fan base of young and mature audiences? Twilight and New Moon screenplay writer Melissa Rosenberg told LA Times Hero Complex blog contributor Gina McIntyre that what’s so great about the story is Stephenie “really explores complex emotions. You could boil it down to girl loses boy, finds boy, but she doesn’t do the easy, black-and-white moves that a lot of young romances do. It’s very complex -- [what happens when] you develop feelings for a friend, romantic love versus platonic love. These are very sophisticated emotions that are very real but also very hard to translate into a film where everything is usually very simplistic and easy to follow. How do you keep that sophistication and complexity? Because that's the book, that's what makes it interesting.”

A writer’s gift is transporting readers to another place where they can feel the emotions of the characters. That’s what Meyer – and by extension Rosenberg – accomplished in print and on screen.

It’s no secret that Meyer, an English graduate from Brigham Young University, loosely inspired each of her books from classic literature. Booksellers from Paris and Prague to Palm Springs are seeing record highs in sales of these classics:
Twilight: Pride and Prejudice 
New Moon: Romeo and Juliet
Eclipse: Wuthering Heights
Breaking Dawn: The Merchant of Venice and A Midsummers Night Dream

I’m grateful to Stephenie Meyers for more than entertaining us and inspiring a renewed appreciation for the classics: I’m grateful that this stay-at-home mother was brave enough to take a vivid dream she had one June night in 2003 about two star-crossed lovers -- an “ordinary girl” and a beautiful, soulful vampire -- and commit it to paper.

Read the story behind Twilight on Stephenie Meyer's official website: http://www.stepheniemeyer.com/twilight.html

'Twilight' screenwriter says 'New Moon' is better than first: 'I know who I'm writing for'

'Twilight' screenwriter says 'New Moon' is better than first: 'I know who I'm writing for'

Posted using ShareThis

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:

"The brains of human beings seem built to process stories better than other forms of input. Without numbers, stories are just anecdotes, but without stories, numbers are just dry statistics" http://bit.ly/4u93VJ

How Much Do Doctors in Other Countries Make? NYT - http://bit.ly/3DDrz5 - Contrary to expectations, the U.S. doesn't top the list for specialists.

75% of Italian and Canadian doctors report patients wait a long time to see specialists, 28% in the U.S. http://bit.ly/2tzz8x

Movie Theater Popcorn a Calorie Bomb: A large popcorn tub packs more fat and calories than 2 Big Macs http://bit.ly/2GBIsi

People who smoke or who have high blood pressure or diabetes in middle age are more likely to develop dementia http://bit.ly/3ZeMyE)

Hospitalist Blogs selected by the Society of Hospital Medicine http://bit.ly/1jTjsF - 2 are parked domains/spam now - the others are useful.

Historic photos: Famine in Uganda http://bit.ly/1BmSxj

Pediatric growth charts and growth percentile calculators http://bit.ly/1dYHYt and http://bit.ly/3eeJXp

Forensic science: Using insects to help solve crimes - CNN http://bit.ly/134wFw

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Friday, November 20, 2009

Google study: How physicians use the internet and search in their clinical practices

Embedded PDF: Google study: How physicians use the internet and search in their clinical practices.



Link via IgniteBLOG.

@amcunningham points out that the report is "unfortunately research carried out as market research for Google and doesn't help #meded very much."

Related reading:

Journal of Clinical Orthodontics published an article by SEO exert "MasterGoogle .com" on how to to outrank your competition... http://goo.gl/J8pzL

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Transbook: The Book That Contains All Books

Amazon Kindle is the early prototype of the mythical "transbook".

From WSJ:

So far the new technology has been called the "e-reader," a term obviously picked by engineers, not poets. In literary terms it's a transbook, by which I mean that it is the book which can contain all books. A book is a singular object that can contain many voices, but the transbook has the potential to be a singular object containing all voices. It is not just another kind of media; it is the dream of ultimate text.

We are still in early days, but it is obvious where the transbook is headed: It will eventually provide access to all text that is non-copyright, and to the purchase of every book in or out of "print." Kindle 2's boast of being able to hold 1,500 titles will eventually sound as ludicrous as those early ads for floppy disks boasting that they could hold up to 64k of data. We will want everything and we will get it. Possibly there will eventually develop a subscription service, which provides access to all books for a monthly fee. At any rate, a single object will contain the contents of all the world's libraries.

References:
The Book That Contains All Books. WSJ, 2009.
Image source: Amazon.com.

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:

Exercise remodels the brain, making it more stress-resistant (in rats, at least) http://bit.ly/QHkMU

Another study: Regular consumption of alcohol reduces the risk of heart disease by 30-50% http://bit.ly/FZQl3

Young athletes should be screened for heart disease with 2 tests rather than 1: ECG and echocardiogram http://bit.ly/176Nuu

55% of adult Americans don't want to get the H1N1 flu vaccine according to a poll http://bit.ly/4qWyFj

Morphine can increase tumor cell proliferation, inhibit immune system, and promote growth of new blood vessels http://bit.ly/n1uxL

Australian hospital staff set up anonymous blog to voice concerns about hospital cutbacks - BMJ http://bit.ly/Ru9jh

Tiny chip could be used to diagnose dozens of diseases - BBC http://bit.ly/1CjTIu - Chips don't diagnose diseases, doctors do.

A Scientist's Guide to Academic Etiquette http://bit.ly/1c6fnk

Social network sites 'need help buttons' for children to report concerns about bullying - BBC http://bit.ly/1SwEx9

"How should hospitalists be cultivated?" - Dr. RW discusses 2 competing models: http://bit.ly/1astsi

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Health News of the Day, part 2

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:


Wii sports video games may burn as many calories as moderate-intensity exercises such as brisk walking http://bit.ly/4nc2WY

Folic Acid (B9) and Vitamin B12 May Increase Cancer Risk http://bit.ly/3m4UiL -- Folic acid supplements may raise cancer risk http://bit.ly/3Rn3pr and Selenium Supplements May Raise Heart Risk http://bit.ly/15Hw4M -- Selenium and human health - there is inextricable U-shaped link with status (don't supplement normal levels) - Lancet http://goo.gl/BGpmG

Pharaoh to Friend: ‘Who’s Gonna Know I Ate French Fries?’ http://bit.ly/1hntBQ - Headline of the day, commenting on heart disease in mummies.

Universities asked how the practice of professors putting their names on others’ articles is different from plagiarism http://bit.ly/vkAIT

Library in a Pocket: “It’s a surprisingly pleasant experience to read on a small screen” http://bit.ly/2bOrxd - I don't think so.

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

How to make a Google Calendar public and embed it into a website

I have written in the past How Doctors Can Use Google Calendar to Help Patients See Their Practice Schedule and Make Appointments and How Patients Can Monitor Their Medical Condition with it.

The screencast below shows how to make a public Google Calendar and embed it in your website:



Screencast: How to make a Google Calendar public and embed it into a website, by by @jasonhbuck.

References:
Google Calendar for Doctors: Help Patients See Your Practice Schedule and Make Appointments
Google Calendar for Patients: Monitor Your Medical Condition

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:

Hyperkalaemia caused by increased potassium intake of various "sports" and "detox" drinks http://bit.ly/2iQMgG

People who have had repeated flu infections or repeated flu vaccines may have some protection against H1N1 influenza http://bit.ly/DdXBm )

The Healthiest And Unhealthiest States in America: Lists & Rankings http://bit.ly/3abpwO

Cost of happiness discovered by Australian economist http://bit.ly/2Y6nBI

'Fearless' 3-Year-Olds Might Be Tomorrow's Criminals http://bit.ly/1CJn0s

Kissing as an evolutionary adaptation to protect against Human Cytomegalovirus-induced teratogenesis http://bit.ly/3Nhvrs

NPR: Ancient Egyptians Suffered From Hardened Arteries Too http://bit.ly/3TtCjC - NPR has a health blog - npr.org/blogs/health

Texting people to remind them to wear sunscreen daily actually works http://bit.ly/OAdKk

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

There will never be closure in the Nicarico case

Originally posted at the AWEARNESS blog

There will never be closure in the Nicarico case as long as Jim Ryan continues to run for public office.

The Nicarico family never missed a court date. For years they sat in courtroom after courtroom listening to the lies from Attorney Jim Ryan's team as they refused to admit their mistakes and consider Brian Dugan as a suspect. Instead, Ryan kept the case rolling along to wrongfully convict two innocent men and send them to death row.

Jim Ryan is now running for Illinois Governor and "spent a decade as DuPage state's attorney, previously had said he based his case against Cruz and Hernandez on the best information available at the time, though Dugan had long been a suspect in the crime." As I have said before in this space, the Nicarico case made a significant impact on my life. As a child it taught me to make sure the doors are locked. As a teen it taught me the harsh realities of racism in our judicial system.

Now that Brian Dugan has confessed and been sentenced to death, Ryan is apologizing. Not to Rolando Cruz, not to the Nicaricos, but to the voting public. Will we accept it? I can't. I simply can't accept his apology, especially since he has never given one to Cruz.

The fact that Ryan continues to run for public office only reminds us of the miscarriage of justice that occurred. The pain that he put not just the Nicaricos through, but an entire generation of Chicagoans. And it's not over. This case will be an issue throughout the primary election. Dugan still has one automatic appeal owed to him: Illinois has a moratorium on the death penalty. Amazingly, the huge flaws seen in this case alone are still not enough to convince people that we need to abolish the death penalty.

According to Amnesty International "ninety three percent of all known executions took place in five countries: China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and the USA." I think that says a lot about the United States as a country. As our moms have said, we are judged by the company we keep.

I am opposed to the death penalty because it drags out court proceedings (thus wasting money), it is racist, but most importantly because we are flawed as human beings. The Nicarico case screams with our flaws. I don't believe any set of checks and balances can ensure that we won't make a mistake, especially in a country where we are still debating whether people have a right to NOT be framed or a right to DNA testing to prove innocence.

And sorry Jim Ryan, but no apology can make up for all of that.

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:

Study: Little Benefit Seen, So Far, in Electronic Medical Records http://bit.ly/36WAYR

Study: heavily marketed Zetia was inferior to an old standby drug, niacin, in reducing buildup in the carotid artery http://bit.ly/1WH7z3

Flibanserin pill to treat pre-menopausal woman suffering from Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD) http://bit.ly/2udrAS )

Positive Psychology - why optimism is good for your health - BBC Health Check audio (28 min) http://bit.ly/1LZdQ1

"Cough into your mobile phone for instant diagnosis" - Telegraph.co.uk http://bit.ly/sPgnt

Australia operates "closed shop" to restrict doctors from overseas, say critics - BMJ http://bit.ly/1eeQJX

Drug companies raising prices at the fastest rate in years in the run-up to health care legislation http://bit.ly/3lDXC

RhinoChill device pumps coolant into patient nose after heart attack and during ongoing CPR to prevent brain damage http://bit.ly/4wWcJ

7-10% decline in primary care office visits for patients who e-mail their physicians http://bit.ly/2oFJ2p

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

NYT interviews Dr. Blumenthal, the President's EMR "czar"

From the NYTimes:

We found that about 17 percent of physicians in 2008 had adopted an electronic health record, and about ten percent of hospitals.

The Danes have virtually 100 percent of physicians using electronic health records. In Britain, virtually 100 percent of primary care physicians use them. In Australia, Sweden, Norway, virtually 100 percent. In many, many other Western countries, the electronic record is virtually ubiquitous.

From 2011 to 2015, there is a bonus (for adopting EMR). After 2015, if you have not adopted, and you see Medicare or Medicaid patients, you may experience a penalty.

On average, the cost is between $40,000 and $50,000, of which about a third is the software and the hardware, about a third is the cost of getting it set up in the office, and about a third is maintaining it.

References:
Computerized Health Records. NYT, 2009.
Medical Malpractice Liability in the Age of Electronic Health Records - NEJM, 2010 http://goo.gl/cGZG9

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:

Older people who walk slowly are 3 times more likely to die of heart disease than older people who walk faster - BMJ http://bit.ly/40mPqW)

Battery of tests given to a single patient having a heart attack adds up to the radiation dose of 725 chest X-rays http://bit.ly/4tzuKW

New U.S. breast cancer guidelines recommend against routine mammograms for women in their 40s. Guidelines suggest women 50 to 74 only get a mammogram every other year http://bit.ly/2Qdecp)

49 million Americans -- one in seven -- struggle to get enough to eat according to a government report http://bit.ly/2qVWIg

Top 10 Hospitalists for 2009 http://bit.ly/vcdwH

The new active Wii video games may be providing actual exercise, creating a healthier generation of couch potato http://bit.ly/4no2On

Some specialists will see extra cuts in Medicare pay, revisions represent a potentially fatal hit for some practices http://bit.ly/3HwrzT

Mexico international striker Antonio de Nigris has died at the age of 31 from a suspected heart attack - CNN http://bit.ly/20MHu5

NYT: Implants are best solution to replace lost teeth in most cases, more economical than bridges over time - ADA is not so certain http://bit.ly/uXyzx

Auditory Hallucination of Pink Floyd Song "Brick in the Wall" as a Warning Sign of Cerebral Arteriovenous Malformation http://bit.ly/34YVz9

Medical news tweets are not research articles - they are 140-character messages - please always go to the original source, links, etc. Tweets and links do not represent endorsement, approval or support. Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

Follow me on Twitter:

Monday, November 16, 2009

Mispredicting Happiness

From the Journal of Happiness Studies:

Young people mispredict happiness levels in old age, believing—wrongly—that happiness declines with age.

Young male binge drinkers are particularly prone to thinking that happiness declines with age.

References:

Mispredicting Happiness Across the Adult Lifespan: Implications for the Risky Health Behaviour of Young People. Journal of Happiness Studies, 2009.
Experienced happiness is largely set by personality, it will temporarily respond to changing circumstances. The Lancet, 2010. http://goo.gl/ot3Kx
Life satisfaction differences (graph)
Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

New Medical Blog: Education Consult Service

Education Consult Service - Web-based Best Practices Exchange is a blog authored by Christine Taylor, PhD at Cleveland Clinic.

Dr. Taylor works on faculty development projects for Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine (CCLCM) faculty and has been writing a blog about controversies in medical education.

Each post raises questions about a situation or a particular issue in medical education and invites comments from the audience. The blog has been active since May 2008:

http://educonsult.blogspot.com

Image source: Education Consult Service - Web-based Best Practices Exchange

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Book Review: Impossible Motherhood by Irene Vilar



The book is traumatic with a capital, bold T. At one part about 1/3 of the way thru, I threw the book down in disgust and decided I was done. You are warned.

Impossible Motherhood by Irene Vilar has received a lot of press and been a topic of debate on many a listserv due to the subtitle "Testimony of an Abortion Addict." When I first found out about this book my first thought was "Oh shit." Many people, including Vilar, believe that this book will be used by anti-abortion activists as proof of women using abortion as birth control and thus a reason for the procedure to be banned outright.

But if you read Impossible Motherhood, you'll soon discover that abortion is the hook not the heart of the story. Rather you find a sad story of a young woman thrust into an adult world and quickly found herself in a situation most of us would probably fall apart in as well. Depression soon engulfed her life, althou it was most likely merely lurking in Vilar's life after her mother's suicide.

Her 15 abortions didn't cause her depression, rather just like a 2008 American Psychological Association task force found, abortion can exacerbate depression that is already present in a woman's life. It was more of a symptom of her out of control life rather than a catalyst. And that is important to keep in mind.

While Vilar's life is more dramatic than most reality shows and it sometimes hard to believe, it does make you stop and wonder what you would do in her situations, especially as each abortion occurs.  She falls in love with a bully 34 years older than her who "enlightens" her that children and family weigh you down, so a free and independent woman must remain child-free and thus is her excuse for multiple abortions.

Interestingly Vilar claims the label of feminist. She reads feminist authors and talks about them. She finds some strength in them, but talks about how feminism had no answer for her. And honestly I believe she is correct.

What I took away from this book was that while so many of us will fight to the death for abortion rights, many of us would shun Vilar from the movement due to having 15 abortions. She turns to the same people in her life. Would you stand by her abortion after abortion? I honestly don't know. One or two we can forgive* support, but after that many of us start to blame the woman for not taking care of themselves, not protecting themselves, etc.

Another interesting aspect of this book is that this is Vilar's second memoir to cover the years she spent with her ex-husband (the bully). In her first, she talks says it was the happiest time of her life. Obviously in this one she takes a difference view of her marriage. With the number of memoirs being written by younger people (anyone under 50, I'd say) I think there is a lot that could change. Perhaps not as dramatic as Vilar, but think about how you looked at your 20s at age 30 then perhaps 10, 20 years later.

Do I think you should read this book? I'm not sure. It made me think and made me furious. The abuse she suffered in her marriage is what sticks with me far more than her abortions.

Politically you should read this book because I believe it makes a great case of why abortion can't be stopped by legality, if a woman wants one, she will get one. I also think the anti's will use this book and we should be aware of what Vilar actually says.

If you get a copy, please get one thru an indie bookstore or Powells.com.

Fellow Girl w/Pen writer, Allison McCarthy, wrote a review too. 

If you have read this book and would be interested in an online chat or email discussion about the book, please leave your info in comments. A lot of us are conflicted about the book and a few of us have discussed this idea. Thanks!

Disclaimer: The only payment I received for this review was the copy of the book.  

* Read my comments to see why I changed this word.